TL;DR:
- The Solana ecosystem suffers a liquidity crisis after the security breach at KelpDAO on April 20, draining USDC reserves.
- Leading protocols such as Jupiter and Kamino report utilization levels near 100%, limiting access to capital for new loans.
- Stablecoin lending yields have climbed to 10.2%, marking record levels in the network’s credit infrastructure.
Following the KelpDAO security incident that shook investor confidence, the DeFi sector on Solana is undergoing a systemic challenge. The massive outflow of capital has created a bottleneck in stablecoin availability, driving up operating costs.
DeFi Funds Outflow Spreads to Solana
Following the KelpDAO rsETH hack, the chain reaction has further spread from EVM networks to Solana. Several USDC markets on Solanaās leading lending protocol Kamino have seen sharp surges in deposit APY and utilization rates. The Prime⦠pic.twitter.com/mbAaEi31R4
— Wu Blockchain (@WuBlockchain) April 20, 2026
Technical data shows the magnitude of the crisis: Jupiter Lend, with $421 million in deposits, maintains a 99% utilization rate. Meanwhile, the Kamino market records an interest rate of 10.2% on USDC, with barely any remaining liquidity to withdraw or borrow.
The pressure on the ecosystem is not superficial, as the main credit markets are operating at the limit of their technical capacity. This situation forces users to re-evaluate their positions in the face of the scarcity of liquid assets.
As liquidity providers withdraw their funds for fear of contagion, interest rates act as a defense mechanism. However, this rising cost of credit is paralyzing leverage strategies that are vital to the network.
Smaller protocols are also feeling the impact, with platforms like Marginfi reporting utilization levels exceeding 88%. The interconnection of Solana’s DeFi markets amplifies every capital outflow movement at an accelerated pace.
The impact on borrowing costs and prediction markets
The sudden spike in USDC rates has shifted the cost landscape for end users. Specific vaults on Kamino, such as Staekhouse, now show interest rates consistently exceeding 8% APR.
This environment of “digital dollar scarcity” has indirectly affected the price perception of the native token SOL. Prediction markets have reacted with pessimism, assigning minimal probabilities to an immediate recovery of the asset above certain thresholds.
It is evident that market sentiment has turned toward extreme caution, reflected in low derivatives trading volume. The lack of circulating USDC prevents strong buying positions from forming, limiting any attempt at a technical rebound.
Even veteran platforms like Save Finance have crossed 70% utilization, indicating that the problem is structural and not limited to a single protocol. Market depth is being tested like never before in this financial cycle.
User trust is now the scarcest resource, beyond the technical liquidity in smart contracts themselves. The coming days will be crucial to determine if the network can attract new capital to stabilize interest rates.
Despite Solana’s technological robustness, its dependence on external liquidity is exposed during external security events. The normalization of rates will depend entirely on the speed at which deposits return to money markets.
The Solana network is going through a critical period of liquidity stress caused by the KelpDAO incident. With utilization rates at the limit and borrowing costs on the rise, the DeFi ecosystem requires an urgent injection of capital to restore operability and user confidence.






