Loading market data...

FLOKI Data Corruption Wipes Out All Price Feeds, Exchanges Prepare for Delisting

FLOKI Data Corruption Wipes Out All Price Feeds, Exchanges Prepare for Delisting

The memecoin FLOKI suffered a total data corruption across all its price feeds Thursday, with every feed showing a flat $0.00. The technical collapse signals that major exchanges are likely moving to delist the token, according to market observers tracking the infrastructure failure.

Zeroed-out feeds

Every pricing oracle and exchange feed feeding data on FLOKI now returns $0.00. The corruption is systemwide — not a single feed survived intact. Developers have not issued a statement or a timeline for recovery, and the network's technical infrastructure appears to have collapsed completely.

What delisting means for holders

Once exchanges decide to pull a token, trading halts and liquidity dries up. Holders can't sell into an order book that no longer has bids. The zeroed price feeds make it impossible for exchanges to calculate even a pre-delisting settlement price. Some traders are already moving positions to decentralized venues, but those rely on the same corrupted feeds.

The floor target

Given the severity of the data failure and the expected loss of centralized exchange support, the realistic floor target for FLOKI is now $0.00005. That price implies a roughly 90% decline from levels seen before the corruption emerged. Whether the token can trade at that level or slides lower depends on whether any exchange keeps a listing alive — a scenario observers consider unlikely.

Technical infrastructure under stress

The collapse isn't limited to price data. The broader FLOKI technical stack is showing signs of strain. Nodes that normally relay transaction data are struggling to stay synchronized. Without functioning price feeds, applications built on top of the token — lending protocols, derivatives markets, and payment rails — cannot operate. The infrastructure failure cascades beyond just trading.

No official recovery plan has been announced. Developers have not responded to requests for comment. The next clear milestone will come when the first major exchange issues a formal delisting notice. Until that happens, the token exists in a kind of limbo: still listed on paper, but with no data to support any transaction.