Some friends have recently been debating which coins ought to be included on Binance and which ones shouldn't. I'll attempt to clarify: The market for cryptocurrencies is free. A total pool is made up of the trading volume and liquidity of CEX and CEX, CEX and DEX, and other trading platforms.
The CEX market is not closed. These projects still exist even if Binance does not list them. Additionally, capital and trading volume will be redirected to other sectors of the industry. Capital plates, wool-pulling, chain-based local dogs, and meme currencies will all be redirected in addition to the unlocking of venture capital-invested initiatives. The conventional financial sector will also redirect funds that flow straight to the cryptocurrency world once the ETF is approved.
Let's take another look at VC. Some venture capitalists are the primary cause of the inflated prices, but they typically raise money from limited partners (LPs) for a 7-year lock-up period of 4+3 years, collecting management fees + dividends; most VCs are unlocked one year after TGE, so many VCs in the cryptocurrency circle are going bankrupt, and some VCs' LP investments in the cryptocurrency circle may also return to zero; and project parties that have received large amounts of financing have more opportunities to break out of the bubble cycle, but the fundamentals of the currency price and governance model are up to the project party, and there is no one-size-fits-all solution.
Therefore, everyone should conduct a more thorough research of the project tokens, including their application scenarios, release cycles, holding ratios, and initial circulation, prior to making an investment. There isn't a conventional response. The emergence of Defi has enhanced industry liquidity and independence, making it more challenging for CEX to try to create regulations. However, this is exactly what makes the free market so appealing in the cryptocurrency space. DYOR