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Solana-based DApps rake in record fees as memecoin frenzy returns

Five of the top 10 crypto protocols by fee earnings in the last 24 hours were on Solana. 

Solana-based decentralized finance applications (DApps) notched record fees and revenue activity in the last 24 hours amid an apparent return of memecoin mania.

According to a Nov. 18 X post from decentralized finance (DeFi) commentator Patrick Scott, who cited DefiLlama data, five of the top 10 protocols by fees in the last 24 hours were on Solana. 

Five of the top 10 protocols by fees were on Solana on Nov. 17. Source: DefiLlama 

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Solana prepares for possible ‘sizable’ move after defending $120 support

SOL price bounced off the $120 support multiple times since April, leading traders to believe that the current market recovery will lead to an explosive rally.

Crypto traders have zoomed in on the emergence of a strong support line on Solana’s price chart, leading some to believe it is the launch pad for a “sizable” upside move in the near future. 

“Looks like $SOL held support at $120,” veteran trader Peter Brandt wrote in a Sept. 20 post. Brandt was referring to the Solana’s price action on the daily chart, showing SOL’s consolidation in a rectangle with lower limit of the rectangle at $120 acting as support since mid-April.

BTC/USD daily chart. Source: Peter Brandt

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Charles Schwab plans to offer spot crypto trading as US rules evolve under Trump

Analyst tips Solana ETF deadline for mid-March after new filings

Bloomberg ETF analyst Eric Balchunas maintains that the outcome will likely be decided by whether Donald Trump is elected president in November.

Spot Solana exchange-traded funds (ETFs) should receive a final decision from the United States SEC around the middle of March 2025 after the Chicago Board Options Exchange (CBOE) filed applications on Monday to list VanEck and 21Shares’ proposed ETFs. 

CBOE filed two Form 19b-4 applications on July 8, one for the 21Shares Core Solana ETF and another for the VanEck Solana Trust.

The CBOE likened the prospective Solana (SOL) funds to spot Bitcoin (BTC) and spot Ether (ETH) ETFs, which the SEC approved in January and May, respectively. It said that Solana’s decentralization, throughput and speed made it resistant to manipulation that could harm investors.

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Charles Schwab plans to offer spot crypto trading as US rules evolve under Trump

BONK, POPCAT and Solana memecoins stay green even as Bitcoin price drops

Memecoins in the Solana ecosystem defy the recent bearish downtrend in the crypto market by managing to generate double-digit gains.

Nearly every corner of the crypto market has corrected at some point in April, but, memecoins in the Solana ecosystem seem to be charting a different path. 

According to CoinGecko data, the total market capitalization of memecoins on Solana has significantly risen in the last 24 hours, climbing 4.2% to $8.261 billion.

Bonk (BONK) gained the most, rising 15.2% over the last 24 hours and 8.7% in the last hour. Popcat (POPCAT) followd with double-digit gains of 10.7% over the last 24 hours and 214% over the last seven days.

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Charles Schwab plans to offer spot crypto trading as US rules evolve under Trump

‘I just bought SOL’ — Arthur Hayes after Solana price rebounds 500%

Hayes may face short-term losses on his Solana buy-in, but the long-term upside looks promising as the cryptocurrency market recovers.

Arthur Hayes, the former CEO of crypto derivatives exchange BitMEX, has “admitted” to buying Solana’s SOL (SOL) at its possible local top, stressing his bullish outlook for the cryptocurrency.

SOL’s price has rallied 500% in 11 months

Hayes’ self-admitted SOL purchase occurred after it had already rebounded 500% from its market bottom near $8 in December 2022.

In addition, the purchase came days after VanEck, an asset management firm supervising $76.4 billion worth of assets, predicted a 10,600% SOL price rally by 2030, citing Solana’s ability to capture the market share of its top layer-1 blockchain rival, Ethereum.

In addition, an analyst from FieryTrading predicted that once Solana breaks the resistance at $38, it could be headed for another 150% increase.

In October 2023 alone, SOL price gained an impressive 80% and recently reached its 14-month high of around $46.75. 

