Did Binance Spot Chart Just Hide SPK’s Real Peak Price? Early Buyers from Alpha Deserve Transparency

The sudden listing of Spark ($SPK ) on Binance Spot has raised some serious questions, especially for those of us who got in early via Binance Alpha. Within minutes, SPK was launched on Spot — a move that should’ve been bullish. But something doesn’t sit right.

If you were watching Alpha before the listing, you’d have seen SPK spike to prices significantly higher than what’s now reflected on the Spot chart. On Alpha, we witnessed a rally that suggested a much higher peak, $0.10 or beyond. Yet, once SPK moved to Spot, the chart reset with no trace of that early surge. The 24h high on Spot shows just $0.069, completely ignoring the Alpha momentum.

That’s a problem.

Many of us made entry, take profit, and exit decisions based on Alpha’s chart. We saw the breakout and committed, assuming Spot would continue reflecting that bullish structure. But when the Spot chart launched without any record of the Alpha price peak, it created a bias against Alpha users. Now, we’re left with a chart that doesn’t reflect reality — and with other traders thinking we’re chasing a pump when in fact we were early believers.

This isn’t just a charting issue; it’s a credibility issue. If Binance intends for Alpha to be a launchpad for price discovery, then those prices must carry over or at least be referenced when the token moves to Spot. Otherwise, Alpha users are being disadvantaged — first into the market, yet misrepresented in the charts.

Transparency matters, especially in crypto. We call on Binance to provide unified charting or historical transparency when tokens move from Alpha to Spot. Otherwise, we’re flying blind — and that’s not what this market needs.