Digital Asset Prime Broker Falconx has executed the very first exchange of blocks for Solana Futures from the CME group, the Stonex financial services company acting as a counterpart.
The transaction was completed one day before the official launch of Future soil on March 17, according to a Sunday press release on Sunday.
Falconx, based in San Mateo, California, has executed trade to facilitate the capacity of institutional investors to manage exposure to risks and prices on a regulated platform.
“This trade represents an important step in the supply of liquidity and coverage possibilities for institutional customers,” said Josh Barkhordar, American sales director at Falconx, in a press release.
Block transactions facilitate large -scale transactions without market disturbances
Block transactions refer to large private transactions carried out outside the free market to avoid disturbances in major prices.
These professions are commonly used in the derivative markets to ensure smooth execution for large volume participants.
CME Group introduced Solana Futures at the end of February in response to an increase in institutional demand for exposure to assets.
New derivatives are also considered a potential springboard to a fund negotiated by Solana (ETF), similar to the path followed by Bitcoin and Ethereum.
The term markets for both assets played an essential role in the approval of ETFs.
Several asset managers have already submitted requests to the US Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) to launch Solana ETF.
Franklin Templeton, managing more than 1.5 billion of dollars in assets, filed his request in February 2025.
Other companies, including Grayscale, 21Shares, Bitwise, Vaneck and Canary Capital, also moved to establish Solana.
CME Solana’s term contracts are available in two sizes: standard contracts representing 500 soil and micro contracts covering 25 soil.
The contracts are in cash depending on the reference rate CME CF Solana-Dollar, which is calculated daily at 4:00 p.m. London time.
This pricing mechanism provides a transparent reference for the soil value in American dollars.
Falconx remains a key liquidity supplier in the CME cryptographic derivative ecosystem.
The company reports that it has executed more than $ 1.5 billion in negotiation volume on more than 400 tokens for around 600 institutional customers.
He also widened his institutional presence through acquisitions and partnerships.
Falconx extends the institutional presence
In January 2025, Falconx acquired the Arbelos Markets derivatives business company, followed by a partnership with digital assets Fusion of TP ICAP in February 2024.
Last year, the company also unveiled a main brokerage service designed to facilitate the negotiation activities of institutional investors on the scholarships while their funds remain safely in the regulated and bankrupt care.
Meanwhile, the CME group reports continuous growth in its market for cryptographic derivatives.
The average daily volume of crypto contracts reached 202,000 at the beginning of 2025, marking an increase of 73% from one year to the next.
Open interests also increased, with 243,600 registered contracts – 55% compared to the previous year. More than 11,300 unique accounts actively negotiate CME’s cryptographic products.
On centralized crypto exchanges, Solana’s derivatives have experienced a sharp increase in commercial activity, volumes increasing by 66% to 7.24 billion dollars, according to Coinglass.
Despite this, the asset remains under pressure, trading at $ 127, down 6.4% compared to the day, following its January summit nearly $ 293.31, in accordance with Coingecko data.
The Post Falconx performs the very first block of blocks for CME Solana Futures with Stonex before the launch appeared first on Cryptonews.