<!DOCTYPE html>
On April 9 (ET), spot Bitcoin ETFs absorbed $358 million while spot Ethereum ETFs also finished with net additions, putting regulated crypto-fund demand back in positive territory across the two major U.S. spot ETF tracker tables.
Spot Bitcoin ETFs Record $358 Million Net Inflow on April 9
Farside's April 9 Bitcoin ETF table showed total net inflows of $358.1 million, with BlackRock's IBIT adding $269.3 million and Fidelity's FBTC adding $53.3 million. On the Ethereum side, Farside's April 9 Ether ETF table listed total net inflows of $85.2 million, giving the headline's BTC-versus-ETH framing a verified fund-flow baseline.
- $358.1 million moved into spot Bitcoin ETFs on April 9 (ET), according to Farside's daily table.
- The session showed stronger verified demand for BTC wrappers than for ETH wrappers because both major assets were positive while Bitcoin's tracker total was materially larger.
- Ethereum's verified daily total stayed positive, but the ETH read deserves more caution because one alternate report later published a higher and unreconciled tally.
Spot Bitcoin ETF Flows on April 9: What the $358 Million Inflow Signals
The strongest part of the Bitcoin print was concentration in the largest products. IBIT's $269.3 million intake accounted for most of the session's net demand, while FBTC's $53.3 million contribution reinforced that the bid was not isolated to a single issuer.
Gate News' market recap said IBIT's historical net inflows reached $63.59 billion, total spot Bitcoin ETF net asset value reached $93.29 billion, and historical cumulative net inflows stood at $56.5 billion. That cumulative figure is effectively in line with Farside's running total of $56.51 billion, which suggests the April 9 session added to an already durable multi-month accumulation trend.
The practical takeaway is that ETF demand remains concentrated but still broad enough to matter. When IBIT and FBTC are both positive on the same day, allocators get a cleaner signal that capital is moving through regulated U.S. wrappers rather than through a single one-off creation event.
That selective demand looks more like institutionally packaged buying than a broad exchange-volume boom, which makes the backdrop in March 2026 Exchange Data Report: Spot Volume Falls 19.4% a useful contrast. ETF inflows can improve even when overall venue activity is softer, because the data here measures creations and redemptions inside listed funds rather than all spot turnover across exchanges.
How the Bitcoin ETF Inflow Compares With Ethereum ETF Context
Bitcoin demand was stronger and cleaner
The verified cross-asset comparison still favored Bitcoin. Farside's BTC table showed a much larger net addition than its ETH table, which is why the April 9 flow update reads more like a Bitcoin-led institutional bid than a uniform crypto-ETF surge.
That matters for ETF-watchers because the comparison is based on two directly comparable daily tracker tables rather than on price action alone. For AI-assisted execution models and discretionary allocators alike, the important signal is that Bitcoin fund demand outpaced Ethereum fund demand inside the same reporting window.
Bitcoin's ETF story is also unfolding alongside chain-specific narratives rather than replacing them. That is why the network-side context in Bitcoin Block 944306 Mined on Solo CK by Independent Miner, Mempool Data Suggests remains relevant: fund flows can strengthen at the same time that attention rotates to base-layer activity, mining luck, or settlement behavior.
Ethereum stayed positive, but the exact tally needs caveats
Farside's Ethereum table showed ETHA with $90.9 million, ETHB with $13.7 million, and ETH mini with $9.7 million of inflows, while FETH, TETH, EZET, and ETHE acted as net outflow contributors. That mix explains how ETH funds finished positive overall without producing the same headline force as Bitcoin.
Wu Blockchain's April 10 report put the Ethereum total at $85.1861 million, which effectively matches Farside's rounded $85.2 million figure. That agreement makes the Farside-Wu range the most defensible number set in the current brief.
A single Gate News item citing Trader T reported $106 million of spot Ethereum ETF inflows on April 9, but that higher figure conflicts with the Farside and WuBlockchain totals and no fetched source explained the methodology gap. Until that difference is reconciled, the higher tally should be treated as an unconfirmed alternate count rather than an established fact.
That discrepancy is part of the story because ETF-flow dashboards now function as trading inputs. A larger unverified ETH number would imply stronger capital rotation into Ether products, but the better-supported Farside data and WuBlockchain confirmation point to a more modest, still-positive reading.
Outlook for ETF Watchers and Crypto Data Models
The next thing to watch is whether Bitcoin keeps extending its lead over Ethereum in the daily tables or whether Ether begins closing the gap with cleaner fund-by-fund confirmation. For market participants who automate around flow data, consistency across Bitcoin ETF trackers and Ethereum ETF trackers matters almost as much as the raw totals themselves.
That is also what separates this ETF update from more speculative narratives. The risk profile here is different from event-driven listing attention such as Scroll (SCR) on Binance Pre-Market: What a $8.16 Cap Could Mean, because daily U.S. ETF creations and redemptions provide a structured institutional demand signal rather than early pre-market price discovery.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial or investment advice. Cryptocurrency and digital asset markets carry significant risk, and ETF flow trackers can differ by methodology.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial or investment advice. Cryptocurrency and digital asset markets carry significant risk. Always do your own research before making decisions.