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🔥 «GET Delisting: A One-Month Lesson.»
«If the market decided to test me — it should know I learn fast!» 😄
Today I want to share a real story from my experience on the Gate exchange. I’ve been in crypto for only 7 months, so every event is a new level of understanding for me. For a full month, I published posts on Gate Square and earned 19,514.20 GET.
When I first entered the GET/USDT trading pair, the price was 0.0015587 USDT. If I had sold immediately at market price, I would have received around 30 USDT. However, I placed a limit order slightly higher — not out of greed, but due to lack of experience and insufficient understanding of the token. I simply didn’t know the asset or its prospects. That was my first encounter with GET.
Within a day, instead of growth, I saw a decline. The price dropped to 0.0015315 USDT, then to 0.0010588 USDT, then to 0.000983 USDT — three zeros after the decimal point. I watched the numbers change in real time. With only 7 months of experience, this was an emotional stress test. You don’t yet have the composure of a market veteran, but you begin to understand that crypto is about speed and decision-making — and that hesitation can be costly.
On March 3, 2026, I was still monitoring the market. On the morning of March 4, I checked the news and saw Gate’s official announcement: 30 tokens, including GET, would be delisted. Deposits were already suspended. Spot trading would cease at 11:00 on March 11, 2026 (UTC+8). Perpetual contract markets would switch to reduce-only mode at 15:30 on March 5 (UTC+8), and positions would be automatically closed the next day based on the average index price. All open orders would be canceled. This was no longer volatility — it was a clear signal to act.
After March 25, 2026, users could apply for a buyback. The buyback price for GET was 0.00017766 USDT, with a maximum compensation of 100 USDT per user. The application window was from 16:00 (UTC) March 24 to 16:00 (UTC) March 31, 2026.
I calculated the difference and realized that waiting would mean accepting a greater loss in value. This was no longer about emotions, but about rational risk management.
I placed a sell order at 0.0008277 USDT for 19,514.20 GET. The order executed immediately. I received 16.15 USDT. Yes, that was less than the ~30 USDT I could have received earlier — but significantly more than the buyback rate. Later, I checked the market again and saw the new price: 0.0004441 USDT. That confirmed my decision was correct. I preserved part of my capital — and in crypto, capital preservation is already a win.
Delisting is the removal of a token from exchange trading. Reasons may include low liquidity, rule violations, technical issues, or weak project activity. After delisting, liquidity typically collapses and price declines sharply. Trading becomes unavailable on that platform, investors exit positions, volumes shrink, and risk increases. Reaction speed determines the outcome.
What I learned:
• Any unfamiliar token requires immediate analysis.
• Without fundamental understanding, do not delay decisions.
• Exchange announcements must be monitored regularly.
• Seven months in crypto is only the beginning.
• Experience comes through practice, not theory.
How I will act going forward:
• I will not sell or exchange Bitcoin or GT (the exchange token) — they are core capital.
• I will keep several proven altcoins in my portfolio.
• I will assess all other assets quickly and without illusion.
• I will always check liquidity and trading volume.
• My priority is capital preservation.
In short, GET was a low-liquidity asset with limited demand that ultimately faced delisting. Such tokens are highly sensitive to exchange decisions. When platform support ends, the market reacts instantly. If you fail to act quickly, losses can increase significantly.
Yes, it is disappointing when a month of work results in 16.15 USDT instead of nearly 30 USDT. But it would be worse to lose almost everything. I am not upset — I am more experienced.
Every month in crypto feels like a year of education. Now I know for certain: knowledge about an asset is not optional — it is essential.
Now a few questions to my crypto community:
❓ Have you ever experienced a token delisting?
❓ How quickly do you react to official exchange announcements?
❓ Do you sell unfamiliar assets immediately?
❓ What was the most valuable lesson you learned during your first year in crypto?
Crypto experience / Market lesson / Delisting case study 🚀
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