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Rebalancing Bot FAQ

Q: When is a good time to start the Rebalancing Bot?

You can start the Rebalancing Bot when prices are at a relatively low level. If you're unsure whether the current price is low, consider a dollar-cost averaging approach — open multiple Rebalancing Bot orders gradually and wait patiently for the market to recover.


Q: What is the minimum investment for the Rebalancing Bot?

The minimum investment is 20 USDT. The Rebalancing Bot requires at least two coins to start. The minimum per coin is 10 USDT — so the total minimum is: number of coins × 10 USDT.


Q: How many coins can I include in the Rebalancing Bot?

Up to 20 coins can run simultaneously.


Q: What are the trading fees? Creating a Rebalancing Bot is free. Only trading fees apply:

Token Type

Fee Rate

Spot

0.05%

Leveraged Token / Stock Token

0.1%


Q: I can't create a Rebalancing Bot. What should I do?

This may be caused by a coin in your portfolio that is currently unavailable for trading. Please check whether all selected coins are still supported.

If you're still unable to identify the issue, take a screenshot of your current coin selection page and contact support for further assistance.


Q: Can I modify the rebalancing conditions while the bot is running?

Yes. Go to: Details → Parameters → Rebalancing methods, to make changes.


Q: Can I change the coins or allocation ratios while the bot is running?

Yes.

On the website, go to Details → More → Change Coins to add or modify your coin selection and individual allocation ratios.

On the app, go to More → Edit Parameter.


Q: Can I add funds to a running Rebalancing Bot?

Yes. Go to: More → Add Investment.


Q: Can I withdraw profits from the Rebalancing Bot?

Yes. The Rebalancing Bot holds spot assets, and all profits exist as unrealized gains. Go to: More → Deduct/ Withdraw Investment. When reducing, both principal and profit are released proportionally.


Q: I set a Threshold rebalancing of 0.25%, but the bot still hasn't rebalanced. Why?

Reason

Explanation

Deviation threshold not reached

The coin's allocation deviation has not yet met the trigger condition

Minimum trade size not met

The amount to be adjusted is too small to meet the minimum order size

Portfolio contains coins in the market close

Tokens such as Stock Tokens will not rebalance during market-closed hours


Q: What does "Threshold 0.25%" mean? When triggered, does it rebalance just one coin or all of them?

This is the value change threshold that triggers a rebalance.

For example, with 10 coins equally weighted at 10% each, when any coin's actual allocation changes by 0.25 percentage points from its target (reaching 10.25% or 9.75%), a rebalance is triggered. At that point, the system rebalances all coins back to their respective target allocations in one pass.


Q: What does "Trading precision" causing a skipped rebalance mean? Is this a bug?

This is normal behavior, not a bug.

During rebalancing, the bot buys and sells to adjust each coin's allocation. Every trading pair has a minimum order size. When the calculated adjustment amount falls below that minimum, the system skips the rebalance for that round and accumulates the difference until the amount is large enough to execute.

Example: A portfolio of 50% USDT and 50% SOL, where SOL has dropped below 50%. The system needs to buy SOL to rebalance, but calculates that only 0.003 SOL is needed — below the minimum of 0.01 SOL. The system waits until the accumulated difference reaches 0.01 SOL before executing the buy.

This is more likely to occur under the following conditions — adjusting these can reduce how often it happens:

  • Small investment amount

  • Small allocation deviation


Q: Why do I have fewer coins after using the Rebalancing Bot?

The Rebalancing Bot buys and sells different tokens during rebalancing. When the quantity of one coin decreases, it means the bot sold that coin and bought others — the quantities of those other coins will have increased accordingly.

Over time, you'll find that the quantities of all holdings gradually increase as the bot cycles through arbitrage rebalancing.


Q: Why do I see only sell records with no corresponding buy records?

This is common with smaller investment amounts. After the bot sells a spot asset, the resulting buy amount may fall below the minimum trade size threshold, so the buy order doesn't appear in the records. This is completely normal — the buy will be executed automatically once the accumulated amount meets the minimum trade size in a future round.


Q: Some rebalancing rounds have smaller trade sizes than others. Is this normal?

Yes, this is normal and is caused by minimum trade size accumulation.

When the required buy amount for a round doesn't reach the next trade size increment, the system executes what it can in the current round and carries over the remainder. Once the accumulated amount meets the threshold, it is bought in full.

This is why you may notice some rounds with smaller trade sizes and others with larger ones — it is expected behavior.


Q: Will the Rebalancing Bot rebalance Stock Tokens during market-closed hours?

No. Stock Tokens are subject to trading session hours. The Rebalancing Bot only rebalances Stock Tokens during market-open hours and will not execute adjustments when the market is closed.


Q: My portfolio includes US stock tokens, but I don't want them to affect my crypto holdings. What should I do?

It is recommended to set up a separate Rebalancing Bot for your US stock tokens, keeping them independent from your crypto portfolio. Each bot runs on its own schedule without affecting the other.

Alternatively, if you don't want US stock tokens to affect overall rebalancing, you can remove them from the portfolio entirely.


Q: What is Momentum Rebalancing, and how is it different from the standard Rebalancing Bot?

Standard Rebalancing Bot

Momentum Rebalancing

Core Logic

Maintains fixed allocations — sells outperformers, buys underperformers

Moves all funds into the top-performing coin each round

Best For

Long-term holding across multiple coins

Markets with clear rotational momentum

Risk Profile

Diversified holdings, lower volatility

Concentrated position, higher volatility


Q: How does Momentum Rebalancing work?

At each set time interval, the system ranks all coins by performance and moves all funds into the top-ranked coin.

Example: A portfolio of 5 coins + USDT, rebalancing every 4 hours:

  • Round 1: PEPE ranks #1 → all USDT is used to buy PEPE

  • Round 2: DOGE overtakes PEPE → PEPE is sold and all funds move into DOGE

  • This repeats each round, always holding the current top-performing coin

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