The data revealed that inflows totaled $882 million globally last week, bringing year-to-date figures to $6.7 billion—just shy of the previous peak of $7.3 billion recorded in early February 2025.
This surpasses the previous high of $61.6 billion from earlier this year, reinforcing the role of institutional vehicles in driving Bitcoin demand.
In contrast, Ethereum’s performance was relatively subdued despite recent price appreciation. ETH products recorded only $1.5 million in inflows for the week, a marginal figure compared to Bitcoin.
Meanwhile, alternative layer-1 protocol Sui saw an influx of $11.7 million, pushing its year-to-date total to $84 million, eclipsing Solana’s $76 million. Notably, Solana saw $3.4 million in outflows over the same period, suggesting a rotation of capital into newer blockchain networks.
Regionally, the United States led all markets with $840 million in inflows, followed by Germany with $44.5 million and Australia with $10.2 million. Canada and Hong Kong, by contrast, posted modest outflows of $8 million and $4.3 million, respectively.
The geographical divergence may reflect varying levels of investor sentiment, regulatory clarity, and institutional product availability across jurisdictions.
This view is being reinforced by developments like state-level legislation in the US acknowledging Bitcoin as a reserve asset and the broader uptick in fiat liquidity.
Featured image created with DALL-E, Chart from TradingView