đ Bitcoin Funds Soak Up $3.7B as BTC Shatters RecordsâWall Street Chases the Pump
FOMO hits institutional players as crypto's dirty little secret becomes mainstream: everyone wants a slice of the volatility pie.
The floodgates open
With Bitcoin kissing new all-time highs daily, traditional finance is scrambling to onboardâproving even suits can't resist a good moon mission.
Follow the money (literally)
That $3.7B inflow? Just hedge funds front-running retail before the inevitable 'correction' they'll blame on meme traders.
Welcome to digital goldâwhere the rules are made up and the fundamentals don't matter. Until the SEC starts caring again tomorrow.
Key Takeaways
- Global bitcoin investment products saw 13 consecutive weeks of inflows, totaling $21.8 billion.
- Last week's $3.7 billion inflow marked the second-largest weekly inflow on record, driving AUM to a new $211 billion high.
- U.S. spot Bitcoin ETFs led with $2.72 billion in inflows, while regional flows were mixed with Europe seeing some outflows.
Investment products focused on Bitcoin and other digital assets experienced $3.7 billion in global net inflows last week, according to data from CoinShares.
This surge marks the second-largest weekly inflow ever recorded, following a $3.9 billion high in December 2024.
13 weeks
The streak now totals 13 consecutive weeks of net inflows for global digital asset funds, amounting to $21.8 billion.
Year-to-date inflows have reached $22.7 billion. Trading volumes also climbed to $29 billion last week, double the weekly average for 2025.
CoinShares Head of Research James Butterfill commented in a report:
âNotably, July 10 recorded the third-highest daily inflow ever.â
Bitcoin funds dominate inflows
Bitcoin-based funds accounted for 73% of last weekâs net inflows, adding $2.7 billion and boosting their assets under management to $179.5 billion.
This brings bitcoin funds to parity with 54% of the total AUM held in gold ETPs.
The majority of this came from U.S. spot Bitcoin exchange-traded funds, which have seen 13 consecutive trading days of inflows, totaling $2.72 billion.
In contrast, short-bitcoin funds saw minimal activity.
Regionally, the U.S. led inflows with $3.7 billion, while Switzerland and Canada contributed $65.8 million and $17.1 million, respectively. These gains were partially offset by outflows from Germany, Sweden, and Brazil.