Bitcoin fell below $77,000 as U.S. spot Bitcoin ETFs snapped a nine-day inflow streak, recording net outflows of $263.2 million and sending a risk-off signal across the crypto market.
Bitcoin breaks below $77,000 and triggers market attention
On April 28, 2026, Bitcoin dropped to $76,377.5, falling roughly 0.5% during the session after briefly touching a weekly high of $79,486. The decline through the $77,000 round number, a level traders had been watching as short-term support, drew immediate attention.
The break below $77,000 matters because round-number levels often concentrate stop-loss orders and liquidation triggers. When price slices through, the resulting cascade of forced selling can accelerate the move, which is exactly what traders saw during the late-April session.
As of May 18, 2026, Bitcoin was still hovering near that same threshold, trading at $77,052 with a 24-hour decline of 1.3%. The Fear & Greed Index sat at 28, firmly in “Fear” territory, suggesting sentiment has not recovered.
ETF outflows and macro caution drove the pullback
The clearest catalyst was the sharp reversal in U.S. spot Bitcoin ETF flows. On April 27, 2026, the funds posted combined net outflows of $263.2 million, ending what had been a nine-day streak of inflows. Fidelity’s FBTC led the exodus at -$150.4 million, followed by Grayscale’s GBTC at -$46.6 million and ARK’s ARKB at -$43.3 million.
The ETF reversal did not happen in isolation. The pullback coincided with broader macro caution ahead of the Federal Reserve’s April 29 decision, rising oil prices, and Middle East geopolitical tension. That combination appears to have pushed institutional allocators toward risk reduction across multiple asset classes, not just crypto.
The weakness was not limited to Bitcoin. Reports from the same session noted that Ethereum and XRP also fell back amid what FXStreet described as “deteriorating sentiment.” This pattern of correlated declines, similar to what was seen during recent heavy ETF outflow episodes, reinforces the view that macro forces rather than a crypto-specific event drove the selling.
Key support and resistance levels to watch next
With Bitcoin lingering near $77,000 weeks after the initial breakdown, the level has shifted from support to a contested zone. A sustained move back above $79,500, the weekly high from late April, would be the first signal that buyers are regaining control.
On the downside, traders are watching the $75,000 area as the next meaningful support. A break below that level could accelerate selling, particularly if ETF outflows resume at the scale seen on April 27. Bitcoin dominance remains elevated at 58.3%, which suggests that capital leaving BTC is largely exiting crypto altogether rather than rotating into altcoins, a dynamic also visible in lagging altcoin price action.
Regulatory developments could also shift the picture. The Digital Asset Market Clarity Act advancing through the Senate Banking Committee may provide a longer-term tailwind for institutional confidence, but near-term price action remains tethered to ETF flows and Federal Reserve signals. With the Fear & Greed Index deep in fear territory, volatility around the $77,000 level is likely to persist.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial or investment advice. Cryptocurrency and digital asset markets carry significant risk. Always do your own research before making decisions.






