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    Why is Solana falling despite ETF inflows and booming activity?

    Solana spot ETF AUM crossed $1 billion by month-end, following $115.3 million in net inflows in May, the best monthly figure of 2026.

    The market cap of tokenized real-world assets hit $2.8 billion, stablecoin supply crossed $16.4 billion, perps volume reached $64.6 billion, and Solana accounted for 97% of cumulative on-chain tokenized-equity spot trading volume.

    That makes the market question simple: why is Solana falling while ETF flows and network usage are moving the other way?

    SOL is trading near $63, and the disconnect between network momentum and token price can be explained by the fact that activity does not equal value capture, according to Jake Kennis, senior research analyst at Nansen.

    Fees, stablecoin flows, tokenized equity volume, and ETF flows each benefit validators, issuers, platforms, and market makers before reaching SOL holders. In Solana’s current fee structure, the connection between network usage, token burn, and SOL value capture is weaker than the headline activity numbers suggest.

    Solana metric Latest figure What it shows Why it may not lift SOL directly
    Spot Solana ETF AUM >$1B Institutional access exists ETF demand does not guarantee continuous SOL spot buying
    May ETF net inflows $115.3M Best monthly figure of 2026 Flows can be episodic and macro-sensitive
    Tokenized RWA market cap $2.8B Institutional asset activity is growing Issuers and platforms capture value first
    Stablecoin supply $16.4B Solana is a settlement rail Users need little SOL beyond transaction fees
    Perps volume $64.6B App activity is active Revenue may accrue to apps, LPs, and validators
    Tokenized-equity spot share 97% Solana dominates this niche Trading volume benefits brokers/platforms first
    SOL price ~$63 Token has not followed fundamentals Market still questions value capture

    The fee structure behind the gap

    Solana’s base fees are split 50% to burn and 50% to block producers. Priority fees, which dominate activity during high-throughput periods, flow 100% to validators after SIMD-0096.

    That means a busy day on Solana with high-priority-fee activity and dense block usage routes the bulk of fee revenue to validators, with burn staying flat regardless of throughput.

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    SIMD-0547, currently under discussion, argues that Solana’s burn rate is around 648 SOL per day, even at sustained high throughput.

    On a network processing billions in daily volume, that figure reflects a design flaw in which usage accrues to the network’s operators and application layer before it accrues to SOL as an asset.

    Users can settle $16 billion in stablecoins across Solana while holding only the minimum SOL required for transaction fees. Equity trading volume benefits the platforms and brokers facilitating those trades. App revenue accumulates at the protocol and frontend layer.

    Kennis noted that the breakdown from the $76-$98 range toward the mid-$60s reflects macro risk-off pressure repricing a high-beta asset, with supply dynamics, holder distribution, and broader liquidity conditions governing SOL’s price in ways positive headlines cannot immediately reach.

    Activity type First-order beneficiary Why SOL capture is indirect
    Base transaction fees 50% burned, 50% to block producers Only half of base fees directly reduce supply
    Priority fees 100% to validators after SIMD-0096 High-demand activity rewards validators, not burn
    Stablecoin settlement Stablecoin issuers, payment apps, validators Users can transact while holding minimal SOL
    Tokenized equities Brokers, issuers, tokenization platforms Equity volume does not automatically require SOL accumulation
    Perps and app activity Frontends, LPs, market makers, protocols App revenue can bypass SOL holders
    ETF activity ETF issuers, custodians, market makers ETF AUM supports access, but not necessarily sustained spot demand

    The macro layer

    Ryan Day, CMO of Solstice, said the SpaceX IPO is pricing this week, targeting a valuation of roughly $1.75 trillion and at least $75 billion in proceeds, with Reuters reporting that retail investors have been allocated up to 30% of the shares.

    OpenAI and Anthropic are queued behind it, and when capital of that scale moves to market, risk assets across equities, credit, and crypto reprice to raise cash.

    Every high-beta asset is absorbing the same pressure, and SOL’s drawdown is a position in that read, one shared with Bitcoin, which has been trading near $61,500.

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    Nasdaq’s fast-entry rule could allow eligible newly listed mega-caps to enter the Nasdaq-100 within 15 trading days of listing, drawing passive fund demand into SpaceX after it begins trading. The mechanism extends the time speculative capital stays repositioned away from crypto.

    Across a longer horizon, the sustained distance between SOL’s price and Solana’s fundamental momentum points to the value-capture structure.

    The bear case with substance

    Day identifies the structural criticism of Solana’s tokenomics, which run on an 8% initial inflation rate, a 15% annual disinflation rate, and a 1.5% long-term floor.

    At the current pace of disinflation, the path to terminal inflation takes roughly 5.7 years. During that period, SOL supply grows continuously, and without burn, staking demand, or other sinks offsetting issuance at scale, dilution becomes the dominant tokenomic force regardless of ecosystem activity.

    Regarding the memecoin reputation due to Pump.fun, Day points out that every major chain chased the same memecoin trading cycle, and singling out Solana for a phenomenon that played out identically on Ethereum, Base, and BNB Chain reflects an insider framing error applied unevenly.

    The inflation critique runs on specific numbers, while the memecoin critique is a reputational hangover applied to a trade every major chain ran.

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