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Bybit opened ARX spot trading at 12:00 UTC on June 22, 2026 after enabling deposits earlier that day. CryptoSigy's owner angle is the new-market execution path: network support, withdrawal timing, early liquidity, and promotion-adjusted behavior.

What Happened

The official announcement lists ARX deposits from 04:00 UTC and spot trading from 12:00 UTC on June 22. Withdrawals are scheduled to open at 10:00 UTC on June 23. Bybit says deposits and withdrawals use the Solana network.

The same notice describes deposit and trading campaigns running from 12:00 UTC on June 22 through 11:00 UTC on July 7. Those incentives can affect measured volume, so promotional turnover should not be treated as proof of durable organic liquidity.

Why It Matters

A new spot market starts without a long venue-specific history for spread, order-book depth, withdrawal processing, or API stability. The relevant signal is not the listing headline alone but whether executable liquidity develops across the intended stake size.

Network identity matters as well. A user should verify the exchange deposit page, the Solana route, and the official token contract before transferring. A matching ticker or social post is not sufficient address verification.

This remains CryptoSigy-only because the source is an exchange listing and campaign notice. Radar would require a separate protocol launch or contract event with a genuinely different discovery intent.

What To Watch Next

Track spread, depth at several price levels, rejected or partial orders, deposit confirmations, and the June 23 withdrawal opening. Use small test transfers and limit orders until the route behaves consistently.

Separate campaign volume from non-incentivized activity through and after July 7. If depth falls sharply when rewards end, signals calibrated during the campaign may overstate normal exit capacity.

Also compare quoted spread with realized slippage at small sizes; displayed turnover alone cannot prove that exits are deep or orderly.

No listing requires a trade. Passing is appropriate when the contract, network, withdrawal route, or usable order-book depth cannot be verified.

Sources

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Continue with current exchange changes where listing mechanics alter execution or settlement risk.