Nasdaq has filed a proposed rule change to list the VanEck JitoSOL ETF, a fund designed to hold the Solana-based liquid staking token JitoSOL (CRYPTO: JTO). The instrument would give investors exposure to on-chain staking economics without the need to operate validator infrastructure, wrapping the underlying asset in publicly traded shares. If approved, the fund would reflect staking rewards in its net asset value rather than distributing separate yield payments, a detail highlighted by the Jito Foundation's leadership. The token itself compounds rewards automatically, so each share would represent the SOL deposited and the staking yield accrued on the Solana network (CRYPTO: SOL). The filing, submitted under Nasdaq Rule 5711(d) governing commodity-based trust shares, seeks approval to list and trade shares of a trust that would hold JitoSOL directly rather than track via futures or other derivatives. The move underscores the ongoing regulatory interest in expanding regulated acces...
U.S. lawmakers and regulators are sharpening their focus on prediction markets as a high-profile insider-trading narrative unfolds around Polymarket and Axiom. At the center is a claim by on-chain investigator ZachXBT that an Axiom employee—Broox Bauer—and others allegedly used internal tools to access sensitive user data and execute profitable insider trades, a practice the researcher says may have persisted since early 2025. The timing is notable: Polymarket traders had placed large bets on the outcome of ZachXBT’s disclosures, with activity approaching tens of millions of dollars. In response, Axiom said it has removed access to the implicated tools and pledged to investigate and hold responsible parties to account, framing the episode as a test of governance and user protection within the evolving prediction-market ecosystem. Key takeaways On-chain sleuth ZachXBT alleged that an Axiom employee, Broox Bauer, and others conducted insider trading by leveraging internal tools to acce...