đ Bitcoin vs. Gold: $2.7B Inflow Frenzy Narrows the GapâIs This the Flip?
Bitcoin just pulled a heavyweight moveâ$2.7 billion flooded in, putting it toe-to-toe with gold ETPs. The crypto underdog is now sparring with the OG safe-haven asset. Game on.
### The Numbers Donât Lie
That $2.7 billion surge isnât just noiseâitâs a seismic shift. Institutional moneyâs voting with its wallet, and suddenly, goldâs crown looks wobbly. Who needs a vault when youâve got a blockchain?
### The Cynicâs Corner
Wall Streetâs latest love affair with crypto? Probably just hedging against their own incompetence. But hey, at least Bitcoinâs volatility beats watching gold collect dust.
### The Bottom Line
This isnât a flukeâitâs a trend. Bitcoinâs liquidity, portability, and (yes) meme-worthy status are rewriting the rules. Gold bugs, meet your match.
Investors Pour Billions into Bitcoin and Ethereum
In the latest edition of the âDigital Asset Fund Flows Weekly Report,â CoinShares revealed Bitcoin investment products recorded $2.7 billion in inflows last week, which pushed the total assets under management (AuM) to $179.5 billion. Interestingly, this means Bitcoin now represents 54% of the AuM held in gold ETPs for the first time. Short Bitcoin ETPs remained quiet with minor inflows of $0.4 million.
Ethereum extended its streak with a 12th consecutive week of inflows as it amassed $990 million, its fourth-largest on record. In relative terms, Ethereumâs inflows over 12 weeks equate to 19.5% of its AuM, thereby outperforming Bitcoinâs 9.8%. solana followed with a strong $92.6 million in inflows, while Sui attracted $3.5 million.
During the same period, multi-asset investment products saw $1.1 million in new capital, and Cardano pulled in $0.5 million. On the other hand, XRP led outflows with $104 million, while chainlink noted $0.5 million in outflows.
Regional flows showed the United States in a clear lead with $3.7 billion in inflows, while Switzerland and Canada posted $65.8 million and $17.1 million, respectively. Australiaâs inflows stood at $1 million. Germany recorded the weekâs largest outflows with $85.7 million. Sweden and Brazil followed with $15.7 million and $7.5 million in outflows.
These strong inflows into digital assets have coincided with Bitcoinâs breakout.
No Signs of Fatigue?
According to QCP Capital, Bitcoinâs rally above $122,000 shows no signs of slowing. In an update, the firm noted that the market underestimated the strength of this parabolic breakout. A decisive technical MOVE and rising institutional demand are driving the surge.
To top that, the Crypto Fear & Greed Index jumped from 40 to 70 in three weeks. This signals a clear transition from fear to greed among investors. Spot bitcoin ETFs saw over $2 billion in net inflows last week, which is indicative of a growing institutional participation in the rally.
Perpetual funding rates are also nearing 30% as Leveraged long positions build while total open interest has crossed $43 billion, levels last seen in January. Despite the rally, implied volatility has not spiked as it usually does. Front-end implied vols rose but remain below last yearâs average levels. One-month risk reversals are also flat, which points to little demand for immediate upside.
However, September and December risk reversals show strong bids for calls, meaning investors are hedging long-term upside while managing near-term caution. Elevated funding rates also call for careful positioning amid market euphoria. QCP said that it remains structurally bullish on Bitcoin with macro and institutional support. However, it prefers positioning on a pullback rather than chasing the current rally.