
Bitcoin is climbing on thin volume, leaving rally vulnerable to macro shock
Bitcoin's climb to $80K is questioned due to low trading volume and muted activity.

Bitcoin funds received $933 million in inflows last week, contributing to a total of $155 billion in assets under management across crypto funds, the highest since February. Institutional investment is outpacing retail this cycle, with digital asset products attracting $1.2 billion overall.
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Institutional money is flowing back into crypto faster than retail this cycle, and the data is starting to back the rally bitcoin has been quietly running.
Digital asset investment products attracted $1.2 billion in inflows last week, a fourth consecutive weekly gain, according to CoinShares data published Monday.
Total assets under management across crypto funds rose to $155 billion, the highest level since February 1, though still well below the $263 billion peak from October 2025. Bitcoin alone took in $933 million, bringing year-to-date flows to $4 billion. Ether attracted $192 million, the third straight week above $190 million.
Meanwhile, blockchain equity ETFs are one to watch for outside of crypto-related funds. These products invest in publicly traded companies that derive revenue from crypto infrastructure, like miners, exchanges, and chip makers selling into crypto applications.
Inflows totaled $617 million over the past three weeks, including a record weekly figure, marking what CoinShares analyst James Butterfill described as an explosion in demand for indirect technology exposure to the asset class.
The pattern suggests allocators who cannot or will not hold spot bitcoin directly are rotating into the equity wrappers around the sector.
Bitcoin tagged $79,399 overnight, its highest level since January 31, before reversing to $77,705. The level matters because $80,000 is where buyers from January and February are approaching breakeven on positions held through the war-driven correction.
The week ahead is the test of whether institutional flows can absorb that selling pressure or whether a third rejection from $79,000 starts to define a range rather than precede a breakout.
Megacap tech earnings on Wednesday and Thursday from Alphabet, Microsoft, Amazon, and Meta, followed by Apple on Thursday, represent roughly a quarter of the S&P 500's market capitalization and will determine whether the broader risk-on bid that has been lifting bitcoin alongside equities continues.
Strong earnings would extend the four-week run of crypto inflows and bitcoin may gets the catalyst it needs to clear $80,000. Disappointing results, however, could send prices dwindling lower.
Bitcoin funds took in $933 million in inflows last week.
Year-to-date flows for digital asset products have reached $4 billion.
Total assets under management across crypto funds have risen to $155 billion.

Bitcoin's climb to $80K is questioned due to low trading volume and muted activity.

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