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April 5, 2026

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The post Solana Price Under Pressure as Selling Activity Rises—Is More Downside Ahead? appeared first on Coinpedia Fintech News

Solana price is down by 1.5%, reaching $78.82, plunging below $80, and underperforming the broader market, primarily driven by continued fallout from a major ecosystem hack. The $285 million exploit on Solana-based Drift Protocol on April 01, 2026, remains a dominant overhang. The hack by the North-Korean hackers dropped Drift’s TVL from $530 million to $230 million, creating a liquidity crisis and community distrust. This has also pressured the SOL price as investors reassess ecosystem security risks. 

As a result, the SOL price is showing a structural weakness in times when the broader market attempts to stabilise. Hence, the increase in the sell-side pressure is shaping a cautious outlook for the short term.

Price Structure Shows Weakness Near Key Support

Solana is trading at a critical support zone near $75–$78, with the current price hovering around $78–$80, showing clear signs of weakness after failing to sustain its recovery above $85. While the broader market is attempting to stabilise, SOL continues to lag, indicating a lack of strong buyer conviction at higher levels. This is not a trend continuation — it’s a pressure phase at support, where holding or losing this range will define the next move.

On the daily chart, SOL has broken down from an ascending channel and is now consolidating just above the $77 support, which aligns with key short-term levels. Repeated retests of this zone without a strong bounce suggest weakening demand. RSI is below neutral, reflecting fading momentum, while the structure shows lower highs forming after rejection near $90–$95 resistance. 

If this support fails, the next downside targets open toward $73, followed by a deeper move toward $67–$70. On the upside, SOL needs to reclaim $85–$86 to regain short-term strength, with $93–$95 acting as the next key resistance zone.

TVL Decline Signals Capital Outflow

TVL reflects actual capital deployed within the ecosystem. A decline of this scale indicates reduced DeFi activity, lower user participation and Capital rotating out of the network. The DeFiLlama data shows a consistent drop in Solana’s TVL, falling from above $9 billion to nearly $5.5–$6 billion in recent weeks.

This indicates the funds withdrawn may be converted to stablecoins or other assets and rotated into other ecosystems. As TVL is a confidence metric, new capital hesitates when it drops, and existing holders reduce exposure. Therefore, the current decline, combined with the price sitting near support, indicates weak demand while the supply is rising. 

What’s Next—Will SOL Price Secure Range Above $85 This Week?

The Solana price is not just reacting to price pressure; it is reflecting a broader slowdown in capital participation. The drop in TVL indicates that liquidity and user activity within the ecosystem are declining, which reduces the strength of any potential recovery.

At the same time, the price is holding near a key support zone around $75–$78, but without strong follow-through. This combination — weak structure on the chart and declining TVL — suggests that the current phase is more of a fragile hold than a strong base.

In practical terms, this limits upside in the near term. Even if SOL attempts a bounce, the absence of capital inflow makes it difficult to sustain higher levels. For a meaningful move higher, the price needs to stabilise while TVL either stops declining or begins to recover. Until that shift happens, the current setup points toward slow, reactive price action with downside risk remaining elevated rather than a clear trend reversal.

Taiwan’s Foxconn, the world’s largest contract electronics manufacturer, reported a sharp rise in first-quarter revenue.

The strong numbers were supported by surging demand for artificial intelligence infrastructure — even as the company sounded a note of caution over what it described as a “volatile” global political and economic environment.

Revenue for the January-to-March quarter climbed 29.7% year-on-year to T$2.13 trillion (approximately $66.60 billion), Foxconn said in a statement released on Sunday.

The figure came in marginally below the T$2.148 trillion LSEG SmartEstimate.

Foxconn, formally known as Hon Hai Precision Industry, serves as the primary server manufacturer for chipmaker Nvidia and is Apple’s largest iPhone assembler.

Both business lines contributed to the quarterly performance.

The company’s cloud and networking products division was a key growth engine, driven by robust demand for AI-related infrastructure.

Meanwhile, the smart consumer electronics segment — which encompasses iPhone assembly — recorded what the company characterised as “significant” growth, attributed to new product launches during the period.

Inside the numbers

March proved to be a standout month within the quarter.

Revenue for the month alone surged 45.6% on a year-on-year basis to T$803.7 billion, marking a record for that calendar month, according to the company.

Looking ahead, Foxconn expressed confidence in continued momentum.

Operations are expected to grow both quarter-on-quarter and year-on-year in the second quarter, with AI server rack deployments maintaining what the company described as a “continued growth trend.”

Geopolitical risks on the radar

Despite the upbeat near-term guidance, the company introduced a note of caution.

“It remains necessary to monitor the impact of the volatile global political and economic situation,” Foxconn said in its statement, without providing further elaboration.

The warning echoes remarks made last month by Chairman Young Liu, who identified the global economic and political landscape — with particular reference to the conflict in the Middle East — as the company’s most significant external challenge for the year.

Foxconn does not issue numerical financial forecasts. The company is scheduled to report its full first-quarter earnings on May 14.

The revenue announcement comes against the backdrop of a difficult year for Foxconn’s stock.

Shares have declined approximately 16% year-to-date, underperforming the broader Taiwan market benchmark index, which has gained around 12% over the same period.

The stock closed down 2% on Thursday, broadly in line with the benchmark index, ahead of the revenue data release.

Taiwan’s financial markets were closed on Friday for a public holiday and are scheduled to resume trading on Tuesday.

The post Foxconn Q1 revenue jumps 29.7% on AI demand appeared first on Invezz