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Crypto Risk Management: How to Get Your Wealth Off an Exchange

Knowing how to move your cryptocurrencies is fundamental to risk management and preventing crypto losses when bad things happen on exchanges.
Updated Nov 8, 2022 at 8:47 p.m. UTC
Crypto Explainer+

Mike Antolin was CoinDesk's SEO Content Writer for Learn.

Keeping your cryptocurrencies in exchanges comes with risks, and there are dangers in doing so for a long period of time. Crashes, hacks and exploits have resulted in losses of hundreds of millions of dollars in the short history of cryptocurrency. The recent turmoil rocking FTX and its FTT token had many worried about the exchange becoming insolvent. As of this update, it looks like Binance's stunning move to buy FTX is leading to a rebound, but it goes to show how quickly fortunes can change even with the biggest names in crypto.

If your intention is to buy and sell digital assets quickly, it’s convenient to leave them in an exchange. It is much safer, however, to store your digital assets in what’s known as cold storage, and it’s important to also know how to cash out into fiat, like the U.S. dollar, from whatever exchange or exchanges you’ve invested in.

Risks of crypto exchanges

While many people begin their crypto investment journey by opening an account on an exchange like Coinbase or Binance, they are not without risks. Here are some common ones:

  • An exchange suddenly halts selling and withdrawals, hence indefinitely barring you from access to your crypto.
  • An exchange becomes insolvent, as was the worry with FTX and its FTT token.
  • The exchange undergoes an outage, cutting your access to its platform and your cryptocurrencies.
  • The exchange itself turns out to be a scheme, as was the case with QuadrigaCX and some other early exchanges.
  • A crypto exchange gets hacked, causing the exchange to liquidate its assets, thereby making users unable to access their crypto, as was the case with Cryptopia.

Why cold storage is the safest option for your crypto

There’s a famous saying in crypto, “not your keys, not your coins,” which basically means if you are entrusting another entity, such as an exchange, to hold the private keys to your crypto, it is the one who controls your crypto, not you.

To keep things simple, you want to have custody or control over your crypto and to not give that power to an exchange or other third party. To do so, you need a crypto wallet that gives you custody. There are two main kinds of these wallets, hot wallets and cold wallets.

A hot wallet gives you custody, but because it's connected to the internet, it's vulnerable to hacks such as the recent one on Solana wallets and past exploits such as KuCoin’s hot wallets being drained of $280 million.

A cold wallet is the safest way to protect your wealth regarding cryptocurrencies because it keeps your tokens offline. A cold storage wallet has no connection to the internet, which dramatically decreases the ability of hackers and cybercriminals to access your assets, keeping them safe and secure.

Some of the most popular cold storage devices are hardware-based, such as the Ledger Nano S and Trezor Model One. Additionally, a cold storage device offers better risk management and control than exchanges. When you hold crypto in a cold wallet, it completely belongs to you, giving you freedom to sell and trade when you want, how you want and with whom you want. Letting a crypto exchange store your digital assets falls under their surveillance and conditions.

How to withdraw crypto into a cold storage wallet

The steps for withdrawing your cryptocurrencies are similar among all exchanges:

  • Log into your account in your crypto exchange.
  • Find the cryptocurrency that you would like to withdraw and press “withdraw” or “send.”
  • Input your cold storage address into the respective field. Your wallet address can either come in the form of a QR code or an alphanumeric string similar to the one below.
CoinDesk - Unknown

Withdrawal address (Samurai Wallet)

  • Press the option to “review” the transaction once you are ready.
  • Review the withdrawal details, such as the amount you receive with the fees deducted, if applicable. Make sure everything is correct here – if you send it to an incorrect wallet address, you cannot get it back.
  • If you have SMS OTP or a verification authenticator enabled, input the code.
  • Once you confirm everything is correct, press “confirm withdrawal."

For more detail on the process and how to set up a cold storage device, here’s our review of the Ledger Nano S Plus, which includes a step-by-step example of how it works with that device.

Why you might want to cash out your crypto into fiat

Cashing out into fiat, such U.S. dollars, is another option if you feel the investment risks of all cryptocurrencies or a specific cryptocurrency have risen above your comfort level. Exiting your positions and converting them into government-issued money will remove your wealth from any risk of hacks and the volatile nature of the crypto market.

There are times when the crypto markets are choppy and volatile, and 2022 has been a year of corrections and crashes in crypto. Whether you are unsure of the markets or are bearing large financial risk, cashing out even 50 percent of your portfolio can relieve you from the stress of what is still a highly speculative and volatile market and give stability to your financial planning.

There are times in recent history when cashing out into fiat would have saved your wealth – for example, the start of the Covid-19 pandemic or when China banned crypto transactions, both of which resulted in a crypto crash.

Cashing out your cryptocurrencies in the early stages of a crypto crash or correction can also help you sleep at night.

How to cash out

Being prepared for a turn of events in the crypto market is critical. Converting your crypto into fiat to withdraw from your bank account is a simple process:

1. If necessary, convert your cryptocurrency to a more popular one such as BTC or USDT, as not every crypto on an exchange can always be directly cashed out for fiat.

2. Select the cryptocurrency you would like to convert to fiat. This option is usually in a dropdown menu where you choose, for example, U.S. dollars or euros.

CoinDesk - Unknown

BTC to fiat (Binance)

3. Upon confirming your selection, choose where/how you would like to receive the fiat you exchanged. With many exchanges, you can receive payment through debit credit cards or ACH (U.S.-supported wire transfer).

CoinDesk - Unknown

Fiat to bank (Binance)

4. Finally, check whether your funds are delivered into the account you chose.




This article was originally published on Aug 4, 2022 at 8:36 p.m. UTC

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Mike Antolin was CoinDesk's SEO Content Writer for Learn.

CoinDesk - Unknown

Mike Antolin was CoinDesk's SEO Content Writer for Learn.


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