Wall Street firms directed more than $540 million into US-listed spot Solana exchange-traded funds during the fourth quarter. Bloomberg ETF analyst James Seyffart shared the data based on recent regulatory filings. The figures show concentrated institutional exposure following the October launch of these products.
Seyffart cited 13F filings submitted to the US Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) in mid-February. These filings require firms managing over $100 million to disclose quarterly holdings. The data shows that the top 30 institutional holders purchased more than $540 million in spot Solana ETFs during Q4.
Electric Capital led all buyers with $137.8 million in exposure to the funds. Goldman Sachs followed with $107.4 million in reported holdings. Elequin Capital, SIG Holding, and Multicoin Capital completed the top five positions.
Morgan Stanley and Citadel Advisors also reported positions in the newly launched products. Their filings show allocations after Bitwise listed the first SEC-approved spot Solana ETF on Oct. 28. The disclosures reflect positions held at the end of the fourth quarter.
Investment advisers accounted for over $270 million of the reported holdings. Hedge fund managers followed with $186.4 million in exposure. Holding companies, brokerage firms, and banks reported smaller allocations totaling under $85 million combined.
Eric Balchunas, another Bloomberg ETF analyst, addressed the ownership structure in recent comments. He said that “50% of Solana ETF assets are held by these 13F-filing firms.” He added that this composition points to a more established investor base.
Farside Investors data shows that US spot Solana ETFs have drawn $952 million in cumulative inflows since launch. These inflows reflect demand since trading began in late October. The funds entered the market following regulatory approval from the SEC.
The reported $540 million in institutional holdings corresponded to about 4.3 million SOL tokens. Those tokens backed the ETF shares held by the reporting firms. The calculation reflects token equivalents at the end of Q4.
However, the market value of those 4.3 million SOL tokens has declined since year-end. SOL traded at $124.95 at the end of Q4. At the time of writing, the token changed hands at $86.53.
Balchunas addressed fund flows despite the token’s price movement. He stated that cumulative flows have “held strong in recent months” even as prices fell. His remarks focused on flow data rather than market performance.
The SEC requires quarterly disclosures through Form 13F filings. These filings provide transparency into institutional equity holdings. Seyffart based his analysis on the most recent submissions released in February.
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