How to spot a fragile Token Launch before you buy in
How to spot a fragile token launch before you buy in
Most retail traders learn about liquidity the hard way — watching a token crater in the first hour and wondering what they missed. The signals were there. They just didn’t know what to look for.
Token launches fail at a startling rate, and the common narrative blames the project, the market timing, or bad luck. But after working with over 500 token launches and tracking data across 35+ market-making firms, the team at Forgd has a different conclusion: most launch failures are structural, and most of them are visible in advance — if you know where to look.
Scott Byron, Managing Director at Forgd, joined Ashton Addison on Blockchain Interviews to walk through exactly this. What follows is a practical breakdown of the warning signs retail traders can use before committing capital to a new token launch.
Why launch day is already too late to diagnose the problem
The decisions that determine whether a launch succeeds are made months before the token ever hits an exchange. Market maker selection, vesting schedule structure, exchange listing strategy, liquidity depth — all of it gets locked in during the lead-up period. By the time a token goes live, the foundation is either solid or it isn’t.
“Once you see fragile liquidity on day one, recovery is almost impossible. The narrative breaks, the community loses confidence, and the market maker has little incentive to defend a price that’s already under pressure.”
Scott Byron, Managing Director, ForgdThis is why retail traders who wait for launch day to evaluate a project are often evaluating the aftermath of decisions that were already made. The better question is: what does the pre-launch setup tell you?
The red flags worth watching before you buy
1. Thin or missing order book depth
One of the clearest early signals is the order book itself. A well-supported launch will show meaningful bid depth within 1–2% of the current price on both sides. When you see a wide spread, steep drop-off just below the current price, or almost no visible bids, that’s a sign the market maker either isn’t active or is providing minimal support.
This isn’t just a cosmetic issue. Thin order books mean small sell orders can move price dramatically — which triggers stop-losses, creates panic, and accelerates the kind of cascade that turns a soft open into a collapse. Forgd’s data across hundreds of launches shows this pattern repeating constantly.
2. Only on a DEX, or only on a CEX
Exchange listing strategy is something most retail traders overlook entirely, but it’s a meaningful signal. A legitimate, well-funded launch should have presence on both centralized exchanges (CEXes) and decentralized exchanges (DEXes) — they serve different audiences and require different liquidity approaches.
A project that launches exclusively on a DEX may be doing so because it couldn’t secure a CEX listing, which raises questions about vetting and credibility. A project that launches only on a CEX may be avoiding the on-chain transparency that DEX trading provides. The strongest launches cover both, and they do it intentionally — CEXes bring volume and distribution, DEXes attract the protocol-native audience most likely to become long-term holders.
Geography matters too. A project skipping Asian exchange listings is deliberately cutting off a major portion of the buyer base. That either reflects poor planning or a very narrow target market — neither is a great sign.
For founders navigating this themselves, Forgd’s Exchange and Listing Research tool makes this data publicly accessible for the first time. It provides visibility on listing fees, security deposits, historical listing performance, and due diligence questionnaire requirements across top-tier CEXes including Binance, OKX, Bybit, Coinbase, and KuCoin — information that was previously only available through backchannels and relationships. For a retail trader, seeing that a project chose exchanges well-suited to their profile and FDV is itself a green flag. It suggests the team did the homework.
3. A vesting schedule that puts pressure on price immediately
Vesting schedules and token unlock timelines are public information on most launches, but few retail traders actually model out what they mean for circulating supply in the first 30, 60, and 90 days. This is worth doing.
Aggressive early unlocks — especially for team, advisor, or early investor allocations — create natural selling pressure right when the project needs price stability most. When those unlocks hit at the same time a market maker’s initial commitment period ends, the combination can be toxic. Byron describes this as one of the most common structural failures Forgd encounters: teams that didn’t think through the timing interaction between their vesting cliffs and their liquidity support schedule.
This is another area where Forgd has built a free tool that benefits both founders and informed investors. The Tokenomics Research tool lets you model token distributions, emission schedules, and demand drivers, then run price discovery simulations to stress-test how a given supply structure holds up at launch. For a retail trader, it’s worth cross-referencing any project’s published tokenomics against what well-structured launches actually look like — the difference is usually visible immediately.
- Order book depth within 1–2% of price on both sides at open — is there meaningful bid support, or does it fall off a cliff?
- Is the token listed on both a CEX and a DEX? Single-venue launches warrant closer scrutiny. Use Forgd’s Exchange Research tool to check if the chosen exchanges match the project’s FDV and profile.
- Check the vesting schedule — when do team, advisor, and early investor unlocks hit relative to launch? Use Forgd’s Tokenomics Research tool to benchmark the supply structure against well-performing launches.
- Is there a named, verifiable market maker? Projects that can’t or won’t disclose this are hiding something.
- What does post-launch trading volume look like after hour 1? Sustained volume is a good sign. A spike followed by a cliff is not.
The market maker question most investors never ask
One of the most underappreciated signals in a token launch is whether the project can tell you who their market maker is — and whether that firm has a verifiable track record.
The market making industry for crypto tokens has historically operated with almost no transparency. There are 30+ firms active in this space, operating under two primary engagement structures: a loan model, where the market maker borrows tokens and uses them to provide liquidity in exchange for an option at a fixed price, and a retainer model, where the project pays a monthly fee for ongoing liquidity services. Each structure creates different incentives, and understanding which one a project is using tells you a lot about whether the market maker’s interests are aligned with long-term price stability.
Forgd built its market maker leaderboard specifically because this data didn’t exist anywhere. Founders were choosing market makers based on reputation and relationships rather than actual performance data — and retail traders had no way to evaluate quality at all. The leaderboard, available at forgd.com, tracks performance across firms and gives both founders and informed investors a benchmark.
What good liquidity actually looks like
It’s worth being specific about what you’re looking for as a positive signal, not just what to avoid. A well-supported launch tends to show consistent spreads through the first few hours of trading, not dramatic swings. Volume stays relatively stable rather than spiking on open and then disappearing. The price may move, but it moves in both directions — evidence that the order book is active and that there’s genuine two-sided interest.
Projects that have done the work tend to want to show it. If a team is transparent about their market maker, has published their vesting schedule, and is listed on multiple quality exchanges, those aren’t just checkboxes — they’re signals that someone planned this out. That doesn’t guarantee success, but it eliminates a category of failure that takes down a surprising number of launches that otherwise had strong fundamentals.
“The projects that succeed in 2026 are the ones that treat the capital markets side of their launch with the same rigor they apply to the product. Most still don’t.”
Scott Byron, Managing Director, ForgdThe shift Forgd is trying to accelerate is a move from reputation-based decision making to data-based decision making — on both sides of the table. Founders picking market makers with better information. Retail traders evaluating launches with a clearer framework. The more that happens, the fewer entirely preventable launch failures there are.
For retail traders, the practical takeaway is simple: the information you need to make a better call is almost always available before you buy. You just have to know what you’re looking at.
