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Synternet ($SYNT) FUD vs Reality
There is a lot of panic around Synternet because of the bankruptcy news of the company behind the token. Many traders instantly assume: “bankrupt = instant delisting”. That is not how it necessarily works.
A few key points:
- Bankruptcy of the company does not automatically mean the token will be delisted. Each exchange decides based on its own rules, liquidity and user demand. - Delistings usually follow issues like extremely low volume, technical/security problems, legal concerns or a completely abandoned project – not just financial trouble at the company level. - A token and its smart contracts can continue to exist and trade, even if the original company restructures or goes through bankruptcy. Sometimes teams, structures or communities change, while the token stays listed. - Price dumping reflects risk being priced in, not an automatic delisting. It is a signal to manage risk carefully, not to blindly panic. - Exchanges prefer to keep active, liquid markets as long as they meet their listing criteria. Sudden delistings without any official announcement are rare.
Main message: stay informed, watch official announcements from the exchange and the project, and make decisions based on facts, not fear or rumors. This is not financial advice – always do your own research.
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korter en in het Engels aub enkel de post zodat het makkelijk te kopiëren is
Synternet ($SYNT) FUD vs Reality
There is a lot of panic around Synternet because of the bankruptcy news of the company behind the token. Many traders instantly assume: “bankrupt = instant delisting”. That is not how it necessarily works.
A few key points:
- Bankruptcy of the company does not automatically mean the token will be delisted. Each exchange decides based on its own rules, liquidity and user demand.
- Delistings usually follow issues like extremely low volume, technical/security problems, legal concerns or a completely abandoned project – not just financial trouble at the company level.
- A token and its smart contracts can continue to exist and trade, even if the original company restructures or goes through bankruptcy. Sometimes teams, structures or communities change, while the token stays listed.
- Price dumping reflects risk being priced in, not an automatic delisting. It is a signal to manage risk carefully, not to blindly panic.
- Exchanges prefer to keep active, liquid markets as long as they meet their listing criteria. Sudden delistings without any official announcement are rare.
Main message: stay informed, watch official announcements from the exchange and the project, and make decisions based on facts, not fear or rumors. This is not financial advice – always do your own research.