Bybit outlines futures delisting process amid claims

No verified Bybit notice: AIN, SKYAI, DODO, ALU, SD futures

As of publication, there is no verified official notice confirming that AIN, SKYAI, DODO, ALU, or SD perpetual contracts have been delisted from the exchange’s futures market. The circulating claim remains unconfirmed pending an official derivatives announcement.

Absent a formal notice, references to delisting may reflect rumor or confusion between product types. Traders should distinguish futures contracts from spot listings when assessing unverified claims.

What this means for traders and immediate next steps

The exchange’s public announcements and Help Center show no posted delisting event for these specific perpetual contracts at the time of writing. Where delistings are enacted, exchanges typically provide notice, outline timelines, and detail settlement mechanics to manage open positions.

To clarify how formal changes are usually communicated, the exchange points users to its documented delisting procedures. “Bybit has published rules and processes around when and how tokens or trading pairs get delisted, particularly under their Spot Delisting Mechanism,” said Bybit Help Center.

Past rounds of removals have occurred on digital-asset venues for various reasons, including liquidity and risk standards; as reported by ainvest.com, such patterns are part of routine market hygiene rather than extraordinary action.

If a futures delisting were announced later, typical steps would include a notice period, trading halt, and final settlement mechanics for open positions. Funding updates and index/mark price references are generally clarified in the same notice to avoid disorderly liquidation outcomes.

How to verify Bybit contract status and avoid confusion

Verification should focus on official notices and live contract pages rather than social posts. Confirm whether a relevant perpetual instrument remains listable, quotable, and executable on the platform’s derivatives interfaces.

Quick checklist: where to confirm perpetual contract availability

  • Official Announcements or Blog: look for derivatives/perpetual updates by ticker and contract code.
  • Help Center: review delisting or maintenance notices that specify contract actions and timelines.
  • Derivatives instrument page: confirm order entry is enabled and funding timers are active.
  • Ticker search in app/web: check if the contract still appears under Perpetuals with live quotes.
  • Contract specs page: verify index constituents, funding cadence, and margin parameters remain published.
  • API/perpetual endpoints (if used): confirm the symbol is returned as tradable and not in the “delisted” state.

Futures versus spot: key differences during delisting rumors

Futures delisting affects derivatives exposure, funding accrual, and settlement of open interest. An official derivatives notice typically specifies when new positions stop, how existing positions will close, and what reference price applies.

Spot delisting concerns the underlying token’s order book, with separate timelines for trading halt, deposits, and withdrawals. A token can remain tradable on futures even if spot liquidity is constrained, and vice versa, depending on the exchange’s risk framework.

During rumor cycles, verify the specific product: perpetual contracts, dated futures (if any), or spot pairs may follow different procedures and schedules. Conflating these can lead to incorrect assumptions about tradability or settlement risk.

At the time of this writing, DODO (DODO) shows a price of $0.01536 with high 5.29% volatility, RSI(14) near 57.16, and 12 green days over the last 30 sessions. The SMA50 at 0.01664 versus SMA200 at 0.02785 indicates a longer-term downtrend context for the asset.

Disclaimer

The information provided in this article is for educational and informational purposes only and does not constitute financial, investment, or legal advice. Cryptocurrency and blockchain markets are volatile, always do your own research (DYOR) before making any financial decisions. While TokenTopNews.com strives for accuracy and reliability, we do not guarantee the completeness or timeliness of any information provided. Some articles may include AI-assisted content, but all posts are reviewed and edited by human editors to ensure accuracy, transparency, and compliance with Google’s content quality standards.

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Otto Bergmanr

Otte Bergmar is a crypto journalist covering Scandinavian and European blockchain markets, with a focus on decentralisation, privacy, and the AI–crypto interface. He reports on Web3 startups, market structure, and EU policy; from licensing regimes to consumer protection and cross-border compliance. At TokenTopNews, Otte transforms policy drafts, regulatory disclosures, and on-chain data into actionable, decision-ready insights, helping readers understand how regulation influences blockchain adoption across Europe.