Standard Chartered has lowered its end-2026 price target for Solana to $250, down from $310, while leaving its longer-dated trajectory intact. The bankβs roadmap still points to $2,000 by 2030 as the bank argues the chainβs activity mix is rotating away from memecoin-led trading toward stablecoin-based micropayments.
The revised forecast comes as the bankβs digital assets research team frames the current drawdown as a period when βperformance differentiationβ across crypto should become more visible, rather than a tape where everything trades as a single risk bucket.
Why Standard Chartered Lowers The 2026 Solana Target, Boosts Long View
Behind the 2026 haircut is a more skeptical view on how quickly Solana can convert its cost and throughput advantages into sustained, fee-generating economic activity beyond speculative bursts. In Standard Charteredβs telling, Solana is in the middle of a narrative transition that is strategically attractive but not instantaneous in market terms.
Geoffrey Kendrick, Standard Charteredβs head of global digital assets research, anchored the shift in decentralized exchange (DEX) flow composition. βWhen we initiated coverage of Solana in May 2025, we observed that activity on the network was largely concentrated in memecoin trading on DEXs.β βComposition of DEX flows has shifted from memecoin trading toward SOLβstablecoin pairs.β
That rotation, Kendrick argued, accelerated over 2025 as capital moved away from meme-focused activity which he said peaked in mid-January around the launch of the Trump token and toward tokenized dollars. The implication is that Solanaβs DEX activity is beginning to resemble a payments-adjacent rail more than a single-cycle casino, even if overall volumes have cooled.
Standard Chartered also flagged Solanaβs ultra-low transaction costs as a key enabler for βmicropaymentβ use cases, including AI-driven payments, where even modest fee overhead can break unit economics.
One of the more striking metrics in the report is stablecoin turnover: Kendrick said stablecoin velocity on Solana is already two to three times higher than on Ethereum, suggesting Solana may be carving out a distinct role for high-frequency, low-value transfers.
The bank tied that possibility to βinternet-nativeβ payment protocols such as Coinbase-backed x402, while cautioning that the repositioning will take time to translate into market leadership.
That slower timeline is part of why Standard Chartered expects Solana to lag Ethereum in the 2026β2027 window, even as the bank becomes more constructive on Solanaβs longer-run upside if micropayment demand compounds.
Despite trimming the 2026 target, Standard Charteredβs longer-term schedule remains aggressive: $400 in 2027, $700 in 2028, $1,200 in 2029, and $2,000 by end-2030, according to reporting by The Block. The bankβs framework implies that Solanaβs βmicropaymentsβ phase is expected to matter more as the cycle matures, with Kendrick also projecting Solana to outperform Bitcoin over 2027β2030.
At press time, SOL traded at $96.93.

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