Sui ETFs just launched — and the volume is collapsing because nobody’s showing up
Two spot Sui ETFs began trading in US markets on Feb. 18. Canary’s SUIS is listed on Nasdaq, while Grayscale’s GSUI appeared on NYSE Arca.
Both products offer staking-enabled exposure to Sui, the layer-1 blockchain positioned as a high-throughput alternative to Ethereum.
By the end of the first trading session, GSUI had moved roughly 8,000 shares. SUIS traded around 1,468. Combined notional volume came in under $150,000, a figure so low it barely registered on the tape.
While Solana’s BSOL debuted with $55.4 million in day-one trading volume in October 2025 and XRP’s XRPC opened with roughly $58 million a month later, Sui’s twin launches struggled to generate liquidity equivalent to a single large institutional block trade.
The contrast reveals a structural reality: the further an asset sits from the top of the market cap rankings, the harder it becomes to summon secondary-market activity. This happens even when the regulatory wrapper, exchange listing, and issuer pedigree are identical.
Liquidity ladder
Debut-day trading volume creates a clean snapshot of investor readiness.
It captures how many desks are willing to make markets, how many advisors are comfortable recommending exposure, how many retail platforms prominently feature the ticker, and how much natural two-way flow exists from the open.
The altcoin ETF class has now generated enough launches to reveal clear tiering.
At the top, Solana and XRP command tens of millions in opening-day volume. Bitwise’s BSOL moved $55.4 million on Oct. 28. Canary’s XRPC hit roughly $58 million on Nov. 13.
Those numbers reflect institutional-grade liquidity: tight spreads, active market making, and enough flow to absorb size without moving the market.
The mid-tier shows more variance. Grayscale’s Chainlink ETF (GLNK) reportedly generated around $13 million in first-day trading volume on Dec. 2.
Bitwise’s competing Chainlink product (CLNK) moved approximately $3.2 million in notional value on Jan. 14.
Then the cliff arrives. Canary’s Litecoin fund (LTCC) managed roughly $1 million, while its Hedera ETF (HBR) was the exception, posting about $8 million on its October debut.
Grayscale’s Dogecoin ETF (GDOG) traded around $1.4 million on Nov. 24. VanEck’s Avalanche product (VAVX) printed approximately $334,000 on Jan. 26.
Sui’s combined launch sits well below that baseline.
Market cap rank maps closely to debut-day liquidity. XRP sits at #4, Solana at #7, and Dogecoin at #9. Hedera ranks #25, Litecoin #27, and Sui #31.
A rough quantitative read suggests that every 10 rank drops corresponds to a roughly 7-fold decline in opening-day trading volume. By rank 30, implied debut-day volume falls into the low six figures, exactly where Sui landed.
Dogecoin complicates the narrative. Despite its top 10 market cap, GDOG’s $1.4 million debut volume sits closer to the lower-tier cohort.
What matters isn’t just size but familiarity, distribution infrastructure, advisor comfort, and trading culture. Market cap gets attention, distribution gets volume.

Why volume fades
Listing an ETF is cheap and administratively simple. Issuers file, exchanges approve, tickers go live.
However, none of that forces advisory platforms, model portfolios, or retail brokerage interfaces to feature the product. Distribution is earned through education, marketing spend, backroom integration, and a liquidity flywheel where early volume attracts market making capital, which tightens spreads, which attracts more flow.
That flywheel never spins up for most launches. Market makers, who handle more than 99% of secondary ETF transactions according to VettaFi research, make money on flow and hedging efficiency.
For a single-token altcoin ETF, the question is: how cleanly can I hedge this exposure intraday? For Solana or XRP, the answer is “very cleanly,” as deep order books on multiple venues, robust futures markets, and institutional lending desks.
For Sui, hedging becomes more costly, spread-capture less reliable, and capital commitment harder to justify.
ETF trading volume does not equal ETF liquidity.
JPMorgan’s research argues that low screen volume doesn’t automatically signal liquidity risk, because creation and redemption mechanisms allow market makers to source liquidity directly from the underlying asset.
But low volume still matters for smaller tactical orders and investor perception.
ETF.com notes that spreads tend to be narrower when trading volume is robust. Poor day-to-day tape signals weak mindshare, limited natural two-way flow, and bad optics.
Even if sophisticated traders can access liquidity through creation units, retail investors see wide spreads and thin volume and walk away.


