VanEck's first US spot BNB ETF, trading under the ticker VBNB on Nasdaq, has attracted approximately $2 million in assets since launch — a modest start that the firm's Director of Digital Assets Product, Kyle DaCruz, frames not as a near-term concern but as the early stage of a longer-term thesis built on a specific investment philosophy: measurable adoption over technical promises.Speaking on CoinDesk's Public Keys with Jennifer Sanasie and Bloomberg's James Seyffart, DaCruz laid out why VanEck believes BNB represents a fundamentally different category of crypto investment than many blockchain projects still in the speculative growth phase.The adoption case: 33 million monthly users, $100 billion in monthly stablecoin transfersVanEck's core argument is that BNB Chain has already achieved the user adoption that many crypto projects are still pursuing as a future goal. DaCruz cited 33 million monthly active users and 2.1 million daily active users on BNB Chain — figures that place the network among the most heavily used blockchains globally by genuine user activity rather than speculative trading volume alone.The stablecoin metrics reinforce the usage narrative. BNB Chain processes roughly $100 billion in monthly stablecoin transfer volume, with $16 billion in stablecoins minted on the network — figures that connect directly to the broader institutional stablecoin infrastructure narrative that has defined 2026, including the $7.8 billion in monthly crypto card transaction volume (up 230% year-over-year) that Visa processes substantially through partnerships with onchain-native companies."Ghost chains" — DaCruz's term for blockchains with significant technical development and market valuation but limited genuine user activity — represent the category VanEck explicitly wants to avoid. The framework positions BNB's adoption metrics as evidence of product-market fit rather than speculative anticipation of future fit.The "revenue chain" framework: $160 million annuallyPerhaps the most significant element of VanEck's thesis is its emphasis on blockchain revenue as an investment metric — a framing that treats blockchains less like technology platforms and more like businesses with measurable income statements.DaCruz said BNB generates approximately $160 million in annual revenue, placing it alongside Hyperliquid as one of what VanEck calls "revenue chains" — networks generating tangible economic value rather than purely token-price-driven market capitalization. This framing represents a maturation in how institutional investors are evaluating blockchain assets: moving from "what can this technology eventually do" toward "what economic activity is this network generating right now, and how does that translate to value accrual for token holders."DaCruz noted that financial advisors are becoming progressively less interested in technical distinctions between competing blockchain architectures and more focused on sustainable business models — a shift that mirrors how equity analysts evaluate traditional companies based on revenue and cash flow rather than underlying technology stack.The staking roadmap: yield as the next value driverVanEck's prospectus for VBNB contemplates incorporating staking once regulatory and operational conditions allow — a development path that mirrors VanEck's own approach with its Avalanche ETF (VAVX), which launched with potential staking-based yield as part of its value proposition.DaCruz framed staking as serving a dual purpose: providing investors with yield while simultaneously helping secure the proof-of-stake network through increased validator participation. This dual-benefit framing — yield generation that also strengthens network security — has become a recurring theme in institutional crypto product design throughout 2026, echoed in Standard Chartered's Geoffrey Kendrick's argument that Ethereum's staking-capable treasury companies hold a structural advantage over Bitcoin's yield-free treasury model.The broader implication: active strategies in a crowded ETF marketDaCruz expects financial advisors to increasingly rely on active crypto investment strategies as the number of available crypto ETFs continues to expand. With Bitcoin, Ethereum, Solana, XRP, Avalanche, Hyperliquid, and now BNB all available as US spot ETF products — and BlackRock's covered-call BITA fund expected to launch around June 18 — the crypto ETF landscape has moved well beyond simple binary exposure decisions.In that more crowded landscape, VanEck's bet is that differentiated product narratives — built around concrete usage and revenue metrics rather than broad "exposure to crypto" positioning — will become increasingly important for advisors making allocation decisions among an expanding menu of options. Whether BNB's adoption and revenue metrics translate into meaningful VBNB inflows beyond its current $2 million remains an open question, but VanEck's framework represents one of the more concrete attempts yet to articulate why a specific altcoin deserves institutional capital beyond Bitcoin and Ethereum.