Crypto investment products see $1.3 billion in weekly inflows despite Trump tariff woes: CoinShares

Quick Take
- Net inflows into global crypto investment products jumped to $1.3 billion last week, nearly doubling from the week before, according to asset manager CoinShares.
- It marks the fifth consecutive week of net inflows for the investment products despite the sharp price drop following President Trump’s tariff announcements.


Global crypto investment products run by asset managers such as BlackRock, Bitwise, Fidelity, Grayscale, ProShares and 21Shares registered net inflows of $1.3 billion last week, nearly doubling from $747.4 million the week before despite President Trump’s tariff-fueled price plunge, according to CoinShares.
It marks a net inflow streak that now extends to five consecutive weeks, with the funds attracting a total of $7.3 billion year-to-date, CoinShares Head of Research James Butterfill noted in a Monday report. Weekly trading volume for the products also held steady at $20 billion, though recent price declines have seen assets under management drop to $163 billion from their $181 billion record peak in January.
Weekly crypto asset flows. Images: CoinShares.
Responding to President Trump's plan to implement 25% tariffs on imported goods from Canada and Mexico, with 10% tariffs on Canadian energy and Chinese goods, bitcoin fell more than 10% to a low of around $91,500 on Feb. 3. Other cryptocurrencies saw deeper corrections — with ether collapsing by approximately 36% to around $2,100 and the GMCI Meme index of leading memecoins dropping around 40% in just a few days.
Bitcoin subsequently bounced back above the $100,000 mark in a volatile trading day last Monday that saw the foremost cryptocurrency trade in a range of more than $10,000 following reports that new tariffs on Mexico and Canada would be paused for a month after an agreement between the respective governments. However, the market began to slide again after China announced retaliatory tariffs on U.S. imports, including 15% on coal and LNG and 10% on crude oil and agricultural machinery.
Bitcoin is currently trading for $97,817 and ether $2,647, according to The Block’s Prices Page.
‘Ethereum stole the show’
Despite the negative price action, Bitcoin-based funds added $407 million in net inflows last week, with global investment products now representing 7.1% of its current market capitalization, Butterfill noted.
The U.S. spot Bitcoin exchange-traded funds represented $203.8 million of the overall net inflows, according to data compiled by The Block.
Meanwhile, “Ethereum stole the show,” with ether-based funds generating net inflows of $793 million last week — outpacing bitcoin funds for the first time this year amid “significant buying-on-weakness,” Butterfill said.
The U.S. spot Ethereum ETFs registered $420.2 million of those net inflows last week, per The Block's data dashboard.
Meanwhile, XRP-based funds were the third-best performing altcoin investment product globally, adding a further $21 million last week, with Solana products bringing in $11 million.
Regionally, the U.S. led with $1 billion in overall net inflows, while funds in Germany, Switzerland and Canada registered inflows of $61 million, $54 million and $37 million, respectively.
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