Solana (SOL) has experienced an impressive bump in its on-chain transfer volume, reaching a whopping $224 billion in just one day. The recent movements cater roughly three times its market cap, currently at about $76 billion.
This sudden growth in transfer volume also reflects how increasingly valuable and popular Solana’s network is becoming, famed for its blazing transaction throughput and relatively low fees compared to Ethereum’s.
This transfer volume is very significant. $224 billion in transactional activity for any blockchain hasn’t happened within 24 hours.
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Any level of on-chain movement could indicate increased user engagement, Interest from institutions, and Preparatory activity in the run-up to significant network updates and announcements.
With such a high volume, Solana’s price would typically rise, but the price has not increased as enormously as expected between network activity and market sentiment.
Price Dips Despite Transfer Volume Surge
Amid the record-high transfer volume, Solana’s price has shown great bullishness. The token’s price has jumped by 12.5% in the past 24 hours.
At the time of writing, Solana is trading at around $184.49. This decoupling between network activity and token price can happen in many ways. The transfer volume surge may not represent broad-based buying or selling pressure.
One possibility is that whale transactions or internal exchange movements affected the volumes. Alternatively, Solana could be a more experimental environment where projects using the network’s infrastructure do so without directly affecting the token’s price.
Investors are likely observing as price stabilization or further price declines may signal new buyers to jump in at lower levels or a broader pullback in price for Solana.
Technical Analysis: Bearish Signals and Key Resistance Levels
Specifically, the price chart for Solana is a technical nightmare. Early on, when the recent breakout above $180 looked promising, it broke out of a downtrend channel that had persisted for the past week.
However, Solana encountered stiff resistance around the $184 point, where sellers have repeatedly pushed to rein in further upsides. It’s an essential area for SOL at this level and has been repeatedly rejected.
This resistance stopped the initial rally’s progress, and we are currently in a consolidation phase on the technical chart. After this resistance was halted, this consolidation phase began.
The relative strength indicator (RSI), a standard momentum indicator, is notable for approaching indicative levels of indecision amongst traders.
However, the RSI isn’t too overbought and tells us buyers and sellers are almost evenly matched. Solana would need a decisive breakout above $184 and into new all-time highs to continue its upward movement, perhaps reversing market sentiment.