Binance to Remove 7 Spot Trading Pairs: ADA/BNB and NIGHT Delisted June 12
Binance announced a delisting of seven spot trading pairs on June 12 at 03:00 UTC. The Binance spot trading pairs affected include ADA/BNB and NIGHT/BNB, alongside DUSK/BTC, EGLD/ETH, ENSO/BNB, LSK/USDC, and S/BNB. Binance to Remove 7 Spot Trading Pairs also includes other tokens paired against BNB, BTC, ETH, and USDC.
In addition to the spot delisting, Binance will terminate spot trading bot services for the same Binance spot trading pairs on June 12 (where applicable). The exchange urged users to update or cancel their bots beforehand to reduce potential losses from forced shutdowns.
Midnight (NIGHT) was listed on Binance in March, which enabled spot trading with multiple pairs including USDT, USDC, BNB, and TRY. Binance typically performs periodic pair reviews and may delist based on liquidity and trading volume.
On the same day, Binance will also conduct margin and loan platform delistings, ending margin trading pairs for XNO, IQ, QUICK, and DGB.
For traders, this Binance to Remove 7 Spot Trading Pairs decision directly impacts order routing, liquidity, and execution risk on the affected markets ahead of June 12.
Neutral
This is a targeted exchange action (Binance to Remove 7 Spot Trading Pairs) rather than a system-wide market event. However, it can still affect short-term pricing and liquidity for the specific instruments as liquidity concentrates away from the delisted pairs. Similar past exchange delistings often lead to (1) thinning order books before the cutoff date, (2) increased slippage for traders who keep limit orders near the close window, and (3) momentum shifts when bots or hedging strategies are disrupted.
Because the announcement is dated (June 12) and includes both pair delisting and termination of spot trading bot services, near-term volatility risk is most likely for ADA/BNB and NIGHT/BNB (and the other listed pairs). But the broader market impact should be limited: major assets like BTC and ETH are only indirectly affected through pair removal, not through a token-wide ban.
Longer term, if liquidity migrates smoothly to alternative pairs, the effect may fade; if traders exit entirely from the affected tokens/pairs, there could be persistent relative weakness versus peers. For margin/loan delistings (XNO, IQ, QUICK, DGB) on the same day, watch for secondary cascades in leverage demand, which can amplify short-term moves in those tokens.