Global digital asset funds posted inflows of $1.1 billion last week, the highest figure since January, according to data tracked by crypto asset manager CoinShares.
CoinShares head of research James Butterfill said the recent inflows were primarily driven by softer-than-expected U.S. inflation data and easing geopolitical tensions, both of which helped restore investor risk appetite.
Bitcoin Leads Massive Weekly Capital Inflows
Crypto exchange-traded products (ETPs) recorded $1.1 billion in inflows last week, with Bitcoin leading the surge at $872 million, according to a Monday report from CoinShares.
The rebound represents a strong shift from the previous week, when crypto funds saw $224 million in inflows, with XRP leading allocations while demand for Bitcoin remained uneven.
The latest inflows represent the second-largest weekly gain of 2026 so far, trailing only the $2.17 billion surge recorded in mid-January.
Ethereum exchange-traded products (ETPs), meanwhile, saw a strong sentiment rebound, attracting about $197 million in inflows—marking their first positive week after three straight weeks of withdrawals.
Despite this recovery, Ethereum remains one of the few assets still in net negative territory year-to-date, with $130 million in outflows. In contrast, Bitcoin continues to dominate flows, leading the year with $1.9 billion in inflows and accounting for roughly 83% of the $2.3 billion total crypto ETP inflows so far in 2026.
Bitcoin was trading at $71,060 at press time after rising nearly 4% over the past 24 hours, according to crypto price aggregator CoinGecko. Despite the recent rebound, BTC remains down roughly 43.6% from its all-time peak of $126,080 set on October 6, 2025.
Although Bitcoin ETPs recorded strong inflows, short-Bitcoin products also witnessed notable activity, with $20 million in weekly inflows—their highest since November 2024—according to Butterfill.
Elsewhere, XRP ETPs attracted around $19 million in inflows, while Solana registered minor redemptions of approximately $2.5 million.
US Investors Lead Demand
Regionally, the United States continued to dominate inflows, accounting for the overwhelming majority of activity. U.S.-based funds pulled in around $1.065 billion—roughly 95% of the weekly total— per data from CoinShares.
Elsewhere, Germany added $34.6 million in inflows, while Canada and Switzerland recorded more modest gains of $7.8 million and $6.9 million, respectively.







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