For a long time,Bitcoin was in a league of its own. It was the only crypto that Wall Street, regulators, and big institutions were comfortable wrapping into ETFs. Ethereum eventually joined, but most other coins were left out in the cold.
That’s no longer the case — and XRP, Dogecoin, and Solana are the biggest winners of this shift.
So what changed?
The Big Shift: Regulators Changed How Crypto ETFs Work
The biggest reason is not that these coins suddenly became “better.”
It’s that the rules around crypto ETFs finally evolved.
Previously, every new crypto ETF needed special approval, one coin at a time. Bitcoin got through. Ethereum barely made it. Everything else was stuck in paperwork and legal debates.
Recently, regulators opened the door to a more standardized ETF approval process. Instead of treating each crypto like a unique legal problem, they now allow ETFs for major, liquid cryptocurrencies as long as they meet basic requirements like:
Strong trading volume
Established markets
Reliable price tracking
Investor protection standards
Once that door opened, XRP, Dogecoin, and Solana were already standing there.
Why These Three Specifically?
Not every altcoin qualifies. These three do because:
XRP has massive global liquidity and years of market history
Dogecoin trades more than many “serious” projects and has deep retail demand
Solana has become one of the most actively used blockchains in crypto
In short: they’re too big to ignore now.
What “Same ETF Perks as Bitcoin” Actually Means
This doesn’t mean they’re equal to Bitcoin in philosophy or tech it means they’re treated similarly inside the traditional financial system.
Just like Bitcoin ETFs, XRP, DOGE, and SOL ETFs now offer:
Exposure through normal stock brokerage accounts
No need to hold wallets or private keys
Eligibility for retirement and institutional portfolios
Regulated, transparent fund structures
Easier access for banks, hedge funds, and asset managers
For Wall Street, that’s huge.
Why This Is a Big Deal (Even If You Don’t Like These Coins)
ETF access changes who can buy a crypto.
Before ETFs:
Mostly retail traders
Crypto-native investors
High friction for institutions
After ETFs:
Pension funds
Wealth managers
Traditional investors who never touch crypto apps
That kind of access can dramatically increase liquidity and long-term demand, even if short-term prices don’t move right away.
The Bigger Picture
This moment isn’t just about XRP, Dogecoin, or Solana.
It’s about crypto crossing a line:
> From “speculative internet assets”
to recognized financial instruments
Bitcoin opened the door. Ethereum widened it.
Now these three walked through.
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