Network Activity, Liquidity and Market Stress
We are seeing a noticeable decline in key on-chain metrics for Solana this September, threatening its historical pattern of positive performance for the month. Data indicates a drop in daily transactions, active addresses, and program calls. This lower usage reduces network fee demand and, crucially, erodes liquidity. For traders and funds, this translates to higher execution costs; a $1 million trade can now experience a noticeable 0.5% slip on major decentralized exchanges like Orca and Raydium.
The derivatives market reflects this stress. Funding rates for SOL perpetuals turned negative on multiple days, a sign of sustained short bias not seen since significant past market downturns. Furthermore, the network’s operational history adds to the fragility, with past outages having triggered immediate and sharp price declines.
Institutional Flows, Upgrades and Regulation
Despite the retail slowdown, institutional interest presents a contrasting narrative. Significant inflows—totaling $127 million over a week—have entered SOL through exchange-traded products and private placements. This activity is likely driven by funds repositioning ahead of a potential landmark decision: the approval of a U.S. spot SOL ETF.
The upcoming Alpenglow upgrade is a critical technical catalyst. Aiming to reduce latency and improve validator efficiency, its successful implementation could bolster network performance. However, with only 38% of validators currently running the necessary software and no firm merge date, its timeline remains uncertain.
The most significant near-term factor is regulatory. The SEC’s decision on the spot ETF application, with a key comment period closing in mid-October, will be a major market mover. A delay could push a final ruling into next year.
In summary, Solana’s performance for the month hinges on a delicate balance. The outcome will be determined by whether the technical improvements from Alpenglow are realized and, more importantly, on the SEC’s verdict regarding the ETF. These two events will ultimately dictate market depth, institutional participation, and whether SOL can close September in positive territory.