The $2 trillion private credit market faced $15.6 billion in redemption requests in the second quarter, a record that dwarfs the $8.9 billion in Bitcoin ETF outflows over the same period and signals a broad risk-off shift across institutional portfolios.
Bitcoin fell 11.7% in June, its fourth straight monthly loss, as investors pulled $8.9 billion from spot Bitcoin ETFs, according to data from CoinShares and the World Gold Council. The outflows accompanied BTC's slide to a 21-month low near $58,000 in late June, with year-to-date net outflows deepening to $2.8 billion. Over roughly the same window, redemption requests in the $2 trillion private credit market surged to $15.6 billion in the second quarter, a record for the asset class, according to data from the Alternative Investment Management Association.
"The simultaneous stress in both markets suggests a liquidity-driven repricing, not a crypto-specific event," James Butterfill, head of research at CoinShares, said. "When institutional investors need to raise cash, they sell what they can, not what they want to. Bitcoin ETFs are liquid; private credit funds are not. The redemption queue tells you where the real pressure is building."
The Bitcoin ETF outflows represent roughly 8 percent of assets under management for the products, mirroring the intensity of drawdowns seen during cycle lows in 2018, Butterfill said. Daily net outflows peaked at $733 million during the latest streak, a threshold surpassed only a handful of times last year. On a proportional basis, the private credit redemption wave is more severe: the $15.6 billion in Q2 requests represents roughly 0.8 percent of the $2 trillion market, but fund managers face a structural mismatch between quarterly redemption gates and the illiquid loans they hold.
The Liquidity Chain
The divergence in how these two markets process stress matters for Bitcoin's near-term outlook. Private credit funds typically impose quarterly redemption gates and can suspend withdrawals entirely, as several did during the 2023 regional banking crisis. When those gates open and requests exceed available liquidity, fund managers sell liquid assets — including exchange-traded products — to meet redemptions. Bitcoin ETFs, which trade intraday on public exchanges, are among the first assets to be sold in such scenarios.
Bitcoin changed hands around $62,000 as of 14:00 UTC on July 9, up 4 percent over the past week but still 51 percent below the all-time high of $126,173 reached in October 2025, according to CoinGecko. The Crypto Fear and Greed Index remains in Extreme Fear territory near 15, and the 50-day moving average has crossed below the 200-day, a death-cross pattern that has historically preceded extended consolidation.
What Comes Next
The private credit redemption data introduces a risk that the broader crypto market has not fully priced. If Q3 redemption requests remain elevated, fund managers may need to reduce ETF positions further, adding sell pressure to an already fragile market. The Federal Reserve's hawkish stance under Chair Kevin Warsh, combined with elevated inflation from US-Iran tensions, has raised the opportunity cost of holding non-yielding assets including Bitcoin.
On the positive side, Asia-based Bitcoin ETF flows remain a counterweight. The region added $12 billion in the first half of 2026, its strongest first half on record, led by Chinese and Indian funds. India bucked the global trend in June, drawing inflows as local investors treated the price dip as an entry point. But the $2.3 billion June outflow from Asia — the region's worst month ever — suggests the selling is broadening.
Bitcoin's next major support sits at $58,000, the June low, with resistance at $70,000, the level that held through most of February before breaking lower. A break below $58,000 could trigger forced selling from short-term holders who accumulated near $83,800, the average cost basis for current ETF buyers, according to Glassnode.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.