Just now, an announcement from Binance has caused a stir in the crypto community—5 spot trading pairs will be permanently removed in 24 hours!
Involving multiple tokens such as BIO, ENS, INJ, TREE, VTHO, the removal is scheduled for December 26, 2025, at 11 AM. Although the official explanation is 'poor liquidity', the signals released behind this delisting are far more complex than they appear on the surface.
One detail that most people overlook is that among the removed trading pairs, those related to the stablecoin FDUSD hold significant positions. At the same time, on-chain data shows that the trading volume of stablecoins based on the Decentralized USD network has surged by 28% in the past 24 hours. As centralized exchanges start to clean up poorly performing trading pairs, a more open and permissionless trading network is quietly expanding.
Chapter One: The Truth Behind Binance's 'Clean-up Operation'
Binance's delisting list reveals three key pieces of information:
1. Liquidity standards are tightening
BIO/FDUSD, ENS/FDUSD were delisted
This means that the average daily trading volume of these trading pairs did not reach the internal threshold
Binance's tolerance for 'zombie trading pairs' is decreasing
2. Stablecoin competition has entered deep water
FDUSD trading pair was removed, but USDT and USDC trading pairs remain
Reflects the liquidity battle between stablecoins
Exchanges begin to 'take sides' between stablecoins
3. Trading pair optimization becomes the norm
INJ/ETH, TREE/BNB, VTHO/TRY delisted simultaneously
Binance is streamlining its trading matrix to improve overall efficiency
In the future, more marginal trading pairs may face the same fate
It is worth noting that this is not the first time, nor will it be the last. In 2024, Binance has delisted more than 30 trading pairs. This action once again proves: in centralized exchanges, liquidity is the right to survive.
Chapter Two: When centralized exchanges close 'small doors', the decentralized world opens 'big doors'
Binance's delisting decision, while having its commercial logic, also exposes the limitations of the centralized model:
The dilemma of centralized exchanges:
Limited resources: unable to support all trading pairs indefinitely
Profit-oriented: prioritize high-volume trading pairs
Single-point decision: whether to delist is entirely decided by the platform
And at this moment, the decentralized dollar (Decentralized USD) ecosystem offers a radically different solution:
Advantages of decentralized trading:
Permissionless listing
Any token can create a trading pair
No exchange review or approval required
Completely driven by market demand
Liquidity aggregation
Multiple DEXs share liquidity pools
No 'island effect' of a single platform
Small coins can also gain trading depth
Never 'delisted'
As long as the smart contract exists, the trading pair exists
No 'regular clean-up' by centralized institutions
True free market choice
Data shows that after Binance announced delisting:
Related tokens' trading volume on DEX increased by 65%
Newly created stablecoin trading pairs increased by 40%
The number of daily active addresses in the decentralized USD network reached a record high
The market is voting with its feet: when one door closes, another door opens.
Chapter Three: #USDD to maintain trust# — Finding unchanging value anchors amidst change
Binance's delisting announcement has taught all investors a lesson: in a centralized world, rules can change at any time.
And the delisted FDUSD trading pair makes us think: What kind of stablecoin can truly cross cycles?
This is exactly the question that #USDD to maintain trust# attempts to answer:
The 'anti-delisting' feature of USDD:
1. Does not rely on a single exchange
Launched on dozens of DEXs and CEXs
No 'exclusive trading pair' risk
Ecosystem decentralization ensures liquidity
2. Transparent operations
All reserve assets can be verified on-chain
Anyone can verify in real-time
Trust is based on code rather than promises
3. Community governance
Major decisions are voted on by token holders
There is no possibility of unilateral delisting
Truly user-driven financial tools
When centralized exchanges can unilaterally decide the life and death of a trading pair, the decentralized ecosystem where USDD resides demonstrates a stronger resilience: there is no 'delisting', only 'competition' and 'evolution'.
Chapter Four: A 'liquidity hedging' guide for ordinary investors
How should ordinary investors respond to the risk of trading pairs being delisted?
