Key Takeaways
Why is Fidelity’s move significant?
Fidelity’s addition of Solana gives U.S. investors regulated, direct access to SOL for the first time, placing it alongside Bitcoin and Ethereum.
How does Hong Kong’s ETF approval change the game?
Hong Kong’s green light for the first Solana spot ETF marks a significant turning point globally, positioning Asia ahead of the U.S.
Solana [SOL] gained another institutional milestone on 23 October after asset management giant Fidelity made it available on its platform. Solana announced that the firm had made the token available to all its U.S. brokerage customers.
The move gives investors direct exposure to SOL alongside Bitcoin [BTC] and Ethereum [ETH] within the Fidelity platform. The move marks a new chapter in the asset’s path toward mainstream adoption.
Solana ETF gets Hong Kong nod
The $5.8 trillion asset manager’s inclusion of Solana underscores the growing demand for regulated access to alternative layer-1 assets.
It also comes just days after Hong Kong’s Securities and Futures Commission (SFC) approved the first Solana spot ETF, issued by ChinaAMC.
The ETF, which will begin trading on 27 October, positions Hong Kong ahead of the United States in opening institutional routes to Solana exposure.
Global spotlight shifts to the U.S.
In the United States, Solana ETF applications remain in limbo following the ongoing government shutdown. The shutdown has forced the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) to pause all new product reviews.
Industry analysts expect the review process to resume once the agency reopens, given that several major issuers — including VanEck and Franklin Templeton — have already filed for spot Solana ETFs.
That delay hasn’t stopped momentum from building globally. With Hong Kong’s approval and Fidelity’s integration, Solana now joins Bitcoin and Ethereum as one of the few crypto assets bridging both retail and institutional channels across continents.
SOL price sees renewed strength
At press time, Solana traded at $189, up nearly 1% over the past 24 hours. Data from TradingView showed SOL consolidating between the $185 and $195 range after rebounding from its weekly lows.


Source: TradingView
The Accumulation/Distribution (A/D) indicator rose modestly, signaling steady buying activity despite broader market volatility.
Should ETF optimism continue, SOL could retest the $200 resistance level, a zone last breached earlier in the month before a market-wide correction pulled prices lower.
A turning point for Solana
Between Fidelity’s listing, Hong Kong’s regulatory approval, and the pending U.S. ETF green light, Solana is seeing one of its strongest institutional adoption phases to date.
Each step further legitimizes SOL as more than a high-speed blockchain — positioning it instead as an emerging macro asset alongside Bitcoin and Ethereum.
If the U.S. follows Hong Kong’s lead once the shutdown ends, Solana could enter its most significant growth cycle yet, backed by both retail accessibility and institutional-grade demand.

