The transfer volume of stablecoins on the layer-1 Solana blockchain has been steadily increasing, hitting a new record so far this month.
According to blockchain analytics platform Artemis, stablecoin transfer volume on Solana has already exceeded $300 billion in January.
The figure has already eclipsed the $297 billion in Solana stablecoin transfer volume for December.
Moreover, January’s $303 billion to date is 2,520% more than the $11.56 billion stablecoin transfer volume in January 2023.
Solana’s stablecoin market share is currently almost 32% which is a huge increase from the 1.2% share it had a year ago.
Stablecoin activity on Solana started picking up in October and has steadily increased by 650% since then.
Ethereum is the industry leader for stablecoin transfer volume with $317 billion so far this month giving it a market share of more than 33%, however, Solana is rapidly catching up.
The third largest blockchain for stablecoin transfers is Tron with $240 billion so far this month.
On Jan. 16, Artemis noted that weekly stablecoin volumes across all networks had reached a yearly high. It attributed the growth to USDC transfer volumes on Solana.
Stablecoin transfer volume surpassed $367 billion for the week of January 8th.
This notable growth can be attributed to the $USDC transfer volume on @solana, which has propelled stablecoins to reach their highest transfer volume levels in over a year. pic.twitter.com/jpitEHXPxn
— Artemis (@artemis__xyz) January 16, 2024
On Jan.18, Paxos announced that its regulated stablecoin USDP had launched on the Solana blockchain.
Over the past year, more than $1.18 trillion in stablecoins was transferred across all blockchains combined.
Related: 3 reasons why Solana (SOL) price is down this week
In addition to stablecoin volumes, there has been an uptick in decentralized finance (DeFi) activity on Solana. This has pushed total value locked to its highest level since September 2022 at $1.36 billion, according to DeFiLlama.
SOL prices have been in retreat this week, falling 2% over the weekend to trade at $93 at the time of writing. The asset has now retreated 25% from its December 2023 high of $123 and remains down 64% from its all-time high of $260 in November 2021.