RAY, the native governance token of Raydium, the automated market maker (AMM) decentralized exchange (DEX) on Solana, soared 30% on May 17 before reversing gains, plunging to spot rates.
RAY Prices Under Pressure
According to CoinMarketCap on May 30, RAY is changing hands at $0.19, stable against the USD, Bitcoin, and Ethereum on the last trading day.
RAY has a market capitalization of $41.2 million at this rate, with an average trading volume of $2 million in the past 24 hours.
At this pace, RAY remains in a bearish formation as bears peeled back gains posted on May 17, aligning the token with bears from mid-February 2023.
Like Solana and tokens based on this network, RAY’s bearish price action has persisted and hasn’t reversed losses from mid-November 2022.
The collapse of FTX, a crypto exchange, and Alameda Research, the investment wing of FTX, which was heavily invested in Solana, triggered a sharp sell-off of SOL, weighing negatively on RAY and other ecosystems.
Raydium Updates
The sharp expansion of RAY prices on May 17 coincided with the upgrade of the Raydium DEX to version V.2.10.11.
According to the development team, the decision was reached following a server load due to API abuse. Specifically, there was a in API pings in April than in March 2023. The extra load stressed Raydium’s servers, disrupting the connection.
The team behind the project stated:Raydium’s APIs were pinged more than 50 billion times in April, up from 18 billion in March. May figures are set to surpass April highs. This highlights how much stress servers have been under and why issues have popped up. Nearly 2,000 new pools were created in the first two weeks of May, bringing Raydium’s total pool count to nearly 8,000.
This update, V.2.10.11, served to correct this issue. Besides increasing the server capacity by 11X, there were several bug fixes that the exchange expects to “greatly improve user interface responsiveness.” While the update was received enthusiastically, momentum has waned, and RAY is trading near May 2023 lows.
Trackers that Raydium’s total value locked (TVL) is around $30 million as of May 30, down from $2.2 billion recorded in mid-November 2021. Meanwhile, there has been a noticeable in the number of unique active wallets (UAW) from early May 2023, according to DappRadar.
The contraction in the number of users coincides with the closure of the RAY Claim Portal on May 14. This portal was opened following the hack in December 2022, when the DEX lost over $2 million. The hacker drained user funds from various Raydium liquidity pools without burning or owning any liquidity pool (LP) tokens.