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Creating a Token is Easy. Listing it is Hard
With the number of global cryptocurrency exchanges now in excess of 250, there ought to be more than enough platforms to support new ICO tokens. But as many of these projects are finding out, obtaining an exchange listing without paying exorbitant fees is almost impossible. ICOs unwilling to stump up risk being left to languish in the shadowlands of low liquidity DEXes. Recent research from ICOrating.com shows the difficulties projects face in getting their token listed on a reputable exchange – and those problems aren’t limited to affording the listing fee.For one thing, the project needs to have completed a successful ICO in the first place. If their tokens failed to sell out, even with the remainder being burned, demand for the token on the secondary markets will be low and exchanges are unlikely to be interested. ICOrating reports that only 22% of ICOs that completed in Q1 of this year were able to have their token listed. This figure is down 10% on the previous quarter, which is attributed to the fact that half of all ICOs in Q1 of this year raised less than $100,000.
Listing Fees Vary Greatly
Projects that failed to hit their hard cap simply can’t afford an exchange listing, while those that did may still balk at the price. The discrepancy between what exchanges charge is huge, ranging from around $100,000 to $3 million for the largest and most liquid exchanges. (It has been claimed that Binance charges as much as $7 million in some cases.) In fairness to cryptocurrency exchanges, listing a new token isn’t as simple as many traders seem to think.Exchanges Can’t Always Be Relied On
Even
after securing an exchange listing, it is not always plain sailing for
ICOs. There have been instances of exchanges delisting tokens without
warning. Regulatory pressure can also take its toll: if there are rumors
that a certain token risks being labeled a security, exchanges can get
spooked and delist it to be safe. Given the haste with which newly
listed tokens can be pumped, dumped, and then left to die a lingering
death, with the project still months away from launch, it’s no wonder
that some ICOs are hesitant to have their token listed before their beta
is ready and there’s genuine demand for their token.
For each problem an exchange listing
solves, it introduces several more. Be it through choice or necessity,
70% of this year’s ICO tokens have yet to make an exchange. Most of them
never will.Do you think ICOs should try to have their token listed as soon as possible, or is it better to wait until the project is ready? Let us know in the comments section below.
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