Bitcoin investment products returned to inflows after investors withdrew approximately $8 billion over 8 consecutive weeks, ending what CoinShares described as the longest negative run on record for spot Bitcoin exchange-traded funds. The reversal followed two weaker-than-expected US inflation reports that reduced expectations of further interest-rate increases. According to CoinShares Head of Research James Butterfill, digital asset products attracted approximately $250 million after Tuesday's Consumer Price Index report, with improvement continuing after producer inflation came in below forecasts on Wednesday. Inflows across issuers reached approximately $218 million on Tuesday and $197 million on Wednesday, with most capital directed towards Bitcoin.
The change in Bitcoin fund flows began after the June CPI report showed US inflation cooled more sharply than economists expected. Headline consumer prices declined 0.4% from the previous month, while the annual inflation rate slowed to 3.5%, below forecasts of approximately 3.8%. The downside surprise led traders to reduce the probability of another Federal Reserve rate increase.
Producer-price data strengthened the move on Wednesday. The US Bureau of Labor Statistics reported that the Producer Price Index for final demand fell 0.3% in June. Economists had expected prices to rise, making the decline another signal that inflationary pressure eased during the month. Markets subsequently reduced the probability of a September interest-rate increase by approximately half.
Bitcoin accounted for most of the renewed demand, following a familiar pattern during uncertain periods when investors seeking exposure to digital assets favor Bitcoin over smaller cryptocurrencies. The inflows provide evidence that institutional investors have not abandoned the market despite the $8 billion withdrawal streak. However, two positive trading days recover only a small part of the capital removed during the previous 8 weeks.
The figures indicate that institutional demand can return quickly when economic data changes expectations for Federal Reserve policy, although the flows remain small compared with the $8 billion withdrawn during the preceding sell-off. CoinShares warned that several days of positive flows would not necessarily represent a complete reversal, particularly after the scale and duration of the preceding withdrawals. The company said in a recent market update that sentiment may have approached capitulation levels following the record outflow streak.
CoinShares identified a behavioral divide between investor interest when Bitcoin trades near record highs and demand after a substantial correction. According to CoinShares, interest tends to increase when Bitcoin approaches approximately $120,000, while investors become significantly less willing to add positions when the asset trades closer to $60,000. The pattern suggests that many investors respond to momentum rather than valuation, becoming more confident after prices have already risen and more defensive after large declines.
This behavior can reinforce both rallies and sell-offs. Rising prices attract capital from investors concerned about missing further gains, while falling prices reduce demand even though the same amount of money can purchase more Bitcoin. The 8-week outflow streak demonstrates how quickly persistent withdrawals can develop when falling prices, geopolitical risk and tighter monetary expectations occur simultaneously.
Some investors remain reluctant to increase direct crypto exposure while broader sentiment is weak. CoinShares said blockchain-related equities are consequently emerging as another area of client interest, with investors identifying opportunities among publicly traded companies connected to digital assets and blockchain infrastructure. These companies can provide exposure to crypto-market activity through traditional equity accounts, but they introduce risks that differ from holding Bitcoin.
What triggered the reversal in Bitcoin investment product flows? Two weaker-than-expected US inflation reports triggered the reversal. The June CPI report showed headline consumer prices declined 0.4% monthly and the annual inflation rate slowed to 3.5% (below the 3.8% forecast). The June PPI report showed the Producer Price Index for final demand fell 0.3%, when economists had expected an increase.
How much capital flowed back into Bitcoin products after the inflation reports? Digital asset products attracted approximately $250 million after Tuesday's Consumer Price Index report. Inflows across issuers reached approximately $218 million on Tuesday and $197 million on Wednesday, with most of the capital directed towards Bitcoin. This followed an 8-week period during which investors withdrew approximately $8 billion.
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