Why Binance Keeps Delisting Tokens (And What It Means)
-
by the time delisting happens, most of the downside is already priced in
-

The latest move by Binance to remove 6 tokens isn’t random — it’s part of a broader cleanup trend.Tokens like BIFI, MDT, FUN, and OXT had already been placed under a Monitoring Tag, signaling:
• Higher risk
• Increased volatility
• Potential delistingOnce flagged, projects are under constant review — and if they don’t improve, they’re out.
We’ve now seen multiple delisting waves this month alone, with previous removals like Loopring and Radiant also taking double-digit hits.
Key takeaway:
If a token gets flagged early, the market usually prices in the risk long before the actual delisting. -
market usually dumps before the official “delisted” tweet hits
-
people still act surprised every single time

-
binance cleaning house again… weak projects getting exposed
-
if it’s flagged and you still hold… that’s on you tbh
-
delisting isn’t the event, it’s the confirmation
-
risk was there early, just nobody wanted to see it
-
another reminder: not all alts survive the cycle
-
smart money exits on the tag, not the news

-
monitoring tag = early warning nobody respects
-
delisting isn’t sudden… it’s ignored signals piling up
-
exit liquidity disappears faster than you can click sell
-
New tokens come. Some old die. Part of crypto.