The development stands out because the inflows were dual: spot Bitcoin ETFs and spot Ether ETFs each ended the session on the positive side of the ledger. Daily fund flows are tracked on the Bitcoin ETF flow dashboard , which logs issuer-level activity for the U.
Spot Bitcoin and Ether ETFs both recorded net inflows on July 14, with fresh capital moving into the U.S.-listed funds on the same trading day and reinforcing the read that regulated crypto products drew buyers across both assets rather than a single one.
The development stands out because the inflows were dual: spot Bitcoin ETFs and spot Ether ETFs each ended the session on the positive side of the ledger. Daily fund flows are tracked on the Bitcoin ETF flow dashboard, which logs issuer-level activity for the U.S. spot products. For related coverage, see Bitcoin Policy Institute NYC Case Over Self-Custody.
“Net inflow” language means new money entered the funds on July 14, as opposed to the net outflows that mark days when redemptions outpace creations. The comparable figures for the Ether side are published on the Ethereum ETF flow dashboard.
Why Simultaneous Bitcoin and Ether Inflows Draw Attention
ETF flow data is widely watched as a proxy for institutional and regulated-market demand, because the vehicles sit inside brokerage and advisory channels that most crypto-native venues do not reach.
Parallel inflows across Bitcoin and Ether products point to appetite that spans more than one asset. That cross-asset breadth is a different signal than a day when only Bitcoin funds gain while Ether funds bleed, a split seen earlier this month when BTC, ETH and SOL spot ETFs all saw net outflows on July 9.
One session of positive flows is meaningful news but not a standalone trend. The direction can reverse quickly, as it did when Bitcoin and Ether funds snapped an eight-week outflow streak with a single strong inflow day before flows normalized again.
What Traders Will Watch Next
The immediate question is whether the July 14 inflows carry into subsequent sessions, since consecutive positive days are what separate a one-off print from renewed momentum. A recent example of that momentum was a day when U.S. spot Bitcoin ETFs added inflows alongside Ethereum ETF gains.
Issuer-level breakdowns are the likely next focal point. After a positive aggregate day, attention typically shifts to which funds led the creations, detail that both Farside dashboards itemize by provider.
The broader tie-back is sentiment: whether steady ETF demand translates into firmer spot-market confidence, or whether flows stay choppy the way they did through the stretch when Bitcoin ETFs logged a record eighth straight negative week despite a large Thursday inflow. That distinction is what the coming sessions will settle.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial or investment advice. Cryptocurrency and digital asset markets carry significant risk. Always do your own research before making decisions.
