Bybit is delisting seven tokens, CBK, FLIP, FUEL, OL, PAAL, SAROS, and STREAM, from its spot market, removing the trading pairs from the exchange and leaving holders to plan their next steps
Bybit is delisting seven tokens, CBK, FLIP, FUEL, OL, PAAL, SAROS, and STREAM, from its spot market, removing the trading pairs from the exchange and leaving holders to plan their next steps around the platform's official timeline.
The action was published through Bybit's official announcements channel, which named all seven affected assets in a single spot-market notice, Bybit's delisting announcement shows. For related coverage, see Coinbase Futures Delists TON: Market Impact.
The move is a straightforward spot-market delisting rather than a broader statement about any of the projects behind the tokens. It affects where these assets can be traded on Bybit specifically, not their status across the wider market. For related coverage, see Bybit Delists ARTY, CTA, GTAI, LBTC, MBOX, NAKA and U.
The Seven Tokens Bybit Is Removing
The delisting covers CBK, FLIP, FUEL, OL, PAAL, SAROS, and STREAM. All seven were named together in the exchange notice, which frames the removal as a single spot-market action. For related coverage, see OKX Lists GRAM on Spot Market: What the New Trading Pair Means.
For traders following these markets on Bybit, the practical effect is direct: the spot pairs for these tokens will no longer be available on the exchange once the delisting takes effect. Holders who have used Bybit as their venue for these assets will need to review their positions.
The change is platform-specific. A delisting on one exchange does not remove a token from other venues where it may still trade, so the impact here is confined to Bybit's spot market.
How Bybit Handles Spot Delistings
Bybit outlines the process it follows when removing assets in its spot delisting mechanism help article, which sets out how trading is halted and how users are expected to manage remaining balances.
Readers holding any of the affected tokens should rely on the official Bybit notice for the exact timeline, including when trading stops and any deadlines tied to withdrawals or account actions.
What Traders Should Watch Next
The immediate considerations after a delisting are trading access, liquidity, and the steps required to move or withdraw affected balances before the relevant cutoff. Those are the points the exchange notice is designed to address.
This is not the first such move to watch on Bybit. The exchange recently delisted ARTY, CTA, GTAI, LBTC, MBOX, NAKA and U from spot trading, and it has also continued adding pairs, as seen when ARX was listed on Bybit spot.
Exchange delistings are a recurring feature across major platforms, with Binance similarly having removed ALCX, ARDR, NFP and POND from its spot market. Traders affected by the Bybit removal should follow the exchange's official channel for confirmation of dates and any further instructions.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial or investment advice. Cryptocurrency and digital asset markets carry significant risk. Always do your own research before making decisions.
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