Spot Bitcoin exchange-traded funds (ETFs) in the U.S. marked their best day of inflows since early October on Tuesday as the funds pulled in over $750 million.
The strong inflows came as the price of Bitcoin climbed past $95,000 on Tuesday, gaining more than 3.6% in 24 hours, as traders responded to a combination of stable inflation data, political uncertainty around the Federal Reserve, and renewed interest in crypto as a macro hedge.
BTC ETFs Log $754 Million Inflows As Risk Appetite Returns
Data from SoSoValue shows that US spot Bitcoin ETFs bagged $753.6 million worth of inflows on Tuesday, marking the best single-day tally since Oct. 7. Fidelity’s Wise Origin Bitcoin fund (FBTC) outdid itself by hauling in $351 million.
Bitwise’s BITB was the next most popular with investors on Tuesday, seeing $159 million worth of shares created yesterday. BlackRock’s iShares Bitcoin Trust (IBIT) followed with $126 million in inflows.
The renewed ETF inflows signal that institutional buyers are re-entering the market after a quiet end to 2025, when liquidity positioning weighed on investments in crypto-related vehicles.
 
Looking at other crypto ETFs, Ether-linked funds drew in $130 million across five products, marking their third consecutive day of inflows. Spot Solana ETFs also posted a combined $16.8 million in investments, notching 20 days of straight positive flows.
“Quite Clear” Bitcoin Is Headed To $100,000
Notably, crypto prices spiked alongside the inflows, with Bitcoin hitting a local high of $95,804 earlier, according to crypto price aggregator CoinGecko. While the alpha crypto has retraced slightly as of publication time, it’s still 2.5% higher than it was this time last week.
Meanwhile, prominent crypto analyst Michaël van de Poppe noted in a Jan. 13 X post that it is “quite clear that this is going to run to $100K in the coming week and that dips are for buying.”
Bitcoin has failed to rally into six digits after plummeting below the $100K psychological milestone on Nov. 13, 2025.
January has historically been a fairly muted month for Bitcoin, averaging a 4.18% growth since 2013, while February has typically been more bullish, delivering an average return of 13.12%.
“The bull market hasn’t died, it’s about to start,” Van de Poppe concluded.
