Altcoins News
By Sakamoto Nashi
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What SIMD-0411 Proposes to Change. Under existing parameters, Solana reduces inflation by 15% annually until the network reaches a…
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Why Solana Holders See Upside in Lower Inflation. Supporters of SIMD-0411 view the proposal as a natural evolution for Solana.
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The Validator Perspective: Security and Fair Compensation. While the proposal has generated enthusiasm among investors, it has also raised concerns among…
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A Proposal Still Under Review, Not a Final Decision. Despite the debates, SIMD-0411 has not been approved and remains in the early stages of community…
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A Pivotal Moment for Solana Monetary Design. At a time when Solana is seeing rising institutional inflows and growing usage across several…
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Solana developers are considering one of the most significant monetary policy changes in the network’s history, introducing a proposal that could meaningfully lower the rate at…
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The proposal, titled SIMD-0411, focuses on accelerating Solana’s path toward low inflation by reducing token issuance more aggressively over the next several years.
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Under existing parameters, Solana reduces inflation by 15% annually until the network reaches a long-term target terminal inflation rate of 1.5%.
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Modeling included in the proposal estimates that Solana would avoid minting about 22.3 million SOL between now and 2031.
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If implemented, the proposal would move Solana’s monetary and staking curve closer to networks such as Ethereum, which already operate on low inflation alongside high transaction…
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Supporters of SIMD-0411 view the proposal as a natural evolution for Solana. During periods of weak demand or sideways price action, high token issuance can place downward…
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The momentum behind this view has increased due to recent growth trends. Demand from institutional funds has improved following the launch of SOL-based ETFs, which have absorbed…
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Proponents argue that the network now earns enough fees to reward validators even if staking rewards gradually shrink.
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Under current expectations, staking yields would fall from roughly 6% to 5% in the first year of the policy change. The second year would push yields closer to 3.
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Another concern is the transition process itself. Lower issuance means fewer tokens flowing to delegators, so validators must rely increasingly on transaction fees and MEV.
The Currency Analytics
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