Solana Accumulation Surges After Price Drop

- Solana ETFs attract $351 million in inflows during 11-day streak as price drops 20%.
- NYSE launches options trading for GSOL and BSOL, enabling institutional risk management tools.
- SOL dropped 2% daily and over 20% since October 28.
Despite a 2% SOL price decline over 24 hours and more than 20% over 11 days, Solana ETFs have continued attracting institutional inflows during the same period. The pattern indicates retail traders are selling while institutions accumulate during the price weakness.
As of this writing, Solana trades at $159, down nearly 2% on the day and over 20% since October 28, the first day of inflow for Solana ETFs. Data shows a surge in Solana ETF inflows for the 11th consecutive day, totaling $351 million since launch across Bitwise’s BSOL and Grayscale’s GSOL funds.
Divergence between flows and price action
The chart reveals divergence between accumulation and price movement. While Solana has achieved 11 consecutive days of ETF inflows, the price has declined. This signals growing confidence among institutions seeking exposure to SOL while retail participants book profits.
Analyst AB Kuai Dong highlighted the contrast, noting that Solana’s ETF inflows are rising even faster than the price drop. “Good news: SOL ETF sees inflows every day. Bad news: The inflow momentum is even faster than SOL’s drop,” he stated, questioning whether upcoming XRP and DOGE ETFs might follow similar patterns.
Adding to the institutional narrative, the New York Stock Exchange has officially launched options trading for Solana ETFs, a first for the ecosystem. The listings for GSOL and BSOL provide risk management, yield strategies, and price discovery tools previously exclusive to traditional markets.
Teddy Fusaro, President of Bitwise, called the milestone a development bringing institutional-grade benefits. “Options are now live on America’s largest Solana ETF, BSOL. Pretty remarkable. Institutional tools for risk management, yield enhancement, and efficient price discovery that are essential at scale,” Fusaro wrote.
This evolution positions Solana as a financial asset with a maturing derivatives market, a development typically preceding major institutional adoption cycles.
XRP and DOGE speculation builds
While Bitcoin ETFs led the market with $524 million in net inflows on November 11, driven by BlackRock’s IBIT, and Ethereum ETFs saw $107 million in outflows for a third consecutive day, Solana’s ETF market stood out with $8 million in daily inflows, continuing an 11-day streak.
The trend highlights institutional diversification beyond Bitcoin and Ethereum, with large holders staking and accumulating Solana for yield and long-term positioning. This could mark early stages of Solana’s institutional adoption curve.