Friday morning brought fresh pain to the crypto ETF world. A handful of Bitcoin-linked funds dropped to new 52-week lows as Bitcoin (BTC) continued its accelerating breakdown through key support levels. It's the kind of sell-off that leaves even the most aggressive income strategies looking pretty vulnerable.
The ProShares Bitcoin Strategy ETF (BITO), one of the most liquid futures-based Bitcoin funds out there, led the carnage. The fund dropped 4.2% on Friday and now sits 54% below its 52-week high at $12.96. When Bitcoin breaks support, futures-tracking funds have nowhere to hide—their NAV just follows the underlying asset straight down.
But the real bloodbath hit the options-income products. These funds are designed to extract yield from volatility, which sounds great until the sell-off moves faster than your income cushion can absorb. The Neos Bitcoin High Income ETF (BTCI) fell 4% Friday morning and is now down 37% from its high. The YieldMax Bitcoin Option Income Strategy ETF (YBIT) dropped 3.5% and sits a staggering 58% below its peak. Turns out selling covered calls doesn't help much when the floor falls out.
What's driving this? Bitcoin decisively broke below all major bull-market support levels—a technical shift that analysts say moved the market from routine pullback territory into something deeper. Because these ETFs track Bitcoin through futures, covered-call overlays, or income strategies, they all fell in lockstep as Bitcoin lost key trendlines on both daily and weekly charts.
Covered-Call Strategies Crack Under Pressure
The covered-call ETFs didn't fare much better. Roundhill's Bitcoin Covered Call ETF (YBTC) and its Ethereum (ETH) counterpart Roundhill Ether Covered Call Strategy ETF (YETH) both slid to new lows. These funds face a double whammy: falling token prices and declining realized volatility. When spot markets break key trendlines, the core stabilizer for these strategies disappears, leaving them fully exposed to the underlying crypto slump.
Right now, the entire Bitcoin-linked ETF complex is pricing in the possibility of a deeper corrective phase. The real tell will come from inflow and outflow data—still pending—which will show whether institutional investors are buying the dip or stepping back to watch from the sidelines.
Is This a Bottom? Traders Are Split
Amid the wreckage, some analysts think Bitcoin might be nearing a local exhaustion point. The token is down roughly $40,000 from its highs but has bounced about 30% from this week's intraday lows. That's a meaningful recovery, though hardly conclusive.
Crypto trader Pentoshi, who avoided calling dips throughout this correction, now says Bitcoin is "within a few percent" of a potential bottom. He's highlighting the $83,000-$85,000 range as a high-probability reaction zone. But he's also warning against emotional buying, pointing out that even ultra-bull Michael Saylor is up less than 10% over five years—a sobering reminder of how brutal this cycle has been.
On-chain data adds some texture to the picture. According to Santiment, whale activity surged during the decline, with over 102,900 large transactions this week alone. Some analysts interpret this as a shift from distribution to early accumulation. But traders like Altcoin Sherpa aren't convinced the worst is over—they caution that short-term players might need to withstand another 10%-15% drop if current patterns continue.
The Long View: Eyes on 2026
Zooming out, Cardano's Charles Hoskinson says the current slump fits into the historical post-halving digestion phase. He expects the next two quarters to "clear remaining downside" before Bitcoin eventually climbs toward $250,000 by late 2026, supported by stronger institutional participation from firms like BlackRock and Goldman Sachs.
For now, though, ETF investors are bracing for more volatility. The question isn't whether there's more pain ahead—it's whether the $75,000-$80,000 zone becomes a durable floor or just another stop on Bitcoin's reset journey. Either way, it's clear that the easy money phase is over.