July 13, 2026 · Exchange Listing Post-Mortem · APAC FINSTAB

Why Coinbase Added GROVE: Listing Signals Other Exchanges Should Watch

Exchange ListingGROVEOKXToken Listing ComplianceMarket Structure

Quick answer

As of 2026-07-13, APAC FINSTAB exchange snapshots show GROVE present on Bybit, Coinbase and absent from OKX, Gate.io, Binance. The strongest observed weekly change is: Bybit, Coinbase. This does not prove a OKX rejection; it shows a listing-distribution gap worth analyzing through venue-specific listing, liquidity, custody and compliance requirements.

GROVE appears in the Coinbase snapshot, making it a useful case for reading what U.S.-venue listing inclusion may signal to other exchange listing teams.

Evidence matrix

VenueSnapshot statusObserved pairsSnapshot file
OKXNot listed in snapshotexchange-listing/data/okx-2026-07-13.json
BybitNew this weekGROVEUSDTexchange-listing/data/bybit-2026-07-13.json
Gate.ioNot listed in snapshotexchange-listing/data/gate-2026-07-13.json
CoinbaseNew this weekGROVE-USDexchange-listing/data/coinbase-2026-07-13.json
BinanceNot listed in snapshotexchange-listing/data/binance-2026-07-13.json

What the split may mean

  1. Venue sequencing is not linear. A token can clear one major exchange and remain absent from another because each venue weights legal risk, market demand, custody, surveillance and commercial priority differently.
  2. Liquidity is necessary but not sufficient. Offshore demand, market-maker support, or a regional user base can support one listing path without automatically satisfying every venue's market-integrity threshold.
  3. Distribution quality matters. Concentrated supply, unclear unlocks, opaque market-making, or suspicious volume can slow a conservative listing review even when retail demand exists elsewhere.
  4. Operational support matters. Chain support, custody readiness, deposits/withdrawals, incident history, and token contract controls can all affect venue sequencing.

Compliance checklist for projects in this category

SEO query targets

Method: Exchange snapshots show listing presence or absence at a point in time. They do not prove that a venue rejected, approved, reviewed, or intentionally avoided an asset. This analysis should be read as a listing-distribution study, not as confirmation of any private exchange review decision.

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