TLDR
- U.S. spot Bitcoin ETFs pulled in $471 million on April 6, the largest single-day inflow since February 25
- It was the sixth-biggest daily inflow of 2026, though still below January’s peak days above $700 million
- BlackRock and Fidelity were among the leading contributors to the inflow surge
- Bitcoin traded around $68,780, still capped below $70,000 by weak spot demand and large holder selling
- Binance Research says Bitcoin has shifted from following global monetary policy to pricing it in ahead of time
U.S. spot Bitcoin ETFs recorded their strongest day of inflows in more than a month on April 6, pulling in $471 million in a single session. The figure makes it the sixth-largest daily inflow of 2026 so far, according to SoSoValue data.
🚨BITCOIN ETFS POST BIGGEST INFLOWS IN WEEKS, NEARLY $500M FLOODS INTO BTC PRODUCTS
U.S. spot Bitcoin ETFs attracted $471 million on Monday, the highest inflows since late February.
BlackRock’s IBIT led with $182M and Fidelity Investments’s FBTC added an $147M. pic.twitter.com/zBEt3pAb2S
— Coin Bureau (@coinbureau) April 7, 2026
Bitcoin was trading around $68,780 at the time. Despite the strong ETF demand, the price remained stuck below $70,000.
Weak spot market buying and distribution from large holders have been keeping a lid on prices. ETF inflows have been stepping in to absorb that supply pressure.
BlackRock and Fidelity led contributions on the day. Their involvement continues to drive the bulk of institutional flows into Bitcoin through regulated products.
The $471 million figure is the highest since February 25. It still falls short of January’s strongest sessions, when multiple days saw inflows above $700 million.
What the Fed Has to Do With It
Macro conditions remain relatively calm. Prediction market data from Polymarket shows a 98% probability that the Federal Reserve will hold interest rates steady at its April meeting. Markets are pricing in little chance of cuts or hikes in the near term.
That stability appears to be giving institutions more confidence to move capital into Bitcoin ETFs. When rate expectations are settled, large funds tend to position more freely.
How Bitcoin’s Relationship With Policy Is Changing
A new report from Binance Research points to a deeper shift in how Bitcoin responds to global monetary policy.
Before U.S. spot ETFs were approved in 2024, Bitcoin tended to lag behind easing cycles from central banks. It would react after policy moved, not before.
That pattern has now reversed. Binance Research tracks a Global Easing Breadth Index covering 41 central banks. Since 2024, Bitcoin’s correlation with that index has turned sharply negative, and the inverse effect is nearly three times stronger than before.
The report suggests ETF-driven institutional flows are now forward-looking. Large funds are positioning ahead of expected central bank moves rather than reacting after the fact.
“BTC may have evolved from a macro ‘lagging receiver’ to a ‘leading pricer,'” Binance Research wrote.
The shift reflects a change in who controls the marginal price of Bitcoin. Retail investors historically moved after macro events. Institutions move earlier.
ETF inflows continue to absorb available supply on the market. That dynamic is helping to keep Bitcoin’s price anchored even when spot demand is soft.
Daily inflow data remains a key figure to watch. Consistent buying through ETFs signals sustained institutional interest. Any sudden drop in that number would be worth noting.
The $471 million inflow on April 6 stands as the most recent data point in that trend.







