Cedomis Listing Date Pushed Back Again, Team Now Says CEDO Selloff
Cedomis told its own holders to sell. That's not a normal announcement from a project heading toward a healthy listing. The official X account posted on June 13 that all $CEDO holders should sell their tokens before June 14, 10:00 AM UTC. The reason? The team said liquidity for $CEDO would be removed at that deadline. If you missed that window, you'd be stuck holding a token with no exit. That's a serious development. And it's coming after a string of problems this community has already dealt with.
What Was Supposed to Happen
The CEDO airdrop claim portal went live on the Avalanche Chain in early June. The Season 1 claim opened at 15:00 UTC on June 5, with a 90-day window before unclaimed tokens get redirected to the treasury.
On-chain deployment for $CEDO was confirmed for June 8, and trading was set to begin on June 11, 2026. The team warned holders not to buy any token before the official contract address dropped, as fake tokens were already circulating.
So the plan looked straightforward on paper. Airdrop live. Staking live. Listing June 11. The community was watching. June 11 came and went. No listing followed.
Then the Liquidity Warning Dropped
Two days after the missed listing date, the team posted an urgent notice. All holders advised to sell $CEDO before June 14, 10:00 AM UTC. Liquidity would be pulled at that time. The announcement said anyone who didn't sell before the deadline might be "unable to trade" their tokens after liquidity removal. The team asked for "cooperation."
That phrasing raised eyebrows immediately. Projects that plan to list on exchanges don't typically remove liquidity days after their supposed launch date. They add it. When a team pulls liquidity, two things usually happen. Either the project is pivoting or restructuring in some way, or token holders get left with nothing they can sell. Neither outcome is what the community was expecting.
No Exchange Was Ever Confirmed
This part matters. At no point did the team officially confirm a DEX or CEX listing. Platforms like Uniswap and LBank were considered possible candidates based on other project activity, but the team never announced exchange partnerships publicly.
The absence of confirmed exchange listings at launch was already flagged as a risk factor worth watching. Community members were told to monitor official channels. No public announcement ever came confirming a real exchange.
Red Flags That Were There From the Start
The biggest risks identified in the Cedomis presale review were information risk, execution risk, and liquidity risk. Information risk means buyers didn't have enough verified data. Execution risk meant the team may not ship. Liquidity risk meant exit options after launch could be thin or delayed.
All three of those risks are now playing out. The presale was hosted directly through the project website rather than a named launchpad. That structure removes one possible review layer. Key disclosures like team identity, audit status, vesting, and token utility were not supplied before the sale opened.
Is This a Scam? Here's What the Pattern Looks Like
Nobody can say definitively whether Cedomis is a scam or a failed project. But the pattern here follows a well-known playbook:
Airdrop launched to build a large holder base fast
Listing date announced without exchange confirmation
Cedomis Listing was missed with no explanation
Liquidity removal warning issued days later
No update on what comes next
Disclaimer
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial or investment advice. Crypto tokens carry high risk, including the total loss of funds. Always do your own research before investing.