Binance to delist ALCX, ARDR, NFP, and POND on July 10, 2026

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Binance is pulling the plug on four more tokens. ALCX (Alchemix), ARDR (Ardor), NFP (NFPrompt), and POND (Marlin) will all be removed from the exchange on July 10, 2026.

The warning signs were already there

Binance has been telegraphing its intentions through its Monitoring Tag system, a kind of yellow card for tokens that aren’t meeting the exchange’s standards for liquidity, trading volume, or project development activity.

NFP and POND were both flagged with the Monitoring Tag effective April 30, 2026. ALCX followed about three weeks later, receiving its tag on May 22, 2026. ARDR’s trajectory was arguably the most drawn out: Binance had already removed specific trading pairs for the token back on February 10, 2026.

Binance evaluates listed assets on an ongoing basis, looking at factors including team commitment, development activity, trading volume, liquidity, network stability, and regulatory compliance.

What happens to your tokens

Delisting does not mean your tokens vanish. If you hold ALCX, ARDR, NFP, or POND in a Binance wallet, you retain ownership and can withdraw them to an external wallet. The tokens will continue to exist on their respective blockchains.

Previous Binance delistings have often resulted in double-digit price drops following the announcement. Traders who see the writing on the wall rush for the exits, creating a sell-off that compounds the very liquidity problems that triggered the delisting review in the first place.

What this means for investors

If you currently hold any of these four tokens on Binance, the clock is ticking. July 10 is the hard deadline for trading, after which withdrawal will likely remain open for a limited window, but trading pairs will go dark.

The Monitoring Tag exists for a reason, and treating it as actionable intelligence rather than background noise could save investors from painful drawdowns. Tokens that end up on the Monitoring Tag list are disproportionately likely to end up delisted, and the price action between tagging and delisting rarely rewards those who hold through it.

Disclosure: This article was edited by Editorial Team. For more information on how we create and review content, see our Editorial Policy.

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