Key Notes
- It turns out that without BlackRock’s presence in the Bitcoin ETF market, the overall inflows would be negative.
- Bitcoin ETFs have recorded net inflows of $26.9 billion this year, with BlackRock taking the bigger share.
- With BlackRock having no altcoin ETFs, the fate of these offerings is up for speculation.
In this year alone, Bitcoin BTC $114 654 24h volatility: 0.3% Market cap: $2.29 T Vol. 24h: $68.22 B Exchange Traded Funds (ETFs) have recorded net inflows of $26.9 billion, per K33 Research.
Out of this massive flow, top asset management firm BlackRock accounted for a total of $28.1 billion, covering the losses from other issuers, including Grayscale Investments.
This outlook has prompted the question, “What is the fate of altcoin ETFs without BlackRock’s presence?”
BlackRock Bitcoin and Ethereum ETFs Take Front Row
Even though Bitcoin ETFs recorded $26.9 billion in net inflows this year, it is obvious that BlackRock contributed the major percentage of this value.
Precisely, the BlackRock iShares Bitcoin Trust ETF (IBIT) rakes in $28.1 billion in inflows . This shows that without this fund, Bitcoin ETF flows would be negative.
According to K33 Research, Bitcoin ETFs have recorded $26.9 billion in net inflows this year, with BlackRock’s IBIT accounting for $28.1 billion. Excluding BlackRock, Bitcoin ETF flows would be negative. K33 noted that while competitors may gain an edge as BlackRock stays out of… pic.twitter.com/wpaCvqzRSV
— Wu Blockchain (@WuBlockchain) October 28, 2025
The same positive trend was seen around the BlackRock iShares Ethereum Trust ETF (ETHA), as it dominated inflows on several occasions.
Unfortunately, BlackRock has decided to stay out of the current altcoin ETF wave that is now gaining traction.
21Shares, Canary Capital , Fidelity, and many other asset managers have all filed for one or an altcoin ETF with the United States Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) in the last year.
Unlike these firms, BlackRock has not pursued a similar filing. Given the strong performance of the first two crypto ETFs, the upcoming funds may face challenges in achieving the same level of traction.
In other words, their overall inflows could be limited, despite the massive hype trailing their respective listings.
Altcoin ETFs Awaiting SEC Decision
In mid-October, VanEck filed for the Lido Staked Ethereum ETF with the US SEC. Just a week before this filing, it filed a statutory trust registration for the same Ethereum ETF in Delaware.
This fund is designed to track spot Lido Staked ETH (stETH) prices based on MarketVector’s LDO Staked Ethereum Benchmark Rate index.
Back in August, Bitwise Asset Management submitted an S-1 filing to the US SEC to launch a spot Chainlink ETF to track the price of LINK LINK $18.35 24h volatility: 0.2% Market cap: $12.79 B Vol. 24h: $791.24 M .
Details in the filing suggest standard creation and redemption mechanisms, noting that the trust can process both in-kind and cash transactions.
It intends to utilize a “Trust-Directed Trade” system managed by the prime execution agent to achieve this. Interestingly, these altcoin ETFs are waiting for a green light from the SEC.


