
The largest public corporate holder of Solana bought 6.83 million SOL at an average of $232.08 – and is now $167.99 underwater per coin as price hits $64.09, its lowest level since December 2023, even as Mastercard announced stablecoin settlement support across the Solana network on June 3.
Key Takeaways
- Forward Industries deposited 455,784 SOL worth $29.2M to a centralized exchange after a month of on-chain inactivity.
- Solana spot ETFs recorded -$12.74M on June 3 and -$278.50K on June 4, extending the institutional exit trend.
- Staking yield of approximately 6% to 6.7% APY generated roughly $17.4M in Q4 2025, covering less than 2% of the current unrealized loss.
Forward Industries launched its Solana treasury strategy in September 2025, raising $1.65 billion through a private placement backed by Galaxy Digital, Jump Crypto, and Multicoin Capital. Across its accumulation phase the company built a position of 6.83 million SOL at an average cost of $232.08 per coin.
At $64.09 at time of writing, the position is worth approximately $437.7 million against a $1.59 billion cost basis, producing an unrealized loss of approximately $1.15 billion. Every coin in the treasury is $167.99 underwater, a 72.4% loss from average entry.
The staking yield adds a layer of irony. Earning 6% to 6.7% APY generated approximately $17.4 million in Q4 2025 – less than 2% of the current paper loss. The yield is not cushioning the position. It is arithmetically invisible against it.
The Exchange Deposit: Signal or Noise?
After approximately a month of on-chain inactivity, Forward Industries moved 455,784 SOL to a centralized exchange – worth approximately $31.87M at the time of transfer according to data from Arkham Intelligence and $29.2M at current prices. Corporate treasuries move assets to exchanges for reasons that do not involve immediate selling: liquidity management, staking rebalancing, hedging, or operational requirements. The transfer alone confirms nothing about intent.

What it does confirm is that 1.4% of all circulating SOL, held by a single entity sitting on a $1.15 billion loss, has moved closer to market liquidity at a moment of significant sell-side pressure. The market’s perception of a distressed holder repositioning is itself a price signal regardless of actual intent, and that perception is actively being priced into the current session. The question is not whether Forward Industries will sell, it is whether the market will trade as though they might, even if they do not.
The Price: December 2023 Levels, With Mastercard as Backdrop
According to data from TradingView, Solana is trading at $64.09 at time of writing, down 8.4% in the past 24 hours and 22% on the week. The current level represents the lowest price for SOL since December 2023, erasing approximately two and a half years of price appreciation in a correction that accelerated sharply in the past seven days.

The timing creates a notable contrast. On June 3, Mastercard announced it was expanding settlement capabilities to include stablecoin options across a range of supported blockchain networks, explicitly naming Solana alongside Ethereum, Base, Polygon, and XRPL. The announcement confirmed support for USDC, USDG, USDP, PYUSD, RLUSD, and SoFiUSD across supported blockchain networks, with ARQ Finance, CBW Bank, Cross River Bank, Lead Bank, and Nuvei among the first institutions to participate.
Today, Mastercard is announcing plans to expand settlement capabilities to include stablecoin, intraday, holiday, and weekend options, giving partners more choice in how and when transactions are settled. That means we’re:
✅ Enabling greater choice to settle in fiat or… pic.twitter.com/rhZSuhJXgC
— Mastercard (@Mastercard) June 3, 2026
Mastercard processing volume across its network runs in the trillions annually. A settlement infrastructure announcement of this scale naming Solana as a supported network is structurally significant for the protocol’s long-term institutional adoption case. The fact that SOL is hitting two-and-a-half-year lows in the same week that announcement landed reflects how completely the current macro and liquidation environment is overriding any positive fundamental signal. Institutional adoption narratives do not compete with $1.15 billion in unrealized losses and a liquidation cascade in the same session.
The ETF Data: Institutional Exit Continues
Solana spot ETF flows data from SoSoValue confirms the institutional demand picture. June 3 saw -$12.74M in net outflows, followed by -$278.50K on June 4. The prior days showed modest inflows – $6.50M on June 2, $1.32M on May 29 – but the negative readings at the start of June align with the broader institutional exit pattern visible across Bitcoin and Ethereum ETF data for the same period.
The outflow figures are small relative to the scale of Forward Industries’ position, but directionally consistent: institutional capital is reducing Solana exposure through regulated vehicles at the same time the largest corporate holder of SOL is moving coins toward exchange liquidity.
The information provided in this article is for educational purposes only and does not constitute financial, investment, or trading advice. Coindoo.com does not endorse or recommend any specific investment strategy or cryptocurrency. Always conduct your own research and consult with a licensed financial advisor before making any investment decisions.



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