Part 1 Beginner Why long-term crypto holders borrow against assets instead of selling A strategic guide to liquidity management, capital preservation, and the real tradeoff between selling and borrowing crypto Open guide Bitcoin (BTC) trades on centralized exchanges, Bitcoin-focused apps, wallet apps, and peer-to-peer marketplaces. The right route depends on your country, payment method, fee tolerance, and whether you plan to keep BTC on a platform or withdraw to a wallet.
Most beginners do best with a regulated exchange or Bitcoin-first app — clear bank funding, quoted fees, and native BTC withdrawals in one flow. Crypto holders may prefer a swap or trade route, provided they confirm they are receiving native Bitcoin rather than a wrapped version on another chain.
Bitcoin runs on a peer-to-peer network with no central authority, and BTC is the native asset of that network. That makes the withdrawal step matter more than it does on a stock or ETF buy — sending BTC to the wrong address or network is hard or impossible to reverse.
For background, see CryptoSlate's Bitcoin explainer. For live BTC price data, Bitcoin news coverage, or BTC price scenarios, use the linked pages.

