Explore detailed information about each ETF fund, including their holdings, performance and historical data.
| Ticker | Fund | Issuer | Total AUM | Flow · 24h |
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The crypto ETF funds directory lists every U.S. spot crypto ETF we track — across Bitcoin, Ethereum, Solana, XRP and Hyperliquid — with each issuer's assets under management and latest daily net flow.
Each row is a single spot crypto ETF: its ticker, issuer, the asset it holds, total assets under management (AUM) and most recent daily net flow. Together they map the competitive landscape of regulated crypto investing — from the largest Bitcoin funds to the newest Hyperliquid products.
Major issuers include BlackRock, Fidelity, Grayscale, Bitwise, 21Shares, VanEck, Invesco, Franklin Templeton and others. Some run funds across several assets, so the directory lets you compare an issuer's footprint and see where new capital is concentrating.
Because flows and AUM update every business day, the directory is a live league table of which funds are winning and losing institutional demand — not a static list.
Search by issuer or ticker, and sort by AUM or 24-hour flow to rank funds. Click any fund to open its detail page with history and holdings.
To see flows aggregated by asset rather than by fund, use the dedicated Bitcoin, Ethereum, Solana, XRP and Hyperliquid ETF flow pages; for an overall sentiment read, see the Crypto ETF Flow Sentiment Index (CEFI).
Assets and flow figures are aggregated from issuer disclosures and public regulatory filings, expressed in U.S. dollars, and refreshed every business day.
The asset manager that creates and runs a spot crypto ETF — for example BlackRock, Fidelity or Grayscale. Each issuer holds the underlying crypto and issues exchange-listed shares against it.
AUM (assets under management) is the total value a fund currently holds. Net flow is how much money entered or left on a given day. AUM also moves with the asset's price; flow isolates investor creations and redemptions.
For Bitcoin, BlackRock (IBIT) and Fidelity (FBTC) are typically the largest by AUM, with Grayscale (GBTC) sizeable but shrinking after its trust conversion. Rankings differ per asset — sort the table by AUM to see the current order.
Every business day, as issuers disclose creations and redemptions. Weekends and U.S. market holidays usually show no new flow.