Market Overview

With U.S. equity markets closed Sunday, spot crypto ETFs recorded no trading activity, capping a week defined by persistent outflows and broad-based price weakness across digital assets. Bitcoin sat at $65,946 heading into the new week, down 7.0% over the past seven days — its steepest weekly decline in recent sessions. Despite the pullback, BTC remains only 1.6% below its 30-day level, suggesting the bulk of the damage was concentrated in the back half of last week.

ETF Flows Recap

No ETF flows were recorded on March 30 due to weekend market closure. The trailing figures, however, tell a more pointed story.

Over the past seven days, spot crypto ETFs posted a cumulative -$236M ↓ in net outflows, reversing a portion of the broader monthly trend that remains positive at $1.18 billion in cumulative 30-day net inflows. The weekly outflow figure points to a shift in fund-level sentiment during the latter half of March, though the still-positive monthly picture suggests the drawdown may represent tactical repositioning rather than a structural unwind of ETF allocations.

No individual fund flow data was available for Sunday's session. Investors heading into Monday will be watching whether the outflow streak extends or whether dip-buying emerges at current price levels.

Asset Price Analysis

Prices were effectively flat on Sunday, with negligible 24-hour moves across the board. The weekly picture, however, was uniformly red:

  • BTC: $65,946 — 24h: 0.0%, 7d: -7.0% ↓, 30d: -1.6% ↓
  • ETH: $1,982.78 — 24h: 0.0%, 7d: -7.9% ↓, 30d: +0.9% ↑
  • SOL: $81.34 — 24h: 0.0%, 7d: -11.1% ↓, 30d: -3.6% ↓
  • XRP: $1.33 — 24h: 0.0%, 7d: -7.4% ↓, 30d: -3.6% ↓

Solana led losses on the week with an 11.1% decline, underperforming both major-cap peers by a wide margin. The severity of SOL's drawdown relative to BTC and ETH could point to a rotation out of higher-beta positions during the risk-off move. Ethereum remains marginally positive on a 30-day basis — a rare bright spot — though the $2,000 psychological level now sits just overhead as potential resistance.

For Bitcoin, the $65,000 round number served as a near-term floor through the weekend. A decisive break below that level on Monday could open a path toward the $62,000–$63,000 zone, which marked consolidation support in prior sessions. On the upside, reclaiming $68,000 would be needed to neutralize the bearish weekly structure.

Stablecoin Flows

USDC supply declined by approximately $150 million over the past 24 hours to $77.5 billion, a notable single-day contraction that may reflect capital exiting crypto-adjacent positions or converting to fiat. USDT supply was essentially unchanged at $184.0 billion, with a marginal $100K addition. The divergence between the two major stablecoins — with USDC shrinking while USDT holds steady — could suggest U.S.-domiciled capital is pulling back more aggressively than offshore participants, though the single-day snapshot warrants caution in drawing broader conclusions.

Outlook

Monday's session will be the first opportunity for ETF investors to react to last week's 7% BTC drawdown. Key items to monitor:

  • ETF flow direction on Monday — Whether the $236 million weekly outflow trend extends or reverses will set the tone for early-week sentiment. A large inflow day would suggest dip-buying conviction; continued redemptions would reinforce the risk-off read.
  • BTC $65,000 support — This round-number level held through the weekend. A Monday break below it on volume could accelerate selling pressure toward $62,000–$63,000.
  • ETH $2,000 resistance — Ethereum's proximity to this psychological barrier makes it a key level. A convincing move above $2,000 would be constructive for ETH-specific flow recovery.
  • USDC supply trend — A second consecutive day of significant USDC contraction would strengthen the case that U.S. capital is de-risking, which could weigh on ETF inflows.
  • End-of-quarter dynamics — March 30 marks the final days of Q1 2026. Portfolio rebalancing and window-dressing activity may influence both ETF flows and spot prices in the sessions immediately ahead.