The distribution wall
What Sui’s debut reveals isn’t a problem with Sui. It’s a ceiling on how far down the market-cap ladder ETF distribution can realistically reach.
The same infrastructure that made Solana ETFs functional exists for Sui. The regulatory approval process was identical. What’s missing is investor demand at a sufficient scale to create sustainable liquidity.
That demand doesn’t scale linearly with market cap. It clusters around assets that institutional allocators and retail platforms consider “committee-safe.”
Solana and XRP have that status, built through years of venture backing, exchange listings, and regulatory survival. Chainlink carved out a niche as “the infrastructure play.” Hedera benefits from enterprise governance branding. Litecoin trades on nostalgia.
Sui, despite strong technical fundamentals, hasn’t achieved that level of institutional comfort. The ETF wrapper can’t create demand that doesn’t exist upstream.
The forward-looking implication is a barbell market structure.
A small set of altcoin ETFs, likely three to five products, will achieve genuine liquidity and institutional adoption. Everything else becomes tradeable-but-thin: functional for niche allocators, but not competitive with the top tier on spreads, volume, or advisor mindshare.
This dynamic isn’t unique to crypto. Morningstar’s 2025 ETF review highlights a long tail of sub-scale products across the broader fund universe, with persistent closures among funds that fail to attract assets or trading interest.
The crypto ETF market is replicating that pattern faster, compressed by the rapid pace of launches and the narrow distribution infrastructure.
JPMorgan projected that altcoin ETFs could draw $14 billion in assets during their first six months, with a large portion flowing into Solana-focused products. That forecast reflects asset-gathering potential, not guaranteed trading volume, but reinforces the concentration risk.
Even in an optimistic scenario, most capital flows to the top few names.
| Underlying | Ticker | Launch date | Exchange | Debut-day trading volume | Market cap rank | Tier |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| XRP | XRPC | 2025-11-13 | — | ~$58.0M (notional) | #4 | Top |
| SOL | BSOL | 2025-10-28 | — | $55.4M (notional) | #7 | Top |
| LINK | GLNK | 2025-12-02 | — | ~$13.0M (notional, reported) | — | Mid |
| HBAR | HBR | 2025-10-28 | — | ~$8.0M (notional, reported) | #25 | Mid |
| LINK | CLNK | 2026-01-14 | — | ~$3.2M (notional) | — | Mid |
| DOGE | GDOG | 2025-11-24 | — | ~$1.4M (notional) | #9 | Long tail |
| LTC | LTCC | 2025-10-28 | — | ~$1.0M (notional, reported) | #27 | Long tail |
| AVAX | VAVX | 2026-01-26 | — | ~$334K (notional, reported) | — | Long tail |
| SUI | GSUI | 2026-02-18 | NYSE Arca | ~8,000 shares (approx ~$109K notional) | #31 | Long tail |
| SUI | SUIS | 2026-02-18 | Nasdaq | 1,468 shares (approx ~$35K notional) | #31 | Long tail |
What happens next
The Sui debut offers a test case for what happens when regulatory approval meets weak distribution.
The products exist. The infrastructure works. The underlying asset is liquid enough to support creation and redemption.
Yet the volume isn’t there, and volume attracts more volume. Without day-to-day tape, spreads stay wide. Without tight spreads, advisors don’t recommend exposure. The distribution wall becomes self-reinforcing.
In a strong crypto market, the entire volume curve could shift upward.
Rising prices create speculative energy, which pulls capital into riskier names, which generates more flow. However, even in that scenario, the slope is likely to remain. Top-tier products still capture most incremental attention.
The alternative is a culling mechanism. If the next three to six months don’t produce persistent trading activity, expect fewer follow-on launches, wider spreads, reduced marketing budgets, and eventual shutdown risk for the least-trafficked products.
That’s the normal lifecycle of sub-scale ETFs.
Sui’s sub-$150,000 debut shows how far liquidity has to fall before the ETF wrapper stops mattering.
The structure is the same. The regulatory approval is the same. The issuer pedigree is the same. What changed is the asset’s rank in the attention economy, and that difference translated into a 300-to-400-times decline in opening-day volume relative to Solana.
Distribution is the gating factor. Everything else is infrastructure.










































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