There's an intriguing phenomenon: it seems that a certain leading exchange only starts to act when meme coins are almost bottomed out.
Take Binance as an example—do they only consider listing a coin after its market cap drops to around 50 million? Do they wait until most traders have already cut their losses before going live?
Recently, most of the new tokens added in the Alpha section have first fallen by about 70-80%, and only then do they appear on the platform. Is there some secret behind this? Are there particular considerations in choosing the right timing? Or am I misunderstanding something?
Seeking insights from experienced folks.
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GasWaster69
· 5h ago
Haha, really, they only go live after the pump is over, it's ridiculous.
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StableNomad
· 5h ago
nah this is actually just risk-adjusted positioning tbh... statistically speaking, exchanges list after volatility compression because correlation coefficients normalize. reminds me of UST in May—smart money waits for the bleed-out.
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AltcoinHunter
· 12-10 11:07
Oh no, isn't this just asking whether the exchange is bottom-fishing? It sounds a bit reasonable.
Launching after a round of selling does seem a bit shady... but on the other hand, would that make it more stable when it goes up?
I just want to know if this is a blessing or a trap for retail investors, really.
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GateUser-3824aa38
· 12-10 10:56
Haha, you're right. I've also noticed this pattern... Do they all have to first lose everything and go broke before the exchange feels safe?
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AirdropFatigue
· 12-10 10:50
It's normal to go live after the completion of the split, haha.
There's an intriguing phenomenon: it seems that a certain leading exchange only starts to act when meme coins are almost bottomed out.
Take Binance as an example—do they only consider listing a coin after its market cap drops to around 50 million? Do they wait until most traders have already cut their losses before going live?
Recently, most of the new tokens added in the Alpha section have first fallen by about 70-80%, and only then do they appear on the platform. Is there some secret behind this? Are there particular considerations in choosing the right timing? Or am I misunderstanding something?
Seeking insights from experienced folks.