Coin info
Rank
Market Cap
Volume (24h)
Circulating Supply
Total Supply
Do you think the price will rise or fall?
Rise 40%
Fall 60%
Price perfomance
Depth of Market
Depth +2%
Depth -2%


PRICE
+8.93%
$0.008163

PRICE
+7.5%
$1.11

PRICE
+2.24%
$474.21

PRICE
+2.03%
$0.04633

PRICE
+1.4%
$0.059

PRICE
+1.38%
$1.04

PRICE
+1.05%
$4,483.02

PRICE
+1.02%
$4,485.38

PRICE
+0.08%
$1.0000

PRICE
+0.05%
$0.9973

PRICE
+0.05%
$0.9995

PRICE
+0.05%
$0.9995

PRICE
+0.03%
$0.9994

PRICE
+0.03%
$0.9993

PRICE
+0.03%
$0.9986

PRICE
+0.02%
$0.9997

PRICE
+0.02%
$0.9999

PRICE
+0.02%
$0.9999

PRICE
+0.02%
$0.9998

PRICE
+0.02%
$9.45

PRICE
+0.01%
$114.73

PRICE
+0.01%
$1.0000

PRICE
+0.01%
$0.9997

PRICE
+0%
$1

PRICE
+0%
$1.1

VOL24
+10,265.47%
$1.13

VOL24
+658.84%
$1.0000
VOL24
+491.28%
$0.01144

VOL24
+256.2%
$0.9988

VOL24
+152.65%
$1.04

VOL24
+112.05%
$474.21

VOL24
+105.71%
$1.11

VOL24
+61.89%
$0.07145

VOL24
+54.11%
$0.3100

VOL24
+46.07%
$0.2493

VOL24
+44.32%
$0.9987

VOL24
+41.98%
$0.09660

VOL24
+41.25%
$0.2635

VOL24
+39.85%
$1,987.39

VOL24
+39.07%
$6.44

VOL24
+31.87%
$82.08

VOL24
+27.39%
$0.1765

VOL24
+25.92%
$0.9995

VOL24
+22.71%
$0.09030

VOL24
+19.51%
$0.053

VOL24
+14.73%
$66,169.09

VOL24
+14.49%
$2.97

VOL24
+14.25%
$51.23

VOL24
+14.17%
$7.84

VOL24
+11.52%
$0.02587

PRICE
+8.93%
$0.008163

PRICE
+7.5%
$1.11

PRICE
+2.24%
$474.21

PRICE
+2.03%
$0.04633

PRICE
+1.4%
$0.059

PRICE
+1.38%
$1.04

PRICE
+1.05%
$4,483.02

PRICE
+1.02%
$4,485.38

PRICE
+0.08%
$1.0000

PRICE
+0.05%
$0.9973

PRICE
+0.05%
$0.9995

PRICE
+0.05%
$0.9995

PRICE
+0.03%
$0.9994

PRICE
+0.03%
$0.9993

PRICE
+0.03%
$0.9986

PRICE
+0.02%
$0.9997

PRICE
+0.02%
$0.9999

PRICE
+0.02%
$0.9999

PRICE
+0.02%
$0.9998

PRICE
+0.02%
$9.45

PRICE
+0.01%
$114.73

PRICE
+0.01%
$1.0000

PRICE
+0.01%
$0.9997

PRICE
+0%
$1

PRICE
+0%
$1.1

VOL24
+10,265.47%
$1.13

VOL24
+658.84%
$1.0000
VOL24
+491.28%
$0.01144

VOL24
+256.2%
$0.9988

VOL24
+152.65%
$1.04

VOL24
+112.05%
$474.21

VOL24
+105.71%
$1.11

VOL24
+61.89%
$0.07145

VOL24
+54.11%
$0.3100

VOL24
+46.07%
$0.2493

VOL24
+44.32%
$0.9987

VOL24
+41.98%
$0.09660

VOL24
+41.25%
$0.2635

VOL24
+39.85%
$1,987.39

VOL24
+39.07%
$6.44

VOL24
+31.87%
$82.08

VOL24
+27.39%
$0.1765

VOL24
+25.92%
$0.9995

VOL24
+22.71%
$0.09030

VOL24
+19.51%
$0.053

VOL24
+14.73%
$66,169.09

VOL24
+14.49%
$2.97

VOL24
+14.25%
$51.23

VOL24
+14.17%
$7.84

VOL24
+11.52%
$0.02587
Rise 40%
Fall 60%


$0.0002990
#3577
$621,081
$5,484,951
820,426,904.77
820,426,904.77
27 Mar 2026, 18:00

