Anchorage Digital has integrated full mint and redeem capabilities for JitoSOL, Solana’s leading liquid staking token. This development positions JitoSOL as one of the most accessible institutional-grade liquid staking assets and brings regulated exposure to Solana’s staking economy within closer reach for financial institutions.
Anchorage Partnership Expands Regulated Access to Solana Staking
The integration allows Anchorage Digital’s clients—via its U.S. federally chartered crypto bank and its Singapore-based licensed entity—to custody, mint, and redeem JitoSOL securely.
For institutions preferring to self-custody, JitoSOL functionality will also soon be accessible via Porto, Anchorage’s institutional-grade self-custody wallet.
Anchorage’s infrastructure includes biometric authentication, HSMs, and behavioral analytics. This robust security framework addresses a key concern among institutional players seeking to tap into the returns from staking without compromising regulatory or custodial standards.
This move underscores how staking—and particularly liquid staking—is increasingly viewed not just as a DeFi-native utility but also a backbone for the next generation of financial products.
ETF Aspirations and the Rise of Liquid Staking Tokens
As regulatory conversations evolve around staking-enabled ETFs, products like JitoSOL could act as compliant proxies. According to coingecko, liquid staking tokens (LSTs) now represent $43.3 billion in market capitalization, with Ethereum dominating the landscape. However, Solana’s LST market is gaining traction, with JitoSOL leading the charge.
Jito Foundation CCO, Thomas Uhm, said: “This partnership brings us closer to integrating staking into the broader financial landscape.”
“As conversations around staking-enabled ETFs progress, liquid staking tokens like JitoSOL are increasingly considered a practical alternative to direct staking,” Thomas Uhm mentioned.
“With support for in-kind creation and redemption, primary and secondary market liquidity, and compatibility with a trusted partner like Anchorage Digital, JitoSOL satisfies many of the operational requirements that modern ETF issuers — and other developers of regulated financial products — must address,” Thomas added.
Why This Matters for Solana and Institutional Crypto?
For Solana, the partnership is a notable milestone. While Ethereum’s Lido has long offered robust LST infrastructure, Solana-based LSTs lacked similar institutional support. With Anchorage Digital backing JitoSOL, Solana enters a new phase of DeFi maturity.
This move also aligns with broader industry momentum. A June 2024 report from Bernstein estimates that staking yields could represent a $40 billion opportunity annually by 2027, fueled by institutional adoption of LSTs and on-chain yield products.
Compliance and Classification Frameworks: A Necessary Step Forward
To facilitate institutional entry, the Jito Foundation released a Securities Classification Report asserting JitoSOL is not a security under U.S. law. They also issued a tax memorandum, offering clarity on how JitoSOL should be treated by financial professionals and accountants—a proactive step toward regulatory certainty.
Such groundwork reflects a broader trend where crypto-native protocols are adapting to traditional financial norms to gain legitimacy among asset managers, custodians, and ETF issuers.
By aligning with Anchorage Digital, JitoSOL becomes a regulated, auditable asset likely to be integrated into institutional portfolios, staking strategies, and potentially, the next generation of crypto ETFs.
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Image Credits: JitoSOL