Solana ETFs (SOL) have attracted record net inflows in November, making them the single-largest draw in the crypto market. This institutional success, largely fueled by the network’s attractive staking yield, is now colliding with a new governance proposal to execute a double disinflation.
Managing a recent 30% price correction, Solana now faces a critical choice: embrace long-term scarcity and reshape its economic identity, or maintain the high yield that is currently driving its institutional gold rush.
Solana Supply Shock: Double Disinflation Proposal
Helius Labs recently introduced the SIMD-0411 proposal, marking one of the most substantial monetary policies proposed since Solana’s launch. Developers plan to double the network’s annual disinflation rate, increasing it from 15% to 30%. The accelerated timeline brings the target date for the terminal 1.5% inflation rate forward by three years. This change cuts total projected emissions by over 22 million SOL (approximately $3 billion) over the next six years.
big
solana inflation reduction proposal is now live
tl;dr — we are proposing to speed up the existing solana disinflation rate by 2x
no complex mechanisms and no adverse cuts, and after alpenglow (and vote reduction)
we don’t need to leak this value
— mert | helius.dev (@0xMert_) November 21, 2025

Source: Solana Floor
Proponents maintain that the network is mature, citing massive increases in both network revenue and DeFi throughput. They argue this growth justifies lowering the issuance schedule, which in turn reduces structural sell pressure and satisfies institutional demands for disciplined tokenomics.
The drive to create scarcity is taking place during a period of intense market difficulty affecting Solana’s price. Forward Industries, the largest corporate owner of SOL, is currently facing an estimated loss of $646.6 million. Upexi, the fifth-largest corporate SOL holder, has accrued approximately $31 million in unrealized losses, reflecting a 10% drop from its original purchase prices. In contrast, DeFi Development Corp. (DFDV), the proposal’s first major supporter, maintains a $62 million profit.
Investors Pivot to Yield: $419M ETF Inflows
In the meantime, market flow data for November strongly validates Solana’s appeal as a “productive yield asset.” While major assets saw massive redemptions, Solana ETFs attracted $419.38 million in fresh capital. To be more specific, Bitcoin ETFs witnessed $3.57 billion in net redemptions, and Ether ETFs lost $1.56 billion during the same period.

Solana ETFs attracted a total of $419.38M in November. – Source: SoSoValue
In other words, investors increasingly choose the steady income of Solana’s 5 – 7% native staking yield over the purely speculative nature of assets like Bitcoin, whose exchange-traded products offer no yield. Everstake co-founder Bohdan Opryshko explains that retail and institutional participants now treat SOL as an income-generating tool rather than simply a speculative trade.
Scarcity or Yield?
Data from Coinbase confirms that a compelling 67% of all circulating SOL is in staking, a ratio that Sebastien Gilquin, Head of BD and Partnerships at Trezor, cites as one of the strongest staking profiles among proof-of-stake blockchains. Total staked SOL climbed this year to 407 million, and retail delegators increased their holdings by over 238,000 SOL even during the 30% downturn.
The data sets create a critical economic conflict. Solana’s ETFs success hinges on the high yield, which depends on the current inflation rate. Yet, SIMD-0411 seeks to cut the inflation rate in half to achieve scarcity.
If the community approves the double disinflation plan, the resulting reduction in emissions will cut the staking yield, potentially halving the rate that currently protects SOL from the market outflows hurting its competitors.