SOL/USD year-to-date price performance. Source: TradingView

Hayes appeared to have bought SOL around the same $46.75 level. He expects the price to continue rising in the coming weeks, perhaps drawing his “degen” cues from Solana’s ongoing scalability efforts.

Solana most “overbought” since January

However, technical and fundamental signals are warning of a potential 30% price drop in November.

Notably, SOL’s relentless uptrend in recent months has pushed its daily relative strength index (RSI), a momentum indicator, to its most overbought levels since January 2023. From a technical standpoint, overbought RSI readings prompt the underlying assets to correct or consolidate.

In SOL’s case, the possibility of undergoing a sharp correction in November looks more likely. That is primarily due to a fractal analysis, which shows SOL’s overbought RSIs preceding 35%–50% price corrections throughout 2023, as shown below.

SOL/USD daily price chart. Source: TradingView

If this bear scenario happens, the next downside target appears to be around its June–November 2022 support level near $30.25, down about 30% from current prices.

SOL/USD three-day price chart. Source: TradingView

Interestingly, this level coincides with SOL’s 200-3D exponential moving average (200-3D EMA; the blue wave in the chart above). A break below it could have SOL bears test the cryptocurrency’s ascending trendline support near $26 as their next downside target.

Related: FTX and Alameda Research wallets send $13.1M in crypto to exchanges overnight

The $26 target, down about 37.50% from current price levels, was instrumental in capping SOL’s downside attempts in June 2022. 

This article does not contain investment advice or recommendations. Every investment and trading move involves risk, and readers should conduct their own research when making a decision.

Charles Schwab plans to offer spot crypto trading as US rules evolve under Trump

Solana falls 6% amid fears of FTX dump — but there’s a catch

The price of Solana has plunged as the market fears a large FTX sell-off, however, it seems unlikely that the now-defunct exchange will dump all of its holdings at once.

The price of Solana (SOL) has plunged more than 6% the last 24 hours, amid fears that bankrupt crypto exchange FTX may soon liquidate its significant portions of the token and other Solana-affiliated crypto assets. 

The price of Solana has fallen 6% to $18.38 in the last 24 hours. Source: CoinGecko

According to a combination of data from Solscan, which has added up the value of the three publicly available FTX cold storage wallets, the FTX estate holds a combined $1.5 billion in crypto assets on the Solana network.

Of that weighty figure, Solana tokens account for just $128 million.

The rest of the amount is comprised of numerous Solana-based altcoins such as Wrapped Bitcoin (WBTC), Maps token (MAPS), Serum (SRM) and a number of other tokens colloquially referred to as “Sam coins” — a jest at the former FTX CEO Sam Bankman-Fried.

The total sum of Solana-based tokens on FTX Cold Storage #1 wallet. Source: Solscan

Still, the idea that liquidators may soon unleash $128 million worth of SOL and hundreds of millions worth of other SOL-affiliated tokens onto the market hasn’t inspired much confidence in the market.

A number of users took to X (formerly known as Twitter) to voice their concerns over the impending sell-off. “FTX about to dump $680 mil worth of SOL 👀” wrote one user. “SOL is going to dump hard after FTX sells its bag, going to reach 14$ soon,” said another.

Others have instead urged calm, as the bankruptcy plan actually restricts how much can be sold off at once

According to FTX bankruptcy filings, the proposed plan for the liquidation of FTX’s assets imposes a series of conditions on the sale of tokens.

On Aug. 24, FTX proposed to appoint Mike Novogratz’s Galaxy Digital Capital Management as the investment manager that would oversee the sales of its recovered crypto holdings.

In this plan, the FTX estate would only be permitted to sell a maximum of $100 million worth of its tokens each week, however, that limit could be raised to $200 million on an individual token basis.

These limits have been introduced in a bid to minimize the impact of token sales on the broader market while still allowing for FTX to make creditors whole.

Notably, the plan has not yet been signed off on by the courts, however, the plan and a number of other matters related to the FTX token sales are expected to come before the Delaware Bankruptcy Court on Sept. 13.

