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US Solana exchange-traded products (ETPs) pulled in $26.57 million in net inflows in a single day, with Bitwise’s Solana ETF (BSOL) accounting for most of the demand. BSOL attracted $21.6 million, or roughly 81% of all money flowing into Solana-focused ETPs.
BSOL provides direct exposure to Solana’s token (SOL) while also seeking staking rewards. The fund’s approach is designed to stake 100% of its holdings, making the staking component a key differentiator in a market where yield is increasingly important. The article notes that an ETF that passes through staking rewards can offer a reason to choose it over competitors that primarily hold the underlying token in cold storage.
On a year-to-date basis, BSOL has captured 78% of roughly $1 billion in Solana ETF inflows.
The sustained inflows into Solana ETFs reflect a broader shift in crypto investing toward regulated ETF structures. The article describes institutional participation—such as hedge funds, family offices, and registered investment advisors—moving toward ETFs rather than direct spot token purchases.
It cites several practical advantages that can make ETFs easier to adopt, including:
It also argues that an ETF that stakes Solana and passes through rewards offers institutions something that is harder to replicate through direct token ownership without significant operational infrastructure.
The combination of $26.57 million in one-day net inflows and approximately $1 billion in year-to-date flows suggests durable institutional demand rather than a short-lived spike.
The article also draws a comparison with Ethereum ETFs, noting that they have struggled to match Bitcoin ETF enthusiasm. It attributes part of that gap to earlier SEC restrictions on ETH ETF staking. By contrast, Solana ETFs launched with staking built in, which the article says gave them an early edge that Ethereum products are still working to close.
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