Binance, the world’s largest cryptocurrency exchange by trading volume, has announced plans to delist several trading pairs involving the stablecoin First Digital USD (FDUSD). The change will take effect on January 6 and will impact popular cryptocurrencies including Bitcoin Cash (BCH), Avalanche (AVAX), Litecoin (LTC), Sui (SUI), Cardano (ADA), Chainlink (LINK), and Bittensor (TAO).
According to an official statement from the exchange, Binance will remove both cross-margin and isolated margin trading pairs that involve FDUSD and the affected tokens. The company did not provide a public explanation for the decision, which is not unusual for delisting announcements.
Alongside the removal of these pairs, Binance has already introduced new restrictions for users. Traders can no longer use Auto-Transfer Mode or freely make manual transfers of the affected assets into their isolated margin accounts. For users with existing margin positions, transfers are limited. They may only manually transfer amounts equal to their outstanding liabilities, minus any available collateral.
Despite the scale of the announcement and the number of tokens involved, the market reaction has been relatively muted. Prices across the affected cryptocurrencies showed limited volatility following the news, suggesting traders had either anticipated the move or did not see it as a major short-term risk.
A key detail tying all the delisted pairs together is FDUSD itself. Every removed trading pair is linked to the stablecoin, pointing to a broader adjustment in how Binance is managing FDUSD-related products rather than a judgment on the individual cryptocurrencies.
This is not the first time Binance delistings have caught the market’s attention. Earlier in December, the exchange announced it would remove StaFi (FIS), REI Network (REI), and Voxies (VOXEL). Following that update, prices of those tokens declined, according to market data.
Similarly, in October, Binance discontinued services for Flamingo (FLM), Kadena (KDA), and Perpetual Protocol (PERP). Kadena, in particular, saw its valuation drop after the announcement.
However, delistings do not always lead to negative price action. About a week ago, Binance introduced new spot trading pairs for Cardano and other cryptocurrencies, though access was restricted in certain regions, including the United States, Canada, Cuba, Iran, and the Netherlands. That announcement briefly pushed ADA and other listed tokens higher.
As January 6 approaches, users holding margin positions tied to FDUSD pairs are advised to review their accounts carefully and manage liabilities ahead of the removal. While the immediate price impact appears limited, Binance’s continued adjustments to its trading offerings highlight the importance of staying alert to exchange updates in a fast-moving crypto market.
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