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Solana (SOL) is extending its rebound and is closing in on a key technical threshold near $90, a level traders are watching as a potential trigger for a broader breakout across high-beta altcoins. Despite a modest dip on the day, SOL’s weekly advance underscores a renewed risk-on tone as Bitcoin (BTC) holds above $81,000 and Ethereum (ETH) remains near $2,300, helping stabilize sentiment across the market.
As of May 7 at 3:58 a.m. UTC, Solana was trading at $88.42, down 0.66% over the previous 24 hours but up 6.39% on the week. The token’s market capitalization stood at roughly $51.0 billion, keeping it in seventh place among crypto assets by market value. Spot trading activity was mixed: 24-hour volume was about $4.75 billion, down 21.36% from the prior day, though MEXC data showed some sessions spiking toward $6 billion.
The more decisive signal has come from derivatives. According to an MEXC report, Solana’s “open interest” climbed to $5.55 billion, up around 10%, while options volume surged 194%, pointing to heavier positioning rather than passive spot buying. Over the past 24 hours, more than $16 million in short positions were liquidated, indicating bearish traders were forced to cover into the rally.
On the four-hour chart, the relative strength index (RSI) printed 71, an “overbought” reading that typically signals elevated short-term risk of pullbacks while confirming strong demand. The MACD indicator has formed a “golden cross,” commonly interpreted as a bullish inflection in trend. Market watchers including Ali Charts and Rand Group have also pointed to SOL breaking above a multi-month descending trendline, suggesting the market is attempting to transition from recovery to trend reversal.
Traders are focused on resistance between $90 and $92. A clean break and hold above that zone could open a path toward $96–$100, where supply has historically intensified. On the downside, $85 is emerging as a key support level; a loss of that floor could shift the market back into consolidation or a corrective phase.
Beyond price action, Solana’s “real-world asset” narrative is picking up pace. RootData reported that crypto exchange Bullish tokenized 151 million shares of its own stock on the Solana network, translating its equity structure onto-chain. Proponents argue this can improve settlement speed and transparency, though broader adoption depends on regulatory treatment and interoperability with existing securities infrastructure.
Traditional finance participation is also expanding at the application layer. Western Union (WU) has launched a Solana-based stablecoin, USDPT, according to Cryptonite.ae, positioning the product as a compliance-focused tool aimed at improving cross-border transfer speeds. The rollout highlights why some institutions are evaluating Solana’s low fees and high throughput for payment-style use cases.
On the protocol roadmap, the Solana Foundation is targeting a third-quarter 2026 release for the “Alpenglow” upgrade, which MEXC and Wu Blockchain say could reduce transaction finality to roughly 100–150 milliseconds. The proposed changes introduce new consensus components—Votor and Rotor—designed to complement Solana’s existing Proof of History architecture and TowerBFT, aiming to lower latency without sacrificing throughput.
If delivered as advertised, faster finality could improve user experience in high-frequency trading, gaming, and DeFi environments where delays can translate into higher slippage or failed executions.
Tokenomics remain a consideration for longer-horizon investors. Solana’s circulating supply is about 577.2 million tokens, with total supply around 625.96 million. The asset has no hard cap. Based on self-reported circulating figures, Solana’s market cap was cited near $46.4 billion, with a fully diluted valuation of roughly $55.35 billion.
Market microstructure data also points to where the action is concentrated. Centralized exchange volume was reported near $4.75 billion versus a much smaller decentralized exchange figure of about $23,825, suggesting price discovery is currently dominated by CEX liquidity rather than on-chain trading venues.
For now, the market’s near-term focus is whether SOL can decisively reclaim the $90–$92 range and convert it into support. A breakout could reinforce the view that altcoins are regaining momentum alongside Bitcoin and Ethereum, while a failure—particularly if $85 breaks—would likely signal that the rally remains vulnerable to risk-off swings and profit-taking after an “overbought” run.
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