Fidelity Wise Origin Bitcoin Fund (FBTC) — Bitcoin ETF Flows
Is Money Moving Into FBTC or Out?
Fidelity Wise Origin Bitcoin Fund, run by Fidelity — one of the US funds that holds real Bitcoin for its shareholders.
Nothing new stands out right now — money movement in FBTC is in line with the past few months.
The running total of every dollar invested in FBTC since January 2024 — $10.44 billion in all.
Is money moving into FBTC or out?
Money LeavingMore money is leaving FBTC than coming in.
How much money has moved lately?
−$6MLast trading dayMoney left−$22MPast weekFlat−$614MPast month17 days out · 3 days inMoney leftIs that fast or slow, for this fund?
A middling month for FBTC — about 60% of its history saw less money move.
How big is FBTC next to the other funds?
$10.4BAll-time money inEverything invested in this fund since it started trading.13.0%Share of all money inOf everything that's flowed into the Bitcoin ETFs since 2024.−$5.6BAll funds, past monthMoney leftMoving with the pack — the funds as a group also saw money leave this month.
What does this mean for you?
More money is leaving FBTC than arriving.Over the past month a net $614 million has flowed out of FBTC. It's a lean toward the exit, not a rush.
Money leaving one fund doesn't always mean people are done with Bitcoin — it can simply walk next door to a cheaper or more convenient fund. The all-funds page tells you whether this is one fund losing customers or the whole group selling.
Watch whether it deepens, and whether the other funds are losing money too.
What to watch from here- A net $614 million left FBTC this past month — a lean toward the exit.
- Whether the other funds are losing money too, or just this one.
- Watch whether the move deepens or turns back to buying.
Understanding Fidelity Wise Origin Bitcoin Fund (FBTC)
Fidelity Wise Origin Bitcoin Fund is one of the US Bitcoin ETFs — stock-market funds that hold real Bitcoin on behalf of their shareholders. It's run by Fidelity. When money comes into the fund, it buys Bitcoin; when money leaves, it sells. You buy and sell its shares through a normal brokerage account, like any stock.
This page tracks the money flowing in and out of this one fund, and the big chart shows the running total of everything invested in it since January 2024. The percentages and “faster than usual” readings compare the fund against its own history, not against the other funds.
A single fund's numbers mix two things: how people feel about Bitcoin, and how this fund competes with the other twelve — fees, brand, and where it's easiest to buy. Money can leave one fund and walk straight into a cheaper one next door without anyone actually selling Bitcoin. For the market-wide read, start from the main Bitcoin ETF page.
These funds trade on the stock market, so they're closed on weekends and holidays — flat stretches on the chart are days the market wasn't open, not days nothing happened to Bitcoin.