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Institutional investors show strong conviction in Bitcoin despite deep market correction
While the crypto market experienced a sharp correction of about 50 percent between October 2025 and now, institutional investors do not appear to have pulled back en masse. This picture is based on ETF market data, which reveal much more about the behavior of professional investors than often expected. Bitwise CEO Matt Hougan presents this data as evidence that institutional investors are not only resilient but also fundamentally think differently about Bitcoin than smaller market participants.
ETF Flows as an Indicator of Institutional Capital
The core of Hougan’s analysis lies in the flow data of Bitcoin ETFs. Since the launch of spot Bitcoin exchange-traded funds in January 2024 through October 2025, approximately $60 billion flowed into these products. This amount marks a phase of growing institutional acceptance. However, what follows is the most interesting part of the story.
After October 2025, when Bitcoin prices dropped by 50 percent, institutional investors via ETFs experienced less than $10 billion in outflows. This means that despite dramatic market volatility, about 83 percent of the previously accumulated positions were maintained. For analysts and market observers, this pattern indicates a much higher level of commitment from institutional investors than has historically been typical.
The figures are supported by concrete examples. Bitwise manages nearly $3 billion in assets with its Bitcoin ETF (BITB). Additionally, other providers manage significant amounts: BlackRock’s iShares Bitcoin Trust (IBIT) now exceeds $55 billion.
The Role of Career Risk and Conviction
Hougan’s explanation for this behavior goes deeper than superficial determination. He points to an important fact: Bitcoin remains a non-consensus asset for many professional decision-makers. This means that organizations buying Bitcoin today expose themselves to career risk — their stance diverges from that of colleagues in other institutions, which could potentially lead to critical questions from superiors and risk committees.
This career risk acts as a natural filter. Institutional investors willing to take this risk generally have an exceptionally strong conviction in Bitcoin. According to Hougan, they are not 50 percent convinced that Bitcoin is a good idea; they are closer to 80 to 90 percent convinced. Without that level of certainty, they would not justify the exposure to internal stakeholders.
This dynamic leads to a crucial insight: the capital that institutional investors pour into Bitcoin is “very sticky.” Even when markets become turbulent, this capital tends to stay longer than traditional investor capital because its foundation lies deeper in personal and institutional conviction.
From Volatility to Long-Term Scenarios
Hougan’s long-term perspective leverages this robustness of institutional capital. He continues to support his prediction of $1 million per Bitcoin, an ambitious goal that many commentators initially dismissed. Yet, according to Hougan, it is not far-fetched.
For Bitcoin to reach $1 million, only two things need to be true: first, the global store of value market must continue to grow as it has over the past 20 years, and second, Bitcoin must become a small but substantial part of that market. This is not an unrealistic scenario but a continuation of existing trends.
The behavior of institutional investors during the recent market correction actually supports this view. It shows that the fundamental growth factors that introduced Bitcoin into institutional portfolios are still active. As long as these growth factors persist, the capital of institutional investors in Bitcoin will also increase.
Current Market Dynamics and Outlook
With Bitcoin currently trading above $70,000 after positive signals related to geopolitical tensions, many market technicians are shifting their focus to support levels and resistance points. The range of $74,000 to $76,000 forms a critical zone for the upcoming phase. Below that, this level could act as resistance, while above it, further expansion is likely.
The stabilization of oil prices and shipping traffic through key passages like the Strait of Hormuz remains decisive for broader macro developments. Parallel to this, alternative cryptocurrencies such as Ether, Solana, and Dogecoin show similar momentum patterns with gains around 5 percent, while traditional stock milestones like the S&P 500 and Nasdaq each closed with approximately 1.2 percent gains.
This picture of institutional continuity, supported by concrete ETF data, suggests that the current phase of the crypto market is driven by much deeper fundamentals than just short-term sentiment or speculative money.