Coinbase now lets users borrow up to $100K against SOL via Morpho on Base, turning Solana into its third major collateral pillar as the token eyes a retest of $Coinbase now lets users borrow up to $100K against SOL via Morpho on Base, turning Solana into its third major collateral pillar as the token eyes a retest of $

Can SOL hit $200 as Coinbase adds $100,000 SOL collateral lending?

2026/05/13 02:00
5 min read
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Coinbase now lets users borrow up to $100K against SOL via Morpho on Base, turning Solana into its third major collateral pillar as the token eyes a retest of $200.

Summary
  • Coinbase has added Solana as a supported collateral asset in its on-chain lending product, letting users borrow up to $100,000 against SOL holdings via the Morpho protocol on Base, expanding a service that has already issued over $2.3 billion in cumulative loans.
  • Bitcoin dominates Coinbase’s lending book with $2.17 billion in cumulative collateralized loans, followed by ETH at $110 million and XRP at $31.6 million, with SOL now joining that roster as Coinbase pursues its “Everything Exchange” strategy.
  • The SOL addition lands despite Coinbase reporting a $394.1 million net loss in Q1 and cutting roughly 14% of its workforce, with CEO Brian Armstrong maintaining that “all finance will migrate on-chain” and multiple Wall Street desks keeping buy ratings on COIN stock.

Coinbase has expanded its on-chain crypto lending product to include Solana as collateral, allowing users to borrow up to $100,000 against SOL holdings through an integration with the Morpho lending protocol on the Base network, according to reporting by The Block.

Coinbase bets on SOL as its third major collateral pillar

The product previously supported Bitcoin and Ethereum as collateral assets, and the SOL (SOL) addition marks the first time a major non-BTC, non-ETH Layer 1 has been added to Coinbase’s lending stack, reflecting the exchange’s assessment that Solana has reached the liquidity depth and institutional acceptance needed to function as reliable loan collateral.

Ben Shen, Coinbase’s Head of Financial Services and Loyalty Products, framed the move explicitly around platform strategy, saying the addition of SOL collateral is “an important step for Coinbase to become the best platform for trading and holding Solana” and that it reflects the company’s broader push to build an “Everything Exchange” — a single venue where users can trade, hold, earn, borrow and settle across any major asset without leaving the Coinbase ecosystem. Since launching its crypto lending product last year, Coinbase has issued more than $2.3 billion in cumulative loans, with Bitcoin accounting for $2.17 billion of that total, ETH at roughly $110 million and XRP at $31.6 million, followed by smaller positions in cbETH, DOGE, ADA and LTC.

SOL is currently trading around $171, having pulled back from highs above $260 earlier in the cycle, and sits in a market where the addition of a major exchange’s collateral lending service has historically acted as a mild but persistent price support: users who might otherwise sell SOL to raise dollar liquidity can instead borrow against their position, reducing spot sell pressure while keeping exposure intact. That dynamic has been well-documented in Bitcoin’s lending market, where the growth of BTC-collateralized loans is cited as one structural reason why long-term holders have been able to extract liquidity without triggering the kind of forced selling that characterized earlier cycles.

“Everything Exchange” strategy survives a $394M quarterly loss

The SOL lending launch arrives in the same news cycle as Coinbase’s Q1 earnings disclosure, which showed a net loss of $394.1 million and a workforce reduction of approximately 14%. Those numbers reflect a broader revenue compression from lower trading volumes and the cost of Coinbase’s aggressive product expansion, but CEO Brian Armstrong has been consistent in framing near-term losses as the price of building infrastructure for what he calls the inevitable migration of “all finance on-chain.” Institutional analysts appear to agree with that framing: Bernstein, Benchmark and Rosenblatt have all maintained buy ratings on COIN stock, with Bernstein specifically noting that Coinbase is “gradually validating the feasibility of its Everything Exchange strategy” through cumulative data points like $2.3 billion in loans issued and the UK market expansion completed last month.

For Solana’s price trajectory, the Coinbase lending integration is one of several institutional signals converging this week. Huma Finance’s V2 PayFi platform, detailed in a recent crypto.news story, is built on Solana and recently survived a legacy Polygon exploit that underlined the architectural superiority of its Solana-native rebuild. Meanwhile, a crypto.news story on SUI’s 31% single-session surge showed how supply shocks and new institutional products can compress months of sideways price action into days of vertical movement for high-liquidity Layer 1 tokens.

At roughly $171, SOL would need a 17% move to retest $200 — a level it held briefly in early 2026 before the broader market correction — and a 52% recovery to challenge its cycle high above $260. The Coinbase collateral addition does not by itself generate that kind of move, but it does remove one structural friction point by giving large SOL holders a dollar-liquidity option that does not require selling, and it extends Coinbase’s institutional credibility to Solana in the same way that BTC and ETH lending helped normalize those assets as balance-sheet instruments. Combined with the altseason rotation signals flagged in a separate crypto.news story on Tuesday’s top-100 movers, a clear break above $180 to $185 in the near term looks more achievable than it did before Coinbase put SOL on the same collateral shelf as Bitcoin.

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