Related: FTX wallet shifts $10M in crypto, sparking fear of token dumps to come

In an April 12 hearing, FTX disclosed that it had recovered roughly $7.3 billion in liquid assets, with $4.8 billion of that sum being comprised of assets recovered as of November 2022.

Overall however, according to documents raised in the hearing, FTX held a total of $4.3 billion in crypto assets available for stakeholder recovery at market prices as of April 12.

FTX assets available for stakeholder recovery as of April 12. Source: Sullivan and Cromwell

At the time of publication, Solana is changing hands for $18.38 apiece, down nearly 11% for the week.

BitCulture: Fine art on Solana, AI music, podcast + book reviews

Charles Schwab plans to offer spot crypto trading as US rules evolve under Trump

Bitcoin gets closer to ‘51% attack’ on altcoin market

Bitcoin's market dominance index has failed to sustain above 50% since April 2021 — so will this time be any different?

Bitcoin's (BTC) percentage share in the crypto market has risen to nearly 50% in the aftermath of the last week's altcoin market rout.

On June 13, the Bitcoin Dominance Index (BTC.D), which tracks BTC's weight against other cryptocurrencies, reached 49.29%, slightly down from its two-year highs of 49.66% seen earlier this week. 

BTC.D daily price chart. Source: TradingView

BTC not an "unregistered security" 

The surge in Bitcoin dominance comes after the United States' Securities and Exchange Commission's (SEC) lawsuit against the crypto exchanges Binance and Coinbase. In its court filings, the commission accused many leading altcoins, including Cardano (ADA) and Solana (SOL), of being "unregistered securities."

Related: SEC’s Gensler says BTC, ETH ‘not securities’ in a newly surfaced video

Bitcoin's market share typically rises during high market stress, given that traders view it as the least volatile, non-stablecoin crypto asset than most cryptocurrencies. For instance, at the height of banking crisis in March 2023, Bitcoin's dominance versus altcoins had also rebounded to 50%.

Altcoins' seven-day performance versus the U.S. dollar and Bitcoin. Source: Messari

There's also other cues suggesting Bitcoin's dominance could grow further to finally break 50%.

For instance, DWF Labs, a crypto market maker, has reportedly sent millions of dollars worth of non-Bitcoin tokens to exchanges, this potentially adding selling pressure for certain altcoins. 

Independent market analyst Stack Hodler also suggests that most crypto hedge funds would first and foremost abandon their altcoin exposure.

But not everyone is bullish on BTC dominance. Fellow analyst Moustache, for example, argues the altcoin market may have bottomed once again as Bitcoin will be unable to break the 50% mark.

Bitcoin dominance risks pullback in June

Chart technicals suggest that Bitcoin's dominance can indeed drop in the coming weeks as altcoins rebound.

Related: ‘There’s no more exciting time than now’ for Bitcoin: BTC Prague 2023

Most notably, BTC.D has failed to close decisively above the 50%-mark since April 2021, often reversing its gains due to an overbought weekly relative strength index (RSI).

BTC.D weekly performance chart. Source: TradingView

Bitcoin now faces a similar scenario with a retest of the 50% level for the first time since last summer. Meanwhile, its RSI hangs just two points below its overbought level of 70.

Therefore, if history repeats, Bitcoin's dominance will decline toward 39% by late 2023 or early 2024.

On the other hand, a breakout here will be key for BTC — to reach levels not seen in over two years. For example, analyst Crypto Rover sees a classic bullish continuation setup with 52% being the next major hurdle if such a scenario pans out. 

This article does not contain investment advice or recommendations. Every investment and trading move involves risk, and readers should conduct their own research when making a decision.

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Solana’s weekend bounce risks turning into a bull trap — Can SOL price fall to $60 next?

More bearish cues for SOL comes from a bull flag setup that's now breaking to the downside.

A rebound move witnessed in the Solana (SOL) market this weekend exhausted midway as its price dropped below the $90 level from a high of $96 on Feb. 21. In doing so, SOL price technicals are now risking a classic bearish reversal setup.

Solana price risks dropping to $60

Dubbed head-and-shoulders (H&S), the technical pattern emerges when the price forms three peaks in a row atop a common support level (called a neckline). As it typically turns out, the pattern's middle peak, called a "head," comes longer than the other two peaks, called theleft and right shoulders, which come to be of similar heights. 

