Delphi Digital analysts called 2026 the “year of Solana,” pointing to the largest upgrade cycle in the network’s history and growing institutional attention to Delphi Digital analysts called 2026 the “year of Solana,” pointing to the largest upgrade cycle in the network’s history and growing institutional attention to

Delphi Digital Predicted that 2026 Will Be a Turning Point for Solana

  • Delphi Digital experts believe that 2026 will be the “year of Solana.”
  • According to their analysis, the network is preparing for the role of a “decentralized Nasdaq.”
  • Among the factors behind this view, they cited the Alpenglow upgrade, the Firedancer solution, and the presence of institutional capital.

Delphi Digital analysts called 2026 the “year of Solana,” pointing to the largest upgrade cycle in the network’s history and growing institutional attention to the ecosystem. 

According to their report, Solana’s roadmap is aimed at transforming the blockchain into “exchange-grade” infrastructure capable of competing with centralized exchanges on latency, liquidity depth, and fairness of order execution.

The key technical upgrade will be Alpenglow — the biggest protocol change in Solana’s entire history. The new consensus mechanism consists of two components: Votor and Rotor.

Votor changes the very principle of reaching agreement: instead of multiple voting rounds, validators aggregate votes off-chain and reach finality in one or two rounds. In theory, this makes it possible to cut finality time to 100–150 milliseconds, down from the previous 12.8 seconds.

Rotor, in turn, optimizes block propagation by routing messages through validators with the largest stake share and stable connectivity.

Alpenglow also introduces the “20+20” resilience model: security is preserved if no more than 20% of stake behaves maliciously, and network liveness holds even if another 20% of validators are offline. 

This means the network can withstand up to 40% inactive or dishonest participants. As part of this upgrade, Proof of History is effectively phased out, giving way to deterministic slot scheduling and local timers. 

The release is expected in early or mid-2026.

Another key element will be Firedancer — a second independent validator client developed by Jump in C++. Its goal is to turn the Solana validator into a high-performance, predictable engine with throughput in the millions of transactions per second. 

An intermediate step is Frankendancer, which combines Firedancer’s networking modules with execution and consensus from the current Agave client.

In parallel, DoubleZero is developing — a private fiber-optic network that directly connects validators, similar to the infrastructure used by traditional exchanges like Nasdaq and CME. It reduces latency discrepancies, which is critical for Alpenglow’s fast finality, and supports multicast — simultaneous data delivery to all validators.

In the transaction formation layer, two solutions play a key role. Jito’s BAM (Block Assembly Marketplace) separates transaction ordering from execution and uses trusted execution environments (TEE) to prevent frontrunning. 

Harmonic, in turn, is building an open block-builder aggregation layer, allowing validators to accept bids from multiple competing participants in real time.

Raiku complements this architecture by offering deterministic execution guarantees for applications that need predictable latency — in particular, for onchain CLOBs and HFT strategies. The solution runs alongside L1 and uses Ahead-of-Time and Just-in-Time transactions to guarantee execution without changing the base consensus.

Against the backdrop of these technical changes, traditional financial interest in Solana is also growing. For example, investment bank Morgan Stanley filed S-1 registration statements with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission to launch spot ETFs — the Morgan Stanley Bitcoin Trust and the Morgan Stanley Solana Trust. 

Another signal of institutional legitimization was that on January 7, 2026, the state of Wyoming launched Frontier Stable Token (FRNT) — the first state-issued stablecoin in the U.S. The asset is fully backed by fiat currency and short-term bonds, is available on Kraken, and is supported across seven blockchains, including the Solana network.

The Solana ecosystem is also expanding aggressively in the consumer segment. Solana Mobile launched an airdrop of SKR tokens for Seeker smartphone users and decentralized app developers. A total of 3 billion tokens were allocated for the distribution, which is expected to spur the growth of mobile dApps and attract new users.

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