As Solana turns six years old, the “memecoin chain” is quietly listing 200 plus tokenized stocks for Wall Street
Solana hit its six-year mark on March 16, and the chain still widely associated with memecoin speculation is also building a very different market narrative: more than 200 tokenized U.S. stocks and ETFs are now live on Solana through Ondo Global Markets.
That does not mean Wall Street has fully arrived on Solana, and the headline’s “quietly” and “for Wall Street” framing should be read as narrative shorthand rather than proven adoption. But the underlying development is real. Solana’s official materials say Ondo Global Markets expanded to Solana on January 21, 2026 with more than 200 tokenized U.S. stocks and ETFs, giving the network one of its clearest pushes yet beyond the retail trading culture that has defined much of its public image.
The timing matters because Solana’s sixth anniversary offers an unusually clean reset point. The network’s mainnet beta launched on March 16, 2020, according to Solana’s June 2020 newsletter. Six years later, the bigger story may be less about another burst of meme-driven volume and more about whether Solana can become credible infrastructure for regulated, cross-border access to public-market assets.
Solana’s sixth birthday marks a shift in how the network wants to be seen
Solana has spent much of the last cycle being branded as a high-speed venue for speculative trading, especially memecoins. That reputation did not appear out of nowhere. It was reinforced by the kinds of assets and trading behavior that dominated attention on-chain. What makes the current moment different is that Solana is now hosting a product category designed to look much closer to traditional market structure than crypto-native speculation.
In the official Solana announcement, Ondo’s stock and ETF products are described as fully backed 1:1 by the corresponding underlying securities held with licensed U.S. custodial broker-dealers. The same announcement says the instruments are built for non-U.S. users, support minting and redemption 24 hours a day, five days a week, and use a total-return tracker structure that automatically reinvests dividends net of withholding tax.
That is a very different proposition from a standard crypto token launch. It also makes the anniversary angle more than a calendar hook. If Solana wants to be viewed as more than a memecoin chain, asset-backed financial products are exactly the type of product set it needs to point to.
Why 200-plus tokenized stock listings could give Solana a Wall Street bridge
The scale is what turns this from a side experiment into a serious category. A dozen tokenized names can be dismissed as a proof of concept. More than 200 starts to resemble a shelf of recognizable market exposure. That matters for traders, allocators, and market-structure observers because tokenized equities sit at the intersection of familiar securities demand and crypto settlement rails.
Solana said Ondo became the largest real-world asset issuer on the network by asset count, accounting for roughly 65% of tokenized RWAs live on Solana. Separate market data from RWA.xyz’s tokenized-stocks dashboard showed Ondo with 202 tokenized stock assets, about $644.0 million in total value, and 60.49% market share as of March 12, 2026.
That snapshot also sharpens the competitive picture. Solana did not suddenly discover tokenized equities this year. Kraken had already launched xStocks on Solana, with its initial rollout covering 60 tokenized assets. By March 12, 2026, RWA.xyz listed xStocks with 75 assets, around $252.8 million in total value, and 23.75% market share. In other words, Solana already had a tokenized-equities stack; Ondo’s entrance dramatically scaled it.
Kraken itself framed the category in strategic terms. In the company’s xStocks launch post, Kraken co-CEO Arjun Sethi said, “With xStocks, we’re not launching a novelty. We’re unlocking something foundational,” while Adam Levi, co-founder of Backed, argued that “Tokenized equities are the next step for crypto.” Those quotes do not prove institutional adoption, but they do show how market participants want this category to be read: as financial infrastructure, not as a niche trading gimmick.
That helps explain why this story lands differently from the usual Solana headlines. Recent crypto coverage has naturally centered on market momentum, whether that is Bitcoin pressing against a breakout level or sharp altcoin moves such as the latest market-watch spike in Zcash and MemeCore. Tokenized stocks point to a separate lane entirely, one aimed less at short-term price action and more at turning blockchain networks into distribution rails for existing financial assets.
The real test is whether Solana can convert listings into credibility
The cautious view is straightforward: listings are not the same thing as liquidity, and product count is not the same thing as trust. Solana can point to a growing tokenized-equities catalog, but the harder question is whether meaningful trading activity, reliable secondary liquidity, and lasting institutional confidence follow.
That is especially important because the regulatory framing here is narrower than a broad “Wall Street on-chain” narrative suggests. Ondo’s products are positioned for non-U.S. users, and the structure is based on total-return trackers rather than direct shareholder registration in the United States. That makes this a regulated cross-border tokenized-securities story, not a simple case of traditional U.S. equities being moved wholesale onto a public chain.
Solana’s market footprint still matters in the background. The research brief for this story places SOL at roughly $48.65 billion in market capitalization and about $3.99 billion in 24-hour trading volume, underscoring that this is a major network with enough scale to matter if tokenized equities gain traction. But the next proof points will be practical, not symbolic: trading depth, tighter spreads, more issuers, more broker integrations, and evidence that tokenized stock products become habit-forming rather than merely headline-friendly.
For now, the clearest conclusion is narrower and more defensible than the loudest version of the story. As Solana turns six, the chain best known for memecoins is also becoming a larger venue for tokenized stocks. That does not yet prove Wall Street adoption. It does show that Solana’s most consequential growth category may increasingly come from assets that look a lot more like traditional finance than crypto’s usual mascots.
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.




