I've been noticing a lot of chatter about Bitcoin ETFs lately and how they’re influencing the market. It's true they're pulling in fresh investments. Big players can jump into Bitcoin easily through ETFs without needing to mess with exchanges or wallets. This really opens the door for funds and institutions. When you look at days with high ETF inflows, you often see prices jump pretty fast. Conversely, when those inflows dry up or go negative, the market tends to struggle. So yeah, in the short term, ETFs are definitely making waves.
But honestly, I think people might be overemphasizing this. Before ETFs came along, Bitcoin was on the rise too. It had growth driven by adoption, the halvings, and general market trends.
Another thing to consider is that demand for ETFs can fluctuate with market conditions. If the economy gets shaky, those inflows might slow down. Plus, ETF buyers aren’t actually using Bitcoin; they’re just betting on its price. For me, ETFs matter, but they’re not the sole factor to consider. In the long run, the real value is tied to adoption, the strength of the network, and overall trust.
What do you guys think? Are ETFs the main force behind Bitcoin's growth right now, or just one piece of a larger puzzle?
Bitcoin's growth essentially depends on mining activity/network sustainability, protocol inprovement, and actual adoption. ETFs are just a conduit to greater liquidity and it simply adds a few other centralized institutional holders. However, I understand what you mean about people's "growth" expectations being to achieve high trading volume and MC because most bitcoin holders are just speculators. Because of this, many people talk about where the next liquidity pool will come from rather than looking at the technical side.
ETFs don't bring in anything other that capital inflow into the market, and for that reason bitcoin ETFs is just amplifieing on what bitcoin have already build on,. Bitcoin adoption is growing and institutional holdings government assets and now the new funding pipeline for bitcoin, this will definitely have an impact on the price of Bitcoin and how the market keep reacting to each new liquidity inflows via ETFs.
But other than that, bitcoin network still remain in it original nature and all the component functions independently, this is where the real freedom comes to play.
I think ETFs have been a big thing for altcoins mainly.
For Bitcoin with its marketcap the inflows have to be way bigger however it is possible that in the future ETFs inflows will grow to the point where it actually pushed its price up significantly.
I was among the people that celebrated the approval of bitcoin ETFs because I felt it would help bitcoin growth in no mean way. The news around their approval actually helped bitcoin create an ATH even before the last halving, something that never happened in other previous market cycles. Unfortunately, the effect of ETF on bitcoin is no more strong now which is why the market hardly respond to purchase of large amount of bitcoin by MicroStrategy. It seems bitcoin ETFs have served their purpose, for bitcoin to grow to new price regimes, it has to look for another strong fundamentals or grow naturally based on the dictates of the forces of demand and supply.
There is no doubt that ETF's when launched by the big financial houses in the US back in 2024
were seen as a massive step forward in Bitcoin adoption by in traditional financial institutions.
Many were calling it a game changer and calling the market was set to rocket etc.
ETF's are just another branch in the tree. Its true though that some people focus on them a lot
and they can move the market but there are other events that can move the market like simply
a large amount of Bitcoin moving from a "dormant wallet".
So yea there will always be FUD and panic when something out if the ordinary happens and it
shows up in the market.
You made it clear, that the era of ETF effects on Bitcoin had come and gone long time ago, as crypto ecosystem works based on trends and hype for a specific period of time. The same hype also from institutional investment programs from microstrategy and others also affected the market to the point many said these investors are directly influencing the market but that's not true.
What people don't know is that, Bitcoin growth isn't built on those programs, it's built on strong demand and supply, with or without ETF, the growth of Bitcoin still stands. Before all these, Bitcoin had experienced ATH and ATL when it's supposed to.
Bitcoin Spot ETFs are like many different entities and products for community to spend their money. Like with trading, you can not say trading is useless for Bitcoin adoption growth, market trading volume and price. The same with Bitcoin Spot ETFs which truly have brought considerable new capital into Bitcoin market and it is surely helpful for Bitcoin market trading volume and price. It's clearly that there are Inflows and Outflows of capital from Bitcoin Spot ETFs, and let's be realistic that the Net Capital Flow from all Bitcoin Spot ETFs is not always positive, but it's a live market.
Having in and out capital is better than a dead market, and Bitcoin Spot ETFs are good for Bitcoin adoption growth. It's just if people understand Bitcoin fundamentals well enough, they will be their own custodials and no longer rely on Bitcoin Spot ETFs.
ETFs were 'the hype' every year for many years. But until they were finally approved, they kept getting declined year after year. In the mean while, Bitcoin had zero issues completing its typical 4 year cycle and kept skyrocketting even with no ETF around.
