Ethereum extended its streak of inflows to seven consecutive weeks, accumulating $3.7 billion during this period, with $1 billion recorded last week alone.
This highlights improving investor sentiment toward the worlds second-largest cryptocurrency.
According to the latest edition of CoinShares Digital Asset Fund Flows Weekly Report, overall, digital asset investment products saw $3.2 billion in inflows last week. This was the 10th consecutive week of positive momentum, bringing total inflows this year to a whopping $44.5 billion over four times higher than any previous year.
ETPs have seen weekly trading volumes averaging $21 billion, making up 30% of Bitcoin trading on trusted exchanges. Bitcoins daily trading volume across all investment types on trusted exchanges averaged $8.3 billion this year, twice that of the FTSE 100.
Interestingly, Bitcoin investment products contributed $2 billion to the weekly inflows, reaching $11.5 billion since the US election. Amidst recent price surges, short Bitcoin products gained $14.6 million, although assets under management (AuM) for this category remain modest at $130 million.
After Ethereum, XRP was the biggest winner among the altcoins, seeing inflows of $145 million as hopes rose for a US-listed ETF. Another factor that could have catalyzed this trend was the imminent debut of Ripples newly NYDFS-approved stablecoin RLUSD.
Next up was Litecoin, with $2.2 million in inflows over the past week, followed by Cardano with $1.9 million and Solana with $1.7 million. Additionally, Binance and Chainlink attracted $0.7 million in inflows each. On the other hand, multi-asset products faced yet another setback, with $31 million in outflows during the same period.
Meanwhile, there was a positive trend across regions, with inflows recorded in all areas. The US topped the list with $3.14 billion in inflows. Next up were Switzerland with $35.6 million and Germany with $32.9 million over the past week. Brazil also saw strong inflows of $24.7 million, with Hong Kong, Canada, and Australia adding $9.7 million, $4.9 million, and $3.8 million, respectively. In contrast, Sweden faced outflows of $19 million.