Digital Asset Fund Flows Hit $3.7B Last Week, 2nd-Highest on Record: CoinShares
The week's flows are second only to those of the week ending Dec. 6 last year when they surpassed $4 billion

What to know:
- Digital asset funds saw $3.7 billion of inflows last week, the second-largest figure on record, CoinShares said in its weekly roundup.
- The 13th consecutive week of gains by crypto investment products took total asset under management past $200 billion for the first time.
- Bitcoin products accounted for $2.7 billion of the inflows taking the total assets under management to $179.5 billion.
Digital asset funds saw $3.7 billion of inflows last week, the second-largest figure on record, according to data tracked by crypto asset manager CoinShares.
The flows are surpassed only by those in the week ended Dec. 6 last year, when they topped $4 billion, the Jersey-based company said in its weekly roundup on Monday.
The 13th consecutive week of gains by crypto investment products took total asset under management (AUM) past $200 billion for the first time, reaching $211 billion.
U.S.-listed products dominated the inflows with nearly $3.74 billion registered, while products in Germany and Sweden saw outflows of $85.7 million and $15.7 million respectively.
Bitcoin products accounted for $2.7 billion of the inflows taking the total AUM to $179.5 billion, which is equal to 54% of the AUM held in gold exchange-traded products (ETPs), CoinShares said.
The week ended July 11 saw a kickstart to the crypto bull market, with bitcoin gaining nearly 10% to clock an all-time high of around $118,000. This has continued into the current week, with BTC climbing as high as $122,873.45, according to CoinDesk data.
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JPMorgan bullish on crypto for rest of year as institutional flows set to drive recovery

After bitcoin fell below its estimated production cost, the bank said stronger fundamentals and rising institutional inflows could lift crypto in 2026.
What to know:
- JPMorgan sees renewed institutional inflows driving crypto markets higher in 2026.
- Bitcoin’s estimated production cost has fallen to $77,000, creating a potential new equilibrium after miner capitulation.
- Additional U.S. crypto legislation could provide the clarity needed to unlock further institutional participation, the bank said.











