Key findings
- A spot-ETF creation is backed by the fund acquiring real BTC; a redemption releases it. Net creations therefore move coins into long-term custodial holdings.
- Daily net-flow figures are a demand signal, not a price prediction: they interact with miner issuance, exchange balances, and derivatives positioning.
- The post-2024-halving block subsidy is 3.125 BTC per block (~450 BTC/day of new issuance), a useful denominator when sizing flow against fresh supply.
Background
US spot-Bitcoin exchange-traded products acquire and hold real bitcoin against their shares. When authorized participants create new shares, the fund’s bitcoin holdings rise; when they redeem, holdings fall. Because these are physically-backed products, published creation and redemption data is a reasonably clean read on one category of demand — capital entering or leaving bitcoin through a regulated wrapper.
Data & method
Data: fund holdings and net-flow disclosures published by issuers and aggregators; protocol issuance from the Bitcoin consensus rules. Method: compare reported net flows to daily issuance and to exchange-held balances over the same window. Limitation: flow figures are reported with a lag and vary in methodology between aggregators.
The natural denominator for a flow number is fresh supply. Since the 2024 halving, the block subsidy is 3.125 BTC and blocks arrive roughly every ten minutes, so miners add on the order of 450 BTC per day before fees. A day of net ETF creations larger than that absorbs more than the day’s new issuance — but that framing ignores the far larger pool of already-circulating coins that can change hands.
Analysis
What the data shows is the direction and rough magnitude of ETF demand. What it infers, at best, is pressure on freely tradable supply when creations persist and exchange balances fall together. What it cannot do is predict price: flows are one input among miner selling, long-term-holder behavior, and leverage in the derivatives market, any of which can dominate on a given day.
Risks & limitations
Net-flow series are noisy, revised, and inconsistently defined. Treating a single day’s number as a signal is a classic error; the useful object is the trend across weeks, cross-checked against on-chain exchange balances. Correlation between flows and price is regime-dependent and unstable.
What to watch
Sustained multi-week net creations alongside falling exchange balances are the configuration most consistent with a tightening tradable float. Track it live on our market dashboard, and read it against our framework in what actually moves Bitcoin’s price.
Sources — primary where possible
The BlackPearlBitcoin Research Desk holds no positions relevant to this report. See our conflict-of-interest policy in the methodology.
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