Sol Price Action Lags The Wider Altcoin Market: Is Solana’s Heyday...

Sol Price Action Lags The Wider Altcoin Market: Is Solana’s Heyday...

SOL falls behind multiple altcoin competitors as its onchain activity, fee and DApp revenues slump. Cointelegraph explains why.

SOL lagged the altcoin market as falling fees and DApp revenues signaled weaker Solana network demand.

Growth shifted to Base, Arbitrum, Polygon and BNB Chain, reducing the odds of a near-term SOL rebound.

Solana’s native token, SOL (SOL), has fallen 32% since November, underperforming the broader altcoin market, which declined 21%. This gap has become a concern for bulls, especially given inflows into SOL exchange-traded funds and a growing number of companies adding the asset to their balance sheets as a reserve strategy.

Traders are now questioning what would need to change for SOL price to reestablish a sustained bullish trend.

The Solana ETF industry in the US has accumulated $636 million in assets since the launch of the REX-Osprey SOL+Staking ETF in July. At the same time, companies such as Forward Industries (FORD US), Solana Company (HSDT US) and Sharps Technology (STSS US) have collectively added 20.35 million SOL to their balance sheets, valued at more than $2.5 billion.

Native staking on Solana has also helped limit the amount of SOL immediately available for sale. Nearly 68% of the circulating supply is currently delegated to the network’s proof-of-stake system, a share that has increased steadily over the past few months. Staking yields on Solana can exceed 6%, as SOL remains inflationary to offset the costs of operating validators.

Total staked SOL rose to 418 million from 410 million two months earlier, extending a trend that has been in place since March. As a result, SOL’s drop back toward the $120 level appears more closely tied to softer expectations for Solana network demand. Broader crypto adoption trends may have shifted toward competing platforms or alternative solutions that do not require direct blockchain settlement.

Solana onchain activity has been in steady decline since August, with weekly network fees falling to $4.5 million from $7 million just two months earlier. Decentralized applications (DApps) on Solana also experienced a 30% decline in revenue over the same period, dropping to $26 million per week. While Solana’s utility weakened, activity on other networks accelerated.

Monthly transaction counts increased by just 4% on Solana and 6% on Ethereum. In contrast, activity surged 34% on Base, 21% on Arbitrum and 89% on Polygon. Even Tron, a direct competitor of Solana, recorded a 13% rise

Source: CoinTelegraph