
Solana faces a DeFi confidence crisis after a hack, pressuring its token price, but strong payments adoption with Visa and record on-chain activity signal a fundamental divergence.
The Solana blockchain is navigating a period of significant tension. While its technology attracts major partners and processes staggering transaction volumes, a crisis of confidence within its decentralized finance (DeFi) sector is applying substantial downward pressure on its token price. Investors are left weighing the impact of high-profile project failures against tangible progress in real-world payment adoption.
Amidst sector-specific turmoil, the Solana Foundation is aggressively advancing its strategy for real-world utility. The launch of the “Solana Payments” hub at payments.org is designed to streamline blockchain payment integration for businesses. This platform provides developer tools and a live transaction simulator for risk-free testing.
The infrastructure’s adoption by financial heavyweights including Visa, PayPal, and Stripe underscores the strategy’s potential. Network data robustly supports this direction: over 480 billion transactions processed in the past six years and a quarterly stablecoin volume reaching two trillion dollars point to massive, sustained usage.
The ecosystem’s mood has been darkened by the lasting consequences of a January 2026 security breach. The incident, which resulted in the theft of 261,854 SOL (valued at approximately $27 million at the time) from the treasury of Step Finance, has now led to definitive closures. Unable to cover the losses, Step Finance along with associated platforms SolanaFloor and Remora Markets announced their shutdown in late February.
A critical point for risk assessment is that the attack did not target the core Solana protocol; instead, it exploited vulnerabilities in external key management. Nevertheless, the disappearance of these established services has negatively impacted market sentiment. The cryptocurrency’s price reflects this uncertainty, recently falling nearly 7% to $81.52, bringing it perilously close to its 52-week low of $77.74.
Should investors sell immediately? Or is it worth buying Solana?
Despite a price decline exceeding 35% over the past month, on-chain metrics present a contrasting narrative. The number of daily active addresses climbed to 3.78 million in early February, marking a 72% increase from the previous quarter. Institutional investors appear to be using the lower prices as an entry point: Solana spot ETFs recorded net inflows of over $61 million in February, while competing Ethereum-based products experienced outflows.
Technologically, the focus is shifting toward the third quarter of 2026. The planned “Alpenglow” upgrade is expected to further accelerate transaction finalization and strengthen the network’s foundational technology.
Fresh Solana information released. What’s the impact for investors? Our latest independent report examines recent figures and market trends.