So who ever thinks Bitcoin success is strictly or mostly related to how ETFs go is clearly new around the Bitcoin scene or lacks knowledge.
If we consider what Bitcoin was designed forto be a kind of peer-to-peer cashthen yes. Not only that, but also centralized exchanges (CEXs), custodial wallets, and Bitcoin treasury firms. Ultimately, those of us who use P2P and manage Bitcoin with our own private keys are in the minority, and it seems like our numbers are only going to keep shrinking.
Furthermore, since spot ETFs were approved, the price hasnt exactly been booming in terms of percentage returns.
It's rise had nothing to do with ETFs (obviously, since they weren't there), but now that they are there, and they make up a huge portion of Bitcoin's investor base, losing them would be catastrophic to the price.
Hype is biggest when it is only in mode of application, proposal, and speculation but it's naturally declining after official approvals and operations but I don't think this common hype effect is bad.
I consider Bitcoin Spot ETF effects are similar to bitcoin withdrawals out of centralized exchanges that in many articles mentioned as supply shocks. That's true but effects don't show immediately and usually in one Bitcoin market cycle, this long term accumulation from whales and supply shock only show after many months later.
The same with Bitcoin Spot ETFs, effects from capital into the market will be shown after months, years and cycles later. With its another effect to bring Bitcoin going more nearly to mainstream, it should not be under estimated.
No, as much as those investors are into ETF as it is easy for them, I think the main driver will still be us, average joe and retail investors. Those huge money is coming from ETF no denying that, but it is us that has sustain Bitcoin for a long time now.
Imagine before when there was no institution flowing in, but the market keeps going up and reaching new all time high. And that is due to retail investors. It's just abonus now that we have ETF and others factors that's why the price keeps going up.
I think the future of bitcoin ETF's inflow is already here with us as it's already made/making significant growth impact on the price of bitcoin (though bitcoin growth doesn't depends on it). Tracking the timeline from when the US spot bitcoin ETF was approved to date we can sight few dynamics in the bitcoin price historical behaviour, i could recall the remarkable event at approval when for the first time a new high was made before the halving in 2024, and this was due to massive ETF inflows, which has continued to build till this time
Nobody is relying on ETF for bitcoin growth, the only hypes we got some times back when we experience the approval of Bitcoin sports ETF was a breaking news that has the major event of renting the market bullish because of the conditions that come after such, whatever since then, there is no much dependency on bitcoin ETF to see the market of Bitcoin price rising as a result, each one work independently despite that ETF uses bitcoin market price to determine its value for commodity assets.
The approval of the ETF is also part of the process of adopting and popularizing Bitcoin. It is true that Bitcoin grew and increased even before ETFs existed, but as Bitcoin matures, it require more capital to continue growing. Meanwhile, we cannot deny that the largest flow of money into the market is through ETF. So there is nothing wrong with people focusing on that.
When the adoption process moves to a new phase, such as when central bank begin to recognize and accumulate it. At that point, you will see people stop talking about ETF and instead focus on Bitcoin reserve.
Whether anyone likes it or not, spot BTC ETFs have become an important factor influencing the price of BTC, which can be clearly seen if you track inflows/outflows. Since the beginning of the month, inflows have shown over $1.1 billion, and we see that this is definitely affecting the growth of the BTC price.
In the short term it would have a very bad impact on the price, but in the long term I don't think it would have catastrophic consequences. It is possible that those who now trade through ETFs would do the same through CEXs if they had no other choice.
The law of supply and demand applies to almost every commodity. The Bitcoin ETF increased the demand for Bitcoin, and it had a positive impact on its price. These institutional investors gave Bitcoin exposure in the global asset market. These ETF firms spend so much on publicity because they are doing business. The inflows of these Bitcoin ETFs are so high that they would always influence the market.
Bitcoin ETFs are not the only influencers of the market. We have seen wars, government policies, tariffs, and other influences on the price of Bitcoin. So I would have to conclude that ETFs are part of the biggest players of the crypto market, but they are not the only main drivers.
That's just not how consumers act. People buy BTC ETFs because it's another button on their brokerage app, and it looks and acts the same (say for tax purposes) as the stocks they buy. This also confers a massive amount of safety to Bitcoin that it wouldn't otherwise have (the irony here is so thick it's simply crazy btw).
Losing the ETFs would mean Bitcoin loses millions of consumers. That would be very bad for the price, and quite permanently.
Of course this is an academic conversation: we're not going to lose the ETFs unless the US cracked down on Bitcoin generally (say if Bitcoin became associated with a very unpopular outgoing political party for instance). If that happened, Bitcoin's price would have much bigger problems than just the ETFs being canceled.