OKX said on April 24 that it has launched a new parameter adjustment notification page covering position tiers, discount rate, tick size, and minimum order size. The exchange also said routine changes to those four parameter types will no longer be announced one by one.
For CryptoSigy, that makes this a signals-context story. The risk is not a single headline instrument. It is that traders who only watch the usual announcement feed can miss a routine change that still affects leverage, order placement, or execution quality.
What Happened
In its official help notice, OKX says the new page consolidates upcoming adjustments for four categories: position tiers, discount rate, tick size, and minimum order size. Users can filter by business line, instrument, and status to review before-and-after comparisons on the page itself.
OKX also says routine adjustments for those categories will no longer get separate announcement posts. Major or exceptional changes will still be announced independently. The same notice adds that if a tick-size change reduces significant digits, trading in the affected instrument will be suspended during the execution window and resumed afterward.
Why It Matters
That changes the monitoring workflow for active traders. A strategy that depends on a familiar tick increment, a certain tier ladder, or a minimum order template can stop behaving cleanly if the exchange shifts those parameters without the trader checking the new watch surface.
For signal followers, this is even more practical. A copied entry can look valid in theory and still fail in execution if the instrument's size step, leverage tier, or available discount treatment changed first. This is the kind of quiet exchange update that can create friction before price direction becomes the real problem.
What To Watch Next
Watch the new parameter page for instruments you trade repeatedly, especially around thin perpetuals or contracts where order-size precision matters. If your workflow depends on templates or bots, recheck whether they still map cleanly to the live instrument settings.
Also watch for any tick-size reductions that compress significant digits, because OKX says those can temporarily suspend trading during the adjustment itself. Execution risk now includes where the notice appears, not just what it says.