For weeks, the story in crypto was fear. The Iran war. The Hormuz blockade. The oil shock. The DeFi hacks. And through all of it, institutional investors were quietly doing something that most of the market did not notice until the data came out. They were buying.
Digital asset investment products recorded $1.4 billion in net inflows last week, marking the strongest weekly total since January this year, according to CoinShares. The result extends a three-week positive streak, and total assets under management rose to $155 billion.
That $1.4 billion is not retail traders buying the dip on their phones. It is pension funds, family offices, wealth managers, and endowments making allocation decisions through regulated investment products. And they did it during one of the most volatile weeks of the year.
Where the Money Went
Bitcoin took the lion’s share. Bitcoin investment products attracted $1.116 billion in inflows last week, lifting year-to-date inflows to $3.1 billion. CoinShares said Bitcoin’s move above $76,000 during the week helped support market sentiment.
BlackRock’s iShares products led the field with over $1 billion in weekly inflows on their own. That is a staggering concentration of capital flowing through a single fund family. Fidelity and ARK 21Shares followed with $163 million and $118 million respectively. Spot Bitcoin ETFs alone brought in nearly $1 billion, with Friday’s $663.9 million the single biggest daily inflow since mid-January.
Ethereum had an even more interesting week, relatively speaking. Ethereum investment products posted $328 million in inflows, their strongest weekly result since January. That lifted Ethereum’s year-to-date inflows to $197 million.
That number deserves some context. Ethereum funds spent most of Q1 in outflow territory. Investors were pulling money out, not putting it in. The fact that ETH products just posted their best week in four months suggests something has shifted in how institutions view Ethereum. The seven-day ETF inflow streak, BlackRock’s staked ETHB product, Bitmine’s $230 million purchase, and the Glamsterdam upgrade narrative are all contributing to a change in tone.
Not Everyone Is Buying
The numbers were not green across the board. XRP and Solana products recorded outflows of $56 million and $2.3 million, respectively.
That is a reminder that even in a week where $1.4 billion flowed into crypto, the money was highly selective. Investors wanted Bitcoin and Ethereum, the two assets with the deepest liquidity, the strongest institutional products, and the clearest regulatory status. Everything else was an afterthought, or worse, a source of redemptions.
The geographic breakdown tells a similar story. The US dominated with $1.5 billion in inflows and Germany chipped in $28 million, but Switzerland saw $138 million in outflows, the largest Swiss exit since November.
Switzerland has been one of the most active markets for crypto investment products in Europe. A $138 million outflow from Swiss products while US products are seeing $1.5 billion in inflows suggests that capital is concentrating in American vehicles, likely driven by the depth and liquidity of US-listed spot ETFs.
Why Now?
The timing makes sense when you look at what happened during the week. Bitcoin broke above $76,000 for the first time since February, clearing a resistance level that had rejected it four times. Iran declared the Strait of Hormuz open on Friday, and even though it reversed course by Saturday, the initial headline was enough to pull in a wave of capital. March CPI came in at 3.3% headline with a core reading of 2.6%, suggesting inflation is drifting lower even with elevated oil prices.
CoinShares said weekly flows amounted to 0.91% of total assets under management, the highest weekly intensity year-to-date.
That intensity metric is worth paying attention to. It means the inflows are not just growing in absolute terms. They are growing faster relative to the size of the existing asset base. Capital is coming in at a pace that has not been seen all year.
“As more wealth management platforms activate Bitcoin ETF access, Morgan Stanley being the latest and Goldman Sachs having filed one week later, a growing share of available supply will be captured by these vehicles,” said Dessislava Ianeva, analyst at Nexo. “That demand does not require a macro catalyst to persist. It is built into the distribution infrastructure now being assembled across Wall Street.”
That last point is the one worth sitting with. The ETF infrastructure is not a one-off event. It is a distribution machine that keeps running once it is turned on. Every time a new wealth platform adds Bitcoin or Ethereum ETF access, the pool of potential buyers gets larger. Morgan Stanley just launched its Bitcoin trust. Goldman Sachs filed for a Bitcoin income ETF. Charles Schwab is preparing direct spot trading for 39 million clients. Each one of those opens a new pipeline of demand.
The Week Ahead
The $1.4 billion in inflows landed during a week of optimism. This week will test whether that momentum survives a very different environment. The US-Iran ceasefire expires tomorrow. The Kelp DAO hack is still reverberating through DeFi. The FOMC meets next week. And Bitcoin is sitting at $76,000, the exact level where it has stalled and reversed multiple times this year.
If the ceasefire extends and risk appetite holds, the inflow trend could accelerate further. If it collapses and oil spikes, the same institutions that bought last week could pull back just as quickly. That is the reality of investing alongside geopolitics. The money comes in fast when the mood is good, and it can leave just as fast when the mood changes.
But the structural story underneath the weekly numbers is harder to reverse. There are now $155 billion in crypto investment products. The distribution infrastructure keeps expanding. And miners produce only 450 BTC per day while ETFs alone absorbed multiples of that last week. Whatever happens tomorrow with Iran, those numbers are not going away.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial, investment, or legal advice. Always conduct your own research before making any investment decisions.


















