MOVE Plummets 16% Following Coinbase Delisting – A Classic Crypto Bloodbath
Another day, another altcoin takes a nosedive after failing the exchange viability test. MOVE joins the graveyard of tokens axed by Coinbase—because nothing says ’healthy market’ like centralized gatekeepers deciding what survives.
What happened? Coinbase wielded its delisting hammer, triggering panic sells. Liquidity vanished faster than a Bitcoin maximalist’s patience for ’Web3’ buzzwords. The 16% crash proves yet again that in crypto, your asset is only as strong as its last CEX listing.
Silver lining? Degens now get to ’buy the dip’ before the next exchange inevitably cuts the cord. Just don’t act surprised when the house always wins.
Why Did Coinbase Delist MOVE?
Although Coinbase has the well-documented ability to boost certain cryptoassets by listing them, the reverse is apparently also true. The exchange will suspend all MOVE trading in exactly two weeks, immediately causing the asset to plummet.
In addition to this 16% price drop, MOVE’s daily trading volume surged 130%. This suggests that MOVE holders are selling their assets after Coinbase’s delisting announcement.
This is a serious blow to Movement Network’s credibility and reputation. The project showed significant potential and even outperformed Bitcoin and Ethereum during the Q1 2025 cycle. It also raised $100 million in VC funding earlier this year, backed by notable investors.
However, Coinbase’s delisting is not unfounded. Earlier today, Movement Labs announced that a planned airdrop was being delayed, helping spark frustration. That may have been the final straw for Coinbase, on top of pre-existing problems.
From a perspective of someone who’s been building on Movement since day one — before mainnet, before the hype, before the community we have today even existed:
The recent MM incident and MoveDrop delay are real setbacks. There’s no sugarcoating it. But surely they don’t define… https://t.co/rfSrUKxxpq pic.twitter.com/STng5Oid4P
Specifically, Movement Labs claimed it would investigate an instance of potential fraud in mid-March. A market Maker dumped 66 million MOVE tokens, triggering a sharp price drop.
New evidence has come to light, leading users to allege that Movement Labs was directly or indirectly complicit in these dealings. The company allegedly loaned 50% of MOVE’s supply to investment platform Web3Port, which proceeded to dump a large volume of tokens.
Based on these incidents, the community fears a repeat of MANTRA’s historic OM crash. Meanwhile, Movement Labs is backed by the Trump Family’s World Liberty Financial. The DeFi project holds more than 7 million MOVE tokens.