Bitcoin Soars With $2.67B Fund Influx - Still Chasing ’s Peak Performance

Digital gold proves its mettle as institutional money floods back into crypto's flagship asset.
The King's Comeback
Bitcoin just pulled in a staggering $2.67 billion wave of fresh capital - dominating all other digital assets combined. The massive inflow signals renewed institutional confidence after months of sideways trading and regulatory uncertainty.
Peak Performance Gap
Despite the impressive numbers, Bitcoin's current rally still trails the explosive momentum we witnessed during 2024's market frenzy. The digital asset continues playing catch-up with its own record-breaking past - because in crypto, yesterday's all-time high is just tomorrow's support level.
Wall Street's Selective Memory
Traditional finance veterans keep waiting for the 'mature market' phase while missing every major move. They'll eventually jump in - right after the next 200% run-up, of course.
Altcoin Flows Stay Resilient
Investors poured $2.67 billion into Bitcoin over the past week, which pushed cumulative 2025 inflows to $30.2 billion. Though strong, that figure remains short of 2024’s $41.7 billion benchmark, according to the latest edition of CoinShares’ Digital Asset Fund Flows Weekly Report. Friday’s market sell-off generated record trading volumes of $10.4 billion; however, the actual daily net flow was modest, standing at just $0.39 million.
Meanwhile, ethereum attracted $338 million in inflows last week but faced significant $172 million outflows on Friday, which was the largest among all digital assets. This indicates that investors viewed it as particularly exposed during the correction. Meanwhile, enthusiasm around the upcoming US ETFs for Solana and XRP appears to be waning, as inflows eased to $93.3 million and $61.6 million, respectively.
Investment flows into altcoin-based products were modest but steady. For instance, chainlink pulled in $3.2 million while Sui recorded $2.3 million in inflows. Cardano and Litecoin added smaller amounts, receiving $0.8 million and $0.2 million. Multi-asset products, on the other hand, deviated from the broader positive sentiment, registering significant outflows of more than $35 million for the period.
In regional terms, the United States overwhelmingly dominated inflows, drawing more than $3 billion in fresh investments. Switzerland came next with $132 million, followed by Germany at $53.5 million and Australia at $9.9 million. Canada posted smaller inflows of $3.8 million. Meanwhile, Sweden led outflows with $22 million, while Brazil and Hong Kong reported declines of $10.1 million and $9.3 million each.
Market Still on Shaky Ground
Financial markets were rattled overnight after tensions between the US and China escalated unexpectedly. The sell-off began when President TRUMP accused China of “holding the world captive” through sweeping export restrictions on rare earth elements. Investors quickly fled risk assets, which pushed the Nasdaq down 3.5% and the S&P 500 down 2.7%.
Bitcoin wasn’t spared either, as it briefly collapsed to $102K before recovering to $115K amid a record $19 billion in liquidations. According to QCP Capital, with global liquidity tightening and policy risks soaring, “market positioning remains defensive across risk assets heading into the new week.”