
The Canary HBAR ETF, trading on Nasdaq under the ticker HBR, pulled in $989,000 in net inflows on July 2. The figure marked its largest single-day inflow since May 15, according to market posts tracking spot crypto ETF flow data.
The amount remains small compared with spot Bitcoin ETF and spot Ethereum ETF flows. Still, the move showed that Hedera continues to appear in institutional product data even during a quiet period for HBAR price action.
One market post said the fund’s consistency matters more than “any one-day figure.” That view reflects the current debate around HBR. The fund has not produced large daily flows in recent weeks, but it continues to provide regulated exposure to HBAR.
The ETF gives investors access to Hedera without holding tokens directly.Canary’s fund page says HBR holds HBAR and offers simplified exposure through brokerage and retirement accounts.
HBAR traded at $0.075212 on July 5, based on crypto market data. The token was up 0.75% over 24 hours and 5.67% over seven days.
The token’s market cap stood at about $3.29 billion, while 24-hour trading volume was near $68.95 million. HBAR traded between $0.07433 and $0.077207 during the latest 24-hour period.
The price remains far below Hedera’s all-time high of $0.569229, reached on Sept. 15, 2021. It also remains under the $0.10 area that has capped several recovery attempts in 2026.
That gap shows the difference between institutional product access and token price strength. HBR may improve access for regulated investors, but HBAR still needs broader demand to build a stronger market structure.
Earlier Hedera price coverage showed that the HBR ETF had accumulated $93.21 million in cumulative inflows by early 2026. The same report said HBAR became one of the few cryptocurrencies to secure U.S. spot ETF access.
Canary’s HBR fund page lists the ETF’s net assets at about $49.14 million as of July 2. It also shows a market price of $9.92 and net asset value of $9.89 on the same date.
The fund charges a 0.95% sponsor fee. Its listed custodians include BitGo Trust Company and Coinbase Custody Trust Company, according to Canary’s published fund details.
These details matter for institutional users because custody, pricing and access remain key parts of crypto ETF demand. HBR gives Hedera a channel into traditional brokerage accounts, even if current flows remain modest.
Hedera remains focused on enterprise use cases, payments, tokenization and decentralized applications. The project’s governing council includes several major companies, while HBAR powers fees and network activity.
Past coverage noted that Hedera has processed real-world asset activity and has drawn attention from firms looking at enterprise blockchain use. Even so, token price action has stayed weak for much of 2026.
This creates a split market picture. On one side, HBR’s inflow shows that some regulated investor demand still exists. On the other side, HBAR continues to trade below key resistance levels and remains down sharply from past highs.
At press time, the July 2 inflow gives Hedera a fresh institutional flow signal. It does not confirm a price recovery by itself. Traders will likely watch whether HBR can attract repeat inflows and whether HBAR can reclaim the $0.08 to $0.10 zone.