TL;DR
- VanEck positions its BNB spot ETF VBNB around BNB chain usage and revenue metrics.
- The ETF would have approximately $2 million in assets under management and a sponsor fee of 0.39%.
- BNB chain metrics cited include 33 million monthly active users, 2.1 million daily active users, and approximately $160 million in annual revenue.
VanEck positions BNB as a usage-based ETF story
VanEck relies on real BNB Chain activity as the central argument for its spot BNB ETF, ticker VBNB, rather than selling the product solely as another crypto exposure vehicle.
The ETF launched on Nasdaq on May 28, 2026, with VanEck Digital Assets, LLC as sponsor. The capture pack says the fund has attracted about $2 million in assets under management so far, a modest start that still leaves room to test the thesis over time.
Kyle DaCruz, director of digital asset products at VanEck, defined BNB Chain as a “revenue chain” with real users, transactions, and fee generation. This is in direct contrast to networks that attract attention with their technical promises but display little sustained economic activity.
The metrics behind the BNB thesis
The network numbers in the capture pack are the crux of the argument: 33 million monthly active users, 2.1 million daily active users, $100 billion in monthly stablecoin transfer volume, $16 billion in minted stablecoins, and around $160 million in annual revenue.
These numbers give VanEck a usage-based story to tell potential investors. Instead of focusing solely on price appreciation, VBNB can position itself on network activity, settlement volume and fee generation.
The ETF holds BNB in cold storage through Anchorage Digital Bank and carries a sponsor fee of 0.39%. Staking is not enabled at launch, but the prospectus includes provisions that could allow staking at a later date if regulatory conditions permit.
Why the ETF still needs to prove demand
The risk is that usage does not automatically translate into demand for ETFs. BNB Chain may have strong activity metrics, but VBNB’s reported $2 million in assets under management is still small compared to larger crypto ETF products.
Staking is another open question. If enabled in the future, this could make the ETF more attractive by adding yield exposure and supporting the proof-of-stake network. For now, this remains hypothetical and subject to regulatory approval.
Configuration is important as the ETF market becomes more and more crowded. VanEck’s argument is that BNB can stand out through measurable economic use. The next test is whether investors agree that these network metrics deserve a place in their portfolios.
The ETF also comes at a time when investors are becoming more selective about their exposure to cryptocurrencies. A network-linked fund with visible fees, users, and stable activity may be easier to explain than a fund built primarily around future technical potential.
However, VanEck must convert the usage story into a request for funds. Strong on-chain indicators can support investment arguments, but ETF flows will show whether traditional investors are willing to treat BNB as a differentiated exposure rather than another altcoin product.


