Solana Stuck in a Loop? The $200 SOL Dream Still Just Out of Reach
Solana's rally hits a wall—again. Despite bullish momentum, SOL can't seem to crack the elusive $200 barrier. What's holding it back?
Network congestion? Check. Memecoin mania clogging the pipes? Obviously. But the real culprit might be traders treating SOL like a casino chip—pumping, dumping, and repeating.
Meanwhile, Ethereum L2s keep eating Solana's lunch on institutional adoption. Ouch.
Wake-up call: Until SOL shakes its 'degenerate playground' rep, that $200 target stays in fantasy land. But hey—at least the apes are having fun.
Solana faces strong underwater resistance
Solana still hasn’t made it back to $200, not in late Q1, and not through all of Q2. And there’s a good reason for that.
When SOL spiked to $180 last month, about 86% of the supply was in profit. Fast-forward 30 days, and that number has been cut in half.
This shift suggests a growing wall of sell-side liquidity, making the $180 zone a heavy supply wall.
That dynamic is reinforced by Solana’s UTXO Realized Price Distribution (URPD). It shows a concentrated cost basis between $144 and $168 with a peak cluster at $155–$165, right in line with current price levels.
Source: Glassnode
These bands make up nearly 30% of SOL’s realized price, with buyers acquiring around 160 million tokens between $144 and $168, most of which now sit in underwater positions.
If SOL pushes toward $180, those holders begin to flip into profit, introducing increased sell pressure right at the breakout point.
While a well-coordinated bullish push could clear this wall and open the path to $200, this is where the feedback loop tightens.
Smart money lacks clear direction
Although Ripple [XRP] remains range-bound, failing to break key resistance, it has still managed to limit its monthly drawdown to 25%, less severe than Solana’s 30% decline.
But AMBCrypto believes that the real story lies in the divergence in smart money behavior.
XRP is showing signs of gradual absorption, with bulls quietly accumulating.
In contrast, Solana’s whales are reinforcing the range, consistently buying the dip and offloading NEAR resistance, effectively tightening the feedback loop.
On-chain data backs this up: Each time SOL approaches a local top, the number of whale wallets (>10k SOL) spikes, only to decline sharply as the price retraces.
Source: Glassnode
This cycle of tactical accumulation and distribution is keeping SOL capped, unable to absorb the persistent sell-side liquidity around $180.
Until smart money flips to directional conviction, a MOVE to $200 feels more like hope than a setup right now, putting the breakout narrative officially on pause.
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