Solana (SOL +4.34%) is limping into the back half of 2026 in rough shape, falling close to 13% over the 30 days ending on June 29, and 53% over the last 12 months.
That’s the bad news. The good news could be right around the corner. Here’s what history suggests might happen next.

Today’s Change
(4.34%) $3.35
Current Price
$80.65
Key Data Points
Market Cap
$47B
Day’s Range
$76.90 – $82.40
52wk Range
$60.40 – $252.78
Volume
3.8B
Could this be a jubilant July?
The months that follow June have often done some heavy lifting for Solana’s holders.
While June has been a down month in all but two instances, the coin’s performance in July exhibits the opposite. In all six prior Julys in Solana’s lifetime, its performance was strongly positive, with a median return of 21.4%. Whether it was breaking a multi-month downtrend or simply bouncing back from a modest decline, it made no difference; the coin’s price went up.
For the rest of the summer, per the data, Augusts are split evenly, with three featuring strong rallies and three featuring brutal collapses of 20% or more. And September has been positive in all but Solana’s first year, gaining a median of 6.8%. So the pattern of seasonality — as much as it’s necessary to take such patterns with a big grain of salt — indicates that Solana’s painful downtrend may soon reverse.
Still, as tidy as the data look, five or six observations make up a very small sample. Seasonality itself isn’t something you should rely on to time your investing; it’s a dubious practice and no substitute for an investment thesis.
Image source: Getty Images.
Why this particular summer might break the pattern
In short, despite Solana’s past performance, the macro environment is moving the wrong way for risk assets.
At the Federal Reserve’s June 17 meeting, rates held steady, but futures markets are now pricing in a quarter-point hike on the way as soon as October. If inflation continues to exceed the Fed’s target, more hikes could follow. And when rates rise, liquidity drops, which ultimately starves risky assets like cryptocurrencies of the fuel they need to rally.
Furthermore, capital is rotating away from crypto rather than toward it. AI has driven a new boom in memory stocks and semiconductor stocks, pulling marginal dollars into chip manufacturers and big initial public offerings (IPOs). Moreover, spot Solana exchange-traded funds (ETFs) have attracted $1.1 billion in cumulative net inflows since their October 2025 launch, yet the coin still made its fresh 2026 lows on June 6.
So, even with Solana’s historical performance in July, it’s not currently a screaming buy. If you hold it, keep holding it. If you’re looking to add to your position for the purpose of long-term holding, there’s a small buying opportunity here, but don’t bet the farm on Solana.
Source: Original Article

































