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Solana (SOL) is hovering near a key support zone as traders brace for a major “unstaking” event that could add meaningful supply to the market and amplify short-term volatility.
As of Friday at 9:58 a.m. ET, SOL was trading at $84.18, up 0.22% over the past 24 hours but down 1.88% on the week. The relatively muted daily move has done little to ease caution, with market attention increasingly focused on an upcoming release of roughly $870 million worth of SOL from staking—an event many participants see as a potential near-term catalyst for sharper price swings.
Technical analysts broadly frame SOL’s immediate battleground within the $80–$90 band, with especially heavy liquidity concentrated around $84–$87. That pocket is being treated as the decision zone: sustained buying there could stabilize price action, while slippage below it could open the door to a deeper pullback.
SOL recently slid from $84.57 to $83.70, reflecting renewed sell pressure, and has since attempted to base again in the low $84 area. Sentiment gauges have also turned cautious. On the prediction market at Lines.com, a majority of participants—about 68%—were positioned for SOL to fail to break above $85, while the related contract price was reported to have fallen 19.5%, signaling a shift toward more defensive expectations.
On the upside, some market watchers point to $106 as a pivotal resistance level. In their view, SOL would need a decisive move above that threshold to re-establish durable upside momentum. If current supports give way, however, the $80 level is being cited as the next major downside checkpoint.
Broader technical signals are leaning bearish, and declining turnover suggests a market that is waiting for clarity. Reported 24-hour trading volume came in near $2.54 billion, down 24.91% from the prior day—often interpreted as a sign of reduced risk appetite and a more cautious stance ahead of an event risk.
Even so, traders have not ruled out a short-lived rebound. Market commentators frequently note that oversold conditions can trigger sharp, technical bounces even within a broader downtrend—particularly in high-beta altcoins like Solana—making risk management a central theme into the unstaking window.
Performance across time horizons underscores that mixed setup. SOL was up 6.45% over the last 30 days, pointing to resilience in the medium term, but it remained down 18.38% over 90 days, highlighting the tougher backdrop facing longer-horizon holders.
Despite the price consolidation, Solana’s ecosystem activity continues to draw attention. A story circulating among traders described a Solana-based arbitrage bot that reportedly turned a $0.20 starting amount into approximately $1.32 million by exploiting price discrepancies involving the ANB token in a Meteora liquidity pool. While the anecdote’s broader replicability was not established, it reinforced a familiar narrative: Solana’s fast settlement and low-fee environment can be advantageous for high-frequency and automated trading strategies.
By market capitalization, Solana stood at roughly $48.5 billion, ranking seventh among cryptocurrencies and representing about 1.86% of the overall market, according to figures cited in the report. Investor focus has remained elevated relative to other non-Ethereum layer-1 networks, even as near-term technicals remain fragile.
The dominant question for the coming sessions is how the market absorbs the anticipated $870 million in unstaked SOL. With a large portion of the estimated 576.2 million SOL circulating supply staked, the release could translate into a noticeable short-term increase in tradable tokens.
Analysts caution that large supply events can weigh on price—though the actual impact depends on what share of unstaked tokens are sold versus re-staked, transferred, or held, and how much demand is available to absorb additional supply.
For now, traders are watching whether SOL can hold the $83 area and whether the post-unstaking flow results in real spot selling. With liquidity concentrated in the mid-$80s and sentiment leaning cautious, the setup points to a higher probability of volatility in the near term, even if the market ultimately stabilizes once the supply event is digested.
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