Market Makers Pull Liquidity as Flow Struggle Continues
Binance announced the removal of the FLOW/BTC spot and margin trading pairs Friday, effective January 3, while simultaneously placing the token on its "Monitoring Tag" list. The move forces an automatic settlement of all margin positions by Saturday and signals deteriorating institutional confidence in the asset following last week’s $3.9 million exploit.
The timing is conspicuous. Just days ago, the Flow Foundation alleged that a single account on an "unnamed exchange" was able to deposit 150 million fraudulently minted tokens, roughly 10% of the total supply, and swap them for Bitcoin (BTC) without triggering Anti-Money Laundering (AML) controls. The attacker subsequently withdrew over $5 million.
"This process exposed flaws in the exchange’s AML/KYC procedures and shifted financial risks to users who unknowingly purchased fraudulent tokens," the Flow Foundation stated in its post-mortem.
While Binance did not explicitly confirm it was the venue in question, the specific removal of the BTC pair, the exact exit route used by the attacker, has fueled market speculation that the exchange is insulating itself from further toxic flow or regulatory blowback.
Price Reaction & Recovery Chaos
FLOW struggled to hold the $0.11 mark Friday, trading down roughly 46% since the December 27 breach. The token hit a new all-time low of $0.097 earlier in the week as liquidity evaporated across major venues.
The network remains in a fragile recovery phase. Developers abandoned an initial proposal to roll back the chain state after facing severe backlash from node operators and bridge partners, who argued a rollback would permanently damage the chain’s claim to decentralization. Instead, the team is pursuing a "two-stage" recovery, focusing on restoring EVM functionality while leaving the fraudulent history on-chain but freezing the bad assets where possible.
For traders, the Binance "Monitoring Tag" is the final warning shot. Tokens on this list are subject to higher volatility checks and are statistically more likely to face full delisting if they fail to meet liquidity requirements over the coming quarter.