About 3 months ago, $FLOCK @flock_io was delisted from Binance Alpha, but today some friends reported that FLock has been 'quietly' relisted. This wave of back-and-forth actions is likely to leave the project team confused.
There's no need to analyze the reasons; after all, exchanges have their own rights to explain listings and delistings. However, this does give the project team a direction:
In fact, there is no need to consider being listed on Binance spot or Alpha as an ultimate milestone and to pay an unbearable price for it.
The fact is that the key factors determining whether a ticker can be listed are real and valid holding addresses, trading volume, turnover rate, and other fundamental indicators. Theoretically, if there are concerns about not being listed, one only needs to continue building and strengthening these indicators. This is the bargaining chip for the project team to negotiate equally with any exchange.
FLock is a typical example. Originally, it performed very well on Bybit TGE and was listed on Binance Alpha. However, as the market trend declined, it was suddenly delisted. Who would have thought that just a few days ago, it was relisted on Upbit and Bithumb, with a single-day trading volume exceeding $100 million and a cumulative increase of over 222% within 5 days. Perhaps it was this outstanding performance that led it to be included in Binance Alpha again.
Therefore, rather than racking their brains to meet the conditions for listing on Alpha, the project team should focus on building a strong market performance for the project first.