
No matter what happens now, these two cryptocurrencies are etched in the marble of time. Bitcoin has already charmed the general public, from the student stacking some satoshis to the sovereign wealth fund making it an alternative reserve. Ethereum, meanwhile, finds itself in the vault of the institutional giants. One plays the role of symbol, the other attracts the money of the powerful. The recent figures from CoinShares leave no doubt: the duel between BTC and ETH has never been so sharp.
Ethereum has established itself as the star of institutional funds. Just last week, $1.42 billion flowed into ether-linked products, versus $748 million for bitcoin. And in August, the difference is vast: $3.95 billion inflows for ETH against $301 million outflows for BTC.
James Butterfill, head of research at CoinShares, summarized it: “Ethereum continues to dominate Bitcoin… Flows remained strong throughout the week before flipping on Friday after the Core PCE release. The data did not confirm the hope of a Fed rate cut in September, which disappointed digital asset investors”
However, ether did not perform better in the market: -4.3% over the week, versus -2% for bitcoin. Institutional investors are betting on ETH despite its volatility, proof that the battle between adoption and valuation is far from settled.
The question of supremacy remains hot. Bitcoin dominance hovers around 58%. Myriad Markets traders admit: it’s almost a coin toss. BTC dominance could rise to 63% or drop to 53%, it will all depend on the momentum in the coming days.
Meanwhile, other altcoins like Solana ($177M inflows) and XRP ($134M) benefit from optimism surrounding American crypto ETFs. This context reminds us that the visible part of institutional flows hides a complex game where every macro announcement or product launch can move billions.
BTC remains the safe haven, ETH becomes the locomotive of investment products. The market oscillates between caution and conviction.
Corrections are an integral part of bitcoin’s story. As Anthony Scaramucci reminds us, they can be violent: the drop can reach 40% before bitcoin’s price hits $500,000. A warning that clearly illustrates market reality: between rapid ascent and brutal shocks, the road is long.

