World's CHEAPEST Way to Buy Crypto - YouTube

Channel: Max Maher

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This is one of the biggest issues
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in all of crypto right now.
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And this research report tells us
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We've been working on this report for a while now
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because there's no one source
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that gives the full picture.
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In many cases, data here had to be collected
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by manually reading the terms and conditions
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on more than 50 exchanges,
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something I wouldn't wish to my worst enemy.
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But the work is done and I have the answers.
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First, we need to find two major types of fees:
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When you make a trade on an exchange,
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you're either placed in one of two categories.
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You're either a maker or you're a taker, and this matters
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because taker fees can be as much as
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than maker fees for your buy or sell order.
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So let's say you're selling $10,000 in crypto.
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This can be the difference between
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To understand why this is, it's best
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to think about what exchanges want.
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They want liquidity, that precious liquidity.
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They want more assets on their order books
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because this is the product on their shelves,
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Liquidity.
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If no one is placing their assets on the order book,
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the exchange can't make any money.
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So a maker is making the order book,
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they are adding liquidity to it.
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A taker is taking from the order book.
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They are reducing the liquidity available,
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meaning the exchange has less to sell later.
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So this makes sense.
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Many exchanges charge less for maker fees
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because you're helping them keep their
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proverbial shelves stocks.
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Now, what determines if your buy or sell order
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gets labeled as maker or taker?
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Typically, this comes down to timing.
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If you place an order and it's executed immediately,
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you're usually going to be considered a taker.
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A market order is always a taker
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because you're effectively making an order that says,
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Hey, I want to buy or sell this asset immediately at the current rate.
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Thank you very much.
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So you're always taking from the top of the order book.
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To understand this further, let's take a
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look at this order book for Bitcoin.
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Sell orders are in red and buy orders are in green.
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The current price is $46,500.
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This is the equilibrium between buy and
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sell orders or supply and demand.
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Shout out to Alfred Marshall.
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If we come in and place a buy order right at $46,500,
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our order will be filled immediately
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and will be considered a taker because
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we're taking liquidity from the top of the order book.
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On the other hand, if we were to place a
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buy limit order at $46,400, it would be placed
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down the list on the green side
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where the order will wait until it's filled.
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If and when it gets filled, we will have the lower maker fees.
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This is because we're adding liquidity
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to the order book, helping out the exchange
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until the order gets filled.
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So the moral of the story is you can often save
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money on trades right out the gate by simply
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using a limit order at a price that isn't executed right away.
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Now let's take a look at these charts that I've made
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comparing the top crypto exchanges and their fees.
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There are five major fees that you should
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take into consideration and two exceptions
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that can actually lower these fees in many cases.
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Of course, first, we have maker and taker fees
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that we just discussed.
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We can see on these seven exchanges,
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the fees range between 0.01% for BitMEX, which is
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next to nothing up to 0.35% for Bittrex.
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I know they sound very similar.
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You'll also notice that for some of these,
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the maker and taker fees are the exact same.
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For others like BitMEX, the taker fee is
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five times higher than the maker fee,
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so it's important to look at the fine details here.
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And then we have spread fees.
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None of these seven have spread fees,
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but in most cases, if you see a spread fee,
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this means there's likely no maker or taker fees
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because the spread is simply another way
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to charge transaction fees.
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However, a few do charge both.
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So again, always look at the fine print.
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So let's say in exchange has a 0.5% spread fee.
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If you want to purchase one Bitcoin at $45,000,
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your actual purchase amount would be $45,225
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$45,000 for the Bitcoin and $225 in spread fees.
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Then we have deposit fees and withdrawal fees.
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Most exchanges charge no fees to make deposits.
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Anything with a red X here has no deposit fees.
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You can see Binance and Bitfinex have fees for select
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types of currency deposits, but in most cases no fees
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and BitMEX has fees only for USDT deposits.
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Generally, deposit fees aren't a concern.
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You don't really have to worry about them.
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Withdrawal fees, on the other hand,
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that's a totally different story.
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Just about every exchange has this,
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which makes sense if you think about incentives,
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they want to create a disincentive for you to
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take your money off of their platform.
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So the fees are higher there.
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Moving to the next slide, let's talk about fee discounts.
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Many exchanges have their own token,
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and they offer discounts on trading fees
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to users who hold that token.
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We can see that crypto.com has
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fairly high maker and taker fees.
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However, you can potentially wipe away
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all of those hefty fees by simply holding their token.
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But if you look at the fine print,
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in order to get 0% trading fees,
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you have to stake 50 million CRO tokens.
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That's about $25 million at current rates.
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I don't know about you, but I don't have $25 million
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sitting around to go ahead and try
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to save $100 on transaction fees.
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If you stake 5000 CRO tokens or about $2,500 worth,
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you'll get 10% off trading fees.
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So just make sure you always check that fine print.
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Then many exchanges will have a volume discount.
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Again though, to really reap the benefits here,
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you need to be a bit of a baller
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or you need to have like your entire extended family
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trade on the same account.
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Which seems like a terrible idea.
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You can see FTX's volume discounts.
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They're quite high.
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You have to be a bit of a baller, but they're really not that
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bad when you consider FTX has
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some of the lower fees in town already.