Solana faces rising sell pressure as whale inflows clash with weak demand structure near support
27 Mar 2026, 17:30

Umbra has officially opened its privacy wallet to the public on Solana, marking a major step in private onchain transactions. The wallet leverages Arcium's encrypted execution engine, enabling fully shielded transfers between private addresses and encrypted token accounts. This allows users to send assets, execute swaps, and interact with Solana without exposing transaction data. The launch expands access beyond Umbra’s initial phased mainnet rollout following Arcium's Mainnet Alpha debut in February. Previously, only limited participants could experience Umbra’s shielded financial layer. Now, traders, institutions, and businesses can perform private transfers without revealing sensitive information to the public blockchain. Privacy-Focused Transactions Umbra's wallet allows users to hide the sender, recipient, and transaction amount, offering complete confidentiality. Token swaps also remain private, concealing trade size and intent. Moreover, the wallet integrates compliance tools, including viewing keys, risk screening, and geo-blocking. These measures ensure privacy while adhering to regulatory standards. Besides privacy, the wallet emphasizes usability. It targets everyday users on Solana who seek a practical, secure, and compliant privacy solution. This approach addresses long-standing blockchain limitations, where transaction data is typically visible and traceable by anyone. Encrypted Finance Infrastructure The wallet relies on Arcium's encrypted execution, enabling computation over encrypted data. Consequently, no single party can access transaction details during processing. This method differs from traditional privacy approaches that depend on obfuscation, intermediaries, or zero-knowledge systems, which often struggle with multi-party transactions. Umbra also released an SDK, extending Arcium’s privacy infrastructure to developers. This zero-knowledge-based stack allows new applications on Solana to build with native privacy. Several projects are expected to integrate this technology in the coming weeks, enhancing Solana’s privacy ecosystem. ”We are living through a defining moment for privacy,” said Arcium CEO Yannik Schrade. ”The conversation has never been louder, and the technology is finally ready. Umbra is the initial proof of what becomes possible when you build financial infrastructure powered by encrypted compute.” Early Adoption and Funding Umbra’s public launch follows high demand for privacy-focused solutions. The project raised over $150 million through MetaDAO in October 2025, attracting more than 10,000 participants. This significant support highlights the growing interest in encrypted financial infrastructure. With the wallet now public, Umbra aims to make privacy a default standard on Solana. By combining usability, compliance, and encrypted execution, the platform provides a comprehensive solution for secure and private digital finance.
27 Mar 2026, 17:23

Ripple’s head of coverage for the Middle East, Africa, Turkey, and Central Asia reckons that the world’s most sophisticated digital-asset markets are not in New York, London, or Singapore, but across Africa. With 54 countries and more than 1.5 billion people building financial rails from the ground up, the continent is becoming a growth engine for cryptos like Bitcoin , Ethereum , XRP , Solana , Cardano , and DOGE , driven by utility rather than speculation. Ripple’s Reece Merrick revealed that Sub-Saharan Africa recorded $205 billion in on-chain value over the 12 months through June 2025, a 52% increase from the prior year and the third-fastest growth rate among regions globally. Nigeria alone contributed $92 billion, while four African nations now rank in the global top 20 for crypto adoption, up from two the year before. Stablecoin volumes surged 180% year-on-year, underscoring accelerating real-world use. Traditional cross-border transfers are expensive and slow. Sending $200 to the region still incurs an average fee of 8.9%. Digital assets slash that expense dramatically and settle in seconds, addressing everyday issues with inflation, foreign-exchange shortages, and financial exclusion. That said, South Africa has introduced a licensed crypto-asset service provider regime and issued a rand-backed stablecoin. Nigeria has lifted its banking ban on crypto, passed legislation recognizing digital assets as securities, and begun accepting applications from virtual asset service providers. Kenya’s VASP bill cleared parliament in October and is now in active consultation for implementing rules. Retail-sized transfers under $10,000 make up a larger share of activity in sub-Saharan Africa than the global average, highlighting genuine inclusion over institutional flows. Moreover, Nigeria and South Africa also show rising business-to-business use, particularly stablecoin settlements linking Africa with the Middle East and Asia. Bitcoin dominates local purchases, accounting for 89% of buys in Nigeria and 74% in South Africa, serving as both a hedge and an entry point in volatile fiat environments. South African banks, including Absa, are now moving from pilot projects to live crypto product development.
27 Mar 2026, 17:06

