On February 18, two spot exchange-traded funds (ETFs) tracking the Sui blockchain made their trading debut in the United States. Listed as SUIS on Nasdaq and GSUI on NYSE Arca, these new products offer investors direct exposure to Sui—a layer-1 blockchain positioning itself as a high-throughput alternative to Ethereum—complete with staking features. While anticipation ran high for the launch, trading activity on the first day showed a tepid market response.
First Trading Day Sees Tepid Turnover
On their opening day, GSUI recorded just around 8,000 trades while SUIS saw only 1,468 trades executed. Combined, both products generated less than $150,000 in total volume, a figure that barely clears the bar for a single major institutional transaction. In sharp contrast, ETFs tracking more established cryptocurrencies posted far more robust debut volumes: Solana’s BSOL ETF notched $55.4 million when it launched in October 2025, while the XRP-focused XRPC hit $58 million one month later. The debut of Sui-based ETFs, therefore, paled in comparison to these higher-profile listings.
Market Ranking Shapes ETF Performance
Opening day trading volumes are widely seen as a bellwether of investor interest and market readiness. Over the past year, spot altcoin ETFs in the US have revealed a distinct tiering: ETFs tied to top-ranked cryptocurrencies such as Solana and XRP drew tens of millions of dollars right out of the gate, while mid-tier tokens failed to approach this threshold. Chainlink ETFs, for example, registered between $13 million and $3.2 million on their first day, whereas launches linked to Litecoin, Hedera, and Avalanche attracted $1 million, $8 million, and $334,000 respectively. Sui’s debut volume fell short even of these figures; the token currently holds the 31st position by market capitalization. On average, data indicates that for every ten places a token drops in the rankings, its ETF’s first-day volume shrinks by a factor of around seven.
The Challenge of Building Liquid Markets
While technically straightforward and cost-effective from a regulatory perspective, listing an ETF is no guarantee of trading volume or liquidity. Generating significant turnover typically requires active promotion by investment platforms, enthusiastic broker support, and effective education efforts for advisors and clients. For Sui ETFs, such attention has yet to materialize. If market makers—the main force in the secondary market—cannot establish sufficient bid-ask pricing and find counterparties, tight spreads and healthy liquidity remain elusive.
Analysts at JPMorgan note that low screen volumes do not always equate to major liquidity risks, yet weak trading activity can discourage even smaller portfolio managers from engaging. According to ETF.com, highly traded ETFs tend to maintain tighter bid-ask spreads, making them more attractive for retail investors. In contrast, products suffering from low volume and wide spreads often fail to draw interest from this audience.
ETF Variety Faces Real-World Constraints
Sui’s subdued debut underscores the practical limits to diversity in the ETF market. Cryptocurrencies with greater market maturity, major exchange listings, and strong institutional support—like Solana and XRP—find it easier to attract meaningful liquidity. For technically advanced but niche coins such as Sui, packaging exposure in an ETF does not automatically ensure substantial trading activity. Experts predict that truly liquid crypto ETFs are likely to be concentrated around just a handful of major players, leaving emerging tokens with limited audience and shallow trading pools.
A similar trend is observable in traditional fund markets. Morningstar’s 2025 ETF review highlights that while the number of listed products continues to multiply, many small-scale and illiquid funds are quietly shuttered. The closure rate is even quicker on the crypto side, with only top-tier ETFs in the space achieving sustainable volume.
JPMorgan’s projections indicate that new altcoin ETFs could find their way into portfolios over the first six months. However, the real surge in trading interest remains focused on leading products like Solana and XRP, while latecomers such as Sui fight an uphill battle for attention.
In sum, the lackluster debut of Sui’s spot ETFs reveals that available infrastructure and regulatory clarity alone cannot manufacture investor enthusiasm—their market traction ultimately depends on underlying demand.




