Solana spot ETF AUM passed $1 billion at the end of the month after $115.3 million in net inflows in May, the best monthly figure of 2026.
The market capitalization of tokenized real-world assets reached $2.8 billion, stablecoin supply exceeded $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 go the other way?
SOL is trading around $63, and the discrepancy 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 benefit validators, issuers, platforms, and market makers before they reach SOL holders. In Solana’s current fee structure, the link between network usage, token burn and SOL value capture is weaker than the key activity metrics suggest.
| Solana metric | Last digit | What it shows | Why it may not directly cancel out SOL |
|---|---|---|---|
| Spot Solana ETF AUM | >$1 billion | Institutional access exists | The demand for ETFs does not guarantee continued spot buying of SOLs |
| May ETF net inflows | $115.3 million | Best monthly figure of 2026 | Flows can be episodic and macrosensitive |
| Tokenized RWA market cap | $2.8 billion | Institutional asset activity is growing | Issuers and platforms capture value first |
| Stablecoin offering | $16.4 billion | Solana is a settlement rail | Users require little SOL besides transaction fees |
| Perps volume | $64.6 billion | App activity is active | Proceeds can benefit apps, LPs, and validators |
| Spot share with tokenized equity | 97% | Solana dominates this niche | Trading volume primarily benefits brokers/platforms |
| SOL Award | ~$63 | Token has not followed the fundamentals | The market still has doubts about capturing value |
The compensation structure behind the gap
Solana’s base fees are split 50% to burn producers and 50% to block producers. Priority fees, which dominate activity during high throughput periods, will flow 100% to validators after SIMD-0096.
This means that a busy day on Solana with high priority activities and high block usage directs the majority of fee revenue to validators, with burn remaining the same regardless of throughput.
SIMD-0547, currently under discussion, states that Solana’s burn rate is approximately 648 SOL per day, even at sustained high throughput.
On a network that handles billions in daily volumes, that figure reflects a design flaw where usage accrues to the network operators and the application layer before it accrues to SOL as an asset.
Users can pay for $16 billion worth of stablecoins in Solana while maintaining only the minimum SOL required for transaction fees. Stock trading volume benefits the platforms and brokers that facilitate these transactions. App revenues accumulate at the protocol and frontend layers.
Kennis noted that the breakdown of the $76-$98 range toward the mid-$60s reflects macro risk pressures that reprice a high-beta asset, with supply dynamics, holder distribution, and broader liquidity conditions driving SOL’s price in ways that positive headlines can’t immediately achieve.
| Type of activity | Beneficiary of the first order | Why SOL capture is indirect |
|---|---|---|
| Basic transaction fees | 50% burned, 50% to block producers | Only half of the base fees directly reduces supply |
| Priority costs | 100% for validators after SIMD-0096 | High demand activities reward validators, not burn them |
| Stablecoin settlement | Stablecoin issuers, payment apps, validators | Users can transact with minimal SOL |
| Tokenized shares | Brokers, issuers, tokenization platforms | Stock volume does not automatically require SOL accumulation |
| Perpetrators and app activity | Frontends, LPs, market makers, protocols | App monetization can bypass SOL holders |
| ETF activity | ETF issuers, custodians, market makers | ETF AUM supports access, but not necessarily sustained spot demand |
The macro layer
Solstice CMO Ryan Day said SpaceX’s IPO this week is targeting a valuation of about $1.75 trillion and at least $75 billion in proceeds, with Reuters reporting that private investors have been allocated up to 30% of the shares.
OpenAI and Anthropic are in line behind that, and when capital of that size moves into the market you’re risking assets in equities, credit, and crypto repricing to raise money.
Any high-beta asset absorbs the same pressure, and SOL’s drawdown is a position along those lines, one shared with Bitcoin, which is worth almost $61,500.
Nasdaq’s fast-entry rule could allow eligible newly listed megacaps to enter the Nasdaq-100 within 15 trading days of listing, drawing passive demand for funds to SpaceX after it begins trading. The mechanism extends the time that speculative capital remains repositioned away from crypto.
Over longer horizons, the persistent gap between SOL’s price and Solana’s fundamental momentum points to the value-capture structure.
The bear suitcase with contents
Day identifies the structural criticism of Solana’s tokenomics, which assumes an initial inflation of 8%, an annual disinflation of 15% and a long-term bottom of 1.5%.
At the current rate of disinflation, the path to terminal inflation is roughly 5.7 years. During that period, the supply of SOL is continually growing, and without a burn, rising demand, or other issues offsetting large-scale issuance, dilution becomes the dominant symbolic force regardless of ecosystem activity.
Regarding the memecoin reputation thanks to Pump.fun, Day points out that every major chain followed 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 that has been applied unevenly.
The inflation criticism revolves around specific numbers, while the memecoin criticism is a reputational hangover applied to a transaction that every major chain made.


What the community votes on
The reform proposals already under discussion are a direct response to the gap in value creation that the market is pricing in.
SIMD-0550 proposes to double Solana’s annual disinflation rate from 15% to 30%, shortening the path to terminal inflation of 1.5% from about 5.7 years to 2.8 years.
At current prices, the proposal’s proponents estimate the change would reduce future SOL emissions by about $1.5 billion.
Anatoly Yakovenko has publicly supported this direction, and the vote on the strongest bear case in Solana’s tokenomics is taking place in the open.
SIMD-0547 addresses Solana cost burning by adding a resource-based base fee that burns completely, designed to scale instantly with network resource consumption as priority costs flow to validators.
If this is assumed, days of real network stress would cause tens of thousands of SOLs, closing the gap between network activity and direct token value recording that leaves open 648 SOL per day.
Validator support, community coordination, and activation timelines introduce meaningful uncertainty. Solana’s core community is openly debating both the supply and combustion sides of the tokenomics equation, while the market demands answers on exactly those points.
| Proposal | Problem it focuses on | Proposed change | Potential SOL impact | Main uncertainty |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| SIMD-0550 | Inflation/dilution | Double annual disinflation of 15% to 30% | Shorten the path to 1.5% terminal inflation from ~5.7 years to ~2.8 years | Validator support, activation timeline, market confidence |
| SIMD-0547 | Weak fee burn | Add resource-based base fees that are completely burned | Allows for scaling with real resource consumption and network stress | Implementation details, cost impact, economics of the validator |
| Current system | Activity does not equal immediate catch | Basic allowances partially burned; priority fees go to validators | Use benefits the ecosystem relative to SOL holders | Burn remains too small unless the rate design changes |
If macro liquidity returns as SpaceX’s IPO wave passes and SIMD-0550 and SIMD-0547 move toward activation, SOL will have a credible path to revaluation via lower future dilution, higher burn per unit of activity, and an infrastructure that is already demonstrating demand for ETFs, institutional settlement rails, and tokenized equity dominance.
Historically, assets with documented real use are the ones that reprice first when risk appetite recovers.
If reforms stagnate, inflation remains the dominant symbolic force, and macro pressures persist, Solana’s contradiction only deepens.
The chain accumulates real activity through stablecoin settlement, stock trading and institutional access, while SOL accounts for an increasingly smaller share of what that activity is worth.
Proving that SOL captures what the network is becoming is what the market is waiting for.
