Digital asset investment products saw $1.06 billion in inflows over the last week, marking three straight weeks of positive flows. Bitcoin attracted the majority of capital, while XRP faced a second week of outflows. Analysts noted the inflows coincided with heightened geopolitical tensions, which reinforced Bitcoin’s perception as a relative safe haven.
Digital asset investment products attracted $1.06 billion in inflows last week, extending their streak to three consecutive weeks of positive flows. The inflows arrived during intense geopolitical tensions, which appear to have strengthened the perception of digital assets, especially Bitcoin, as a relatively safe haven compared with traditional markets.
Roughly three-quarters of last week’s investment activity was captured by Bitcoin, which drew $793 million. Over a three-week period, cumulative allocations have reached $2.2 billion, narrowing the gap with an earlier five-week phase of withdrawals. Ethereum attracted $315 million last week, pushing its year-to-date performance toward a near-neutral level.
Other digital assets also received fresh capital, with Solana adding $9.1 million and Sui attracting $3.1 million. Chainlink and multi-asset investment products drew $2.4 million and $2.5 million, respectively. In contrast, XRP bucked the trend by suffering its second week of outflows totaling $76 million.
The United States dominated regional activity, accounting for 96% of recent digital asset investments. Canada, Switzerland, and Hong Kong also recorded inflows of $19.4 million, $10.4 million, and $23.1 million, respectively. Germany posted a $17.1 million outflow, its first weekly reduction of the year.
Amid escalating tensions, Bitcoin has reclaimed a major resistance level at $71,300. “If prices stabilize above 71,300, the market could enter a new zone of liquidity competition in the short term,” a Bitunix analyst stated. The analyst further explained that with geopolitical uncertainty elevated, the market’s short-term structure is primarily driven by shifts in risk appetite and derivatives liquidity distribution.
