Over the past decade, Bitcoin has faced a perplexing dilemma:

It is the most widely agreed-upon digital asset in the world, yet it cannot become the cornerstone of the mainstream financial system;

Its price fluctuates wildly, yet there is no stable cash flow supporting it;

Its liquidity is extremely high, yet it is repeatedly excluded from sovereign capital allocation.

However, starting from the end of 2024, a project called Solv is quietly working to solve this dilemma, gradually breaking the bottleneck in Bitcoin's financial evolution.

Why can't Bitcoin enter the sovereign capital market?

Why do sovereign funds that hold trillions in assets - like Abu Dhabi, Qatar, and Saudi Arabia - wish to invest in U.S. bonds and venture capital funds, but never approach Bitcoin? The answer is simple: Bitcoin lacks a compliance structure.

Bitcoin does not have an income certificate, nor a compliance channel, and even lacks a halal certificate. In the eyes of these sovereign funds, Bitcoin is not just a high-risk investment; it is even considered non-investable. It lacks the financial infrastructure necessary to support sovereign capital investments. Solv aims to address these shortcomings in Bitcoin and build a compliant financial channel.