Morgan Stanley has refiled its Solana exchange-traded fund registration with the SEC, this time incorporating a staking component into the product structure.
The updated filing, an amended S-1 registration statement, follows the firm’s original S-1 submission earlier this year. The amendment signals that Morgan Stanley’s investment management arm is actively iterating on the product design rather than letting the initial filing sit idle.
A refiling in the ETF approval process typically reflects issuer responses to SEC feedback or a strategic decision to strengthen the application. In this case, the addition of staking suggests Morgan Stanley sees yield generation as a meaningful differentiator for its Solana product.
The move comes amid a broader wave of institutional crypto activity, with firms like Ark Invest recently increasing positions after market selloffs, pointing to sustained institutional appetite for digital asset exposure.
Staking allows Solana token holders to earn rewards by helping secure the network. In an ETF wrapper, this means the fund could potentially pass staking yield through to shareholders, making the product more than a passive price tracker.
This distinction matters because most crypto ETF filings to date have focused on straightforward spot exposure. A staking-enabled Solana ETF would offer something closer to a yield-bearing instrument, appealing to a different segment of institutional investors.
Solana’s proof-of-stake architecture makes it a natural candidate for this kind of product design. Unlike Bitcoin ETFs, which cannot offer staking, a Solana ETF with built-in staking could generate ongoing returns independent of price appreciation. For context on how digital asset custody intersects with institutional processes, the recent 1,000 BTC seizure in an Irish drug case illustrates the growing complexity of institutional-scale crypto asset handling.
The specifics of how staking rewards would be handled, including tax treatment and distribution mechanics, remain subject to regulatory review. Morgan Stanley’s press release on its cryptocurrency ETP filings confirmed the firm’s intent to bring multiple crypto products to market, though detailed staking mechanics were not disclosed.
The refiling adds to a growing list of Solana-focused ETF efforts from traditional finance firms. Morgan Stanley’s continued engagement with the SEC on this filing suggests the firm views the regulatory path as viable enough to invest further resources.
A refiling is not an approval, and the SEC’s timeline for reviewing amended crypto ETF applications remains unpredictable. Market participants should treat this as a process update, not a finish line.
The staking element could shape how competing issuers approach their own Solana ETF filings. If the SEC signals comfort with staking in an ETF structure, it would likely prompt other applicants to amend their filings with similar features. As institutional infrastructure for digital assets expands, including efforts like the World Datacentre Summit Vietnam 2026 focused on supporting digital asset operations, the pipeline of crypto investment products continues to grow.
The amended S-1 moves the product closer to a potential launch, but approval depends on regulatory review that could still take months.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial or investment advice. Cryptocurrency and digital asset markets carry significant risk. Always do your own research before making decisions.


