Key Issues in Listing BN: Chip Allocation and Market Reaction
1. The real contradiction in listing BN does not lie in the selection of the asset, but in how to reasonably allocate the chips at the opening. Specifically, the key question is whether different groups, such as airdrop recipients and BNB holders, will dump the chips after receiving them, or how to allocate these chips to avoid irrational market fluctuations.
2. For projects with a market capitalization between 300 million to 500 million USD at the opening, it is nearly impossible for the project side to absorb the selling pressure at launch, especially from a compliance perspective, as using financing funds to bear such risks is also unfeasible. The most realistic approach is to rely on market forces to balance this process.
However, the project side still needs to plan to unlock airdrop chips in batches and inform the community in advance to avoid extreme fluctuations at launch due to unreasonable chip distribution.
Further strategy design can consider implementing a long-term post-mining mechanism for BNB holders. This mechanism can be divided into two parts: one part involves 30 days of mining on the Binance platform, and the other part involves 3 to 6 months of mining on the project's platform (applicable to both public chain projects and RWA project sides).
In this way, 5% of the chips are allocated to BNB holders, where the first half can be seen as a fixed reward, while the second half depends on the holders' confidence in the project. Thus, holders' earnings rely not only on the system's allocation but also on their own judgment of the project, avoiding a situation where everything is taken at once.