Key Takeaways
- SOL climbed 22% from its March bottom, reaching a four-week peak of $97 before retracing to the $90 zone.
- On March 17, the SEC and CFTC released joint guidance designating SOL as a digital commodity, ending prolonged regulatory ambiguity.
- Solana spot ETFs recorded $17.81 million in net inflows on March 17, pushing total cumulative inflows close to $989 million.
- The SuperTrend momentum indicator switched to bullish on daily timeframes, with technical analysts projecting targets at $100 and $115.
- On March 18, SOL ETFs experienced their first outflow in 11 days at $295K, while derivatives open interest dropped 6.77%.
Solana has emerged as one of March 2026’s most dynamic cryptocurrencies. Following several weeks of consolidation between $77 and $92, the token surged to a four-week high of $97 on March 13 before experiencing some profit-taking. Currently trading near $89–$90, SOL is defending a crucial support level that has proven resilient since mid-February.

The SuperTrend momentum indicator has transitioned from bearish to bullish on the daily timeframe—the first such flip since late January. Crypto analyst Ali Martinez highlighted a significant demand zone spanning $85.55 to $82.60, where approximately 76 million SOL tokens were accumulated across 38 days. According to Martinez, “the ceiling is thinner than the current floor,” suggesting Solana faces minimal resistance on its “clear path toward $100, followed by $115.”
Solana $SOL is breaking out with little resistance ahead!
On-chain data reveals a robust demand floor established between $85.55 and $82.60, where 76 million tokens were transacted. This 38-day accumulation phase has effectively exhausted sell-side liquidity.
With no… pic.twitter.com/hsQUO4H5uh
— Ali Charts (@alicharts) March 17, 2026
From a technical perspective, SOL is currently positioned between the 20-day exponential moving average at $88.78 and the Bollinger Band centerline at $95.11. Should price action close decisively below $88.78, it would mark the initial technical warning that March’s upward momentum may be losing steam.
Landmark Regulatory Decision Provides SOL with Commodity Status
The most significant development for Solana this week transcended price movements. The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, alongside the Commodity Futures Trading Commission, released comprehensive joint guidance on March 17 identifying 16 digital assets as commodities. Solana secured its position on this list, joining the ranks of Bitcoin and Ethereum.
BREAKING: The SEC has formally classified SOL as a digital commodity in its new crypto asset taxonomy, alongside BTC, ETH, and 14 other assets.
SOL is not a security. pic.twitter.com/PnqpT46NdT
— Solana (@solana) March 17, 2026
The extensive 68-page framework establishes five distinct classifications for crypto assets within federal securities regulations. Digital commodities are now officially characterized as assets whose value stems from the functionality of underlying blockchain networks and market supply-demand forces, rather than from centralized management efforts.
SEC Chairman Paul Atkins characterized the ruling as “a turning point.” Previously, SOL faced regulatory scrutiny after being mentioned in SEC enforcement proceedings against major exchanges including Binance, creating years of legal uncertainty.
This regulatory breakthrough also provides green lights for staking mechanisms, wrapped token versions, and exchange-traded fund applications for assets within the digital commodity classification. Financial institutions can now provide staking solutions and custodial services for SOL without navigating securities registration requirements.
Investment Product Flows Pause After Extended Rally
SOL spot ETFs had maintained an impressive five-week positive momentum heading into the current period. March 17 witnessed inflows reaching $17.81 million in a single trading session, representing the strongest daily performance since early March.

March 18 marked the conclusion of this winning streak. VanEck’s VSOL product experienced $295,730 in redemptions, standing as the sole fund reporting activity that session. Despite this setback, aggregate net inflows across all Solana ETFs remain positioned at $989 million, approaching the psychologically significant $1 billion threshold.
Derivatives open interest contracted 6.77% to $5.28 billion on March 18, even as options trading volume exploded 95.70% to $16 million. This dramatic increase in options activity indicates market participants are primarily establishing protective positions rather than initiating aggressive directional bets.
Leveraged long positions absorbed $13.92 million in liquidations throughout the 24-hour period, substantially outpacing the $2.27 million liquidated from short positions. SOL continues trading at $89.93, maintaining stability above the critical $88 support threshold.