

US spot Bitcoin exchange-traded funds returned to net inflows on July 10 as Bitcoin moved back above $64,000. The products attracted $90.44 million during the session, while spot Ethereum ETFs added $18.43 million.
The flow data arrived as Bitcoin traded near $64,150 and approached resistance level around $65,000. The recovery followed a volatile week in which the asset fell near $62,000 before moving higher again.
Lower oil prices and a weaker dollar supported risk assets during the session, though ETF demand stayed concentrated in a few products. Market participants now track whether the demand can persist.
BlackRock’s iShares Bitcoin Trust recorded $86.83 million in net inflows, accounting for most of the daily total. VanEck’s HODL added $3.61 million, while the other listed spot Bitcoin funds reported no net movement.
IBIT’s cumulative net inflows reached about $60.29 billion after the July 10 session. HODL’s total stood near $1.14 billion. Across the market, US spot Bitcoin ETFs held about $77.42 billion in net assets, equal to roughly 6.05% of Bitcoin’s market value.
Cumulative net inflows across the products reached about $51.28 billion. The latest reading followed a difficult period for the funds. A 10-day withdrawal run removed about $2.73 billion before positive flows returned in early July.
Spot Ethereum ETFs also returned to positive flows on July 10. BlackRock’s ETHA attracted $16.20 million, while Fidelity’s FETH received $2.23 million. The remaining products posted no net flows for the day.
The Ethereum inflow followed a $52.2 million withdrawal on July 9, which ended a five-day positive run. Ether traded near $1,800 as the funds recorded the new capital, while Bitcoin drew nearly five times more money during the same session.
The two markets showed concentrated demand rather than broad buying across every fund. BlackRock supplied most of the inflows in both asset groups. As a result, daily totals depended heavily on activity in its IBIT and ETHA products.
Bitcoin’s return above $64,000 placed the market close to a key short-term barrier. The asset earlier reached about $64,500 before losing momentum. Falling futures open interest, weak spot demand and a negative Coinbase premium had raised doubts about the strength of the July advance.
Short-term holder data also points to possible supply above the current price. The newest buyers hold an average cost near $61,600, while the three-to-six-month group has a realized price close to $74,900. Traders who bought at higher levels may sell as Bitcoin moves toward their entry prices.
Analyst Axel Adler Jr. said, “Buying pressure is once again outweighing selling pressure at the lows.” His model showed buying scores between 37% and 46% during June and July, while selling pressure stood near 16%.
Adler identified $71,000 as an important recovery level. A move above that price would bring Bitcoin closer to the average cost of older short-term holders. The $73,200 to $77,500 range may carry heavier supply if the rebound extends.
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