Solana just had its best quarter for infrastructure. The network shipped $750 million in USDC mints in a single day. Crypto card volume hit $348 million. Western Union integrated stablecoins. Visa partnerships moved forward. Firedancer optimizations went live. On paper, this looks like a winning chain.
But look at the token. SOL dropped 43% in four months. Lifinity shut down. Remora shut down. Magic Eden killed its own wallet. Ecosystem pillars are leaving during Solana’s best shipping quarter ever. That’s not a healthy picture.
Circle captures treasury yield on every USDC dollar flowing through the network. Validators collect dust. Solana is becoming world-class payment infrastructure for stablecoin issuers. Those issuers return zero value to SOL holders.
Shipping without value capture means building someone else’s business for free. Solana does the hard work. Circle and Visa take the profits. SOL holders watch the token bleed.
This is a structural flaw. Until Solana finds a way to route value back to the token, more shipping won’t save the price. The chain works brilliantly. The investment thesis does not.
Let’s look at the chart. The SOL price trades near $118 (estimated). The RSI sits at 54.41 — neutral, slightly tilted up, but no strong momentum.
Source: TradingView
Price action shows lower highs since the January peak near $210. Each rally gets sold. The 200-day moving average (likely above current price) acts as overhead resistance. Volume is drying up. The recent bounce from $100 lacked conviction.
The 43% drop in four months happened while fundamentals supposedly improved. That’s a red flag. Markets usually price good news higher — here, good news is met with selling.
My take: SOL remains in a downtrend until it breaks above $135 with strong volume. Short-term bias is negative toward the $110 support. A break below $110 opens the path to $100. Below that, $88 becomes realistic.
Solana built payment rails that work. But SOL holders didn’t get paid. The token dropped 43% while the ecosystem lost key players. Until value capture is fixed, price remains under pressure.
Related analysis: How High Solana (SOL) Price Could Go in May
Western Union has introduced USDPT, a U.S. dollar–backed stablecoin issued by Anchorage Digital Bank, which operates under a federal charter. The stablecoin is built on the Solana network.
The initial rollout will begin in Bolivia and the Philippines, with plans to expand into 40+ countries by 2026. USDPT will be integrated into Western Union’s global payments and liquidity infrastructure, marking a major step toward mainstream stablecoin adoption.
Circle minted approximately $9.25 billion in USDC on Solana in April 2026, one of the largest monthly stablecoin issuances ever recorded on a single blockchain.
This signals strong liquidity inflows and growing usage of Solana for stablecoin settlement. However, while activity increases on-chain, the yield generated from USDC reserves accrues to Circle (not SOL holders) highlighting the ongoing value-capture gap in the ecosystem.
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The post Solana Ships $750M USDC in One Day, But SOL Holders Get Nothing – Here’s Why appeared first on CaptainAltcoin.

