U.S. Solana spot exchange-traded funds recorded $199 million in net inflows during their debut week. The funds attracted both institutional and individual investors seeking exposure to the blockchain asset.
Bitwise’s BSOL ETF dominated the market by drawing in $197 million over four days. Grayscale’s GSOL fund saw $2.2 million in new investments during the same period.
The ETF products continued their inflow streak for four consecutive days. Friday alone brought $44.48 million into Solana ETFs, pushing total assets under management to over $502 million.
Solana (SOL) Price
The strong ETF performance contrasts with the token’s price action. Solana dropped 8% to $186.75 on October 30, wiping out its gains for the year.
Jump Crypto made a major on-chain transfer during this period. The firm sent 1.1 million SOL tokens worth $205 million to Galaxy Digital.
The transfer fueled speculation about asset reallocation strategies. Some market observers suggested the firm was moving capital toward Bitcoin.
Bitcoin and Ethereum ETFs experienced outflows while Solana products gained traction. Spot Bitcoin ETFs saw $191.6 million in daily net outflows on Friday.
The Bitcoin funds recorded larger outflows earlier in the week. Thursday brought $488.43 million in outflows, while Wednesday saw $470.71 million leave the products.
Spot Ethereum ETFs posted $98.2 million in outflows on Friday. The funds shed $184.3 million on Thursday and $81.4 million on Wednesday.
Vincent Liu, chief investment officer at Kronos Research, described the movement as capital rotation. He expects the trend to continue into next week.
Liu said Bitcoin and Ethereum investors are taking profits after strong runs. The rotation signals growing appetite for staking-driven yield opportunities.
Grayscale’s head of research, Zach Pandl, estimated the new ETFs could eventually control 5% of Solana’s circulating supply. This would represent approximately $5 billion in value.
CoinShares reported $381 million in Solana-focused ETF inflows for October. The year’s total reached $2.8 billion across all Solana investment products.
Early Solana holders have started selling their positions over the past month. However, these sales have been absorbed by the new regulated investment vehicles.
Bloomberg ETF analyst Eric Balchunas called this a clear indicator of institutional appetite. The ETFs are functioning as a liquidity sink that dampens short-term price swings.
Staking yields are attracting investors to these products. Grayscale’s GSOL offers staking yields up to 5.7% annually through its proof-of-stake model.
JPMorgan analysts forecast more than $6 billion in first-year inflows for upcoming Solana ETFs. Firms like VanEck and Fidelity are preparing to launch their own products.
Hong Kong approved its first spot Solana ETF last week. The approval expands international access to Solana investment products beyond U.S. markets.
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