JPMorgan Chase revealed a $523,000 holding in a spot Solana ETF in its Q1 filing, a first for the bank that adds significant weight to the narrative of rising institutional interest in assets beyond Bitcoin and Ethereum.
"The disclosure, part of the bank's mandatory 13F filing with the SEC, shows a 47,460-share position in the Bitwise Solana Staking ETF," according to the official document filed May 15, 2026.
The move makes JPMorgan one of the first major U.S. banks to formally disclose a stake in a Solana-based product. It joins other institutions like Dartmouth College, whose endowment recently reported a $3.3 million position in the same Bitwise fund. The inflows have helped push total assets in the eight U.S. spot Solana ETFs above $1.05 billion, per data from Blockworks.
With Solana's Alpenglow upgrade promising to slash transaction finality times and a potential mainnet rollout by Q3 2026, institutional investors are now evaluating SOL on its technical merits. This growing ETF demand, independent of Bitcoin's price action, suggests a new phase of capital rotation as firms seek catalyst-driven assets with staking yield capabilities.
Solana ETFs See $100 Million Inflow as Ethereum Bleeds
The disclosure lands as Solana ETFs are experiencing a surge in demand, even as the broader market shows signs of weakness. Through May 14, Solana spot ETFs have logged 11 consecutive days of inflows, pulling in over $100 million this month alone. This contrasts sharply with Ethereum ETFs, which bled $189 million over a recent four-day period.
The timing of the inflows points to specific catalysts. The largest single-day haul for SOL ETFs came on May 11, the same day the network’s major Alpenglow upgrade went live on its testnet. This upgrade is the largest consensus overhaul in Solana's history and aims to reduce block finality from several seconds to just 150 milliseconds.
Price Stalls Below $98 Resistance
Despite the strong institutional signals, the price of Solana (SOL) remains in a consolidation pattern. The token has been trading in a $20 range between $78 and $98 since February. As of May 15, SOL was trading around $92.
A decisive break above the $98 resistance level is needed to signal a new leg up, with technical analysts watching for a potential rally toward $107 and $117. However, some on-chain indicators suggest the sideways movement could extend before a breakout occurs.
JPMorgan's relatively small "tracker" position is less important for its size than for the signal it sends: one of the world's largest banks is now formally involved in the Solana ecosystem. This disclosure can pave the way for larger allocations from other conservative funds and provides a key data point for risk committees evaluating the asset. The bank's simultaneous exit from an XRP ETF further highlights a deliberate, asset-specific strategy.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.