Cardano’s Two-Front Push: A $250 Million Bank Deposit and a June Hard Fork
The disconnect between Cardano’s development pipeline and its market valuation has rarely been starker. While ADA trades at roughly $0.25—just a penny above its 52-week low and 74% below the August 2025 peak of $0.96—the network is simultaneously preparing a major protocol upgrade and securing a landmark institutional partnership.
Midnight’s Banking Breakthrough
The most tangible catalyst comes from Midnight, Cardano’s privacy-focused sidechain. Founder Charles Hoskinson confirmed on April 24 that the British Monument Bank will deposit $250 million in tokenized assets on Midnight at launch. The sidechain employs zero-knowledge technology, allowing financial institutions to selectively disclose data—a critical feature for regulatory compliance.
Midnight is secured by Cardano’s stakepool operators, who can secure both networks simultaneously and earn additional revenue. The token has already achieved a milestone as the first Cardano-native asset to be listed for spot trading on Binance following an airdrop.
The Van Rossum Hard Fork
For the base layer, developers are targeting late June 2026 for the “Van Rossum” hard fork, designated as protocol version 11. The upgrade aims to improve Plutus smart contract performance and deliver a more consistent ledger structure. Preparations are on track: a memory bug in Cardano Node 10.7 that caused significant RAM spikes has been fixed in version 10.7.1, which is now running on test networks.
Leios and the Throughput Ambition
The more ambitious technical undertaking remains Ouroboros Leios. Currently, Cardano processes around 15 transactions per second at peak. Leios targets a 10- to 65-fold increase—pushing beyond 1,000 transactions per second. The goal is to remain competitive as DeFi usage and institutional demand grow. Funding for Leios is part of a package of nine proposals that the community is voting on until the end of May.
Bitcoin DeFi via Pogun
Parallel to the throughput upgrade, the ecosystem is pursuing a Bitcoin integration through Project “Pogun.” The proposal requests approximately $4 million from the Cardano treasury to build a Bitcoin DeFi infrastructure on Cardano, including a non-custodial Bitcoin bridge, decentralized credit markets for BTC holders, and a yield infrastructure based on Cardano smart contracts. A first credit market without margin requirements is slated for the second quarter of 2026.
Governance in Action
The community is currently voting on a $46.8 million budget for the 2026 technical roadmap, with a deadline of May 24. That figure represents a 52% cut from the previous year—developer Input Output Global is signaling greater financial independence. The vote is the first real-world test of Cardano’s decentralized Voltaire governance model, which shifted control on April 24 from a central development organization to roughly 1,000 elected delegates, known as DReps.
On-chain data shows that total value locked has remained stable at around 520 million ADA, while stablecoin volume on the network has more than doubled year-over-year.
Whale Accumulation Amid Stagnation
Despite the price weakness, large investors are accumulating. The number of addresses holding more than 10 million ADA reached a four-month high of 424 in late April. These whales have accumulated roughly 819 million ADA during the recent consolidation phase—worth about $214 million at current prices. Trading volume has jumped 48% to around $600 million over 24 hours, and the relative strength index sits at 57, indicating neutral to slightly bullish momentum.
The outcome of the budget vote at the end of May will determine which infrastructure projects—including the Hydra scaling solution and the Midgard rollup—receive funding in 2026. For a network whose price action has been stuck in neutral, the coming weeks will test whether technical and institutional momentum can finally translate into market movement.
Wall Street Piles Into Solana ETFs, but VC Dumping Keeps the Token in the Doldrums
The numbers coming out of Solana’s institutional adoption story are eye-catching. Spot ETFs have breached the billion-dollar mark in assets under management. Goldman Sachs holds a $108 million position. Morgan Stanley has filed for its own Solana Trust with the SEC. Yet the token itself is trading at roughly $86, down 65% from its 2025 high of $247 and off about 32% year-to-date.
That disconnect between what Wall Street is buying and what the market is pricing has become the defining feature of Solana’s current cycle. Institutional flows are real, but they are being absorbed by a wall of supply from early backers cashing out.
The ETF Picture: Strong but Slowing
Four products are competing for institutional dollars. Bitwise’s BSOL leads with $620 million in assets, followed by VanEck’s VSOL at $240 million. The remaining $140 million is split between 21Shares and Canary Capital. SEC filings show investment advisers now hold nearly half of those assets — a level of structural maturity that took the Bitcoin ETF market months to reach.
The weekly flow data tells a more nuanced story. Last week saw roughly $35 million in net inflows across five consecutive positive trading days. But the monthly trend is unmistakably weaker. November saw $419 million in new money; April has produced just $34 million so far, the weakest month since the funds launched.
JPMorgan still projects up to $6 billion in total Solana ETF inflows by mid-2026, but the current trajectory suggests that forecast depends heavily on catalysts that have not yet materialized.
The VC Overhang That Won’t Quit
CryptoQuant data reveals a clear split in market participation. Since February, large wallet addresses have dominated futures activity. Retail traders were last heavily involved when SOL fell from roughly $190 to $120 between November and December. Since then, their engagement has dropped sharply.
That retail retreat matters because it leaves the market exposed to a structural headwind: venture capital firms that bought SOL at early-stage prices well below $10 are now receiving unlocked tokens as vesting periods expire. Even at the current price, many of these holders are sitting on ten to fifty times their original investment. They sell into every ETF-driven rally, capping upside momentum before it can build.
Payments and Infrastructure: The Real Story
While the token struggles, the network is quietly becoming the backbone of institutional finance. SoFi Technologies launched business banking on Solana in April, letting corporate clients swap dollars for stablecoins and settle in real time, bypassing the high fees of legacy bank networks.
The Solana Foundation’s new Developer Platform, launched in late March, bundles infrastructure from more than 20 technology partners into an API-driven interface. Mastercard uses it for stablecoin settlement, Worldpay for merchant payments, and Western Union is exploring cross-border remittances on the chain. Alibaba Cloud is also on board.
These are not pilot projects. They are live integrations with companies that process billions in daily transaction volume.
Network Metrics Tell a Growth Story
The infrastructure push is showing up in the data. Solana has beaten Ethereum in weekly dApp revenue for five consecutive weeks. The real-world asset value on the chain has reached roughly $1.85 billion, with the RWA sector growing 115% in the first quarter alone.
Stablecoin activity is equally impressive. The network processed a record $650 billion in stablecoin volume, and the total stablecoin supply on Solana climbed to $15.7 billion by March.
What Comes Next
Two technical upgrades could shift the narrative. The Firedancer validator client is designed to dramatically increase throughput and reduce vulnerability to network outages. A security audit is underway and is expected to conclude in May. If the software passes, it would solidify Solana’s position as the fastest institutional-grade network.
The Alpenglow consensus upgrade, which promises 150-millisecond finality, is now slated for late 2026. That timeline has slipped, but the foundation insists the technology is on track.
Regulatory clarity arrived in March, when US regulators classified SOL as a digital commodity and exempted protocol staking from securities rules. Corporate treasuries now hold over $4.3 billion in SOL.
The institutional infrastructure is in place. The question is whether VC selling pressure will ease before Firedancer goes live. That timing gap — between the unlocks of early investors and the arrival of the next technical catalyst — will determine whether Solana can break out of its current range or remain stuck in the shadow of its own adoption story.