U.S. spot Bitcoin ETF flow data pointed to another day of institutional buying at the end of the week, with the biggest issuers once again doing most of the work.
Bitcoin ETFs logged heavy net buying on April 10
U.S. spot Bitcoin ETFs recorded $240.4 million in net inflows on April 10, 2026, and CoinCentral reported on April 11, 2026 that the daily total equated to roughly 3,350 BTC worth about $240 million.
The same tally moved across social feeds after @BitcoinArchive posted it on X, while a separate cumulative-holdings figure in that post is treated here as unconfirmed because the research brief noted that no second live dashboard confirmation was available.
Bitcoin ETFs bought 3,350 BTC worth $240M yesterday.
ETFs now hold 721,090 BTC worth $56.75 Billion. pic.twitter.com/tuSNw64wCT
— Bitcoin Archive (@BitcoinArchive) April 11, 2026
BlackRock’s IBIT and Fidelity’s FBTC drove most of the inflows
Farside’s April 10 fund table shows BlackRock’s IBIT at +$137.6 million and Fidelity’s FBTC at +$78.0 million, which together accounted for $215.6 million of the day’s net buying.
The same breakdown lists Bitwise’s BITB at +$9.5 million, Ark/21Shares’ ARKB at +$3.6 million, VanEck’s HODL at +$2.6 million, and Grayscale’s BTC at +$9.1 million, while the remaining listed funds were flat.
That split matters because the April 10 table showed inflows beyond the two biggest products, making the session more informative than a headline-only read. The same concentration question sits behind coverage of Morgan Stanley reportedly entering the Bitcoin ETF arena, where platform access decisions can channel demand into a small set of issuers.
Why the latest ETF buying matters for Bitcoin now
CoinCentral’s report said the buying arrived as bitcoin traded at a six-week high, but the firmer takeaway from the April 10 flow data is that institutional demand stayed positive across more than one issuer.
Because the same session’s fund-by-fund table showed both large-fund and smaller-fund inflows, ETF flow data remains one of the clearer demand gauges in the market, much like traders watch supply-side alerts such as US Government Transfers 2.4 BTC to Coinbase: Why the Move Matters or fast-moving social headlines like Binance Pre-IPO Market Entry Reported on Telegram for signs that positioning is shifting.
These products still sit on the regulatory base created when the SEC approved the listing and trading of a number of spot bitcoin ETP shares on January 10, 2024, while Chair Gary Gensler said the order should not be read as an endorsement of bitcoin itself.
The April 10 inflow table therefore adds another data-backed sign that institutional buyers are still stepping into Bitcoin through regulated funds rather than backing away from the category.
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.




