Altcoins Talks - Cryptocurrency Forum
Crypto Discussion Forum => Cryptocurrency discussions => Topic started by: Domithra on November 26, 2018, 01:37:20 AM
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Removing a coin from an exchange cannot entirely destroy the coin especially when it is listed on many exchanges. This can affect it adversely to a certain degree. What can kill a coin is when trading of that coin ceases, thus when crypto users especially buyers decide not to purchase the coin. This will leave all sell orders hanging and eventually devalue the coin - the death of the coin.
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Removing a coin from an exchange cannot entirely destroy the coin especially when it is listed on many exchanges. This can affect it adversely to a certain degree. What can kill a coin is when trading of that coin ceases, thus when crypto users especially buyers decide not to purchase the coin. This will leave all sell orders hanging and eventually devalue the coin - the death of the coin.
The coin will die if it has no utilization or demand. exchange is only a secondary rule of the life cycle of a crypto-platform for me the demand was created through the working product and services that the platform was offered.
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The primary reason for a death of a coin is poor product, everything is else on the voting list is just secondary.
Who would want to invest in a project with a poor product?
Would any exchange really risk their reputation for listing a coin knowing it does not have a solid fundamental?
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Removing a coin from an exchange cannot entirely destroy the coin especially when it is listed on many exchanges. This can affect it adversely to a certain degree. What can kill a coin is when trading of that coin ceases, thus when crypto users especially buyers decide not to purchase the coin. This will leave all sell orders hanging and eventually devalue the coin - the death of the coin.
Interest of the people, if people don't care about it - coin are dead
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In my oppinion, as a coin is a currency with an intrinsic value and finite supply, the laws of the offer and demand apply, so when there are no buyers for that currency, it will have no value as there is no demand...
A lot of people invest in projects that have no product... so having no product or a bad product is bad but not necessarily the dead of the coin, as long as there are persons interested in trading it...
cheers ;D
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That's right, if there is no demand for a token, then after a while this token will die if nobody will not start to buy this token or the company itself doesn’t start doing something to avoid it.
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I think that the death of a coin is determined by an unsuitable product, which in the process becomes not interesting to users, and therefore the demand also falls!
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We can say that the coin is dead if no one trades and buys it. As long as there is a demand of the coin in market, I think the coin is still alive. This is my own opinion, the demand in market should be the main reason.
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What can kill a coin is when trading of that coin ceases, thus when crypto users especially buyers decide not to purchase the coin. This will leave all sell orders hanging and eventually devalue the coin - the death of the coin.
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This can affect it adversely to a certain degree. What can kill a coin is when trading of that coin ceases, thus when crypto users especially buyers decide not to purchase the coin. This will leave all sell orders hanging and eventually devalue the coin - the death of the coin.
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I think but, what’s missing in the crypto world has been a legitimizing event that brings them into everyday commerce. Even the millennial commerce of “all things tech” hasn’t seen it. Those lucky speculators who bought the hype will say that that lack of utilization is the very reason they were attracted in the first place.
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This can affect it adversely to a certain degree. What can kill a coin is when trading of that coin ceases, thus when crypto users especially buyers decide not to purchase the coin.
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No transactions at all in market is the indicator of dead coin. No people buy the coin and no one believe in the coin. If the condition is the same as what I said, so it can conclude as the death of a coin.
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Coins will die when traders and buyers stop patronizing each other.
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Basically, all the options can lead to the death of a coin. Those can give big influences in a coin. Because they are possible to contribute in dead coin, I think to choose all. But for the most, it is about no transaction.
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Removing a coin from an exchange cannot entirely destroy the coin especially when it is listed on many exchanges. This can affect it adversely to a certain degree. What can kill a coin is when trading of that coin ceases, thus when crypto users especially buyers decide not to purchase the coin. This will leave all sell orders hanging and eventually devalue the coin - the death of the coin.
What you say can be true also. However i think even if for whatever reason the particular coin is de-listed from an exchange if it is a good ICO with good product the coin holders will still hold on to the coin, de-listing can just be temporary what is more important is the whole product they are launching out.
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it all depends on the #DevelopmentTeam , if they have created a good product, then there will be a demand for the coin, if they do not develop, the coin will die.
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The function of the coin is not fully useful for the general public.
Suppose that the Coin cannot be traded in real use, such as payment of electricity tokens, water tokens, circulation tokens at the Mall.
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A poor product cause investors not interested to buy the coin. Then, it will have no transactions on market and it may be removed from the exchanges. This is the steps of the death of a coin. It shows the first factor is about the product.
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Once a coin is delisted its one of the major factor of investors pull out fund from that project. Meaning it got delisted due to non volume or activity and no demand for that project. We can't say it is the reason but attributed to lead its end.
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Ultimately for me it would be the fundamentals, therefore if the project is of poor quality. Price and listings only determine the short-term in my opinion.
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I suggest include ALL OF THE ABOVE choice.
The death of coin is not just only one issue rather a lot's of issues to be considered before they will end.
The main reason could be the subject of budget.
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My answer is unlisting from exchanges. No people can buy the coin if the coin will be nowhere, no single exchange is listing the coin. This perfectly kills the coin and lead it to be a dead coin.
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For me, it's the continuous decline of trading volume throughout the time until the majority of the holders of that
certain coin or token began to do a sale exit. Trading volumes are really important for me and in my point of view,
it can determine if a coin or token is going to be stagnant or going to die.