TokenPost.ai
Ethereum (ETH) led weekly net bridge inflows among major blockchains, posting a $64.73 million net gain, even as Arbitrum recorded the largest net outflow at $105.48 million—signaling a fresh rotation of cross-chain liquidity rather than a one-way risk-on move.
According to data published by crypto analytics platform Artemis on June 24 UTC, bridge flows over the past week showed heavy two-way movement across several ecosystems. In gross inflows, Hyperliquid attracted the most bridged assets at $469.71 million, followed by Arbitrum at $454.92 million and Ethereum at $411.69 million. Polygon PoS brought in $168.73 million and Base added $53.24 million, while smaller but notable inflows were recorded on OP Mainnet ($47.14 million), Solana (SOL) ($19.07 million), Avalanche C-Chain (AVAX) ($15.76 million), BNB Chain ($14.70 million), and Starknet ($13.49 million).
On the outflow side, Arbitrum also saw the largest gross withdrawals at $560.40 million, underscoring its role as a high-velocity hub for bridging activity. Hyperliquid followed with $407.27 million in outflows, while Ethereum saw $346.96 million exit over the same period. Base recorded $132.72 million in outflows and Polygon PoS $127.71 million. Additional outflows were observed from BNB Chain ($27.46 million), OP Mainnet ($24.30 million), Solana ($19.63 million), Starknet ($13.44 million), and edgeX ($6.38 million).
Netting inflows against outflows, Ethereum emerged as the top destination for 'net liquidity inflow' with $64.73 million, edging out Hyperliquid at $62.43 million. Polygon PoS followed with a $41.02 million net inflow, while OP Mainnet added $22.85 million and Avalanche C-Chain gained $12.50 million.
Arbitrum posted the largest 'net liquidity outflow' at $105.48 million, suggesting capital may have been redeployed to other chains or temporarily moved off-bridge into alternative venues. Base recorded a $79.48 million net outflow, while BNB Chain saw $12.76 million. Smaller net outflows were also reported for edgeX ($5.47 million) and Unichain ($2.64 million).
Market observers often treat bridge flows as a proxy for where traders are positioning liquidity for on-chain activity—such as lending, perpetuals trading, or ecosystem-specific incentive programs—though the data can also reflect short-term arbitrage and operational rebalancing by large accounts. The latest figures point to continued fragmentation of on-chain liquidity, with Ethereum maintaining a net advantage as a settlement layer while high-throughput environments like Arbitrum and Base show signs of churn.