For two years, the easy trade was to slap Bitcoin on the balance sheet and ride the wave. That worked for a handful of names, but it also created an army of copycats. Now a different bet is showing up in filings and press wires: public firms stockpiling SOL.
This isn’t just a new ticker swap. Solana treasuries behave differently, come with their own operational quirks, and can actually plug into products. The question is whether these stocks are just high-beta SOL trackers or the start of a more interesting corporate playbook.
We’ve got fresh data points, some pushback from boards, and a few on-chain breadcrumbs worth following.
Point Details Public SOL war chests are real The top five publicly traded Solana treasury companies collectively hold more than 15.7 million SOL, per a June roundup (KuCoin News). Forward Industries is the headline Forward expanded its stash by 500k+ SOL in fiscal Q3, bringing its treasury to 7.55 million SOL as of June 30, 2026 (Forward Industries press release). Boards aren’t rubber-stamping roll-ups HSDT and Brera rejected consolidation offers from Forward in June, even as media framed Forward as the largest public SOL treasury (~7M SOL, acquisition cost cited near $1.6B) (Cointelegraph). Liquidity windows matter An on-chain monitor flagged 455,784 SOL moving from a Forward-linked wallet to Coinbase Prime on June 5, 2026 (LookOnChain), a reminder that execution venues and timing are material. Different from Bitcoin treasuries Staking optionality, validator choices, and upgrade cadence give SOL treasuries more moving parts than BTC balance sheets — with potential yield but added operational risk.
When MicroStrategy turned the corporate treasury into a Bitcoin bet, it set a template: buy, hold, talk about it nonstop. Plenty tried to mimic it. The problem is, markets price in mimicry fast. You end up with a handful of names trading like leveraged BTC without the software business ever mattering.
Solana treasuries are a different flavor. Yes, you still take big price risk, but you also get knobs to turn: staking, on-chain integrations, ecosystem partnerships, and operational flows that can justify owning SOL beyond a marketing line.
We’re now seeing a proper cluster of public firms with notable SOL exposure. A June market snapshot put the top five at over 15.7 million SOL combined (KuCoin News). That’s not a cottage trend. It’s a balance-sheet decision showing up at scale.
SOL can be put to work. Companies can delegate to validators and earn a variable staking return. They can also wire SOL into products: loyalty points with on-chain settlement, NFT-based memberships, payments for microtransactions, DePIN integrations, or simply subsidizing user fees for growth experiments.
Pro tip: If a company can point to a product or revenue stream where SOL reduces cost or wins customers, the treasury stops being a static bet and becomes a strategic input. That’s the test.
Forward Industries has become the poster child for a public SOL treasury. In a July 1 update, the company said it bought more than 500,000 SOL in fiscal Q3 at an average price around $79, lifting its treasury to 7.55 million SOL as of June 30, 2026 (Forward Industries press release).
Media have framed Forward as the largest public SOL treasury. A mid-June report noted roughly 7 million SOL and cited an acquisition cost near $1.6 billion, while also pointing out that Solana-focused targets weren’t eager to be rolled up: HSDT’s board declined on June 12 and Brera did the same on June 9 (Cointelegraph).
We also got a useful on-chain breadcrumb. On June 5 an analytics account flagged a transfer of 455,784 SOL (about $31.9 million at the time) from a wallet linked to Forward to Coinbase Prime (LookOnChain). It’s a reminder that treasury stories live on two timelines: the narrative arc in filings and the hour-by-hour reality of execution and risk.
Bitcoin treasury stocks are mostly a beta story. You’re buying correlation with some operating noise. Solana treasury names add optionality and new ways to mess it up.
