The IPO pipeline for big tech companies is heating up.
Companies like Databricks and Klarna are among the most anticipated stock market listings, while companies like OpenAI, Anthropic and SpaceX continue to dominate investor expectations. Market participants expect these mega IPOs to absorb significant liquidity from existing shares, creating a risk-off structure for Bitcoin.
So far, the second quarter has been heavily driven by equities. As shown in the chart below, the S&P500 is up 16% compared to Bitcoin’s rally of 8%. That means almost twice as much capital flows into US stocks as into BTC. This is evidence of a clear investor preference for traditional risk assets over crypto at this stage of the cycle.


In this context, the upcoming IPO wave could further widen this gap.
It is striking that the impact is already visible in the technical structure of Bitcoin. Although BTC still rose about 8% in the second quarter, the May pullback has pulled the price action back towards the $70,000 region, with the market increasingly pricing in the risk of a breakdown below that level.
Meanwhile, the S&P500 is up nearly 5% over the same period, reinforcing the equity-led momentum currently driving the broader risk markets. Against this background, the distribution risk surrounding Bitcoin is growing [BTC] doesn’t really seem like a fluke, but more like a strategic rotation in positioning.
Institutional flows indicate a ‘strategic’ Bitcoin distribution
To separate strategic positioning from a short-term rotation, institutional flows become a key signal.
The logic is simple: during a normal correction, markets usually deleverage, smart money starts piling up, and Bitcoin goes into consolidation before attempting a recovery. But this cycle doesn’t seem to be following that typical format, as distribution risk has risen sharply to record highs this year.
According to SoSoValue, Bitcoin ETFs are seeing notable outflows. More than $2.3 billion has flowed out of BTC ETFs this month alone. That makes May’s ETF performance the weakest since the $3.5 billion outflow in November 2025, which came just after October’s market crash.


At the time, BTC fell more than 30% before finally stabilizing around $65,000.
According to AMBCrypto, this is growing divergence between shares and Bitcoin is becoming increasingly relevant. With investor preference still heavily tilted towards equities, the coming wave of tech IPOs could draw even more capital into equities over crypto.
In that scheme, the decline in institutional Bitcoin exposure doesn’t really seem coincidental. Instead, it looks more like a strategic repositioning, something that makes the risk of another deeper BTC correction much less far-fetched.
Final summary
- Capital rotation into US stocks continues to outpace Bitcoin, with upcoming tech IPOs potentially draining even more liquidity from the crypto markets.
- The growing institutional distribution suggests that BTC’s recent weakness reflects a strategic repositioning rather than a typical short-term correction.
