Volume 231: Digital Asset Fund Flows Weekly Report
US$3.4bn inflows last week, the 3rd largest on record as invests seek alternative safe havens
Digital asset investment products saw inflows totalling US$3.4bn last week, the largest inflows since mid-December 2024, the 3rd largest inflows on record.
#BTCRebound Bitcoin investment products were the main beneficiaries, attracting US$3.18bn in inflows last week. Ethereum investment products also saw US$183m inflows last week following an 8-week run of outflows. Interestingly, Solana was the only altcoin to see outflows last week, totalling US$5.7m. Digital asset investment products saw inflows totalling US$3.4bn last week, the largest inflows since mid-December 2024 and the 3rd largest weekly inflows on record. We believe concerns over the tariff impact on corporate earnings and the dramatic weakening of the US dollar are the reasons investors have turned towards digital assets, which are being seen as an emerging safe haven. Regionally, it was US investors adding to positions, with inflows of US$3.3bn, although the positive sentiment was broad globally, most prominent being Germany and Switzerland with inflows of US$51.5m and US$41.4m respectively. Bitcoin investment products were the main beneficiaries, attracting US$3.18bn in inflows last week. Total assets under management (AuM) have now reached US$132bn, a level not seen since late February of this year. Ethereum investment products also saw US$183m inflows last week following an 8-week run of outflows. Interestingly, Solana was the only altcoin to see outflows last week, totalling US$5.7m. Little activity was seen in altcoins with the exception of Sui and XRP, which saw US$20.7m and US$31.6m inflows respectively. Blockchain equities also saw inflows of US$17.4m, notably into bitcoin mining related #AITokensBounce ETFs. #BinanceAlphaAlert #XRPETFs #SaylorBTCPurchase $BTC $XRP $ETH
From the end of January to early April, Bitcoin dropped hard. From a peak of $109,000 to just around $74,000. And altcoins? Absolute bloodbath. Some fell over 90% from their recent highs.
Most people were caught completely off guard. Everyone was riding the “Trump Pump” high, convinced that the so-called pumper-in-chief would drive prices higher.