Solana exhibits an on-chain pattern that appears bearish at first glance but becomes constructive when considered alongside capital flows into regulated investment products.
Over the past month, early Solana holders, investors who accumulated during quieter market phases, have begun moving older coins back into circulation.
For context, Arkham Intelligence analyst Emmett Gallic reported on Oct. 30 that a long-dormant Solana address had recently transferred 200,000 SOL, worth roughly $40 million, to Coinbase Prime. Usually, such transactions often spark concern that a major holder is preparing to sell.
In fact, CryptoQuant data reinforced that perception, showing that large wallets have recently dominated average spot trade sizes on major exchanges. This indicates that older, better-capitalized investors were distributing their holdings into stronger positions.

That behavior isn’t inherently bearish. Across Bitcoin, Ethereum, and Solana, veteran investors tend to sell when liquidity improves, rather than when markets are illiquid.
However, what sets the current cycle apart is the new class of buyers absorbing that supply.
ETF flows absorb supply
CoinShares’ weekly digital asset fund report indicates that Solana-focused products have garnered approximately $381 million in inflows for the month, bringing their year-to-date flows to roughly $2.8 billion.
That placed Solana behind only Bitcoin and Ethereum as one of the top-performing crypto assets among institutional products, despite the significant market pullback that wiped more than $20 billion from investors’ earlier in the month.
Moreover, this shift has coincided with the debut of several new US-listed Solana investment vehicles.
Indeed, Grayscale’s Solana Trust (ticker: GSOL), which converted into an exchange-traded format on Oct. 29, recorded a modest $1.4 million in first-day net inflows, according to SoSoValue data.
A day earlier, Bitwise’s Solana Staking ETF (BSOL) saw a far stronger debut with $69.5 million in inflows, followed by another $46.5 million on Oct. 29. In fact, trading activity has mirrored that enthusiasm, with BSOL recording $57.9 million in day-one volume and over $72 million the following day.

Considering this, Bloomberg ETF analyst Eric Balchunas described the performance as “a strong sign of institutional demand” for Solana-linked products.
How does this impact SOL?
The changing ownership dynamics are strengthening Solana’s market structure rather than weakening it.
While old wallets have been distributing coins, those sales are being absorbed by regulated ETFs and institutional buyers with longer investment horizons. That reduces short-term speculative churn and anchors more stable, programmatic demand.
Price-wise, that handoff helps explain why SOL has held within a $180–$200 range even as broader crypto volatility has risen.
Instead of sharp selloffs, the token has shown controlled consolidation, suggesting that newly created ETF shares are being absorbed faster than they reenter the exchanges. Inflows from Bitwise’s BSOL and Grayscale’s GSOL act as a continuous liquidity sink, effectively tightening the available float in spot markets.
At the same time, the increase in open interest, up from under $8 billion to around $10 billion, has deepened Solana’s derivatives market.

That additional liquidity provides large holders with room to de-risk their positions without triggering outsized price reactions. Together, the two trends create a cushion against volatility: liquidity is broadening even as ownership concentrates among long-term vehicles.
If sustained, this pattern supports a more mature phase of price discovery.
SOL may continue trading sideways in the near term, but with less downside pressure and a more supportive base for future rallies.
However, the key risk is that the ETF inflows will fade below roughly $100 million weekly, while long-term holders continue to distribute. That imbalance could flip the equation, pushing SOL back toward exchange supply and weakening price stability.
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