U.S.-based software company Janover Inc. has joined the growing list of corporate entities adding crypto to their treasuries, announcing the purchase of $4.6 million worth of Solana (SOL). This bold move echoes MicroStrategy’s Bitcoin-focused playbook, where institutional capital flows into digital assets amid market uncertainty.
Janover funded the purchase following a $42 million private offering of convertible notes. The firm’s stock surged 429% over four days after the news. Yet, despite this bullish headline, Solana’s price remained largely unmoved, signaling broader market pessimism may be overpowering isolated bullish developments.
- Stock surge: Janover shares up 429%
- Purchase size: $4.6M in SOL tokens
- Trend driver: Treasury diversification strategy
Market pressures—including Trump’s trade war maneuvers, Bitcoin’s downtrend, and lingering macroeconomic uncertainty—continue to weigh on investor sentiment, limiting Solana’s upside.
Solana Breaches Key $126 Support
Technical indicators suggest further downside for SOL, with the token now trading near $116, down 2.13% today. On the three-day chart, Solana has decisively broken below its $126 support, which had held since March 4, 2024. That level has now flipped into resistance.
The $100 psychological level remains the last line of defense. Should it give way, the next significant demand zone lies at $74.94, a level that last saw heavy accumulation in December 2023, preceding a 78% rally over just nine days.
Key technical levels:
- Resistance: $126
- Immediate support: $100
- Major demand zone: $74.94
A return to $75 would represent a 36% drop from recent highs, and analysts warn it could materialize quickly if macroeconomic conditions deteriorate further or if tariff tensions escalate again.
Can Bitcoin Save the Altcoin Market?
Solana’s fate may ultimately hinge on the broader crypto market, particularly Bitcoin’s price action. If Bitcoin stages a bullish reversal—possibly sparked by easing trade tensions or positive inflation data—it could lift altcoins with it, including SOL.
A bullish shift could see SOL:
- Retake $100 and $126 levels
- Re-enter the $127–$168 value range
- Target $142, the highest-volume node in that zone
But until then, the short-term outlook remains cautious. Janover’s bullish bet may be a long-term play, but in the near term, Solana faces the real threat of a decline toward $75 unless broader sentiment shifts.