cryptocurrency market

Investors put $116M into Bitcoin investment products as crypto pumped


  • Digital asset investment products saw inflows of about $117 million last week, the biggest since July 2022.
  • Bitcoin saw almost all of last week’s digital asset investment products inflows, with $116 million of the total.
  • Total assets under management (AUM) rose $28 billion, roughly 43% from inflow lows recorded in November.

Bitcoin saw the most fund inflows this past week, with the benchmark cryptocurrency accounting for nearly all of the weekly inflows.

According to a weekly report digital asset manager CoinShares shared on Monday, crypto asset investment products recorded inflows of $117 million. It was the biggest week for inflows across digital asset investment products since July 2022.

Bitcoin products saw inflows of $116 million

Bitcoin accounted for nearly $116 million of the total digital assets products inflows. And as Bitcoin price rose above $23,000, inflows into Short Bitcoin products represented $4.4 million of weekly totals. 

In other cryptocurrencies, inflows into Ethereum were $2.3 million and $1.1 million for Solana. 

However, multi-asset investment products saw a ninth consecutive week of outflows with $6.4 million. Binance and XRP also saw outflows of around $400,000 and $200,000 respectively.

The spike in inflows pushed total assets under management (AUM) to over $2.8 billion, with the metric up by 43% from its November low. Investment products also saw an improvement in terms of weekly volumes.

Per the CoinShares report, $1.3 billion was traded, up 17% compared to the year-to-date average. The volume was also higher compared to the average of 11% for the broader crypto market.

Readers Also Like:  Ethereum ETF Race Gets Hotter As SEC Receives 11 Filings In One Week

In terms of various regions, Germany saw about 40% of the inflows for approximately $46 million, while Canada, the United States and Switzerland saw the next three largest inflow batches with $30 million, $26 million and $23 million respectively.



READ SOURCE

This website uses cookies. By continuing to use this site, you accept our use of cookies.