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CoinShares data revealed on Tuesday, March 29, that institutional investments into cryptocurrencies are at the highest levels in three months, a sharp rise from the previous week which saw outflows of $47 million.

The Digital Asset Fund Flows Report revealed that investment products for digital assets saw total inflows of $193 million last week, a level not seen since early December 2021.

The last time investment levels were near the current figure was in the week ending on December 3rd, which saw $184 million worth of inflows.

The fund flows had a big focus on Bitcoin (BTC), with just over 50% of the capital going into products based on BTC, which saw inflows totaling $98 million.

Solana (SOL) was runner-up, seeing $87 million inflows for the week, a figure that CoinShares says is the “largest single week of inflows on record”. SOL-based funds now represent 36% of assets under management with institutional firms, the largest altcoin after Ethereum (ETH). Ether-based funds saw inflows last week totaling just $10.2 million.

Europe was the significant contributor, with firms there seemingly bolstered by the news that the bill banning proof-of-work (PoW) mining did not pass. 76% of inflows or about $147 million came from the region last week.

The figures from the report are in sharp contrast to the data the week prior, which saw $49.4 million withdrawn from Bitcoin and Ethereum from mostly North American firms with concerns regarding increasing crypto regulations.

Related: IOSCO says DeFi is quickly evolving and ‘cloning financial markets’

The inflows of cash by institutional firms correlate with the price of Bitcoin seeing a recent surge being pushed above $48,500 at one point. The same was true with Ethereum which has broken out over $3,300.

Last week, executives from crypto firms Nexo and Amber Group discussed at the Blockchain Africa Conference 2022 the ”exponential” growth of institutional investment into cryptocurrencies, saying that whilst there’s an increase in institutional onboarding, there might still be barriers to entry. Kalin Metodiev, co-founder and managing partner at Nexo, said most firms may claim that the crypto market is “still too volatile”.

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By: Cointelegraph By Jesse Coghlan

cointelegraph.com

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