Investor confidence in Bitcoin saw a powerful comeback as the asset drew $2.4 billion in inflows. This figure is its biggest weekly tally since July. Meanwhile, short-Bitcoin products lost ground, with outflows trimming their assets under management to $86 million.
Ethereum also benefited from the change in sentiment. After eight days of consistent withdrawals, it posted four straight days of inflows last week, which added up to $646 million.
According to the latest edition of CoinShares Digital Asset Fund Flows Weekly Report, following weaker US macroeconomic figures, digital asset products shifted back to inflows and collected $3.3 billion last week. The rally in prices toward weeks end supported the climb in assets under management, which hit $239 billion. This level stands just below the all-time high of $244 billion recorded in early August.
In addition to Bitcoin and Ethereum, funds related to Solana also saw its largest-ever single-day inflow on Friday at $145 million, which contributed to a weekly total of $198 million. XRP and Sui also noted similar traction as they attracted $32.5 million and $14 million in inflows, respectively. Next up were Chainlink, Cardano, and Cronos, which registered $1.5 million, $1 million, and $0.3 million, respectively.
On the other hand, multi-asset products witnessed $1.1 million outflows similar to the previous week. Aave and Avalanche-based funds also saw minor outflows of $1.08 million and $0.66 million during the same period, respectively.
Across regions, investor sentiment remained largely optimistic. The United States dominated the week by bringing in $3.2 billion in inflows. Germany followed with $160 million, including its second-largest daily intake on record on Friday. Canada added $14.1 million, while Brazil and Hong Kong contributed $5.4 million each, and Australia registered $2.4 million.
However, not all regions shared the bullish momentum. Despite the broader positive sentiment, Switzerland, for one, noted heavy outflows of over $92 million, as it offset some gains, while Sweden also posted $5.6 million in outflows.