NEW YORK, June 5, 2026, 05:02 EDT
U.S. spot ether ETFs picked up about $19 million in inflows on June 4, snapping a 17-session streak of outflows, according to ETF flow data. The move ended a three-week pull that had weighed on the world’s number two crypto.
That’s in focus now because the funds dropped about $900 million between May 11 and June 3, according to Farside Investors. With spot ether ETFs relying on demand from Wall Street since launch, the losing streak puts a direct question to the market—are institutions still buying the dip, or are they pulling back?
Ether held near $1,662, dropping about 6% for the day after hitting a session low at $1,636.81. Bitcoin slipped too, last seen at $62,383. Traders kept selling in the spot market even though an ETF printed a positive number. The answer is not clear yet.
BlackRock’s iShares Ethereum Trust ETF (ETHA) was the only spot ether fund to see inflows on June 4, according to Farside’s table. Other spot ether ETFs were unchanged for the session. BlackRock’s site listed $5.06 billion in net assets for ETHA as of June 4, a sponsor fee of 0.25%, and a NAV total return for the year to date at minus 38.77% as of June 3.
Bitcoin ETFs showed only slight gains as U.S. spot bitcoin ETFs brought in $3.2 million on June 4, following outflows of $396.6 million on June 3 and $519.1 million on June 2, according to Farside. The flows hint at some easing in pressure across the top crypto ETF markets but stop short of signaling a full rebound.
Ether’s drop this week is about a shift in ETF flows, inflation nerves, higher yields and geopolitics, IG analyst Axel Rudolph wrote earlier in the week. He said as long as ether stays under its May 21 high, “downside pressure will probably remain dominant.” In his view, the short-term is still bearish with traders leaning to the downside. IG
Spot ether ETFs are still early on in U.S. markets. Reuters said in July 2024 that the SEC approved the first exchange-traded funds tracking ether’s spot price, with BlackRock, VanEck and six more firms ready to bring products to Cboe, Nasdaq and NYSE.
The ETF flow table from Farside still points to a wide gap. ETHA has pulled in around $11.3 billion in net inflows, with FETH from Fidelity at $2.1 billion. Grayscale’s ETHE, an older product, shows about $5.3 billion in net outflows. When daily flows shift, the attention is still on a handful of big issuers.
But a single session isn’t much to go on. BlackRock warns that digital assets are volatile, and shares can swing above or below the value of the ether in the trust. The trust also isn’t regulated as a mutual fund under the Investment Company Act of 1940. Those risks are still there even if the flow streak broke.
Test is simple and soon: June 4 will show if that’s the start of inflows or just a break from outflows. Ether now has a better ETF headline than it did yesterday. Price action hasn’t followed yet.