Hackers are moving away from normal servers and using decentralized systems to attack developers and steal their crypto funds. They are are replacing traditional command-and-control (C2) servers entirely with decentralized options. In this attack, the malware abuses the Solana blockchain. It uses the memo field of Solana transactions to run stealth malware that steals crypto wallet data, and even hardware wallet recovery phrases. The memo field was originally designed for simple transaction notes, but attackers are now using it as a hidden communication layer. This turns a public blockchain feature into a covert channel for malware control. Decentralized memos like Solana’s are public and permanent and they cannot be taken down by any single party. In addition, attackers can update instructions without changing malware. The campaign is considered a new version of the GlassWorm malware, which has been active since at least 2022. Solana memos act as a dead drop resolver According to security researchers from Aikido, the attack has three stages or three payloads. The first stage/payload is just an entry point. It begins when a developer installs a malicious package from open source repositories like npm, PyPI, GitHub, or the Open VSX marketplaces. The malware then checks if the system locale is Russian and if so, it does not proceed with the attack. This is because the attackers are likely based in Russia and do not want to get caught by authorities. Once installed, the malware uses the Solana blockchain to fetch the attacker’s command-and-control (C2) server IP address. It looks for a specific transaction on Solana that contains the C2 server’s IP address in the memo field. The malware then connects to the C2 server and starts the second stage of the attack. In this stage, the malware looks for crypto data like seed phrases, private keys, and even screenshots of wallets. It targets browser extension wallets like MetaMask , Phantom, Coinbase, Exodus, Binance, Ronin, Keplr, and more. The malware also looks for browser data like login sessions, session tokens, and cloud access. This means it can access centralized exchange accounts, npm, GitHub, and AWS accounts. After collecting the data, the malware compresses it into a ZIP file, and sends it to the attacker’s server. Source: Aikido Security . Hardware wallets targeted via phishing The last payload splits into two parts. The first part is a .NET binary that looks for hardware wallets like Ledger and Trezor. If it finds one, it shows a fake error message that tricks the user into entering their recovery phrase. The second part is a WebSocket-based JavaScript RAT (remote access trojan) that steals browser data. It also installs a fake Chrome extension that monitors specific sites like exchanges and steals cookies in real time. It’s downloaded through a Google Calendar event as a dead drop resolver. This approach allows the attacker to hide the real server, bypass security filters and it acts as an indirect delivery layer. Unlike the second stage, where the malware only steals browser data, this RAT has live control. It stays active and monitors the browser. It captures new cookies, tracks active sessions like logged-in exchange accounts, logs keystrokes, and takes screenshots. Moreover, it allows the attacker to run commands on the victim’s machine. Its difficult to remove GlassWorm. The malware can re-download itself and it can survive reboots. It also uses fallback methods like DHT (Distributed Hash Table) lookups and Solana memos to find the control server. Since there’s no central server, and the data is shared across many computers, it becomes difficult for defenders to block the attack at the network level. This attack is very dangerous. It highly severe because it combines crypto theft, full system control, and unremovable network. Don’t just read crypto news. Understand it. Subscribe to our newsletter. It's free .