According to the latest market data, the flow of funds into spot ETFs has always been an important factor influencing BTC prices. Last year, the net capital inflow reached a scale of 34 billion USD. This momentum has not completely stopped this year; although the growth rate has slowed to 22 billion USD, the overall trend shows that continuous institutional buying has become a fundamental support for Bitcoin's price.



Interestingly, the growth rate of capital flow last year temporarily surpassed that of the previous year, indicating that market enthusiasm continues to heat up. The current sideways consolidation is merely a cyclical adjustment in the market, a phenomenon that has repeatedly occurred in history.

Looking ahead to next year, with increased participation from more traditional financial institutions, capital inflows may usher in a new round of acceleration. This structural capital support keeps BTC's long-term fundamentals resilient. Regardless of short-term fluctuations, ongoing institutional-level allocations are reshaping the market's support structure.
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LightningWalletvip
· 01-08 08:09
Institutional accumulation really can't stop, $34 billion coming in is just the beginning Sideways movement? Just accumulation, history always repeats itself Wait for this wave next year, traditional financial institutions will push prices up immediately To be honest, in the long run, BTC is stable, and short-term fluctuations are just noise Once the pace of institutional allocation starts, it's hard to stop, and that's where the confidence comes from
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MevTearsvip
· 01-08 07:03
Institutional bottom-fishing or retail investors getting left behind, you'll see once you look. --- 340 billion → 220 billion, this growth slowdown is a bit outrageous... --- Is sideways movement just a cycle adjustment? I've heard that too many times, get ready to be proven wrong. --- Can traditional finance entering the market stabilize it? I doubt it; risk is still risk. --- When institutional buying pressure can't hold up, it can also disappear quickly. Don't be too optimistic. --- The long-term fundamentals remain solid, this argument is the same every time, but in the short term, it can still crash. --- Can the hype of 340 billion really last until next year? That's a bit far-fetched. --- Looks good, but I think this data might have been optimized. --- It sounds nice, but it's basically just waiting for the next wave to cut the leeks.
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MoonMathMagicvip
· 01-08 07:02
Institutions are so aggressively accumulating, retail investors need to keep up with the pace. --- 220 billion is still called a slowdown? I think it's just building up a spring. --- Starting to talk about cyclical adjustments again, same old rhetoric every time. --- The key question is whether traditional finance will really enter the market in a big way. I remain skeptical. --- From 340 to 220, the growth rate is indeed slowing down. Why are they still so optimistic? --- Just sideways trading, don’t tell me about fundamentals. Price speaks for itself. --- Institutional reallocation? It feels more like they are gradually accumulating. --- Accelerating next year? Let’s see if it can break new highs this year first. --- The capital flow looks good, but BTC is still just stepping here. Strange, isn’t it? --- They are hinting that it’s time for us to get in. Old tricks again.
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WagmiOrRektvip
· 01-08 06:53
$34 billion in the market, this is true institutional recognition. Stop obsessing over the K-line all day long. It's just consolidation; history always repeats itself. Let's wait and see the acceleration next year. ETF funds continue to flow in, and Bitcoin's floor is getting stronger... this time is different. Institutions are allocating so aggressively, retail investors are still debating the rise and fall, uh... the gap in the pattern is quite large. $22 billion is still flowing in? The amount of funds says everything. Long-term bears, wake up. Traditional financial institutions are entering, and BTC has already won half the battle.
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unrekt.ethvip
· 01-08 06:51
Institutional buying is really stable. 34 billion flows in and can still continue, this is the way long-term winners play. Although the growth rate has slowed but hasn't stopped, sideways trading is better than a crash. Traditional finance is just beginning to enter the market, there are still opportunities ahead. Those who can buy the dip are quietly accumulating, don't be scared by short-term fluctuations. Wait, 22 billion is considered a slowdown? I think it's still accelerating, just weaker compared to last year's momentum. Institutional allocation is the real support; retail trading volume can't do much. Looking at the data, it seems like it will rise again next year, but the question is whether it can hold until then.
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