VanEck’s proposed spot Solana exchange-traded fund has quietly appeared on the Depository Trust & Clearing Corporation’s website under the ticker VSOL, placing the product in the clearinghouse’s “active & pre-launch” roster. “BREAKING: VanEck’s Solana ETF (VSOL) is now listed on DTCC… While not an SEC approval, it’s a preparatory step, mirroring BTC and ETH ETFs,” the analytics account SolanaFloor told its 109,000 followers on X overnight.
VanEck’s Solana ETF Hits DTCC Listing
The DTCC entry signals that the fund’s operational plumbing—creation/redemption identifiers, trade settlement codes and clearing eligibility—has been assigned, even though shares cannot yet be issued. Derivatives and prediction markets reacted swiftly. On Polymarket, the contract that pays out if any Solana ETF is approved by 31 July 2025 now prices a 58–60 % probability, while the full-year contract has surged to 92%.
Regulatory handicappers are still leaning bullish. Bloomberg Intelligence’s Eric Balchunas wrote that investors should “get ready for a potential alt-coin ETF summer with Solana likely leading the way,” and together with colleague James Seyffart now assigns a 90% likelihood of eventual approval.
Seyffart tempered near-term euphoria, however, warning that “there needs to be a back-and-forth with the SEC and issuers to iron out details,” recalling the flurry of paperwork that preceded January 2024’s spot-Bitcoin launches.
That dialogue is already under way. The SEC asked would-be issuers to amend their S-1 registration statements last week; seven managers—including Fidelity, Bitwise, Franklin Templeton, 21Shares, Grayscale and Canary—filed updates on 13 June. European digital-asset house CoinShares followed yesterday, becoming the eighth entrant in the race.
Macro structure also looks friendlier than during earlier alt-coin attempts. CME Group launched cash-settled futures in mid-March, adding the asset to its regulated derivatives suite.
While the DTCC listing does not bind the SEC, it places VanEck’s fund on the same procedural track that preceded January 2024’s Bitcoin and July 2024s Ether approvals. Whether that track leads to a July debut—or slips to year-end—now hinges on how quickly staff conclude their review of staking language, custody mechanics and market-manipulation surveillance.
For traders, the presence of VSOL on DTCC’s screens is more than cosmetic: it demonstrates that, at least on the market-infrastructure side, the switch has been wired and tested—waiting only for a regulatory finger to press “on.”
When SEC Approval?
Notably, the SEC delayed Franklin Templeton’s spot-Solana ETF application yesterday—a pause that analyst James Seyffart called “expected… [because] today was only an intermediary deadline.” He added that the agency’s ongoing dialogue over the updated S-1s for Solana-staking products is “a very positive sign,” even if “timelines for approvals are less certain.”
Fellow Bloomberg ETF watcher Eric Balchunas concurred, reiterating his 90% base-case odds of eventual approval while cautioning that the current “2-to-4-week” horizon is “ambitious”: “The ball is in the SEC’s court after the S-1s are re-filed; the dialogue between staff and issuers is a great sign, but the timeline is less clear.”
Seyffart summed up the mood: “I wouldn’t be shocked if we see approvals in the next month, but I also wouldn’t be surprised if we have to wait until the final deadline in October… At the end of the day, the SEC is engaging—and that’s a good sign.”
At press time, SOL traded at $145.89.