4 billion in inflows, the largest weekly amount since January and the third straight week of positive movement. CoinShares explained that the trend is likely due to stronger risk appetite during US-Iran ceasefire extension talks and Bitcoin’s rise above $76,000 mid-week, its highest level since the February crash. 6%, which suggested that inflation remains limited and driven by supply-side factors.
1 billion. The asset manager said that Bitcoin’s rally was a “meaningful technical development” after nearly two months of sideways price action. 4 million inflow, which indicated that there was some remaining but limited demand for downside protection.
Ethereum brought in $328 million during the same period – its strongest weekly result since January. The latest inflows lifted its yearly total to $197 million. 6 million.
3 million, respectively. 5 billion last week. 1 million.
Hong Kong also raked in $3 million in inflows, whereas Switzerland bucked the positive trend with $138 million in outflows. As the narrative of de-escalation in Iran shifted abruptly over the weekend, Bitcoin temporarily fell below $74,000 before modestly recovering on Monday. According to QCP Capital, markets are struggling to anchor on a clear direction, and price action is reacting to headlines rather than structural changes.
Volatility remains low despite the decline, which means that expectations are tilting toward episodic disruptions. For now, QCP’s base case points to range-bound movement for the crypto asset, with no decisive breakout expected.




