The Fidelity Solana Fund and the Canary Marinade Solana ETF were launched, and the total net inflow of US Solana spot ETFs reached $30.09 million in a single day.
According to Odaily Planet Daily, on November 18th, Eastern Time, the Fidelity Solana Fund (ticker symbol FSOL) and the Canary Marinade Solana ETF (ticker symbol SOLC) were officially listed on the NYSE and Nasdaq respectively, bringing the total number of listed Solana spot ETFs in the United States to five.
According to SoSoValue data, the Solana spot ETF saw a net inflow of $30.09 million yesterday (November 18th, Eastern Time). Among them,
On its first day of trading, FSOL saw a net inflow of $2.07 million, a trading volume of $8.58 million, and a total net asset value of $5.38 million.
SOLC saw no net inflows on its first day of trading, with a trading volume of $130,000 and a total net asset value of $820,000.
The largest single-day net inflow was seen in the Bitwise Solana ETF (BSOL), with a net inflow of $23 million, bringing its historical total net inflow to $388 million.
As of press time, the Solana spot ETF has a total net asset value of $594 million, a Solana net asset ratio of 0.76%, and a cumulative net inflow of $420 million.
The Fidelity Solana Fund supports cash or in-kind redemption and has a management fee of 0.25%. It supports Solana to provide additional returns through staking, with the manager and staking provider sharing 15% and the remaining 15% going to investors.
The Canary Marinade Solana ETF supports cash or in-kind creation and redemption, with a management fee of 0.50%. It allows Solana to generate additional returns through staking, and the manager does not receive any additional commission.

