DeFi Development Corp reported that its SOL per share reached 0.0670 as of May 13, 2026, marking a 108% increase from a year earlier as the company's Solana treasury strategy continued to expand.
The update came through the company's Q1 2026 results, published via a GlobeNewswire release on May 13. DeFi Development Corp said SPS was up 108% year over year and up 1% from March 30, 2026.
The disclosure positions DeFi Development Corp, which trades under the ticker DFDV, as a corporate treasury play on Solana rather than a traditional operating company. The story echoes a broader trend of public companies building crypto-denominated balance sheets, similar to how JPMorgan recently estimated Strategy's Bitcoin purchases could reach $30 billion in 2026.
Why SOL per Share Matters More Than the Raw Treasury Balance
SOL per share, or SPS, measures the company's total SOL and SOL equivalents divided by its fully converted share count. DeFi Development Corp treats SPS as its core treasury KPI, according to the company's FAQ page.
The distinction matters because a company can grow its raw SOL holdings while diluting shareholders through new share issuances. SPS adjusts for that by using a fully converted share count, which stood at approximately 34.2 million as of May 13, according to SEC filing materials mirrored on StockTitan.
Most coverage of the update repeated the 108% headline without explaining the fully converted methodology or why management chose this framing. The per-share lens is what separates DFDV's treasury reporting from a simple token-accumulation headline.
The company also reaffirmed its June 2026 guidance of 0.075 SPS on a fully converted basis and kept its longer-term target of 1.0 SPS by December 2028 unchanged. That target implies roughly a 15x increase from the current level over the next two and a half years.
The Treasury Expansion and Debt Buyback Behind the Update
DeFi Development Corp reported total SOL and SOL equivalents of 2,294,576 as of May 13. That treasury sits at the center of a strategy that increasingly resembles the equity-as-crypto-proxy model gaining traction among publicly listed firms.
Alongside the treasury update, the company said it repurchased approximately $4.4 million in principal of its July 2030 convertible notes for about $2.6 million in cash, a 41% discount to par. Buying back convertible debt below face value reduces future dilution risk and improves the balance sheet on paper.
The discount suggests the market was pricing those convertibles well below par, which gave DFDV an opportunity to retire obligations cheaply. However, the company's own filing materials flag securities-law, accounting, and SOL-price risks tied to the treasury strategy and future capital raises.
SOL traded at $91.35 at the time of the report, down roughly 4% over the prior 24 hours. The broader crypto market sat in "Fear" territory at 34 on the Fear & Greed Index, meaning DFDV's treasury gains came despite a cautious market backdrop.
For investors tracking crypto-native corporate structures, DFDV's SPS framework offers a more granular view than raw token counts. Whether the company can sustain 108% annual growth in that metric, particularly as it scales toward its 1.0 SPS target, will depend on both Solana's price trajectory and management's ability to grow SOL holdings faster than it issues new shares. As recent industry research has shown, retail investor appetite for crypto-linked equities continues to broaden, which could support future capital raises but also increase dilution pressure.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial or investment advice. Cryptocurrency and digital asset markets carry significant risk. Always do your own research before making decisions.