Dogecoin’s highly anticipated ETF debut has taken an unexpected slow turn. What began as a strong opening for the new GDOG fund quickly faded as inflows collapsed in dramatic fashion. The launch was expected to give Dogecoin a meaningful boost by opening the door for fresh institutional participation. Instead, the opposite has happened, and the Dogecoin ETF has seen its inflows collapse by 80%. Spot Dogecoin ETF Just Suffered An 80% Crash In Inflows The launch of Grayscale Investments’ first-ever spot Dogecoin ETF under the ticker GDOG was hailed as a monumental moment, the first time Dogecoin would be accessible to everyday investors through a traditional brokerage. On November 24, 2025, the product went live on the NYSE Arca, converting Grayscale’s existing DOGE trust into a publicly traded ETF. Related Reading: Pundit Shares XRP Fact That Will ‘Blow Your Mind’ However, just 48 hours after launch, the excitement appears to have cooled down. Although the first day reportedly pulled in roughly $1.8 million in inflows, the second day saw only about $365,420, a collapse of about 80% in early momentum. This has pushed the cumulative net inflows to around $2.16 million, but this is a modest figure for what many expected would be a major catalyst for Dogecoin. Expectations for GDOG were high. Observers pointed to prior early inflow successes with crypto ETFs, notably those for Bitcoin, Ethereum, and more recently Solana, which collectively helped push capital inflows at a large scale.  To put this into comparison, Spot Solana ETFs, which first went live on October 18, raked in $117.39 million in inflows in the first two days of trading. The recently launched Spot XRP ETFs also saw inflows of $243.05 million on their first day of trading.  According to data from SoSoValue, Dogecoin ETF trading volume for the first day was just $1.41 million, far below many projections. The momentum faded even faster on day two, with volume falling by roughly 78% to $397,620. What It Means for DOGE And The Meme-Coin Space The soft start of GDOG raises questions about whether meme coins like DOGE can truly thrive under traditional financial frameworks. On one hand, the ETF listing is a milestone: a token born as a joke is now trading alongside traditional assets on major exchanges. On the other, the weak capital flows hint at limits to demand among institutional investors.  Related Reading: Bitcoin Dead Cat Bounce: Analyst Reveals What To Expect As Price Recovers However, it is still too early to conclude. The long-term relevance of DOGE ETFs can only be judged once the market has had time to digest these new products. A successful DOGE ETF could open the door to other meme-coin funds (some suggest even an ETF for Shiba Inu may follow). In addition to Grayscale, other asset managers have Spot Dogecoin ETFs lined up and ready to hit the market. Bitwise launched its Dogecoin ETF on Wednesday following Grayscale’s debut, but early inflow numbers are yet to come in. The asset manager noted they weren’t expecting to launch this product but are only doing so because the DOGE community requested it. Featured image created with Dall.E, chart from Tradingview.comDogecoin’s highly anticipated ETF debut has taken an unexpected slow turn. What began as a strong opening for the new GDOG fund quickly faded as inflows collapsed in dramatic fashion. The launch was expected to give Dogecoin a meaningful boost by opening the door for fresh institutional participation. Instead, the opposite has happened, and the Dogecoin ETF has seen its inflows collapse by 80%. Spot Dogecoin ETF Just Suffered An 80% Crash In Inflows The launch of Grayscale Investments’ first-ever spot Dogecoin ETF under the ticker GDOG was hailed as a monumental moment, the first time Dogecoin would be accessible to everyday investors through a traditional brokerage. On November 24, 2025, the product went live on the NYSE Arca, converting Grayscale’s existing DOGE trust into a publicly traded ETF. Related Reading: Pundit Shares XRP Fact That Will ‘Blow Your Mind’ However, just 48 hours after launch, the excitement appears to have cooled down. Although the first day reportedly pulled in roughly $1.8 million in inflows, the second day saw only about $365,420, a collapse of about 80% in early momentum. This has pushed the cumulative net inflows to around $2.16 million, but this is a modest figure for what many expected would be a major catalyst for Dogecoin. Expectations for GDOG were high. Observers pointed to prior early inflow successes with crypto ETFs, notably those for Bitcoin, Ethereum, and more recently Solana, which collectively helped push capital inflows at a large scale.  To put this into comparison, Spot Solana ETFs, which first went live on October 18, raked in $117.39 million in inflows in the first two days of trading. The recently launched Spot XRP ETFs also saw inflows of $243.05 million on their first day of trading.  According to data from SoSoValue, Dogecoin ETF trading volume for the first day was just $1.41 million, far below many projections. The momentum faded even faster on day two, with volume falling by roughly 78% to $397,620. What It Means for DOGE And The Meme-Coin Space The soft start of GDOG raises questions about whether meme coins like DOGE can truly thrive under traditional financial frameworks. On one hand, the ETF listing is a milestone: a token born as a joke is now trading alongside traditional assets on major exchanges. On the other, the weak capital flows hint at limits to demand among institutional investors.  Related Reading: Bitcoin Dead Cat Bounce: Analyst Reveals What To Expect As Price Recovers However, it is still too early to conclude. The long-term relevance of DOGE ETFs can only be judged once the market has had time to digest these new products. A successful DOGE ETF could open the door to other meme-coin funds (some suggest even an ETF for Shiba Inu may follow). In addition to Grayscale, other asset managers have Spot Dogecoin ETFs lined up and ready to hit the market. Bitwise launched its Dogecoin ETF on Wednesday following Grayscale’s debut, but early inflow numbers are yet to come in. The asset manager noted they weren’t expecting to launch this product but are only doing so because the DOGE community requested it. Featured image created with Dall.E, chart from Tradingview.com

