Bitcoin Price Above $63,000 – BTC Recorded $543M in Inflows Last Week

BTC's price could be affected by various events and key speeches taking place this week

Bitcoin Price Above $63,000 - BTC Recorded $543M in Inflows Last Week | Adobe Stock

Key Points

Last week, crypto products saw inflows of $533 million, marking the largest inflow in five weeks, according to Coinshares’ James Butterfill report.

Bitcoin was the main focus, recording $543 million in inflows, following the US Federal Reserve chair, Jerome Powell’s speech about the upcoming rate cuts in September.

CoinShares
CoinShares

Details About Digital Investment Products

The total amount flowing into crypto products last week was $533 million, and the surge reportedly followed the remarks made by Jerome Powell during the Jackson Hole Symposium.

At the meeting, he suggested that the first interest rate cut could take place in September.

From a regional point of view, the US recorded $498 million in inflows, and Hong Kong and Switzerland saw $16 million and $14 million respectively. Germany saw outflows of almost $9 million.

Bitcoin was the main focus regarding the inflows, recording influxes of $543 million. Most of them were reportedly on Friday, following the comments from the Fed’s Chair, which showed Bitcoin’s sensitivity to interest rate expectations, as CoinShares’ report notes.

Ethereum, on the other hand, saw outflows of $35.7 million during the past week.

BlackRock’s Bitcoin ETF, IBIT, recorded the most inflows during last week, totaling $346 million, followed by Fidelity’s Bitcoin ETF, FBTC, which saw $88 million in inflows.

Bitcoin Above $63,000

At the moment of writing this article, BTC is trading above $63,000, after earlier reaching prices close to $65,000.

BTC price in USD today

According to the latest reports coming from Greeks.live, multiple important events and key speeches could affect the price of Bitcoin this week.

Essential events this week that might impact Bitcoin’s price include the following:

The market volatility continued to fall across all major terms, according to the same data.

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