Solana ETFs (SOL) have defied brutal market mechanisms since they went live in July 2025. While the token’s price collapsed by just over 57% during the same period, the funds themselves attracted $1.45 billion in net inflows.
This extreme divergence indicates that a “serious investor base” is massively accumulating, even as retail trading capitulates.
Normally, assets that fall this sharply have difficulty attracting new liquidity. But Solana ETFs do the opposite, absorbing capital at a pace that effectively decouples institutional demand from spot price movements. Adjusted for market capitalization, the buying pressure is almost unprecedented.
To put the numbers in perspective, Solana’s inflow data is arguably stronger than Bitcoin’s when scaled by size.
Eric Balchunas, an analyst at Bloomberg Intelligence, notes that when accounting for the difference in market capitalization, Solana’s $1.45 billion gain equates to $54 billion in net new flows to Bitcoin, or about double what Bitcoin ETFs were managing at the same stage.
While Bitcoin holds over $68,000 amid strong ETF inflows, Solana’s accumulation during a 50%+ crash highlights a different type of conviction.
“As unlucky a time as you’ll ever see,” Balchunas wrote on X regarding the timing of the launch in relation to the price drop. Yet the funds not only accumulated capital, but also retained it.
“They managed to not only accumulate $1.5 billion in streams, but also not give up anything. These are two very good signs for the future.”
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Will SOL price catch up with ETF volume?
The resilience of these flows suggests that the buyer profile is radically different from that of the typical retail trader.
According to 13F filings, the majority of Solana ETF holders are institutions, hedge funds, pension funds and asset managers, which typically operate with time horizons of several years. They buy the thesis, not the weekly candle.
With $1.5 billion flooding into Solana ETFs despite the crash, data indicates that smart money sees the $85 range as a deep value zone. If these investors refused to sell during the sharp drop to $300, they were effectively setting a high conviction floor.
This behavior creates a “diamond hand” dynamic in which a significant portion of the floating supply is transferred to cold storage vehicles.

Balchunas described the situation clearly: “If we adjust the size of Solana relative to the market cap of Bitcoin, that equates to $54 billion in net new flows. »
For active traders, this metric is a leading indicator. Volume often precedes price, and in this case, holding volume signals a bullish divergence even if the chart appears bearish.
Could institutional accumulation via Solana ETFs trigger a supply shock?
The broader implication here is a potential supply squeeze. When the price falls but holdings increase, the asset becomes more illiquid on the sell side.
We see similar dynamics elsewhere in the market, where Bitcoin is disappearing from exchanges at rates that suggest an impending supply shock.
For Solana, the configuration is even more aggressive given the disparity in market capitalizations. Investors viewing current prices as a buying opportunity rather than a warning sign have absorbed selling pressure from the end of the FTX era and broader market corrections.
If market sentiment turns neutral or bullish, the lack of liquid supply could force a violent upward revaluation.
The level to watch is $100. If ETF inflows maintain their current pace, a rise to this psychological level could trigger pressure against late shorts who are betting on a continued downtrend.
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The article Solana ETFs Create “Serious Investor Base,” Outpacing Bitcoin in Key Metrics appeared first on Cryptonews.


