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Should SOL Be Trading at a 70% Discount to ETH?

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Solana (<a href=»https://www.coindesk.com/price/solana» target=»_blank»>SOL</a>) was trading at 97% discount to the market capitalization of Ethereum’s ether (<a href=»https://www.coindesk.com/price/ethereum» target=»_blank»>ETH</a>) in January 2023 — a clear market dislocation that has closed significantly over the last two years.

Today, the discount has shrunk to 70%.

However, Solana is starting to challenge Ethereum in terms of on-chain activity and key measures of network usage.

Which raises the question: Is the market still dislocated?

In this short piece, we explore this key question with relative analysis across four key data points. Let’s dive in.

1. Network Fees

Data: Artemis, The DeFi Report, Gas Fees Only (does not include MEV). Please note that we’ve included the following L2s in the comps data: Arbitrum, Base, Optimism, Blast, Celo, Linea, Mantle, Scroll, Starknet, zkSync, Immutable, and Manta Pacific.

Layer 2s create new demand for block space on the Ethereum layer 1 and increase the network effects of ETH the asset. Therefore, we include them in our comparatrive analysis for SOL.

In the second quarter, Solana did $151 million in fees, which is 27% of Ethereum plus its top layer 2s.

Fast forward to the last 90 days and the ratio has jumped to 49%.

2. DEX Volumes

Data: Artemis, The DeFi Report

Solana did $108 billion in decentralized exchange, or DEX, trading volume in the second quarter, or 36% of Ethereum and its top L2s. Over the last 90 days, Solana is up to $153 billion and 57%, respectively.

3. Stablecoin Volumes

Data: Artemis, The DeFi Report

Solana did $4.7 trillion in stablecoin volume in the second quarter: 1.9 times Ether and the top L2s.

Over the last 90 days, solana did $963 billion of volume: 30% of ether and the top L2s.

Why the drop?

We think this is mostly due to bots/algorithmic trading that were juicing the numbers in the second quarter.

Furthermore, only 6% of Solana’s stablecoin volumes are peer-to-peer transfers, per Artemis. On the Ethereum L1, this figure is closer to 30% — an indication that Ethereum is used more for non-speculative activity than Solana.

In terms of stablecoin supply, Solana has just 4.1% of Ethereum and its top L2s, up from 3.5% at the end of the second quarter.

4. Total Value Locked (TVL)

Data: Artemis, The DeFi Report

Solana ended the second quarter with $4.2 billion of total value locked (TVL): 6.3% of ether + the top L2s.

Solana’s TVL is currently $8.2 billion: 12% of ether + the top L2s.

In summary, based on 90-day performance, Solana now has:

49% of Ethereum’s fees (up from 27% at the end of Q2)

57% of Ethereum’s DEX volumes (up from 36% end of Q2)

30% of Ethereum’s stablecoin volumes (down from 190% in Q2)

4.1% of Ethereum’s stablecoin supply (up from 3.5% end of Q2)

12% of Ethereum’s TVL (up from 6% end of Q2)

We think the on-chain data points to a fair re-pricing of SOL’s valuation relative to ETH.

With that said, investors should consider qualitative differences between the two networks as well as potential upcoming catalysts as we head into year-end and 2025.

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CoinDesk 20 Performance Update: Uniswap (UNI) Gains 7.2% as Index Climbs Higher

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CoinDesk Indices presents its daily market update, highlighting the performance of leaders and laggards in the CoinDesk 20 Index.

The CoinDesk 20 is currently trading at 3206.01, up 1.3% (+41.12) since 4 p.m. ET on Tuesday.

Nineteen of 20 assets are trading higher.

9am CoinDesk 20 Update for 2025-05-21: full chart

Leaders: UNI (+7.2%) and AVAX (+3.5%).
Laggards: AAVE (-1.6%) and BTC (+0.2%).

The CoinDesk 20 is a broad-based index traded on multiple platforms in several regions globally.

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Guatemala’s Largest Bank Adopts Stablecoin Rails for U.S. Remittance Payments

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Guatemala’s largest bank, Banco Industrial, has adopted blockchain firm SukuPay’s stablecoin rails for customers to send remittances from the U.S.

SukuPay will allow Guatemalans to receive funds from the U.S. for a flat 99 cent fee using only a phone number within their Banco National mobile app Zigi, according to an emailed announcement on Wednesday.

«This integration marks the first time a crypto-native protocol has gone live at this depth inside a top-tier Latin American retail bank,» SukuPay said in the announcement.

SukuPay’s developer Suku unveiled the payment tool in April 2024 as a way of allowing cross-border money transfers without the need to create a crypto wallet. It is built on Ethereum scaling network Polygon and uses the USDC stablecoin.

Stablecoins, now a nearly $230 billion asset class, are one of crypto’s most practical success stories. Pegged to fiat currencies like the U.S. dollar, they’ve become popular tools for payments, remittances and savings—especially in developing countries where banking access is limited or local currencies are volatile.

SukuPay’s integration into Banco Industrial underlines the trend how blockchain-based rails are quietly entering the financial mainstream, not as investment vehicles but as invisible plumbing for real-world money movement.

Remittances to Guatemala number around $21 billion annually, which is nearly 20% of the country’s GDP.

Only 35% of Guatemalan adults had access to formal bank accounts as of 2022, according to the World Bank’s Findex Data, making it a prime market for tools that can improve financial inclusion.

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Crypto Hedge Fund Temple Capital Hires TradFi Execs as Institutional Demand Grows

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Crypto hedge fund Temple Capital has expanded its senior management team with hires from Hilbert Capital, BlueCrest and Brevan Howard, the company said in a press release Wednesday.

Guy Griffiths has joined as chief financial officer, the company said. He was previously employed by macro hedge fund Brevan Howard in London for 19 years.

Richard Murray, former CEO of crypto asset manager Hilbert Capital, has joined Temple Capital as a partner of the firm. He was also a former executive at Brevan.

Cristian-Teodor Tudor, formerly lead quant developer at BlueCrest, has joined the investment firm as a quant researcher.

Temple Capital currently manages $120 million in assets and is backed by Bain Capital and Pantera Capital.

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