Solana Is Getting Attention From Both Wall Street and DeFi
Solana is back in the spotlight after U.S. spot SOL exchange-traded funds crossed a major inflow milestone, Goldman Sachs disclosed a sizable Solana ETF position, and the Solana Foundation moved to support Aave during a period of DeFi liquidity stress.
The latest market reports point to cumulative net inflows above $1 billion for U.S. spot Solana ETFs, although recent SoSoValue-linked updates put total net assets closer to $883 million, meaning the cleaner milestone is cumulative inflows rather than current AUM. That distinction matters because ETF assets can move with both investor flows and SOL’s market price.
The bigger story is still clear. Solana has moved beyond being a retail-driven Layer 1 trade and is increasingly being packaged for institutional investors through regulated ETF products.
Goldman’s SOL ETF Stake Adds TradFi Weight
A $108 Million Disclosure Stands Out
Goldman Sachs disclosed about $108 million in Solana-linked ETF exposure at the end of the fourth quarter of 2025, according to reporting based on the bank’s regulatory filing. The position included roughly $45 million in the Bitwise Solana Staking ETF and about $35.7 million in the Grayscale Solana Trust, with smaller positions spread across products tied to Fidelity, VanEck, 21Shares and Franklin Templeton.
For Solana, the disclosure is significant because Goldman is one of the most visible names in traditional finance. A single filing does not mean Wall Street has fully embraced SOL, and ETF holdings can reflect client activity, trading desks, or broader portfolio strategies. Even so, the presence of a major investment bank in Solana products gives the asset a new layer of credibility with institutional allocators.
Solana ETFs Have Had a Fast Start
The institutional story began accelerating after Bitwise launched its Solana Staking ETF in October 2025. Reuters reported that the product attracted $420 million in its first week, citing LSEG data, and that the launch pushed other issuers to rethink their own altcoin ETF strategies.
That first-mover momentum helped turn Solana into one of the most closely watched ETF markets beyond Bitcoin and Ethereum. The question now is whether inflows remain steady, especially if SOL’s price stays volatile or broader crypto risk appetite weakens.
Solana Foundation Steps Into Aave’s Liquidity Stress
A USDT Loan During a Difficult Moment
In a separate but related DeFi development, Solana Foundation Chair Lily Liu announced a USDT loan to Aave to support ecosystem recovery after the KelpDAO rsETH exploit disrupted liquidity across Aave’s Ethereum markets. CryptoBriefing reported that the move followed a freeze on Aave’s Ethereum markets and a wave of withdrawals tied to the exploit fallout.
The Foundation’s loan is important because it shows Solana trying to play a larger role in DeFi liquidity, not just high-speed trading and meme coin activity. Aave is one of the most established lending protocols in crypto, so support during a stress event could help deepen the relationship between the two ecosystems.
Aave V3 on Solana Could Be the Bigger Prize
The loan also arrives as Aave V3’s deployment on Solana is expected to move closer to launch. Aave’s own documentation describes V3 as a liquidity protocol designed for capital efficiency and risk controls across more than 14 blockchain networks. Its features include Efficiency Mode for correlated assets and Isolation Mode for limiting risk around newer or more volatile collateral types.
If Aave V3 launches successfully on Solana, it could give the network a stronger institutional-grade lending layer. That would matter for stablecoin borrowing, SOL collateral markets, liquid staking assets, and broader DeFi total value locked.
Why These Two Stories Belong Together
Solana’s ETF momentum and its deeper DeFi ambitions are not separate narratives. ETFs help SOL reach traditional investors through familiar brokerage products, while Aave integration could expand on-chain liquidity and make Solana more useful for active capital markets.
That combination is exactly what Layer 1 networks are competing for in 2026. The winners are unlikely to be judged only by transaction speed or developer activity. They will also be judged by whether they can attract institutional capital, support serious lending markets, and handle stress without losing trust.
Solana still faces risks. ETF flows can reverse quickly, Goldman’s position may not represent a long-term directional bet, and Aave’s recovery from the KelpDAO fallout depends on multiple moving parts. The USDT loan also does not solve every liquidity issue by itself.
Still, the direction of travel is notable. Solana is becoming more visible in regulated investment products while also pushing deeper into core DeFi infrastructure.
What Comes Next
The next signals to watch are whether Solana ETF flows remain positive, whether more large banks disclose SOL exposure, and whether Goldman adds to or trims its position in future filings.
On the DeFi side, the key milestone is Aave V3’s actual launch on Solana. If the deployment goes live and attracts meaningful stablecoin and SOL-based liquidity, the Solana Foundation’s Aave support may look less like a one-time backstop and more like part of a broader strategy to make Solana a serious lending hub.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial, investment, or legal advice. Always conduct your own research before making any investment decisions.


















