Singapore's move to link with Nasdaq is sparking significant interest in the region, but here's the catch—accessibility could become the real bottleneck. The listing threshold and liquidity requirements are creating friction for most market participants.



While the infrastructure upgrade looks promising on paper, practitioners are questioning whether the entry barriers will actually drive meaningful participation. Higher thresholds mean fewer players can participate directly, and tighter liquidity conditions could squeeze trading efficiency.

It's a classic story: ambitious market expansion meets practical constraints. The potential is there, but execution often comes down to whether the ecosystem can absorb real volume and maintain healthy price discovery.
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BearMarketSurvivorvip
· 15h ago
New exchanges always start with beautiful women, but the supply line is the key to victory or defeat. When the threshold is high, retail investors are directly pushed out of the battlefield. Once liquidity stalls, it becomes a systemic risk. History will repeat itself; those who rely solely on surface data have all suffered losses. I only care whether the actual trading volume can keep up. If price discovery dies, everything else is useless.
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Layer2Arbitrageurvip
· 15h ago
lmao the liquidity requirements are mathematically brutal. basically pricing out 90% of retail while calling it "infrastructure upgrade" - classic move. you're just left watching basis points widen while whales extract value. ngmi for the avg participant honestly.
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digital_archaeologistvip
· 15h ago
It's the same old trick again, looking glamorous on paper but full of pitfalls in practice. The recent collaboration between Singapore and Nasdaq sounds good, but raising the threshold immediately keeps retail investors out, and the liquidity requirements are even more outrageous. To put it simply, they want to make a big cake but are afraid too many people will get a slice, and in the end, only the big fish will profit.
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BearMarketBarbervip
· 15h ago
It sounds like another high-profile plan, but once the threshold is raised, not many people can participate... Liquidity gets stuck, retail investors are directly eliminated—this trick has been seen too many times. Things on paper always look the best; how many can actually succeed? Whether Singapore can succeed this time mainly depends on whether real trading volume with genuine money flows in.
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