Strategy One: Identify risky trading pairs
Focus on trading pairs with persistently low trading volume
Be wary of trading pairs tied to a single stablecoin
Avoid excessive concentration on marginal trading varieties
Strategy Two: Establish a decentralized trading matrix
Use multiple exchanges simultaneously
Explore DEX as a supplementary trading venue
Learn cross-chain trading skills
Strategy Three: Choose 'anti-delisting' assets
Prefer tokens that circulate on multiple platforms
Focus on assets with a strong foundation in DeFi
Consider allocating stablecoins that align with the idea of #USDD to maintain trust#
Strategy Four: Maintain operational flexibility
Timely attention to exchange announcements
Plan alternative trading paths in advance
Avoid making large transactions before the delisting
Chapter Five: Looking at the Future of the Industry from Binance's Delisting — Two Parallel Financial Systems
Binance's routine clean-up inadvertently revealed the dual structure forming in the crypto industry:
Centralized Finance (CeFi) system
Characteristics: Efficient, easy to use, regulated
Advantages: Suitable for the general public, optimized experience
Risk: Single point of failure, rules are not transparent
Representing: Exchanges like Binance, Coinbase
Decentralized Finance (DeFi) system
Characteristics: Open, permissionless, transparent
Advantages: Anti-censorship, no entry barriers
Risks: Complex user experience, smart contract risks
Representing: DEXs like Uniswap, Curve
The decentralized dollar is the key bridge connecting these two systems. It can circulate in both CeFi and DeFi, providing users with:
Enjoy convenience in a centralized world
Enjoy freedom in a decentralized world
The ability to switch seamlessly between the two worlds
Chapter Six: Delisting is not the end, but a new beginning
For tokens involved in delisted trading pairs, this might actually be an opportunity:
Historical experience shows:
Many tokens found true price discovery on DEX after being delisted from major exchanges
Community-driven projects often perform better in decentralized environments
After breaking free from the exchange's 'traffic allocation' game, project teams focus more on substantial construction
Taking ENS as an example:
Although ENS/FDUSD has been delisted
The core position of ENS in the Ethereum ecosystem remains unchanged
On DEXs like Uniswap, ENS/USDC trading pairs have sufficient depth
True value will not disappear because of the delisting of a trading pair
This is also the core spirit of blockchain: truly decentralized assets should not rely on the 'grace' of any centralized platform.
Conclusion: When 'removal' becomes the norm, what is worth holding long-term?
Binance's announcement may cause panic among some, but it will also provoke more thought:
In this rapidly changing industry, what exactly should we believe?
Is it to believe that a certain exchange will never delist our holdings?
Or to believe that a certain stablecoin will always have sufficient trading pairs?
Or to believe that a certain token can always trade on mainstream platforms?
#USDD to maintain trust# The answer given is: Trust in transparency, trust in code, trust in mathematics.
When centralized platforms can 'remove' trading pairs at any time, decentralized protocols promise:
Rules are written on the chain and cannot be unilaterally changed
Creating trading pairs does not require permission; delisting requires community consensus
Liquidity is determined by the market, not allocated by the platform
Delisting 5 trading pairs is routine for Binance.
But for the entire industry, this reminds us:
The future of the crypto world will not exist solely on the servers of a few centralized exchanges.
It exists more in:
Among tens of thousands of independent nodes
In the open-source smart contract code
In the liquidity pool co-built by global users
On a transparent and verifiable blockchain ledger
Next time you see a 'trading pair delisting' announcement, don't just see it as an end.
We must also see the beginning — a more open, transparent, and decentralized financial system is quietly beginning amidst these 'endings'.
After all, in the true spirit of crypto:
No one's 'announcement' can decide the life or death of an asset.
Only the real operation of code and the free choice of the market.
And you, are you ready to embrace this future?
Risk warning: This article is based on publicly available information analysis and does not constitute any investment advice. Delisting trading pairs by exchanges is a normal market behavior, and investors should remain rational and manage risks. In any market environment, diversification of asset allocation, decentralization of platform selection, and continuous learning are effective strategies to deal with uncertainty. Remember: the safest holdings are those that can circulate without relying on any single platform.



