| AIA Coin Price Drop: Why Is There No Protection for Traders? |
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shawonngp: AIA Coin, which was recently listed on Binance Futures, crossed above $20 just 4–5 days ago, but started dropping immediately. Now it’s down to only $0.7. Why doesn’t Binance take action against coins that can’t remain stable for even a single day after such a major price spike? Situations like this make people compare crypto trading to gambling. Does AIA have any real future? |
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flapduck: That move from ~$20 to cents in a few days isn't a bug of Binance. That's how thin, hype-listed coins behave when they finally meet real liquidity and leverage. Futures listings amplify it even more because now you've got degens 50x long and short on something with almost no mature price history. Exchanges have no interest in "protecting the price" of a coin, lol. The moment they start doing that, it stops being a market and becomes a sort of a managed casino. Their job is basically: list, match orders, liquidate you when your margin is gone, repeat. 8) |
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Hispo: Quote from: shawonngp on November 17, 2025, 07:13:42 AM AIA Coin, which was recently listed on Binance Futures, crossed above $20 just 4–5 days ago, but started dropping immediately. Now it’s down to only $0.7. Why doesn’t Binance take action against coins that can’t remain stable for even a single day after such a major price spike? Situations like this make people compare crypto trading to gambling. Does AIA have any real future? I mean... Binance is a business and has the right to list whatever they want for their costumers to get or especulate on. It is up to traders to decide where to put their money, it is their sole responsibility. When people create their account on exchanges, they are accepting to fact they are getting access to economical tools, reading tools and markets which could be translated into financial losses. So Binance do not have any obligation to give money back to traders. If people is willing to gamble their money on shitcoins on future markets, then they are supposed to be ready to accept consequences. |
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coin-investor: Quote from: shawonngp on November 17, 2025, 07:13:42 AM Why doesn’t Binance take action against coins that can’t remain stable for even a single day after such a major price spike? What specific action do you want Binance to take to protect coins from crashing? It's the traders’ action, something that they have no complete control over. Traders should be responsible for all their actions. If they trade in pump-and-dump schemes with no innovative token, expect something like this to happen. Quote Situations like this make people compare crypto trading to gambling. It is and will always be that way. This is why experts advise you to do your own research and study the risk inherent in crypto trading; an exchange will not spoon-feed everything to you, it’s not a bank where you expect interest after a few months. |
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o48o: Quote from: shawonngp on November 17, 2025, 07:13:42 AM AIA Coin, which was recently listed on Binance Futures, crossed above $20 just 4–5 days ago, but started dropping immediately. Now it’s down to only $0.7. Why doesn’t Binance take action against coins that can’t remain stable for even a single day after such a major price spike? Situations like this make people compare crypto trading to gambling. Does AIA have any real future? So it went back to where it was before binance listing because all the investors wanted to cash out? Are you asking binance to prevent selling and shorting? You mean that Binance should do illegal market manipulation to protect your investments? Should they also take action against spikes when something is mooning, because shorters money is in danger? Real question is why is people buying something mooned 20x in a day? |
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