The H&S pattern tends to send the prices lower—at length equal to the maximum distance between the head and the neckline—once they decisively break below its neckline. As a result, Solana, which has been forming a similar technical structure lately, risks sliding toward $60, or almost 30%.

SOL/USD daily price chart featuring head-and-shoulders setup. Source: TradingView 

Interestingly, the H&S downside target, near $60, was also instrumental as support in August 2021, right before Solana's price rally to its record high above $250.

Bear flag increases downside risks

The risks of Solana undergoing a period of another major selloff have been also increasing due to a technical pattern called a "bear flag."

Related: Bottom ahead? Solana paints its first 'death cross' as SOL losses 50% in January

Notably, SOL's price has been breaking out of the bearish continuation setup. In doing so, it now risks falling by as much as the length of its previous downtrend, called "flagpole," when measured from the point of breakout, as shown in the chart below.

SOL/USD daily price chart featuring bear flag setup. Source: TradingView

As a result, SOL's bear flag breakout risks sending its price to $60 or lower, like the H&S pattern.

The views and opinions expressed here are solely those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of Cointelegraph.com. Every investment and trading move involves risk, you should conduct your own research when making a decision.

Charles Schwab plans to offer spot crypto trading as US rules evolve under Trump

Bottom ahead? Solana paints its first ‘death cross’ as SOL losses 50% in January

Recently, death crosses between the 50-day and 200-day exponential moving averages have acted as a reliable predictors of bottoms.

Solana (SOL) looks poised to paint its first “death cross” this week, raising fears that its ongoing selloff would continue further into February.

Real selloff threat

Notably, the SOL price's 50-day exponential moving average (50-day EMA; the red wave) will eventually close below its 200-day EMA (the blue wave), signaling a bearish crossover, called a death cross, that typically prompts traders to sell.

SOL/USD daily price chart featuring its 50-200 EMA death cross. Source: TradingView

The threat surfaces as SOL looks to close January at nearly a 50% loss — as of the month's final day, the Solana token was down by over 2.50% to nearly $91, compared to almost $180 at the start. Meanwhile, the catalysts behind SOL's price crash remain pretty much intact.

Crypto-assets have fallen this month as traders have attempted to assess how fast the Federal Reserve would increase its benchmark rates from near-zero levels to tame booming inflation and tighter jobs market. Solana, as a result, has wiped half its market valuation in January from $55.19 billion to $28.79 billion; that is, after it closed 2021 at a whopping 11,144% profit.

That has got some financial experts to expect a "crypto winter" ahead, a term referring to concerning bearish cycles in the cryptocurrency market, such as the one seen during 2018 wherein digital assets' combined market cap fell by more than 80%.

As of now, SOL's interim bullish outlook hangs over its possibility to hold above $83, its current support level. A break below the said price floor could have the Solana token find its next pullback opportunity not until $65, as shown in the chart below.

SOL/USD daily price chart featuring its interim support targets. Source: TradingView

Both support levels were instrumental in sending the SOL/USD pair to its record high above $260 last year.

Philip Gunwhy, partner at Blockasset.co, remained long-term bullish on Solana, citing its exponential growth in the decentralized finance (DeFi) and nonfungible token (NFT) sectors that, in turn, tends to boost SOL's demand. However, the analyst noted that SOL's swift rebound in the short term depends on the performance of the broader crypto ecosystem.

"For Solana, maintaining solid support at $65–$85 area is undoubtedly the primary focus for the week while maintaining a longer-term focus to retest its All-Time High around $260," Gunwhy said.

Rebound scenario

No previous data shows how SOL traders react to a death cross since it will be Solana's first 50–200-day EMA bearish crossover to date. But considering that people who trade SOL have been trading Bitcoin (BTC) over the recent years, one can notice that death crosses bother them very little.

For instance, a 50–200-day EMA crossover, witnessed in the Bitcoin market in June 2021, followed a drop towards $29,000. But a month later, the BTC price bounced back strongly, eventually reaching its all-time high of $69,000 in early Nov. 2021.

