Stablecoins on the Solana (SOL) network has surged to a two-year high at a time in which the network’s native token is enduring a bearish downturn that’s seen it lose more than 25% of its value since late November.
The stablecoin supply has seemingly been growing as investors seek refuge in the relative stability of digital assets pegged to traditional currencies, with Solana reaching $5.89 billion, a sign of risk aversion within the cryptocurrency’s ecosystem.
The lion’s share of the stablecoin supply on Solana, according to data from DeFiLlama, is in the token issued by Circle, USDC, with $4.38 billion in circulation within the network. The second-largest stablecoin on the network, data shows, is Tether’s USDT, followed by PayPal USD (PYUSD).
Other contenders with more than $100 million in circulation within the Solana ecosystem also include Sky Dollar (USDS), an overcollateralized cryptocurrency-backed stablecoin issued by Sky (formerly Maker), and Ondo US Dollar Yield (USDY), a yield-generating stablecoin.
Solana’s stablecoin supply growth. Source: DeFiLlama
Solana’s DeFi Ecosystem Grows Amid Stablecoin Supply Surge
This influx comes at a time in which the total value locked (TVL) on the Solana blockchain is nearing its previous all-time high of $9.9 billion, having grown from around $1.5 billion early last year to now stand at $8.6 billion.
The protocol’s DeFi ecosystem has been growing amid a memecoin and AI agent trading trend that has helped propel its decentralized exchanges to the top in terms of trading volume, with liquid staking protocols also playing a crucial role in the growth.
Nevertheless, the total trading volume of non-fungible tokens on Solana has plunged significantly from its peak in March of last year, to the point it’s now down nearly 90%.