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Upbit’s Daily Listing Spree: The Strategy Behind the Crypto Exchange’s Relentless Expansion

Upbit’s Daily Listing Spree: The Strategy Behind the Crypto Exchange’s Relentless Expansion

Author:
Beincrypto
Published:
2025-09-12 01:49:34
19
3

Upbit isn't just listing coins—it's flooding the market. Day after day, new tokens hit South Korea's largest exchange, creating a whirlwind of trading activity that leaves competitors scrambling.

The listing frenzy serves multiple strategic purposes. Each new asset attracts fresh capital, expands user base, and solidifies Upbit's dominance in Asia's most aggressive crypto market. It's a volume game—more listings mean more trading pairs, more fees, and more market influence.

Regulatory positioning plays key role too. By continuously vetting and adding projects, Upbit demonstrates compliance rigor to Korea's Financial Services Authority while actually expanding its risk exposure. Traditional finance types might call this 'diversification'—crypto natives know it's calculated saturation.

Market makers love it, traders chase the pumps, and the cycle feeds itself. While Wall Street still debates Bitcoin ETFs, Upbit adds three new tokens before lunch. Sometimes the old guard just doesn't get it—they're too busy calculating risk ratios to notice the entire financial system shifting beneath their feet.

Upbit Ramps Up Listings to Defend Market Lead

On Wednesday, Upbit listed Linea (LINEA). Recently, Upbit also added Pump.Fun (PUMP), Holoworld AI (HOLO), OpenLedger (OPEN), Worldcoin (WLD), Flock.io (FLOCK), and RedStone (RED). That brought seven new tokens in just 11 days—already more than its total listings in August.

Upbit had traditionally followed a conservative listing approach compared with competitors. According to a local media report, however, the exchange has shifted course after Bithumb began closing the market share gap.

The top 10 most-traded coins on the Upbit on September 11 / Source: CoinGecko

For example, WLD, previously traded on Bithumb, Coinone, and Korbit, more than doubled in one week, pushing Bithumb’s market share to 46% on Tuesday. Upbit quickly countered, announcing a WLD listing at 7 pm and launching trading two hours later.

Data from the Digital Asset eXchange Alliance (DAXA), an association of Korean crypto exchanges, shows that as of late August, Bithumb listed 406 tokens—roughly 1.5 times more than Upbit’s 260. CoinGecko figures place Bithumb’s market share at 46%, compared with Upbit’s 50.6%.

신규 디지털 자산 월드코인(WLD) 거래지원 안내

✅ 지원 마켓: KRW, BTC, USDT 마켓
📅 거래지원 개시 시점 : 2025-09-09 21:30 KST 예정

🔗 공지 바로가기:https://t.co/TvTsvaEnhQ#Upbit #WLD@worldcoin pic.twitter.com/epzli7FntI

— Upbit Korea (@Official_Upbit) September 9, 2025

The two exchanges have long dominated Korea’s crypto market. Bithumb briefly overtook Upbit in late 2023 through a zero-fee trading campaign but quickly lost the lead. Analysts note the current challenge is more significant, as Bithumb’s gains came without special promotions.

From January to August 2025, average daily trading volume reached $3.2 billion (₩4.4 trillion) on Upbit and $1.2 billion (₩1.6 trillion) on Bithumb, totaling $4.4 billion (₩6 trillion). That figure nearly doubled from $2.2 billion (₩2.9 trillion) a year earlier.

Listing Race Sparks Investor Protection Fears

Industry experts warn that the intense competition for listing tokens could weaken due diligence. Accelerated reviews risk approving assets that fail to meet requirements. In the second half of 2025 alone, Korea’s five largest won-based exchanges delisted 25 tokens, many of which were less than a year old.

Upbit has stepped up delistings alongside listings. It removed 10 tokens in 2023, 3 in 2024, and 11 in the first eight months of 2025, its highest total. Bithumb delisted 26, 19, and 20 tokens during the same periods, maintaining about 20 removals annually. Upbit’s delisting ratio jumped from 8% to 24%, while Bithumb’s eased from 24% to 21%.

An industry official, who requested anonymity, said, “With South Korea’s market limited to spot trading, listing expansion has become the only competitive tool. Stricter regulations ironically fuel fiercer listing battles, eroding investor protection.” He indicates that South Korean regulations restrict exchanges to spot trading only, prohibiting derivatives and other products.

|Square

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