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crypto.news 2025-05-05 09:55:33

Stablecoins are the next big thing for Solana as memecoin frenzy cools | Opinion

Disclosure: The views and opinions expressed here belong solely to the author and do not represent the views and opinions of crypto.news’ editorial. Solana ( SOL ) has emerged from one of its most turbulent periods to date. Stress-tested in Q1 2025 by an unprecedented wave of memecoin launches on platforms like Pump.fun, the network faced both extraordinary transaction volume and congestion. It saw tens of thousands of new token launches in just a few months, bringing billions of dollars on-chain through millions of transactions. You might also like: Only Solana could handle a memecoin supercycle | Opinion It was a real test of how Solana would perform under pressure. Yet, rather than faltering, the network adapted and improved. From this intense period of on-chain activity, a more resilient blockchain has emerged—one that’s increasingly being seen as not just a “memechain” but as a foundational layer for stablecoins and real-world payments. The memecoin stress test Memecoins, despite their speculative nature, served a valuable purpose: they pushed Solana’s infrastructure to the limit. During the January peak, tokens like Official Trump ( TRUMP ) and MELANIA ( MELANIA ) helped drive Solana’s decentralized exchanges to a near-record $40 billion in 24-hour trading volume. Together, these two meme tokens reached a combined fully diluted valuation (FDV) of nearly $70 billion—larger than many publicly listed companies. This sent the daily trading volume on Pump.fun past the $5 billion mark, higher than Coinbase. This onslaught did expose certain issues: validators hit compute limits, RPCs throttled, and trading bots struggled to keep pace. But, in response, Solana’s core developers shipped staking-weighted Quality-of-Service to prioritize honest traffic, QUIC networking fixes to reduce packet loss, and advanced priority fees so users could cut the line transparently. In short, the network’s foundational thesis—that better hardware leads to better scalability—held up well under pressure. Stability over speculation Now that the memecoin tide has ebbed, the real opportunity is clear. Stablecoins—reliable, dollar-pegged digital cash—are seeing rapid growth on Solana. The network’s outstanding stablecoin float sits at an all-time high of around $12.7 billion , more than double the figure from a year ago and within striking distance of Ethereum’s all-time peak. Why the influx? Solana is the first L1 that combines sub-second finality, fractions-of-a-cent fees, and battle-tested throughput. Put simply, there are no roll-ups, there’s no waiting around, micro-payments are finally economical, and throughput has been thoroughly proven during the memecoin frenzy of Q1. The chain is finally ready for money markets and payment rails—exactly what mainstream users and regulators require. Real-world rails are already here Take USDG, for example. This stablecoin, issued by Paxos Digital Singapore and designed to be compliant with the Monetary Authority of Singapore’s upcoming stablecoin regulatory framework, is now live on Solana, giving fintech firms a way to transfer US dollars worldwide in seconds for a fraction of a cent. Cheap, final settlement at internet speed is no longer just a theory, but a reality. And then there’s Franklin Templeton’s OnChain US Government Money Fund. One of the world’s largest asset managers is tokenizing money-market shares on Solana because the chain’s throughput and custody tooling already feel familiar to traditional finance ops teams. Collectively, these heavy hitters aren’t chasing memes; they’re chasing the $20 trillion global payments market that Statista pegs for 2025. If even 1% of that flow lands on Solana, it would eclipse today’s entire crypto market cap—and it’s the stability of these new rail-builders that will make it happen. Firedancer: The next upgrade There’s more good news in the pipeline, too. Later this year, Jump Crypto’s independent validator client, Firedancer , lands on mainnet, which promises 50x faster block propagation and a design ceiling of 1 million transactions per second. For stablecoin issuers and payment providers, Firedancer could be a game-changer: it offers deterministic finality, even during Black Friday-level transaction spikes. For Solana builders, meanwhile, the upgrade is the green light to aggregate liquidity across a wide range of automated market makers, order-book DEX, and RFQ venues without worrying about network stability. A call to builders Memecoins were a stress test. Stablecoins are the real opportunity. For developers working on wallets, payment apps, remittance tools, or trading infrastructure, Solana is optimized and ready, and now the next phase begins. In fact, it wouldn’t be too far-fetched to say that this is what the blockchain has been preparing for all along. Where memecoins generated attention, stablecoins promise adoption. Solana has shown it can handle volume, and with Firedancer on the horizon, it will only improve from here. For builders seeking deep liquidity, reliable performance, and low fees, Solana is an increasingly compelling choice. In fact, it is rapidly turning into the Nasdaq-grade settlement layer Anatoly Yakovenko envisioned back in 2020. Read more: Mass crypto adoption requires transparency and education | Opinion Author: Chris Chung Chris Chung is the CEO and co-founder of Titan, Solana’s first Meta DEX Aggregator. In addition, Chris is very active in the Toronto Solana ecosystem as the local ambassador for MonkeDao in Toronto, as well as a Superteam Canada member. Chris previously served as the CTO of a cryptocurrency and US equity hedge fund, building out low-latency analytics, back office reporting, and trading systems.

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