Bitcoin spot ETFs ended a volatile month of heavy outflows with a slight reversal, recording around $70 million in net Capital for the week.
The recovery comes after four consecutive weeks of heavy Capital , totaling about $4.35 billion in withdrawals from the spot Bitcoin ETF sector, causing a sharp decline in net assets, according to data from SoSoValue. The two weeks with the largest Capital were November 7 and November 21, 2025, each seeing $1.22 billion leave spot Bitcoin ETFs.
On a daily basis, Bitcoin funds recorded about $71 million in net Capital on Friday, bringing the total Capital since launch to nearly $57.7 billion. Total net assets have now grown to nearly $119.4 billion, or about 6.5% of Bitcoin's market Capital .
During the day, BlackRock's IBIT fund recorded outflows of $113.7 million, but this was offset by strong inflows at rival funds, led by Fidelity's FBTC with $77.5 million and ARK 21Shares' ARKB with $88 million.

Ether ETF also reversed, escaping the Capital withdrawal chain
Spot Ether ETFs also saw a recovery, recording $312.6 million in net inflows after three consecutive weeks of strong Capital .
The rally follows a difficult period that saw about $1.74 billion withdrawn from Ether ETFs in the previous three weeks. The worst week was the week ending November 14, 2025, when investors withdrew $728.6 million.
Ether ETFs saw about $76.6 million in inflows on Friday, bringing total net Capital since launch to $12.94 billion. Total assets in U.S. spot Ether ETFs now stand at about $19.15 billion, or 5.2% of Ether's market Capital .
Bitcoin nears short-term Dip
As Cointelegraph reported, trader Mister Crypto said Bitcoin may have formed a short-term Dip as the RSI approached oversold territory and whales began to reopen Longing positions, increasing the likelihood of a recovery to the $100,000–$110,000 region.
Additionally, André Dragosch — Head of Research at Bitwise Europe — also believes that Bitcoin could have strong upside potential ahead, as the current price does not reflect improving macro expectations.