Dogecoin Just Suffered An 80% Crash In This Major Metric

2025/11/29 00:00
3 min read
For feedback or concerns regarding this content, please contact us at crypto.news@mexc.com

Dogecoin’s highly anticipated ETF debut has taken an unexpected slow turn. What began as a strong opening for the new GDOG fund quickly faded as inflows collapsed in dramatic fashion. The launch was expected to give Dogecoin a meaningful boost by opening the door for fresh institutional participation. Instead, the opposite has happened, and the Dogecoin ETF has seen its inflows collapse by 80%.

Spot Dogecoin ETF Just Suffered An 80% Crash In Inflows

The launch of Grayscale Investments’ first-ever spot Dogecoin ETF under the ticker GDOG was hailed as a monumental moment, the first time Dogecoin would be accessible to everyday investors through a traditional brokerage. On November 24, 2025, the product went live on the NYSE Arca, converting Grayscale’s existing DOGE trust into a publicly traded ETF.

However, just 48 hours after launch, the excitement appears to have cooled down. Although the first day reportedly pulled in roughly $1.8 million in inflows, the second day saw only about $365,420, a collapse of about 80% in early momentum. This has pushed the cumulative net inflows to around $2.16 million, but this is a modest figure for what many expected would be a major catalyst for Dogecoin.

Expectations for GDOG were high. Observers pointed to prior early inflow successes with crypto ETFs, notably those for Bitcoin, Ethereum, and more recently Solana, which collectively helped push capital inflows at a large scale.  To put this into comparison, Spot Solana ETFs, which first went live on October 18, raked in $117.39 million in inflows in the first two days of trading. The recently launched Spot XRP ETFs also saw inflows of $243.05 million on their first day of trading.

 According to data from SoSoValue, Dogecoin ETF trading volume for the first day was just $1.41 million, far below many projections. The momentum faded even faster on day two, with volume falling by roughly 78% to $397,620.

What It Means for DOGE And The Meme-Coin Space

The soft start of GDOG raises questions about whether meme coins like DOGE can truly thrive under traditional financial frameworks. On one hand, the ETF listing is a milestone: a token born as a joke is now trading alongside traditional assets on major exchanges. On the other, the weak capital flows hint at limits to demand among institutional investors. 

However, it is still too early to conclude. The long-term relevance of DOGE ETFs can only be judged once the market has had time to digest these new products. A successful DOGE ETF could open the door to other meme-coin funds (some suggest even an ETF for Shiba Inu may follow).

In addition to Grayscale, other asset managers have Spot Dogecoin ETFs lined up and ready to hit the market. Bitwise launched its Dogecoin ETF on Wednesday following Grayscale’s debut, but early inflow numbers are yet to come in. The asset manager noted they weren’t expecting to launch this product but are only doing so because the DOGE community requested it.

Dogecoin price chart from Tradingview.com
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