Citi lowered its 12-month Bitcoin forecast to $82,000 and Ether to $2,240 as spot ETF outflows and stalled U.S. legislation erode institutional demand.Citi lowered its 12-month Bitcoin forecast to $82,000 and Ether to $2,240 as spot ETF outflows and stalled U.S. legislation erode institutional demand.

Citi Slashes Bitcoin and Ether Price Targets as ETF Flows Turn Negative

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Citi just took a knife to its crypto price forecasts. What was a cautiously bullish view six months ago now looks like a liability. The bank cut its 12-month bitcoin target from $112,000 to $82,000 and slashed ether from $3,175 to $2,240, per the original report. More telling than the numbers themselves is the reasoning: Citi no longer expects any net inflows into U.S. spot crypto ETFs over the next year, down from a prior $10 billion forecast.

The reset speaks to a liquidity story that has soured faster than many on the sell side anticipated. Bitcoin ETFs have bled roughly $3.3 billion in outflows so far this year. The daily tape has turned decidedly negative, and sustained selling has forced institutional desks to reprice the entire catalyst roadmap they had banked on. If the year began with hope that ETF flows would act as a steady bid, that thesis is now in tatters.

Why the bank turned cautious

The downgrade is not merely a reaction to a few weeks of redemptions. Citi is pointing toward structural headwinds. Slow progress on U.S. crypto legislation is a core concern. Markets had positioned for clearer rules around stablecoins and market structure, but gridlock in Washington has left trading firms and asset managers with little regulatory clarity. The major crypto bill that seemed close to a Senate vote is now facing fresh resistance from banking lobbyists, according to recent reports. That kind of eleventh-hour pushback is exactly what makes institutional allocators hesitate.

Layered on top is a less discussed but important variable: potential bitcoin selling by digital asset treasury companies. If firms holding large bitcoin positions on their balance sheets begin reducing exposure, even modestly, it would amplify any capital exodus from ETFs. The bank’s note flagged that risk, and it underscores how a liquidity drain can quickly become a wider unwind when multiple sources of supply hit the market at once.

The ETF flow reversal and what it means

Net-zero inflow expectations change the game. For the better part of 18 months, the bull case rested on the idea that ETFs would unlock a wave of new capital, drawing in registered investment advisors, pension funds, and sovereign wealth. That hasn’t materialized at the pace many predicted. Instead, the investor base remains concentrated among hedge funds and tactical traders who treat the products as short-term vehicles. When momentum stalls, they leave.

This dynamic also disrupts the correlation trade. Bitcoin and ether have recently moved more in lockstep with tech equities, but the outflows suggest that dedicated crypto allocations are not yet sticky. If Citi’s base case is right—zero net new money for a full year—then price discovery will rely heavily on spot markets and on-chain activity rather than the ETF wrapper.

Some activity is still grinding forward. Developer engagement on major networks remains robust, with chains like Ethereum, BNB Chain, and Polygon topping recent developer activity rankings. That kind of quiet building rarely makes headlines, but it’s a reminder that the infrastructure layer hasn’t frozen just because flows have.

Not all institutional capital is retreating

The ETF story obscures a different pattern: institutional engagement is migrating rather than disappearing. While basket-style products suffer, targeted bets on layer-1s are still showing life. Sui’s price surged earlier this month as a Nasdaq-listed firm moved into institutional staking and a major fintech partnership brought new demand. That kind of direct token exposure, bypassing ETFs entirely, may become more common if the fund-wrapper thesis continues to weaken.

But selective demand isn’t broad demand. Citi’s note pulls focus back to the uncomfortable fact that the two largest crypto assets now lack the momentum tailwind that ETF inflows were supposed to provide. Without it, $82,000 bitcoin and $2,240 ether may end up looking generous rather than pessimistic.

What remains unsettled

The swift downgrade raises a question few want to entertain: what if the ETF catalyst was front-run and the remaining demand is far smaller than originally estimated? A bank cutting its inflow forecast to zero after billions in outflows isn’t just a model tweak—it’s a message that the assumptions anchoring institutional desks are breaking. The market now faces a summer where the legislative calendar is thin, ETF flows are negative, and the risk of concentrated treasury-company selling hangs overhead.

Citi’s new targets may not be the final word. But they mark a psychological shift. The era of expecting ETF liquidity to solve everything is over. Whatever bid comes next will have to be earned on fundamentals, not on the promise of a product that Wall Street is still struggling to fill.

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