šŸ”„ Solanaā€™s all-time high by the numbers


SOL touched $260 for the first time ever last night, setting off a round of quasi-religious celebration and dunks on Solana bears. We have covered the narrative side of Solanaā€™s turnaround from a massive post-FTX sell-off previously, but today weā€™re bringing you some interesting data to recap Solanaā€™s landmark day.

šŸ”ø 1,111

Thatā€™s the number of days between Solanaā€™s first and second all-time highs. As long as the wait may have felt for SOL holders, thatā€™s actually less time than it took bitcoin to set its second price record: The orange coin took some 1,200 days to top its 2013 high.

šŸ”ø $294.42

That would be Solanaā€™s previous all-time high adjusted for inflation, according to the data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics. So $263 is pretty good, but those SOL tokens donā€™t go quite as far as they used to.

šŸ”ø 7.72%

Thatā€™s the percentage of one ether token that one solana token represents, and this SOLETH ratio also set an all-time high yesterday. When solana last hit an all-time high, the coin was only worth 5.7% of one ether.

šŸ”ø $2.4 billion

Thatā€™s how much the SOL tokens Galaxy Trading purchased from the FTX estate are worth at todayā€™s prices, according to details reported by Bloomberg. The subsidiary of Mike Novogratzā€™s Galaxy Digital purchased $620 million in SOL at $64 per token in April. SOL was trading at around $172 at the time. Not a bad deal.

šŸ”ø 80%

Thatā€™s roughly the percentage of Solana decentralized exchange activity that involved memecoins yesterday. Speculative meme tokens have largely been the story of Solanaā€™s massive run-up in volume and blockspace demand. Solana founders and investors will often portray memecoins as a ā€œstress testā€ for the network ā€” presumably as it readies itself to onboard more meaningful financial activity.

#SOL #Solana