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Looking at transaction fees,
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here we can see eToro has a spread that we talked about earlier,
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a pretty hefty one and you can't buy ADA there anyways.
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Coinbase's fees are definitely on the high side
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but nowhere near Coinmama,
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which absolutely knocked everyone else out of the park at 3.9%.
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Here's another seven to look at,
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straight away you'll notice BlockFi has
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0% maker and 0% taker fees.
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Here, I have to do an obligatory plug because
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you can use the link in the description for BlockFi to get up to
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$250 in Bitcoin for joining
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and they offer interest on crypto and stablecoins
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as well as a crypto credit card that pays you cash back in Bitcoin.
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Now I will say, with the fees on BlockFi, 0% is amazing.
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However, they don't have the largest selection
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of cryptos in the entire world.
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You'll find the big popular cryptos there,
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but you're not going to find the tiny little
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altcoins on that platform.
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You'll also notice here that BTC markets
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has a negative maker fee.
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This means you actually make money
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by trading on this site as a maker.
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This isn't limited to BTC markets.
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However, you'll typically only see negative fees
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when combining something like a volume discount
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on top of normal trading fees,
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not just their flat based fee like this.
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So that's pretty awesome.
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That's an awesome feature.
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Moving on from here, you'll notice Gemini's fees are quite high.
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high and you'll also notice HitBTC is on the
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very, very low end for fees.
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And we also have some significant volume and
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token discounts here as well.
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Two more pages left.
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Here you can see Luno and Liquid have 0% maker fees.
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PancakeSwap, despite being a decentralized exchange,
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has higher fees than many of its centralized brethren at 0.2%.
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Kucoin is at 0.1% maker and taker fees.
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I actually use Kucoin for most of my personal trading because
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I take a few other factors into consideration
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beyond just trading fees.
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I like having a platform with a ton of options.
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Kucoin has over 540 cryptos currently and
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I like being able to do bots and lend and
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buy cryptos all in the same site and they're good for all of that.
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What Kucoin isn't the best about is for staking.
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Their staking rates are not great,
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but overall my experience has been pretty darn good.
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River Financial is a bit different with flat fees of $1.49.
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This can be good if you're a high volume trader,
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but they also have a spread fee on top of this
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that could eat into those savings.
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In fact, five of these seven have some form of spread fee.
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Something I want to point out about Robinhood,
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which also goes for Square, PayPal and Weeble
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is they are not the best places to buy crypto.
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I'm ruining some future potential sponsorships here,
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but this is important.
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In fact, one of these platforms, I'm not going to say which
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offered me a five digit sponsorship in the past
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to talk about their crypto services, which
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I had to turn down for this exact reason.
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If you're looking to be more serious
[501]
about crypto or you plan to in the future,
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don't start with one of these platforms.
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The problem is once you are ready to
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spread your crypto wings and
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and go a little bit deeper into this space,
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you'll find that you can't transfer your coins
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off these exchanges because you don't
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actually own the crypto keys,
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meaning you'll have to sell, which is a taxable event
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and then buy back in on a legit crypto exchange.
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Now, some of these platforms plan to allow
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for actual crypto wallets in the future,
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but this hasn't been fully implemented just yet.
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And now that we've done an overview, let's cover
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who is the best of the best.
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For the top ten list here,
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we're considering the platform fees
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before any token or volume discount.
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So these are the base fees for all of the platforms.
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Here are the top ten options for taker fees.
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We can see BlockFi comes first,
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followed by BitMEX with extremely low fees
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of 0.05%, FTX at 0.07%, HitBTC at 0.09%,
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and a several way tie at 0.1% taker fees.
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For maker fees, and remember these are
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always going to be lower on average.
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We have BTC markets with a -0.05% fee
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followed by a three way tie at 0% between
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BlockFi, Liquid and Luno.
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BitMEX and FTX are close behind,
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followed by dYdX Okex and HitBTC.
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This is like a tongue twister.
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And then we have another several way tie at 0.1%.
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So where does this leave us?
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I think fees are only one piece of the equation when
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picking the best exchange for you.
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So because of this, I think any exchange
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with maker and taker fees at or below
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0.1% is a great starting point.
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This gives you around 15 major exchanges to choose from.
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From there, you need to ask yourself
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some personal questions.
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You need to do some soul searching to figure out
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what you'd like to see in an exchange besides
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just low fees, maybe you want a large variety of coins.
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FTX or Kucoin are great for this.
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Or maybe you want advanced trading features.
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FTX or BTC markets are literally built for this.
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Possibly your focus is lending out cryptos.
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Here I would have to give it to BlockFi for usability
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and Kucoin for the best yields.
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Perhaps staking features matter most.
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To be honest here, none of these are amazing for staking,
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but Binance is probably the best out of all of these options.
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So use this list of low trading fee platforms
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as a jumping off point to find the exchange
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that best suits your needs.
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I'll have the few that I personally use
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linked in the description of this video.
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From here, I would recommend you check out
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this video of mine for tactics on how to make passive income
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with NFTs, an absolutely fascinating topic.
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I would like to thank you so much for watching,
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and I hope you have a profitable day!