Bitcoin just absorbed a single $1.3B IBIT block trade with barely any price movement


Bitcoin just absorbed a single .3B IBIT block trade with barely any price movement


At 10:30:34 a.m. ET, a single IBIT print of 29,212,864 shares, crossed at $43.16, for a notional of roughly $1.26 billion.

The next-largest visible movement was 1.3 million shares, making one trade dwarf everything else in IBIT’s session, accounting for about 34.8% of the ETF’s reported intraday volume of 83.86 million shares.

IBIT ended the sequence at $42.99, up about 0.09%, while Bitcoin traded around $75,911, down roughly 1.73%. A dark pool executed the trade with a momentary 1% dip in Bitcoin, which recovered immediately, confirming the block absorbed through organized liquidity and settled cleanly.

IBIT’s intraday volume of 83.86 million shares gave the market enough daily turnover to absorb even a 29.2 million-share print, and a buyer or a network of buyers matched the seller at $43.16 without triggering a disorderly repricing of the ETF.

Before spot Bitcoin ETFs launched, moving a billion dollars of Bitcoin exposure required either a large OTC desk arrangement or a sequence of exchange orders that would leave visible price impact across crypto markets.

Today’s block routed through block desks, market makers, arbitrage desks, authorized participants standing ready, and IBIT closed near where it started.

The secondary market distinction

IBIT shares trade continuously on the secondary market among investors, and a block trade between those investors changes ownership of the shares, leaving the trust’s underlying Bitcoin holdings intact unless something else happens.

BlackRock’s fund documentation states that IBIT shares are bought and sold on the secondary market and are not individually redeemable from the trust.

Only authorized participants, which are large financial institutions that interact directly with the fund, can create or redeem shares in large baskets. This happens through a separate process, and that process determines whether the trust actually sells Bitcoin.

Farside Investors May 26 IBIT flow row was not yet populated, leaving confirmation of whether today’s block translated into fund-level Bitcoin selling still pending.

IBIT’s previous single-day withdrawal record was approximately $523 million, set in November 2025. A confirmed outflow matching today’s full notional size would more than double that record.

If IBIT reports no major outflow, the block transfer of exposure from one institutional holder to another is a liquidity event confined to the secondary market.

Why a block trade is not automatically an ETF outflow
A 29.21 million-share IBIT block trade splits into two paths: secondary-market ownership transfer, which leaves trust holdings intact, or primary-market basket redemption.

If IBIT posts a large outflow, particularly one approaching or exceeding its prior record of $523 million, the block translates into basket-redemption pressure.

A large holder may have wanted to cut Bitcoin exposure and used IBIT because it offered enough liquidity to move size discreetly. The buyer may have been a different institution rotating into Bitcoin exposure via the ETF wrapper.

The trade could also reflect a portfolio rebalancing, a basis-trade unwind, a hedge adjustment, or a mandate-driven allocation change, none of which requires a directional view on Bitcoin’s price.

Plumbing under pressure

In the bull case, ETF flow data shows no major IBIT outflow, and today’s block confirms the depth of Bitcoin’s institutional market.

CryptoSlate Daily Brief

Daily signals, zero noise.

Market-moving headlines and context delivered every morning in one tight read.