

US-listed spot Bitcoin exchange-traded funds pulled in $411.5 million on Tuesday as Goldman Sachs moved into the Bitcoin ETF market. The surge marked April’s second-largest daily inflow so far. It also pushed 2026 net flows back into positive territory at about $245 million, while total assets under management climbed above $96.5 billion, their highest level since mid-March.
No US spot Bitcoin ETF posted outflows that day. BlackRock’s iShares Bitcoin Trust ETF led with about $214 million in inflows, while ARK 21Shares and Fidelity added $113 million and $45 million. At the same time, Goldman Sachs filed to launch a Bitcoin-linked ETF, extending Wall Street’s latest push into digital asset products.
The inflow rebound arrived as several major issuers extended winning streaks. BlackRock’s IBIT and Morgan Stanley’s Bitcoin Trust ETF each logged a fifth straight day of inflows. Over that stretch, IBIT brought in about $696 million, while MSBT added roughly $84 million.
The broader market also moved higher. According to the figures cited, the fresh inflows lifted year-to-date net flows for US spot Bitcoin ETFs to around $245 million. Total assets under management rose above $96.5 billion, their highest level since mid-March.
Meanwhile, the recovery spread beyond Bitcoin. Spot Ether ETFs drew $53 million in inflows on Tuesday. XRP funds added $11 million, while Solana products recorded just over $1 million. Dogecoin ETFs also posted about $187,000 in inflows, bringing cumulative inflows to roughly $9.2 million.
Goldman Sachs filed an application on Monday for a Bitcoin Premium Income ETF. The proposal marked one of the bank’s first direct efforts to expand into cryptocurrency investment products. The planned fund would offer bitcoin exposure while seeking income through a premium-based options strategy.
Under that structure, the fund would sell options tied to Bitcoin-linked exchange-traded products. In return, it would collect premiums, though the strategy would also limit some upside during sharp rallies. The design reflects a broader Wall Street effort to package bitcoin in formats that resemble income funds.
The filing came weeks after BlackRock advanced a similar strategy. BlackRock is preparing to launch the iShares Bitcoin Premium Income ETF under the expected ticker BITA. An updated filing earlier this month showed the asset manager has been refining the fund’s structure ahead of an anticipated launch within weeks.
Goldman’s move came soon after Morgan Stanley launched MSBT last Wednesday. Together, the filings and launches show that competition now reaches beyond spot Bitcoin exposure. Firms are moving into more layered strategies that aim to pair crypto access with steadier returns.
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Can the rebound hold as Wall Street broadens its Bitcoin ETF push?
For now, the flow data points to a calmer backdrop. The text noted that no US spot Bitcoin ETF saw outflows on Tuesday. It also said overall sentiment has improved slightly in recent days, with the Crypto Fear & Greed Index rising above 20 this week.
The filing also reflects a gradual change in Goldman Sachs’ position on digital assets. Chief Executive Officer David Solomon recently said he owns “very little, but some” Bitcoin. He also said he remains an observer of Bitcoin and continues to study how the asset behaves.
Solomon has also tied crypto to wider changes in finance. He pointed to tokenization as an important area and said blockchain-based systems could shape future markets. Even so, the bank has trailed peers such as JPMorgan and Morgan Stanley in launching crypto products, largely because of regulatory limits that now appear to be easing.
US-listed Bitcoin ETFs posted a strong rebound, with $411.5 million in daily inflows and no recorded outflows. Goldman Sachs’ filing added fresh momentum, while BlackRock, ARK, and Fidelity led activity. The broader takeaway is clear: institutional interest in Bitcoin ETFs continues to deepen as product competition expands.