VanEck Launches First Avalanche ETF on Nasdaq
Key HighlightsVanEck’s Avalanche ETF ($VAVX) began trading on Nasdaq, becoming the first ETF linked to AVAX.The product offers direct price exposure to AVAX with integrated staking rewards reflected in...

Key Highlights
- VanEck’s Avalanche ETF ($VAVX) began trading on Nasdaq, becoming the first ETF linked to AVAX.
- The product offers direct price exposure to AVAX with integrated staking rewards reflected in NAV.
- The launch signals growing institutional appetite for non-Bitcoin, non-Ethereum crypto ETFs.
The first Avalanche exchange-traded fund began trading on Nasdaq on Friday, as asset manager VanEck launched the VanEck Avalanche ETF to give investors regulated exposure to AVAX. The fund, listed under the ticker $VAVX, tracks the price of Avalanche’s native token and reflects a broader push by institutions to access crypto infrastructure through familiar market vehicles rather than holding tokens directly.
The debut places Avalanche alongside Bitcoin and Ethereum in the expanding universe of crypto-linked ETFs, reflecting a market increasingly willing to look beyond the two largest digital assets.
What the VAVX ETF offers
VAVX is designed to track the price of AVAX while incorporating staking activity into the fund’s net asset value. As of January 23, the ETF reported net assets of roughly $2.5 million and a gross staking yield of about 5.6%, with rewards and costs reflected directly in performance rather than paid out separately.
Shares opened near $24.58 before easing slightly lower in early trading, highlighting the volatility that still characterizes crypto-linked products, even as they move deeper into regulated venues.
Why Avalanche, and why now
Avalanche has spent years pitching itself as a blockchain built for institutions, with a focus on scale, custom networks, and real financial use cases. For firms like VanEck, that story lines up with investors who want exposure to blockchain infrastructure, not just another speculative trade.
The ETF format makes that bet easier to place, letting investors track AVAX through a familiar product without dealing with wallets, custody, or the mechanics of staking themselves.
VAVX isn’t set up like a typical stock ETF. It operates as a grantor trust and sits outside the Investment Company Act of 1940, with cash-only creations and redemptions that mirror the structure regulators have favored for recent crypto products.
To help kickstart trading activity, VanEck is also waiving sponsor fees on early assets, a familiar playbook designed to draw in initial capital and build liquidity.
A broader shift in crypto ETFs
The debut lands at a moment when crypto ETFs are starting to feel less exotic. Nasdaq is already pushing to ease options limits on Bitcoin and Ethereum funds, a sign that regulators and exchanges are getting more comfortable with these products.
In that context, Avalanche’s ETF arrival sends a clear message: institutional crypto exposure is beginning to stretch beyond just Bitcoin and Ether.
VAVX’s first trading session may have been quiet, but the milestone itself carries far more weight than the early volume suggests.
By bringing Avalanche into an ETF format on Nasdaq, VanEck is testing how far investor appetite extends beyond Bitcoin and Ethereum, and whether the next phase of crypto adoption will be built on broader blockchain infrastructure rather than single-asset bets.
Also read: Japan May Allow Crypto ETFs by 2028 as Global Markets Move Ahead
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