Solana (SOL) floats above $80 at press time on Monday, avoiding deeper corrections with rebounds to extend a consolidating move. The rising institutional demand, with over $115 million in inflows last month, and a surge in tokenized Real World Assets (RWAs) on Solana, reflect strong foundational demand for the long term. Still, the rise in retail demand with increasing funding rates fails to liberate SOL from prevailing downside pressure.
Institutions shift focus to Solana
Solana ETFs are gaining momentum, while Bitcoin ETFs have recorded three consecutive weekly outflows of over $1 billion, suggesting that institutions are willing to hold altcoins over the King Crypto. SoSoValue data shows Solana ETFs recorded their fourth consecutive weekly inflow of $2.36 million, bringing the total monthly inflow to $115.34 million, extending the streak of positive monthly flows since their inception in October.

At the same time, Solana is expanding its footprint in the tokenized RWAs sector, which emerges as one of the leading growth stories in the crypto market. Solana ranks as the third-largest RWA network with $2.74 billion of tokenized assets, after Ethereum and the BNB chain.

A steady demand for Solana among deep-pocketed investors amid its growing real-world utility positions it well for the long term.
Retail interest leans bullish despite sluggish price movement
Solana shows signs of recovery in retail interest as price holds above the $80 mark. CoinGlass data show that SOL Open Interest (OI) has remained stable at around $5.37 billion over the last 24 hours, while the OI funding rate remains positive at 0.0093%. This reflects stability in the notional value of outstanding contracts, while long position holders are willing to pay a premium to offset the spot-swap price difference, as they anticipate an upside move.
On the other hand, the liquidation data show mixed results, with $4.02 million in total liquidation over the last 24 hours, led by $3.24 million in long positions, suggesting sell-side dominance.

Given that the price remains volatile around $80, long-position holders remain at risk of forced liquidation, keeping short-term retail support fragile.
Could Solana rebound to $100?
Solana extends a sideways movement above Thursday’s low of $80.00 and the support-turned-resistance of the May 17 low at $83.50. SOL maintains a bearish near-term bias as price remains below the 50-, 100-, and 200-day Exponential Moving Averages (EMAs), clustered between roughly $86 and $108.
The Relative Strength Index (RSI) at 41 on the daily chart stabilizes between the midline and the oversold zone, suggesting a cooldown in the prevailing downside pressure. Meanwhile, the Moving Average Convergence Divergence (MACD) remains below zero but approaches its signal line as negative histograms contract, reinforcing that downside pressure is losing intensity.
A daily close above $83.50 would pave the path toward the overhead barriers at the 50- and 100-day EMAs at $86.16 and $91.62, respectively. Beyond this zone, the February 1 low at $98.02 remains a key resistance level that capped the rebounds in March and May. If Solana clears this level, the 200-day EMA at $108.14 would serve as the next crucial barrier, reflecting the long-term declining trend.

Looking down, a break below $80.00 could significantly increase bearish pressure on the February 24 and February 6 lows at $75.63 and $67.50, respectively, serving as the next-in-line support levels.
(The technical analysis of this story was written with the help of an AI tool.)
(This story was corrected on June 01 at 06:10 GMT to remove a URL link from the first heading.)
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