>>60574706 (OP)
I hope we'll get back to that too. The chart is pretty bullish, and we have a lot of news on our side with ETFs and tokenized stocks. The entire market is sluggish right now, but we're still holding up well. The onchain data remains decent.
>>60574770
Yes, but the setup is different for SOL. The yield is attractive in itself. Eth didn't have built-in staking and it doesn't yield anything anyway. I'm looking at a lot of estimates - I know it's random - but SOL could reach $200 thanks to the ETF. Plus, the launch of Solana phones made a lot of noise and everyone knows its name. We'll see, but I'm bullish on Sol, much more so than on any other crypto right now.
>>60574798
The average annual rate is between 5.5 and 4.5% and will continue to fall. Without pushing yourself too hard, you can find a yield of 8%. The last proposal to lower it was rejected, but it will probably be reevaluated later. It's nothing alarming and it doesn't significantly impact the price. We are one of the few cryptocurrencies outside of BTC to have reached a new ATH.
>>60574961
Big bad spills have never stopped the chain from growing, that's a bad argument. The ETH Foundation also dumps on the heads of its holders. Link too, HBAR... and I could go on and on.
>>60575115
Thanks, I'm not leaving, I've held this crypto since $30 so I've seen some price movements. It's my strongest conviction and I'm constantly accumulating and using it to farm airdrops. This mocking of holders is also funny
>>60574706 (OP)
It's way cheaper to do transactions on ETH rollup L2s than on SOL though and in terms of real TPS (not validator messages or failed transactions, which aren't considered transactions by any other chain) once you include rollups they are about equal.