U.S. spot Bitcoin ETFs recorded seven consecutive days of net inflows between March 9 and March 17, 2026. That streak was the longest of the year and the first seven-day run since October 2025. Over those seven sessions, Bitcoin ETFs absorbed a combined $1.167 billion in net capital. The final day of the streak, March 17, brought $199.37 million in inflows alone, led by BlackRock’s iShares Bitcoin Trust at $169.34 million and Fidelity’s Wise Origin Bitcoin Fund at $24.39 million.
On March 18, the streak ended. U.S. spot Bitcoin ETFs posted $129.62 million in net outflows. The cause was a single Federal Reserve policy statement. The Federal Open Market Committee held its benchmark interest rate at 3.5% to 3.75%, as expected. However, the accompanying signals were sharper than markets had anticipated, and the reaction across crypto markets was immediate.

What the Fed Actually Said
The Fed’s rate hold was not the problem. Markets had priced in a hold. The problem was what accompanied it. The central bank raised its 2026 inflation forecast from 2.4% to 2.7%, signaling that price pressures would persist longer than previously expected. Additionally, seven of nineteen FOMC participants indicated they expected no rate cuts at all in 2026, up from the prior reading. Futures markets had entered the week pricing two cuts for the year. After the statement, those expectations collapsed to one cut at most, with no additional easing expected until late 2027 or early 2028.
That repricing matters for crypto ETF flows because institutional investors in risk assets price their positions against the expected liquidity environment. Fewer rate cuts mean tighter financial conditions for longer. As a result, capital that had been flowing into Bitcoin ETFs on the assumption of a more accommodative Fed began to exit. Bitcoin dropped approximately 5% on March 18 to around $70,198. Ethereum fell 5.9% to approximately $2,177. The broader crypto ETF market posted an estimated $227.8 million in total outflows for the session.
BREAKING: Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell: “Today the FOMC decided to leave our policy rate unchanged.”
pic.twitter.com/TuIaMM3N8R
— Breaking911 (@Breaking911) March 18, 2026
ETH ETFs Split Down the Middle
Ethereum ETFs recorded $55.51 million in net outflows on March 18. However, that figure masks a significant internal split among issuers. Fidelity’s Ethereum Fund posted $37.11 million in outflows, equivalent to 16,950 ETH. Grayscale’s Ethereum Trust shed $8.89 million, and VanEck’s Ethereum ETF recorded $4.80 million in redemptions.
Meanwhile, BlackRock’s iShares Staked Ethereum Trust moved in the opposite direction, posting $81.7 million in inflows. That product, which trades under the ticker ETHB on Nasdaq, launched on March 12, 2026. Unlike standard spot ETH ETFs, ETHB passes staking yield directly to investors by holding staked ETH rather than unstaked spot holdings. Importantly, that yield component changes the calculus for certain institutional holders. A product that generates native Ethereum staking rewards offers a different return profile than a simple price-exposure vehicle. Some institutional buyers treated the hawkish FOMC outcome as a discount entry point into a yield-bearing asset rather than a reason to exit. That split behavior, BlackRock accumulating while Fidelity and Grayscale redeemed, illustrates how differently institutional players are approaching Ethereum ETF products in 2026.
Solana ETFs Held Their Ground
Solana ETFs posted $17.81 million in net inflows on March 18, their largest single-day figure in two weeks. That inflow arrived on the same day Bitcoin and Ethereum ETFs bled hundreds of millions of dollars. The contrast was notable and not entirely new. SOL ETF holders have shown consistent inflow behavior through periods of broader crypto ETF weakness throughout 2026. The pattern suggests that the investor base in Solana ETFs behaves differently from the institutional macro traders driving large Bitcoin ETF flows.
XRP ETFs added a further data point. The seven XRP spot ETF products trading in the U.S. recorded their highest weekly trading volume since launch during this period, reaching $219 million in secondary market activity. That volume came despite mixed daily flow data. It indicates that XRP ETF investors were actively repositioning rather than simply redeeming. Together, SOL and XRP ETF behavior on March 18 reinforced an emerging pattern: altcoin ETF capital is less sensitive to Fed policy surprises than Bitcoin ETF capital.
ETF FLOWS: SOL spot ETFs saw net inflows on Mar. 19, while BTC and ETH spot ETFs saw net outflows.
BTC: – $90.19M
ETH: – $131.2M
SOL: $767.01K
XRP: $0 pic.twitter.com/7V7y3ubUZb— Cointelegraph (@Cointelegraph) March 20, 2026
The Streak in Context
The seven-day inflow run that ended on March 18 had real significance. It was the strongest stretch of Bitcoin ETF demand since late 2025 and came after a difficult first two months of 2026, during which crypto ETFs recorded extended outflow periods. As of March 16, total net assets across all U.S. Bitcoin ETFs stood at $95.77 billion. BlackRock’s IBIT alone held $63.21 billion in cumulative net inflows, making it by far the dominant vehicle in the market. Ethereum ETFs had accumulated $11.91 billion in cumulative net inflows.
The speed of the reversal on March 18 reflects how quickly macro signals can shift institutional positioning once Bitcoin ETFs have achieved the scale they now operate at. At $95.77 billion in AUM, a 5% price move and a single FOMC statement can generate more than $100 million in net outflows within hours. That sensitivity cuts both ways. The same institutional infrastructure that drives week-long, billion-dollar inflow streaks can reverse on a policy signal. March 17 to 18 illustrated both sides of that dynamic within 24 hours.
What Comes Next
March 19 data remained soft and still being aggregated at time of reporting. The immediate question for Bitcoin ETF watchers is whether the March 18 outflow represents a single-session correction or the beginning of a longer pull-back tied to the revised Fed outlook. During previous FOMC-related sell-offs, Bitcoin has historically recovered within three to five sessions once the initial rate repricing settles. Whether that pattern holds depends on how markets absorb the new inflation forecast and whether upcoming economic data shifts the rate-cut calculus again.
For the broader crypto ETF market, March 18 demonstrated something important. Bitcoin ETF flows are now a macro instrument, responsive to Fed signals as directly as equities or bonds. Ethereum, with its staking yield layer, is beginning to bifurcate between yield-seeking and price-exposure buyers. And Solana and XRP ETFs continue to attract a distinct institutional cohort that holds through macro volatility rather than reacting to it. Those three divergences will define how the multi-asset crypto ETF market develops through the rest of 2026.
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BREAKING: Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell: “Today the FOMC decided to leave our policy rate unchanged.”
ETF FLOWS: SOL spot ETFs saw net inflows on Mar. 19, while BTC and ETH spot ETFs saw net outflows.