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Solana’s real economic value, app revenue, and DEX volumes were all up on the order of 20-30% in May, but one noteworthy figure didn’t keep pace: stablecoin supply.
Today, there are 15% fewer stablecoins on Solana than a month ago, per Blockworks Research data. Stablecoins are often an important source of liquidity for doing things like swapping in and out of SOL, although Solana’s stablecoin dip comes after the gray swan that was Donald Trump’s memecoin.
Solana’s stablecoin supply doubled essentially overnight when Donald Trump’s memecoin was paired with USDC, meaning investors essentially had to buy TRUMP with Circle’s stablecoin. Interestingly, the fresh stablecoin supply didn’t evaporate when TRUMP investors flocked for the exits, and it even hit a fresh all-time high in April when the presidential memecoin was far from its initial highs.
So given that context, some in Solana find the decline in stablecoin supply unconcerning.
Source: Blockworks Research
“[Y]ea this chart looks a lot better than the SOL price chart lol,” Lulo co-founder Jesse Brauner said when I asked him about the stablecoin supply dip.
In any event, the stablecoin exodus has been led by USDC, which saw its market cap on Solana shrink by some $1.8 billion in May, according to Blockworks Research analyst Carlos Gonzalez Campo. Perena founder Anna Yuan speculated that the sudden drop in supply could be funds shorting the dollar in a topsy-turvy macro environment.
Non-USDC stables actually grew last month, notably including PayPal’s PYUSD, which saw its supply grow 48%.
PYUSD is one of several newer stablecoins vying for a piece of USDC’s 70% market share on Solana. It’s joined by USDG — a Paxos-issued stable that pledges to share revenue with its network partners, which include Robinhood and Kraken — and USX, a forthcoming basis-trade token that its developer company dubbed “Solana’s stablecoin.”
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