CoinShares regularly publishes reports tracking weekly fund flows into crypto asset investment products. According to the company's latest data, the market recorded its strongest weekly performance since January. Following a third consecutive positive week, the question of whether this is a trend or a temporary recovery is increasingly being discussed.
$1.4 billion inflow
Crypto asset funds saw $1.4 billion in inflows last week. This marks the third consecutive positive week and the strongest performance since January. According to the report, two things triggered this: US-Iran ceasefire negotiations and Bitcoin surpassing $76,000. BTC had been stuck at horizontal levels for two months after the February drop; breaking these levels attracted position taking. Total assets under management rose to $155 billion, with the weekly inflow/AuM (total assets under management) ratio at its highest level of the year at 0.91 percent.
In terms of regional distribution, the US alone drove almost all of the inflow with $1.49 billion. Germany was up $28 million. Switzerland stands apart with a $137.8 million outflow. Europe isn't the only block.
Bitcoin funds have withdrawn $1.115 billion, bringing the total to $3.07 billion since the beginning of the year. There's only a $1.4 million inflow on the short-Bitcoin side; very few want to bet down.
The picture is more interesting for Ethereum. The weekly inflow of $328 million is the highest since January, and I don't think that's a coincidence. ETH has been in Bitcoin's shadow throughout the year, with investors largely ignoring it for a long time. This week's inflow shows that at least some money is starting to look at Ethereum again. The total figure reaching $197 million year-to-date also supports this turnaround; the starting point was low, but the direction seems to have changed. The altcoin side is more mixed, each asset has a different story. XRP experienced a weekly outflow of $56.2 million, and a negative monthly outlook.
Despite this, it remains up $122 million year-to-date; meaning the long-term conservative group is still there, while short-term money is fleeing. Solana is showing a similar divergence: despite a small weekly outflow of $2.3 million, the year-to-date total is up $216 million. Chainlink saw inflows of $5.3 million, Sui $2.2 million, and the "other" category $4.8 million; small numbers but the direction is positive. Among providers, iShares led by a wide margin with $1.04 billion. Bitwise added $122 million, and ARK 21Shares added $106 million. CoinShares saw outflows of $113 million. On the macro front, March CPI came in at 3.3%, and core at 2.6%. The market did not interpret this as a problem, which opened up room for upward movement.



