Key Takeaways
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Crypto investment funds saw $1.73 billion in outflows, the largest weekly exit since mid-November 2025.
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Bitcoin led with $1.09 billion in outflows, followed by Ethereum with $630 million.
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U.S. investors drove most selling at $1.8 billion, but Switzerland, Germany, and Canada added inflows.
The crypto market saw a sharp change in tone last week as investors pulled significant capital from digital asset investment products.
New data from CoinShares shows that $1.73 billion flowed out of crypto funds in just one week, the largest weekly outflow since mid-November 2025.
The sudden reversal comes after a brief stretch of inflows, highlighting how quickly sentiment has turned amid renewed market uncertainty.
Most of last week’s withdrawals came from the market’s largest cryptocurrencies.
Bitcoin (BTC) investment products led the sell-off, shedding $1.09 billion—the biggest weekly outflow since mid-November.
The scale of the move points to broad caution among investors rather than isolated profit-taking.
Ethereum (ETH) followed with $630 million in outflows, reinforcing the sense that risk appetite faded across major digital assets, not just Bitcoin.
Elsewhere, altcoins also felt pressure.
XRP products lost $18.2 million, while interest in short-Bitcoin products remained muted, with just $0.5 million in inflows, suggesting few investors are aggressively positioning for further downside.
One exception was Solana (SOL), which attracted $17.1 million in fresh capital.
Smaller inflows also went into Binance-linked products ($4.6 million) and Chainlink ($3.8 million), hinting at selective positioning even as the broader market pulled back.
The outflows were not uniform worldwide.
The United States led the pack with nearly $1.8 billion in funds, highlighting how American investors drove much of the retreat.
Sweden and the Netherlands saw smaller outflows of $11.1 million and $4.4 million, respectively.
Some regions took a different view, treating the price dips as buying opportunities.
Switzerland welcomed $32.5 million in inflows, while Germany added $19.1 million and Canada $33.5 million.
These areas appear more optimistic, adding to long positions despite the broader downturn.
This sharp pullback came despite recent inflows into crypto funds, signaling an apparent reversal in sentiment.
Several factors contributed to the bearish turn.
Investors grew less hopeful about potential interest rate cuts from central banks, especially the Federal Reserve.


