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Upbit and Bithumb Delist Fan Token SPURS and Others Amid Tighter Listing Reviews

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The delisting notices hit almost simultaneously. South Korea’s largest exchange Upbit removed the Tottenham Hotspur Fan Token (SPURS/BTC), while its rival Bithumb went further, pulling five assets—GRACY, SPURS, ZTX, WIKEN, and Step App (FITFI). Both platforms pointed to the results of routine project reviews, according to the original report . The action underscores how Korean exchanges are no longer hesitating to cull underperforming or non-compliant tokens, even when the projects have recognizable names or loyal followings.

SPURS, a fan token tied to the Premier League club, lands squarely in the crosshairs of an industry that has grown skeptical of sports-linked crypto assets. Once marketed as a way to deepen fan engagement, most fan tokens have seen trading volumes dwindle and utility questioned. Bithumb’s decision to also delist GRACY, ZTX, WIKEN, and FitFi shows the reviews are casting a wide net—spanning metaverse projects, fitness apps, and governance tokens. The exchange offered no granular breakdown of each project’s failings, only stating they failed the ongoing evaluations. Traders holding these tokens on the respective platforms now face a clock to exit positions or move assets off-exchange.

Why Korean Exchanges Are Cleaning House

South Korea has one of the most stringent crypto oversight frameworks in Asia. After the Terra ecosystem collapse, regulators doubled down on investor protection mandates, pressuring exchanges to manage listing risks proactively. Upbit and Bithumb, which together account for the vast majority of domestic volume, have built internal review processes that examine developer activity, trading liquidity, regulatory compliance, and sometimes even the project’s legal standing in other jurisdictions. A drop in any one of those metrics can trigger a delisting recommendation. For traders outside Korea, the moves are a reminder that centralized exchange listings are not permanent guarantees—especially on platforms that answer to assertive financial watchdogs.

Developer activity has increasingly become a quiet benchmark for listing committees. Data on weekly blockchain developer contributions, such as the metrics tracked in weekly rankings , often surface as a proxy for a project’s long-term viability. Projects that ship little code or rely on flashy marketing without technical follow-through tend to fall out of favor. While it is unclear if the five delisted tokens specifically tripped developer thresholds, the pattern fits a broader exchange logic: if a team isn’t building, the token becomes a liquidity risk more than an investable asset.

A Split Screen for Altcoins

The delistings land in a week where some altcoins are posting double-digit gains. A recent market snapshot showed TON surging over 80% and SIREN and VVV climbing sharply, proving that speculative energy still courses through the market. But that enthusiasm is unequally distributed. While narrative-driven plays attract capital, niche tokens on Korean exchanges can be stripped of their on-ramps overnight. The contrast between celebration and liquidation is sharp: holders of FITFI, for example, must now contend with price slippage and limited exit venues, while traders chasing weekly gainers operate in a completely different liquidity reality.

What is uncertain is whether these delistings will spread to other exchanges. Upbit and Bithumb often move in lockstep on major listing decisions, but international platforms may not follow. A token removed from Bithumb might still find refuge on a decentralized exchange or a Tier-2 centralized venue, though volumes will likely suffer. For the fan token sector, the SPURS removal is another credibility dent after several European clubs saw their tokens lose 80-90% from peak valuations. The question coming into focus is whether fan tokens have a sustainable product-market fit or whether they were purely a bull-market novelty now being quietly retired by the exchanges that once enabled them.

Regulatory Ripples Beyond Korea

Korean exchange reviews don’t happen in a vacuum. Globally, regulators are tightening listing standards, and legislative battles over market structure are playing out in real time. In the U.S., for instance, bank-backed resistance to a major crypto bill is testing how much control exchanges will have over asset onboarding. Korea’s approach is more direct: rather than waiting for lawsuits or enforcement actions, exchanges self-police, pre-emptively removing assets before they become liabilities. For project teams, the message is clear—maintaining a listing on a top Korean exchange requires continuous performance, not just a successful launchpad debut.

For market participants, the immediate effect is a short-term scramble as delisted tokens get dumped. Over the long run, the tightening reinforces a bifurcated market where strong, actively developed projects survive and weaker ones are cut. The silent losers are retail investors who may have bought into these tokens expecting exchange endorsement to carry inherent value. As South Korean exchanges refine their review cadence, the pace of delistings may even accelerate, forcing portfolio adjustments and a sharper focus on project fundamentals. The next review cycle will likely be watched not just by token teams, but by regulators across the region looking for a model that balances innovation with investor safety.

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