Solana’s
SOL
is
starting
to
rival
Ethereum’s
ether
in
terms
of
on-chain
activity
and
network
usage
metrics,
raising
questions
about
whether
the
market
is
dislocated,
says
Michael
Nadeau.
Updated
Nov
27,
2024,
7:53 p.m.
Published
Nov
27,
2024,
4:19 p.m.
Solana
(SOL)
was
trading
at
97%
discount
to
the
market
capitalization
of
Ethereum’s
ether
(ETH)
in
January
2023
—
a
clear
market
dislocation
that
has
closed
significantly
over
the
last
two
years.
Today,
the
discount
has
shrunk
to
70%.
continues
below
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.
Michael
Nadeau
Michael
Nadeau
is
the
founder
of
The
DeFi
Report,
a
research
service
and
educational
newsletter
focused
on
value
accrual
within
the
Web3
tech
stack.
He
is
also
a
strategic
adviser
to
multiple
start-ups
in
the
digital
asset
space.
Prior
to
starting
The
DeFi
Report,
he
was
the
director
of
ecosystem
strategy
at
Inveniam,
a
digital
asset
firm
helping
owners
and
managers
of
private
market
assets
prepare
for
tokenization.
Before
joining
the
Web3
space,
he
spent
12
years
in
traditional
finance
at
a
family
office,
Boston
Properties
and
MIT
Investment
Management
Company.