As 2025 draws to a close, Bitcoin and altcoins are attracting attention with their weak performance. While Bitcoin is expected to finish the year below $100,000, Coinshares has released its weekly cryptocurrency report, stating that there was an inflow of $864 million last week.
“There was a total inflow of $864 million into cryptocurrency investment products. This marks the third week of generally modest inflows, and we believe this reflects a cautious but increasingly optimistic investor base.”
Despite the Federal Reserve’s recent interest rate cut, price performance remained sluggish, and mixed sentiment and erratic flows were observed in the trading days following the reduction.
Entries were concentrated in Bitcoin and Ethereum!
Looking at crypto funds individually, it was observed that the majority of inflows were in Bitcoin.
Bitcoin saw inflows worth $522 million, while Ethereum (ETH) experienced inflows of $337 million.
Looking at other altcoins, Solana (SOL) saw inflows of $64.9 million, XRP $46.9 million, Aave $5.9 million, and Chainlink (LINK) $4.1 million, while Hyperliquid experienced outflows of $14.1 million.
“Bitcoin attracted $522 million in inflows. Despite this, Bitcoin has lagged relatively behind this year. Inflows since the beginning of the year are $27.7 billion, compared to $41 billion in 2024.”
Ethereum recorded $337 million in inflows last week, bringing total inflows since the beginning of the year to $13.3 billion, a 148% increase compared to 2024.
Entries to Solana have remained at a lower level of $3.5 billion since the beginning of the year, but this still represents a tenfold increase compared to 2024.
Aave and Chainlink recorded inflows of $5.9 million and $4.1 million respectively last week, while Hyperliquid experienced outflows of $14.1 million.
Looking at regional fund inflows and outflows, the US ranked first with an inflow of $796 million.
After the US, Germany saw inflows of $68.6 million, and Canada received $26.8 million.
In contrast to these inflows, Switzerland experienced a small outflow of $41.4 million, while Brazil saw a small outflow of $1.7 million.
*This is not investment advice.
