
While ETF outflows grabbed attention, about $13b quietly moved into crypto via OTC, prime brokerage, and private funds, showing institutional demand runs deeper than ETF dashboards.
Summary
- A Daily Chain briefing highlights roughly $13b in capital flowing into crypto this week via prime brokers, OTC desks, structured products, and private vehicles that never show up in ETF flow reports.
- Finery Markets data show institutional crypto spot OTC volumes jumped 109% year-over-year in 2025, far outpacing the 9% growth in top-20 CEX spot trading as large players favor discreet block execution.
- BlackRock’s recent $140m transfer of 47,728 ETH and 544 BTC to Coinbase Prime is a visible example of this “shadow” institutional channel, reinforcing that ETF data understates real big-money demand.
While Bitcoin (BTC) spot ETF outflows dominated market commentary this week — including a $129 million net redemption on Wednesday that snapped a seven-day inflow streak — a far larger and largely unreported capital movement was taking place in parallel: approximately $13 billion flowing into crypto through institutional channels that operate entirely outside the ETF wrapper and below the radar of most retail-facing data providers.
The figure, highlighted in today’s Daily Chain briefing, refers to capital moving through prime brokerage desks, OTC trading facilities, structured products, and private fund vehicles — the infrastructure layer that services sovereign wealth funds, family offices, hedge funds, and corporate treasuries that either cannot or choose not to access crypto through publicly listed ETFs. This distinction matters enormously for understanding the true state of institutional demand, which headline ETF flow data alone systematically understates.
The scale of this hidden layer has grown dramatically. Institutional crypto spot OTC trading rose 109% year-over-year in 2025, according to data from Finery Markets, as large players increasingly favored the price certainty, reduced market impact, and counterparty discretion that OTC desks offer over exchange-based trading. BlackRock’s $140 million deposit into Coinbase Prime earlier today is one visible example of this dynamic — a transaction that occurred entirely off-exchange and would not appear in any ETF flow report.
The $13 billion figure reframes this week’s narrative. The surface-level story — ETF outflows, fear readings, post-FOMC selling — has been unambiguously negative. But beneath it, a parallel institutional market has continued to absorb and deploy capital at a scale that dwarfs the retail-visible flows. This divergence between what the ETF dashboard shows and what is actually moving through institutional rails has become one of the defining features of the 2026 crypto market structure.
It also reflects a broader maturation of the ecosystem. Early institutional Bitcoin exposure was almost entirely channeled through Grayscale’s GBTC or other listed vehicles. Today, the institutional toolkit includes prime brokerage, segregated custody, structured notes, repo-backed leverage products, and direct OTC block trades — each serving different risk, regulatory, and operational requirements. US spot Bitcoin ETFs, for all their profile, now represent just one of many on-ramps.
For market observers, the practical implication is clear: judging the health of institutional crypto demand by ETF flows alone produces a distorted picture. The real money — sovereign funds, large family offices, multi-strategy hedge funds — has always operated in the shadows of the ledger, and the $13 billion moving through those channels this week suggests that conviction among the largest players remains considerably more intact than the fear index of 28 might imply.










