xiand.ai
Apr 15, 2026 · Updated 02:02 AM UTC
Crypto

Digital asset investment products see $1.1 billion weekly inflow

Crypto investment products recorded their strongest weekly inflows since January following a boost in global risk appetite.

Ryan Torres

2 min read

Digital asset investment products see $1.1 billion weekly inflow
Significant weekly inflow in digital asset investment products

Digital asset investment products recorded $1.1 billion in inflows last week, marking the strongest weekly total since January. The surge followed a period of improved risk appetite, supported by softer US Consumer Price Index (CPI) data and easing geopolitical tensions.

The United States dominated the capital movement, accounting for $1.06 billion of the weekly total. This represents approximately 95% of all global inflows. Germany contributed $34.6 million, while Canada and Switzerland added $7.8 million and $6.9 million, respectively.

Asset performance and market trends

Bitcoin led the surge with $871 million in inflows, pushing year-to-date totals to just under $2 billion. At the same time, short Bitcoin investment products attracted $20.2 million. This represents the largest weekly total for these bearish products since late 2023, suggesting that some investors are still positioning for downside or utilizing these instruments as a hedge.

Ethereum posted a significant rebound with $196.5 million in inflows. Despite this weekly gain, CoinShares reported that Ethereum remains one of the few major digital assets still in a net outflow position on a year-to-date basis.

Other assets showed divergent trends. XRP attracted $19.3 million in new capital, while Solana recorded a minor outflow of $2.5 million.

Market-wide trading volumes rose 13% week-over-week to $21 billion. However, this figure remains below the year-to-date average of $31 billion. This gap indicates that capital inflows are currently expanding at a faster rate than broader market activity.

Total assets under management for these investment products have recovered to levels not seen since early February.

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