The post Solana Price Set for Q4 Surge as Canary Capital ETF Filing appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. The Solana price narrative continues to gain traction as market voices highlight both technical accumulation and institutional interest. Pseudonymous analyst Zyn has tied the Wyckoff phases to Solana’s ongoing structure, sparking curiosity about its next moves. Meanwhile, Canary Capital’s ETF filing adds another layer of attention, positioning Solana among digital assets increasingly considered for regulated products.  Solana Price Action Across Wyckoff Phases Specifically, the analyst outlines Solana’s structured move through the Wyckoff accumulation phases with precise timelines and levels. Phase A began in March 2024, where the SOL price ranged around $204 before dropping to $125 by July.  Notably, phase B extended from July 2024, rallying to $293 before correcting sharply to $95 by April 2025. Phase C followed in April 2025, climbing from $95 to $187 in May before pulling back again to test support near $126 in June.  Phase D then picked up strength, pushing SOL price to $254 in September 2025 before retracing to the current Solana market price, which trades at  around $194.  Phase E is expected to unfold next, with the expert projecting a potential 157% rally from current levels. The long-term Solana price forecast highlights the possibility of the asset climbing as high as $500, completing the Wyckoff cycle. SOL/USDT 1-Week (Source: X) Canary Capital Accelerates ETF Filing Momentum Notably, Canary Capital has filed for a Solana ETF, marking one of the first formal pushes to bring SOL into the regulated investment sphere. This filing specifically highlights staking and holding mechanisms, which distinguish the product from traditional spot offerings.  The move has been perceived as both a strategic step and a potential confidence booster for the Solana ecosystem. Meanwhile, institutional visibility often fuels stronger adoption patterns, even before approvals come through.  At the same time, Grayscale recently  launched its CoinDesk Crypto 5 ETF, which… The post Solana Price Set for Q4 Surge as Canary Capital ETF Filing appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. The Solana price narrative continues to gain traction as market voices highlight both technical accumulation and institutional interest. Pseudonymous analyst Zyn has tied the Wyckoff phases to Solana’s ongoing structure, sparking curiosity about its next moves. Meanwhile, Canary Capital’s ETF filing adds another layer of attention, positioning Solana among digital assets increasingly considered for regulated products.  Solana Price Action Across Wyckoff Phases Specifically, the analyst outlines Solana’s structured move through the Wyckoff accumulation phases with precise timelines and levels. Phase A began in March 2024, where the SOL price ranged around $204 before dropping to $125 by July.  Notably, phase B extended from July 2024, rallying to $293 before correcting sharply to $95 by April 2025. Phase C followed in April 2025, climbing from $95 to $187 in May before pulling back again to test support near $126 in June.  Phase D then picked up strength, pushing SOL price to $254 in September 2025 before retracing to the current Solana market price, which trades at  around $194.  Phase E is expected to unfold next, with the expert projecting a potential 157% rally from current levels. The long-term Solana price forecast highlights the possibility of the asset climbing as high as $500, completing the Wyckoff cycle. SOL/USDT 1-Week (Source: X) Canary Capital Accelerates ETF Filing Momentum Notably, Canary Capital has filed for a Solana ETF, marking one of the first formal pushes to bring SOL into the regulated investment sphere. This filing specifically highlights staking and holding mechanisms, which distinguish the product from traditional spot offerings.  The move has been perceived as both a strategic step and a potential confidence booster for the Solana ecosystem. Meanwhile, institutional visibility often fuels stronger adoption patterns, even before approvals come through.  At the same time, Grayscale recently  launched its CoinDesk Crypto 5 ETF, which…

Solana Price Set for Q4 Surge as Canary Capital ETF Filing

2025/09/27 00:30

The Solana price narrative continues to gain traction as market voices highlight both technical accumulation and institutional interest. Pseudonymous analyst Zyn has tied the Wyckoff phases to Solana’s ongoing structure, sparking curiosity about its next moves. Meanwhile, Canary Capital’s ETF filing adds another layer of attention, positioning Solana among digital assets increasingly considered for regulated products. 

Solana Price Action Across Wyckoff Phases

Specifically, the analyst outlines Solana’s structured move through the Wyckoff accumulation phases with precise timelines and levels. Phase A began in March 2024, where the SOL price ranged around $204 before dropping to $125 by July. 

Notably, phase B extended from July 2024, rallying to $293 before correcting sharply to $95 by April 2025. Phase C followed in April 2025, climbing from $95 to $187 in May before pulling back again to test support near $126 in June. 

