Crypto fund inflows reached $1.4 billion last week, marking the second-strongest weekly surge since January. The inflows came as Bitcoin approached $78,000 on April 20, 2026, signaling renewed institutional demand.
According to CoinShares, total assets under management climbed to $154.8 billion during the period. The surge reflects improving market sentiment and growing exposure to regulated crypto investment products.
Investors’ crypto ETP inflows over the past four weeks totaled $2.7 billion. Improved investor sentiment was driven by a stronger macro-outlook and rising Bitcoin price.
Last week, Bitcoin accounted for $1.12 billion of the total inflows of $1.4 billion in crypto funds. This is an important indicator because Bitcoin has been the most popular type of fund year-to-date as well. Investors put a combined $3 billion into Bitcoin-based products so far this year.
Investors also invested a large portion of their inflows into U.S.-based spot Bitcoin ETFs. These ETFs received almost $1 billion of the $1.4 billion in total inflows.
Increased investments into regulated cryptocurrency products, including Bitcoin ETFs, indicate increasing institutional interest in these products.

At a price of approximately $75,200, according to TradingView data, Bitcoin continues to be close to its recent highs near $78,000. According to CoinShares research director James Butterfill, the increased demand for cryptocurrencies was driven primarily by improving investor sentiment.
He attributed much of the improvement in investor sentiment to improved macroeconomic conditions, specifically the U.S.-Iran ceasefire talks.
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According to the CoinShares data, last week was the best week for ether-based products since January, when they experienced net inflows of $328 million. Year-to-date, Ether-based products have seen net inflows of $197 million.
However, other altcoin-based products were less successful than Ether-based products. XRP had the greatest negative inflow last week, with $56 million leaving investment products. This reflects a broader shift in institutional capital flows toward regulated crypto investment products.
Solana had minor outflows of $2.3 million. Short-Bitcoin products received $1.4 million in inflows as hedge buyers seemed limited.
Following peaks in April and May 2023, Binance mid-sized Bitcoin inflows returned to the 3,000 to 4,000 BTC range last week, which is significantly lower than peak levels seen earlier this year. According to CryptoQuant analyst Amr Taha, a few coins are being transferred from retail accounts to exchanges.
Typically, lower inflows suggest decreasing immediate selling pressure among mid-sized traders. Retail inflows are similarly weak, suggesting little evidence of widespread panic selling from retailers.
Lower mid-sized inflows, along with low retail inflows, support the idea of a more stable supply, provided that demand does not collapse.

Global inflows were dominated by institutions in the United States, with $1.5 billion entering U.S.-based crypto funds last week. Germany was the distant runner-up with $28 million entering German crypto funds.
Meanwhile, Switzerland saw the largest outflows of crypto funds with $138 million departing Swiss-based funds. Differences in regional sentiment demonstrate that institutional exposure to crypto varies greatly by region.

Consumer Prices rose 3.3% annually in March, as reported by the Bureau of Labor Statistics. Core inflation, excluding food and energy costs, held steady at 2.6%, indicating relative containment in price pressures.
This allowed markets to absorb inflation news without impacting risk appetite. This supportive environment enabled continued crypto ETP inflows among institutional products.
The Crypto Fear & Greed Index improved from extreme fear back up to fear and moved above 29 for the first time since late January.
Rising crypto fund inflows and falling exchange deposits signal stronger demand with reduced near-term selling pressure.
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