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Digital Asset Funds Draw $1.2 Billion as Bitcoin and Ethereum Extend Inflow Streak
Digital asset investment products attracted $1.2 billion in inflows last week, lifting total assets under management to $155 billion.
Bitcoin led with $933 million, while Ethereum brought in $192 million for a third consecutive week of strong demand.
Crypto investment products posted another solid week, extending what is starting to look like a more durable return of institutional appetite.
According to CoinShares, digital asset funds pulled in $1.2 billion last week, marking a fourth straight week of gains. Total assets under management rose to $155 billion, a level that suggests the recent pickup is no longer just a short-lived bounce. Money is coming back into the market, and it is doing so with a fairly clear preference for the largest assets first.
Bitcoin stays in front, but Ethereum keeps building
Bitcoin remained the main destination for new capital, drawing $933 million over the week. That is not especially surprising. When sentiment improves, Bitcoin is usually the first asset large allocators return to because it remains the most liquid, the most familiar and, for many institutions, still the easiest crypto exposure to justify internally.
But Ethereum deserves a closer look here. The asset recorded $192 million in inflows, making it the third consecutive week in which Ethereum products brought in more than $190 million. That is a meaningful run, not just a one-off spike.
It suggests the market is no longer treating Ethereum as a secondary add-on to Bitcoin exposure. At least for now, it is being bought with more consistency than it was earlier in the year.
U.S. demand dominates as blockchain equities also rally
The geographic split also matters. CoinShares said U.S. inflows dominated the weekly picture, reinforcing the idea that American demand continues to shape the broader tone of digital asset fund flows.
There was also notable strength in blockchain equity ETFs, which have seen $617 million in inflows over the past three weeks. That points to a broader appetite not only for tokens themselves, but for listed equity vehicles tied to the same ecosystem.
Taken together, the message is fairly direct. Institutional capital is still concentrating in the most established corners of crypto, but it is broadening just enough to show that this rebound is not entirely one-dimensional.