Nine of the ten most-held tokenized stock deployments are issued by xStocks and deployed on Solana, according to Token Terminal data published this week.
The lone exception is NVDAon, issued by Ondo Finance on a separate chain, which ranks eighth with 5,300 holders and a circulating market cap of $11.7 million.
TSLAx leads the entire field with 20,700 holders and a market cap of $47.4 million. NVDAx follows at 17,100 holders and $19.3 million. SPYx, the tokenized version of the S&P 500 ETF, holds third place with 13,700 holders across a $18.9 million market cap. The spread between first and tenth is significant. AMZNx, ranked tenth, carries just 4,400 holders.
The data reveals a gap between capital concentration and user adoption that is worth understanding. CRCLx carries the largest circulating market cap in the top ten at $51.5 million, yet ranks fifth by holder count at 9,400. TSLAx, leading on holders, sits at $47.4 million in market cap – closely matched but structurally different. A smaller number of larger positions drives CRCLx’s cap. A broader retail base drives TSLAx’s holder count.
That distinction matters for how issuers think about growth. Holder count reflects distribution. Market cap reflects capital. The two do not always move together.
Token Terminal’s framing is direct: RWA issuers are deploying on Solana because of distribution, meaning access to an existing user base that transacts actively. Ethereum-based deployments appear in the broader scatter chart but sit at the lower end of the holder count axis despite, in some cases, carrying comparable or larger market caps. CRCLon, Ondo’s Ethereum-based Circle tokenization, shows a market cap above $120 million but a holder count below 5,000. GOOGLon sits at roughly $60 million in market cap with a similarly thin holder base.
The pattern is consistent. Solana deployments cluster toward the upper portion of the holder count axis. Ethereum deployments sit further right on market cap but do not match on reach.
Holder count is a distribution proxy, not a liquidity or revenue metric. A high holder count on a low-market-cap asset can reflect fragmented small positions rather than institutional depth. The Token Terminal data does not distinguish between active traders and dormant wallets. It also does not capture secondary market volume, which would clarify whether these holder counts translate into sustained engagement or one-time onboarding events.
What the data does show is that in the current tokenized equity market, the issuer with the most deployments on the chain with the most active retail users holds most of the adoption metrics simultaneously. That combination is what xStocks on Solana currently represents.
The post Solana Is Winning the Tokenized Stock Race: xStocks Controls 9 of the Top 10 Deployments by Holder Count appeared first on ETHNews.



