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😰 Sphere, uncertainty and clout

Solana startups are spinning up validators

Howdy!

Happy (real) MLB Opening Day to all who celebrate. It makes me a bit nervous to see something named Clay Holmes starting the Mets’ opening game. Hopefully Juan Soto hits a few home runs.

Today, we’ve got Solana startups running validators, a hot new trading bot, and Interactive Brokers listing Solana:

Solana startups spin up validators for revenue and ‘soft power’

Two weeks ago, Solana validators voted down SIMD-0228, a proposal that would have significantly cut network inflation. Still, core Solana stakeholders seem interested in cutting inflation at some point, a prospect that would hurt the bottom line for validators.

Validators run Solana’s software to help add blocks to the blockchain, and they’re paid for the labor partly via inflation. Validators can be pretty much anyone with some pricey hardware and internet access, but in a world of lower SOL inflation, it may become less worthwhile to run a Solana validator for financial reasons. Instead, startups building businesses on Solana can reap unique benefits from running a validator, and some have already taken the leap.

“[We] have seen a big push over the past six months,” InfStones head of global sales Parker Poor said when I asked about Solana-native teams wanting to spin up validators.

The Solana payments business Sphere is one such example, although it runs its validator nodes itself rather than through a staking provider.

“[SOL] issuance getting cut is probably inevitable,” Sphere CEO Arnold Lee said, but he added that running a validator “would probably still be worth it for distribution and alignment” even if it failed to turn a profit. 

Solana’s process for protocol governance involves validators voting on proposals based on their share of delegated staked SOL. Solana startups need to run validators if they want a direct say in the future direction of the network. 

“[C]ontested votes like simd-228 underscore the strategic importance of having a seat at the table to make these decisions,” Bernat Fages, co-founder of the node operator firm Firstset, said in a text.

Beyond the rare contested vote, running a validator can confer “soft power” on startup teams as well, Lee said. Users who like the startup’s product might delegate some stake, Lee added, or it could be even simpler than that: “Toly [Solana’s co-founder] will probably want to retweet you if you’re really active in governance.”

A Solana validator’s financial prospects mainly revolve around the validator’s ability to attract stakers. Solana startups with significant distribution can effectively monetize that mindshare with a validator. 

The RPC provider Helius is a popular example of this: The company’s CEO (and Lightspeed podcast co-host) Mert Mumtaz is big on Crypto Twitter, which partly helped Helius to become the largest Solana validator based on publicly available records. Solana prioritizes network traffic based on stake, so Helius has an incentive to gather more stake to make its RPCs more effective. 

Down the line, there are other ways Solana startups could make use of validator operations. Lee offered an interesting thought: Apps could give users perks like lower fees in exchange for staking with the app’s validator, kind of like a Solana-native customer loyalty program.

— Jack Kubinec

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There’s a new bot in town:

Dune data shows Axiom has passed Photon and BullX to become Solana’s most-used trading bot over the past week. Trading bots are a pretty lucrative slice of the memecoin pie, and Photon and BullX have long been the incumbent choices among most traders.

Axiom — which is currently taking part in Y Combinator — has a “rewards” tab active on its website, hinting at a future airdrop. That would be my guess for why the platform is so suddenly ascendent.

— Jack Kubinec

American multinational brokerage firm Interactive Brokers just listed Solana (and others), adding it to a crypto lineup that already includes BTC, ETH and litecoin. That puts SOL on the same institutional rails as equities, bonds and futures — no off-ramps, no friction.

And no, this isn't just another retail exchange listing. IBKR serves hedge funds, RIAs and active traders who demand custody assurance, tax reporting and the ability to hedge with crypto futures or ETFs — all under one login. Adding SOL to its tradable assets signals IBKR's confidence in crypto and Solana’s relevance to a multi-asset portfolio strategy.

Takeaway: Unquestionable legitimacy is the long game. In the eyes of the money that matters, SOL is one step closer to becoming part of the financial default. It’s now easier to include in managed portfolios, thesis-driven macro trades, and even retirement accounts. That opens doors for capital, credibility and staying power.

— Jeffrey Albus

A message from Parker Poor, head of global sales at InfStones