BTC/USD daily price chart featuring recent death crosses. Source: TradingView

Similarly, over the past decade, death crosses in the S&P 500 (SPX) have lost their significance due to false bearish alarms. For instance, the last two bearish crossovers between the SPX's 50-day EMA and 200-day EMA — in December 2018 and March 2020 — led to bottom formations, followed by strong price rebounds.

S&P 500 daily price chart featuring recent death crosses. Source: TradingView

That raises the possibility that SOL's death cross would have its price bottom out in the coming sessions, followed by a bullish reversal. In doing so, the Solana token may eye previous support/resistance levels for a potential rebound move towards its 200-day EMA.

SOL/USD daily price chart featuring rebound scenarios. Source: TradingView

More cues for a bullish rebound also come from the SOL price's oversold relative strength index (RSI), a classic buy signal.

The views and opinions expressed here are solely those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of Cointelegraph.com. Every investment and trading move involves risk, you should conduct your own research when making a decision.

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Solana price eyes $300 as Grayscale launches SOL-backed trust

The Grayscale Solana Trust would allow high-net-worth and institutional investors to gain indirect exposures to the yearlong bullish SOL market.

Solana (SOL) held onto its intraday gains on Nov. 30 as Grayscale Investments, the largest cryptocurrency fund in the world, announced that it would add SOL to its product line.

A $300 SOL ahead?

SOL rallied to nearly $217.50 after rising by over 6.50% intraday. The Solana token's gains came primarily as a part of a recovery move that started Nov. 28, wherein it rebounded over 20% upon testing a dependable multi-month ascending trendline as support (near $190), as shown in the chart below.

SOL/USDT daily price chart featuring Ascending Trendline support. Source: TradingView

The latest bout of buying near the trendline support also helped push SOL over the 23.6 Fib line (~$204) of its Fibonacci retracement graph, drawn from the $23.22-swing low to the $260.69-swing high. As a result, the $260-price level appears like the last line of defense between SOL and a new record high.

"SOL, although, looks like exhaustion, still $300-something is possible (this season)," noted @fomocapdao, an independent market analyst, adding:

"It depends on the whole [ecosystem though], meaning TVL, NFTs, Tabasco, announcements of announcements."

"Continued appetite" for Solana

Grayscale's decision to add Solana into its service portfolio promised to make SOL visible across more high-net-worth and institutional investors. 

That is primarily because of Solana's incredible growth as a blockchain project in 2021. The layer-one protocol emerged as a rival to fellow smart contracts platform Ethereum after providing users with one of the lowest-costing and fastest public ledgers.

Solana blockchain performance versus others. Source: Reddit

Solana's ecosystem attracted over 500 projects spread across decentralized finance (DeFi), nonfungible tokens (NFT), Web 3.0, and other sectors, with 1.2 million active users on the network. Among them is Serum, a decentralized derivatives exchange backed by billionaire Sam Bankman-Fried's FTX and Alamada Research.

As a result, the price of SOL, which works as a fee and staking token inside the Solana ecosystem, surged by more than 10,700% year-over-year, with its circulating market capitalization peaking near $77.93 billion in November.

SOL circulating market capitalization. Source: Messari

Now valued at over $70 billion, Solana is still the fourth-largest blockchain by market capitalization, with Grayscale CEO Michael Sonnenshein noting that there is already a "continued appetite" among investors to gain exposure in the blockchain project.

Related: Okcoin reports altcoins drove institutional interest in crypto for 2021

The statements came after Coinshares, a London-based asset management firm, reported net capital inflows worth over $250 million into the SOL-based exchange-traded products (ETP). This month alone, the Solana ETPs attracted around $42.2 million, Coinshares underscored in its Nov. 29 report.

Despite the calls for SOL to hit $300 next, the token still faces downside risks due to a few general issues, including excessive valuations on longer-timeframe charts and the possibility of network outages.

The views and opinions expressed here are solely those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of Cointelegraph.com. Every investment and trading move involves risk, you should conduct your own research when making a decision.

Charles Schwab plans to offer spot crypto trading as US rules evolve under Trump