Bitcoin ETF Inflows Skyrocket to $2.2B as Geopolitical Tensions Ease Post-Ceasefire
Wall Street's crypto cash cannon fires at full blast—again.
After weeks of geopolitical white-knuckling, Bitcoin ETFs just gulped down $2.2 billion in fresh capital. Turns out nothing makes institutional investors FOMO harder than the sweet sound of ceasefire agreements.
The big guns are loading up
BlackRock and friends are treating BTC like a post-crisis discount bin—never mind that 20% volatility is their version of 'market calm.' Meanwhile, retail traders are still getting rekt trying to time the tops.
Funny how the 'uncorrelated asset' always correlates perfectly with risk-on sentiment. Maybe Satoshi should've coded a 'wealth management' button.

Institutional demand appears to be growing, despite macroeconomic uncertainty. Kronos Research’s Vincent Liu highlighted Bitcoin’s emerging role as a safe-haven asset, citing its scarcity-driven appeal during times of instability.
Still, not all market participants are convinced the rally has legs. Ray Youssef of NoOnes described the bounce as a “relief rally,” driven more by a pause in negative headlines than renewed conviction. With major economic updates—including Fed Chair Jerome Powell’s upcoming testimony and key inflation data—traders remain cautious. For now, bitcoin is hovering around the $100,000–$106,000 range, with key resistance just above and potential downside if support cracks.