Digital asset funds experienced $454 million in weekly outflows, marking a significant reversal in market sentiment. The recent four-day sell-off that triggered $1.3 billion in consecutive withdrawals has nearly erased the positive momentum from early-year inflows totaling $1.5 billion. The shift stems primarily from weakening expectations around March Fed rate cuts, which has pressured investor confidence in risk assets and prompted portfolio adjustments across major fund managers.
This page may contain third-party content, which is provided for information purposes only (not representations/warranties) and should not be considered as an endorsement of its views by Gate, nor as financial or professional advice. See Disclaimer for details.
4 Likes
Reward
4
4
Repost
Share
Comment
0/400
SchrodingerPrivateKey
· 4h ago
Here we go again, as soon as the Fed news comes out, everything's over.
Is it true that 450 million was withdrawn? Should have run earlier.
Damn, all the gains from the beginning of the year have been wiped out?
No way, who still believes in rate cuts?
Funds are being withdrawn so quickly, is there still hope...
This wave is indeed a bit timid.
View OriginalReply0
StealthMoon
· 4h ago
Another great escape is starting again, any slight movement at the Fed causes everything to collapse.
View OriginalReply0
NonFungibleDegen
· 4h ago
ngl this is just classic market whiplash... we were up 1.5b and now we're down bad lmaoo. fed pivot hopium officially dead ser, paper hands everywhere
Reply0
DefiPlaybook
· 4h ago
According to data, $454M weekly outflows combined with a $1.3B four-day consecutive decline have completely wiped out the $1.5B increase at the beginning of the year, exemplifying a typical risk asset panic mode. It is worth noting that this adjustment is essentially a breakdown of the Fed rate cut expectations—based on on-chain data and fund flows, institutions are indeed engaging in large-scale stop-losses.
Digital asset funds experienced $454 million in weekly outflows, marking a significant reversal in market sentiment. The recent four-day sell-off that triggered $1.3 billion in consecutive withdrawals has nearly erased the positive momentum from early-year inflows totaling $1.5 billion. The shift stems primarily from weakening expectations around March Fed rate cuts, which has pressured investor confidence in risk assets and prompted portfolio adjustments across major fund managers.