Solana’s mixed signals: What’s next as whale inflows rise but STHs stay back
- Over 2 million Solana moved between unknown wallets as Exchange Outflows hit $394M.
- Despite bullish patterns and corporate accumulation, traders remain cautious with falling Open Interest.
Solana [SOL]’s price plunged 10.17% in the last 24 hours to trade at $143.31, and yet whales moved over 2 million SOL worth more than $323 million between unknown wallets.
Interestingly, these large movements showed no link to exchanges.
Naturally, that sparked speculation about stealth accumulation, internal reshuffling, or OTC trades.
Such activity typically precedes significant market moves, either signaling insider confidence or a cautious reshuffle amid uncertainty.
Institutions and SOL in the short-term
Institutional appetite remained strong.
DeFi Development Corp (DFDV) secured a $5 billion credit facility to purchase SOL exclusively, reinforcing strong institutional appetite.
Already holding 620,000 SOL valued near $100 million, the firm’s strategic push includes acquiring a Solana validator and launching a Bonk [BONK] linked staking product.
Their stock reacted immediately—up 21% daily and 115% weekly—reinforcing investor faith.
More importantly, DFDV’s cautious, long-term capital strategy aligned with accumulating during dips, not chasing tops.
Money’s moving… But where’s it going?
On the 13th of June, Solana witnessed $359.55 million in Inflows against $394.75 million in Outflows, leading to net negative Exchange Flows.
Naturally, this raised a question: Was it accumulation into cold wallets or just tactical exits? On-chain logic leans bullish here.
Historically, heavy outflows often precede price rebounds. However, given the current price slump, the move could also reflect short-term fear.
In essence, the outflows showed confidence—tempered by macro caution.
Why is Open Interest falling?
Solana’s derivatives market showed mixed signals, as volume surged by 21.75% to $18.62B, while Futures Open Interest dropped 13.14% to $6.38B.
Options data adds another twist, with volume soaring 92.74% and Options Open Interest up 17.64%.
This divergence suggests traders are actively repositioning, favoring short-term speculation over long-term conviction.
Therefore, the market appears volatile yet uncertain, as capital rotates between positions rapidly, waiting for a clearer breakout or breakdown signal.
Funding Rates turned slightly positive at 0.0023%.
Of course, that shift marked returning bullish momentum, but the minimal size showed reluctance.
A cup and handle pattern emerges
SOL flashed a bullish cup and handle pattern on the daily chart at press time. The price hovered near $143.95, sitting just above the $141.12 support.
The falling wedge forming the handle suggests that a breakout attempt is imminent if bulls reclaim $152.43. Further targets lie at $159.17 and $183.43, according to Fibonacci levels.
However, failure to hold the current support will invalidate the pattern, exposing SOL to deeper losses. Thus, price structure favors bullish potential but depends heavily on the $141 zone.
Some are buying, some are selling
As of the 13th of June, the Long/Short Ratio stood at 0.9736. Longs made up 49.33%, while shorts slightly led with 50.67%.
This nearly balanced split shows that traders are hedging in both directions, mirroring the broader uncertainty in spot and derivatives markets.
Despite positive on-chain accumulation signs and technical setups, traders have yet to fully commit to a directional bet. Consequently, this indecision adds a final layer of caution to Solana’s short-term outlook
Solana’s ecosystem shows signs of long-term confidence through corporate accumulation and bullish technical patterns.
However, short-term uncertainty remains high, as derivatives traders hesitate and Open Interest declines.
Whether this confluence of signals leads to a breakout or breakdown depends heavily on SOL holding above $141 support in the coming sessions.