Factor BTC Treasury Stock SOL Treasury Stock Core exposure BTC price SOL price On-chain utility Limited for corporates Can plug into products, fees, and growth spend Yield mechanic Generally none Delegation-based staking (operational risk attached) Ops complexity Lower Higher: validators, epochs, upgrades Liquidity rhythm Spot liquidity 24/7 Unstaking windows add timing frictions Headline risk Macro, miner flows Network performance, validator health, ecosystem headlines
Delegating SOL to validators can provide a yield, but it introduces new ways to lose money or sleep. Validators can get slashed in certain fault conditions. Reward rates change with network dynamics. And security teams may cap the number of validators they’re comfortable with, which can create concentration risk.
Pro tip: If you’re valuing a SOL-heavy company, do not assume staking on 100 percent of the treasury. Big treasuries often leave a meaningful buffer un-staked for liquidity and risk control.
Most public companies will route size through custodians and prime brokers. The June 5 transfer flagged from a wallet tied to Forward into Coinbase Prime (LookOnChain) is a live example of how these flows surface. Whether that was for selling, rebalancing, or custody movement, it underscores that on-chain watchers can and will front-run the narrative.
Unstaking on Solana follows epoch boundaries, which typically means waiting days, not hours. If a company needs cash quickly for payroll, acquisitions, or collateral calls, that delay matters. Good treasurers forecast unlock windows and keep trading lines ready.
Two buckets here: securities law risk and accounting treatment.
Bottom line: fair value makes reported numbers more faithful to market reality, but if a firm is staking or using SOL in operations, you’ll want to see how they present those activities — and what they count as operating versus investing cash flows.
Table/chart of the top 10 publicly traded Solana treasuries and their SOL holdings (shows Forward at ~7.0M SOL) — useful visual for confirming which public firms hold the largest corporate SOL positions and the scale of those treasuries. — Source: Cointelegraph
Pro tip: Treat the core business and the SOL book as separate segments first. If management can’t articulate the bridge between them, price a discount.
If you came looking for a simple yes-or-no on “are these just Bitcoin copycats,” here’s mine: some are, some aren’t. The tells are in the operational playbook, not the press headline. A real Solana treasury strategy shows up in validator policy, unlock calendars, custody design, and products that actually touch the chain.
None of this is investment advice. It’s a framework to keep you from anchoring only on a token count and a ticker.
For fuller context on where the market’s leaning, remember the baseline: the top five public SOL treasuries sit north of 15.7 million tokens (KuCoin News), and the largest headline name, Forward Industries, disclosed 7.55 million SOL as of June 30 (Forward Industries press release). Those two numbers alone tell you we’re past a curiosity phase.
It’s a publicly traded company whose balance sheet holds a meaningful amount of SOL. Some simply hold SOL as a treasury reserve; others also deploy it in staking or integrate it into products and incentives.
Bitcoin treasuries are buy-and-hold with less operational overhead. Solana treasuries can earn staking rewards, face validator choices, and can connect directly to products. That’s more optionality and more ways to trip.
They can affect recognition and disclosures, but the headline change in 2025-2026 is FASB’s fair value accounting for many crypto assets. Gains and losses flow through earnings. Staking adds policy and risk-factor complexity more than it changes that core rule.
There’s no fixed vesting lockup for a company’s own SOL, but staked SOL takes time to deactivate. Unstaking follows Solana’s epoch cadence, so treasurers plan liquidity a few days ahead.
Two Solana-focused firms, HSDT and Brera, turned down consolidation offers from Forward Industries in early June, per media reports. The pushback suggests boards want tighter strategic logic before signing onto roll-ups.
Coverage in mid-June presented Forward as the largest public SOL treasury by tokens, citing roughly 7 million SOL at the time, and noted an acquisition cost near $1.6 billion. Forward later disclosed 7.55 million SOL as of June 30.
Large wallet movements to or from custodians and exchanges, such as the June 5 transfer to Coinbase Prime flagged by an analytics account, can hint at rebalancing or policy changes before filings land.
If you want ongoing coverage without noise, Crypto Daily tracks these treasury shifts as they show up on-chain and in filings. You can always check the latest analysis at Crypto Daily.
Disclaimer: This article is provided for informational purposes only. It is not offered or intended to be used as legal, tax, investment, financial, or other advice.


