I’ve noticed something lately that many crypto traders still underestimate — Binance’s Monitoring Tag. Most people only pay attention after panic starts, prices crash hard, or delisting rumors spread everywhere. But honestly, the warning signs usually appear much earlier.
Binance uses the Monitoring Tag for projects they believe carry higher risks compared to regular listed coins. That risk can come from weak development activity, low liquidity, unstable tokenomics, security concerns, regulatory pressure, or extreme volatility. Once a coin enters this category, it immediately becomes more dangerous for short-term holders and emotional traders.
Recently, Binance added several projects like FARM, HIGH, MLN, SYS, TRU, VELODROME, POND, QUICK, and others into the Monitoring list. The market reaction was immediate. Some coins experienced sudden sell pressure because traders started fearing possible delisting in the future.
What many beginners do not understand is this:
a Monitoring Tag is not an instant delisting.
But it is a serious caution signal.
Binance regularly reviews these projects. If a team stops building, loses community support, fails security standards, or trading volume becomes unhealthy, the exchange can eventually remove the token completely. Once that happens, liquidity often disappears fast, and recovery becomes extremely difficult.
That is why blindly buying “cheap looking” Monitoring coins can become a dangerous trap. A coin dropping 70% does not automatically make it a good opportunity. Sometimes the market is pricing in real problems behind the scenes.
Personally, whenever I see a project enter Monitoring status, I stop treating it like a normal trade. Risk management becomes everything. Smaller position sizes, tighter stop losses, and avoiding emotional averaging down become much more important.
At the same time, not every Monitoring coin dies. Some projects recover by improving development, rebuilding community trust, and increasing ecosystem activity. Crypto has always been unpredictable. But the difference between smart traders and emotional traders is simple:
Smart traders respect warnings early.
Emotional traders react after the damage is already done.
Right now the market is teaching another important lesson — exchange listings are not permanent. In crypto, survival matters just as much as hype.
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