Phase D then picked up strength, pushing SOL price to $254 in September 2025 before retracing to the current Solana market price, which trades at  around $194. 

Phase E is expected to unfold next, with the expert projecting a potential 157% rally from current levels. The long-term Solana price forecast highlights the possibility of the asset climbing as high as $500, completing the Wyckoff cycle.

SOL/USDT 1-Week (Source: X)

Canary Capital Accelerates ETF Filing Momentum

Notably, Canary Capital has filed for a Solana ETF, marking one of the first formal pushes to bring SOL into the regulated investment sphere. This filing specifically highlights staking and holding mechanisms, which distinguish the product from traditional spot offerings. 

The move has been perceived as both a strategic step and a potential confidence booster for the Solana ecosystem. Meanwhile, institutional visibility often fuels stronger adoption patterns, even before approvals come through. 

At the same time, Grayscale recently  launched its CoinDesk Crypto 5 ETF, which includes Solana alongside Bitcoin, Ethereum, XRP, and Cardano. This transition from the former GDLC fund to a regulated ETF expands exposure for major institutions. It also positions Solana next to some of the most widely recognized assets in global finance.

Together, these ETF initiatives provide significant credibility for Solana and strengthen the case for mainstream adoption. Institutional recognition not only adds visibility but could also enhance long-term investor confidence.

Summary

The Solana price remains anchored by technical resilience and institutional catalysts. Phase-based analysis continues to validate its structured path toward higher levels. Meanwhile, the ETF filing strengthens the broader narrative, giving the SOL price greater long-term visibility. Ultimately, the $500 target highlighted by the analyst stands as a powerful reminder of Solana’s upside potential.

Source: https://coingape.com/markets/solana-price-set-for-q4-surge-as-canary-capital-etf-filing-meets-wyckoff-accumulation/

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While the global market is rising, cryptocurrencies are falling. What exactly is the problem?

While the global market is rising, cryptocurrencies are falling. What exactly is the problem?

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Altcoins have also exhibited a volatile pattern, with their excess gains primarily driven by short-term narratives. Compared to other asset classes, cryptocurrencies are the worst-performing asset class. From an index perspective, crypto assets in a broad sense experienced a significant sell-off last week, with the GMCI-30 index falling 12%. Most sectors closed lower. The gaming sector plummeted 21%. Layer 2 network sector plunges 19% The meme coin sector declined by 18%. Mid-cap and small-cap tokens fell by approximately 15%-16%. Only the AI (-3%) and DePIN (-4%) sectors showed relative resilience, mainly due to the strong performance of TAO tokens and AI proxy concept coins in the early part of last week. Overall, this volatility seems more like a money-driven phenomenon, consistent with the tightening liquidity following the Fed's decision, rather than caused by fundamental factors. So why are cryptocurrencies lagging behind while global risk assets are rising? In short: liquidity. But it's not a lack of liquidity, but rather a problem of where it flows. Global liquidity is clearly expanding. Central banks are intervening in relatively strong rather than weak markets, a situation that has only occurred a few times in the past, usually followed by a strong surge in risk appetite. The problem is that this new liquidity is not flowing into the crypto market as it has in the past. Stablecoin supply continues to climb steadily (up 50% year-to-date, adding $100 billion), but Bitcoin ETF inflows have stagnated since the summer, with assets under management hovering around $150 billion. The once-booming crypto treasury DAT has fallen silent, and related concept stocks listed on exchanges like Nasdaq have seen a significant drop in trading volume. Of the three major funding engines driving the market in the first half of this year, only stablecoins are still playing a role. 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Bitcoin continues to act as a market anchor thanks to stable ETF inflows and tight exchange supply, while Ethereum and some L1 and L2 tokens have begun to show signs of relative strength. While a growing number of voices on crypto social media are attributing the price weakness to the four-year cycle theory, this concept is no longer truly applicable. In mature markets, the miner supply and halving mechanisms that once drove cycles have long since failed; the core factor truly determining price performance is now liquidity. The macroeconomic environment continues to provide strong support—the interest rate cut cycle has begun, quantitative tightening has ended, and the stock market is frequently hitting new highs—but the crypto market has lagged behind, primarily due to the lack of effective liquidity inflows. Compared to the three major drivers of capital inflows last year and in the first half of this year (ETFs, stablecoins, and DeFi yield assets), only stablecoins are currently showing a healthy trend. Close monitoring of ETF inflows and DAT activity will be key indicators, as these are likely to be the earliest signals of liquidity returning to the crypto market.
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PANews2025/11/05 16:50