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#代币估值与上线 Seeing the news that Bithumb has listed THQ, my first reaction isn't excitement but a few questions: What is the token circulation? What is the initial valuation? Is the team background clear?
The pitfalls I've encountered over the years have taught me one thing—listing on an exchange is not proof of a project's value; in fact, it often marks the beginning of a rug pull. The threshold for listing on major exchanges has long become a fundraising tool; as long as the money is in place, any project can queue up.
I've seen too many new tokens launch with great fanfare, promising this ecosystem and that application. But what happens? After three months, the team disappears, the token becomes worthless, and retail investors buy at high prices. The key is that many people haven't even looked at the tokenomics model or calculated the release curve—they're just dazzled by the "listing on a well-known exchange" banner.
Now my habit is: whenever there's news of a new token listing, I first check the project’s white paper, token distribution, and founding team background to see how initial liquidity is arranged. If the story is too elaborate, data is scarce, or the token distribution favors the founders excessively, I just pass.
This doesn't mean THQ is necessarily problematic, but after being in this market for a long time, I understand one thing—there may be the deepest traps behind the halo of an exchange. Protecting your principal is what matters in the long run.