Significant capital inflows into crypto investment products, particularly bitcoin and ethereum etps, suggest strong investor demand and confidence. this follows a period of 'extreme fear' and indicates a potential shift towards a more risk-on sentiment, driven by geopolitical factors like ceasefire talks and the perception of contained inflation.
The substantial $1.4 billion in inflows, coupled with the rise in total assets under management and the positive shift in the fear & greed index, strongly suggests a bullish sentiment. bitcoin and ethereum leading these inflows, despite some altcoins experiencing outflows, points to a concentrated but strong bullish trend.
The report focuses on weekly inflows and recent shifts in investor sentiment and market performance. the impact of these flows is likely to be felt in the short to medium term as this renewed investment capital enters the market.
Reason to trust Strict editorial policy that focuses on accuracy, relevance, and impartiality Created by industry experts and meticulously reviewed The highest standards in reporting and publishing How Our News is Made Strict editorial policy that focuses on accuracy, relevance, and impartiality Ad discliamer Morbi pretium leo et nisl aliquam mollis. Quisque arcu lorem, ultricies quis pellentesque nec, ullamcorper eu odio. The Crypto Fear & Greed Index climbed above 29 on Monday for the first time since January 29, pulling out of “extreme fear” and settling into plain “ fear .” It is a small move on a scale, but in crypto markets, it signals a shift in mood that money tends to follow. Related Reading XRP A Strong Buy Before 2027 Despite 27% Drop In 2026: Finance Advisory Firm 17 hours ago Funds Flow Back In Crypto investment products drew $1.4 billion in fresh inflows last week, according to data from CoinShares — the second-largest weekly figure recorded since January. The gain built on the prior week’s $1.1 billion, stretching the inflow run to three straight weeks and $2.7 billion combined. Total assets under management across crypto exchange-traded products rose close to $155 billion, the highest mark since early February. Just weeks earlier, in March, that figure had fallen as low as $128 billion. Source : Alternative.me CoinShares head of research James Butterfill pointed to a recovering appetite for risk, tied largely to ongoing US-Iran ceasefire talks. Bitcoin’s price added to the mood, briefly pushing toward $78,000 on Friday before pulling back. Bitcoin And Ether Lead, Altcoins Get Left Behind Crypto ETP flows segmented by asset (in US$ millions). Source: CoinShares Bitcoin products captured the bulk of the action. Data shows inflows into Bitcoin ETPs reached $1.12 billion for the week, pushing year-to-date totals to $3 billion, with assets under management sitting at $123 billion. US spot Bitcoin ETFs alone accounted for roughly $1 billion of that weekly total. Ether had its strongest week since January, pulling in $328 million. That was enough to flip Ether ETPs into positive territory for the year, with year-to-date inflows now sitting at $197 million. Source: CoinShares Not everything moved in the same direction. XRP products bled $56 million in outflows, the largest among altcoins. Solana recorded smaller but still negative flows of $2.3 million. Short-Bitcoin products took in just $1.4 million, suggesting only a thin slice of investors are still betting against the market. Total crypto market cap at $2.51 trillion on the daily chart: TradingView Inflation Data Gets Brushed Aside Geographically, the US drove most of the action — $1.5 billion in inflows. Germany came in second at $28 million. Switzerland ran the other way, posting $138 million in outflows. Related Reading Strategy Raises $1.76B War Chest As Saylor Signals Bigger Bitcoin Buy 1 day ago March CPI came in at 3.3% year over year, with core inflation at 2.6%. Based on reports from CoinShares, markets largely looked past the headline number, treating core inflation as contained and supply-driven rather than broad-based. Featured image from Meta, chart from TradingView