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Beware the Hidden Fees

Published on July 28th, 2021
Updated on August 13th, 2024
CoinFlip Team

A common refrain among people involved in the cryptocurrency space is how high the fees are. Investors, conditioned to $0 commissions on their stock transactions, see crypto fees as unjustifiably high. While this may seem like a reasonable complaint on the surface, it’s important to distinguish between explicit fees and “hidden” fees.  

First, while your brokerage firm may not be charging you for your stock transactions, they are still generating revenue from you in hidden ways. They may be “selling” your volume to a separate exchange for a fee. Alternatively, they might loan out the stocks in your account to hedge funds who want to lever up their portfolios, collecting the fees on the borrow. But one of the most common tactics is to capture the spread on that trade with another client selling the same stock when you are buying it. We'll explore this last technique below.

How Hidden Fees Impact Buying and Selling Cryptocurrencies

Let’s try to explain the concept in the real world. When you go on a fabulous vacation in Europe and pull out Euros from the ATM, or pay for that incredible meal in Tuscany with your credit card, you will likely be hit with two fees, one hidden and one not. First, your credit card will charge you a “translation fee,” which is usually about three percent of the value of your transaction, so if you pull out the equivalent of $100 in Euros, you will see a three dollar charge on your account, but it won’t be a line item; it will be down at the bottom of your statement, by the late fee section. While this is not really a hidden fee, you still have to hunt to find it.  

 You will also “be charged” the bid-ask spread on the currencies. This spread is dependent on the “generosity” of your credit card company. Let's take a trip to the most famous market in the world, the Grand Bazaar in Istanbul, and change money to learn about the spread.  

While the Wall Street Journal may quote the exchange rate as thirty-four Turkish Lira for one U.S. Dollar, the money changer in the Grand Bazaar will offer to buy your dollars for thirty Lira - note that the true price varies, this is just an example. You can sell him back your Lira at a rate of thirty-six lira. So, if you give the money changer $1,000, he will provide you with 30,000 Lira and tell you to have a great vacation. Then, when the tourist who is about to head back home comes up to him with 36,000 Lira, the money changer will give him $1,000. The money changer thus turned his 30,000 Lira into 36,000 Lira by capturing the spread on those trades.

In this instance, the Turkish money changer was honest about the trade; he told you straight up what his spread was. What if you go to your favorite crypto exchange and they advertise how low their fees are. Are they just great guys, effectively running a Crypto co-op? Remember, the money changer at the Grand Bazaar didn't charge any fees when we were trading with him. There was no three percent fee like the one our credit cards charge; there were no commissions; we simply had to pay him the spread - but what a spread! Our money changer will eat well by simply living off that spread.  

Let’s say during the 2024 market peak you did a search for the price of BTC and found that it was $73,000 and decided that was a great price to either buy or sell a whole coin. The crypto exchange advertises ultra-low fees, so why not go through them? But, if your exchange has a roughly three percent spread in either direction, you would actually be buying the BTC for $75,000, not $73,000, and, correspondingly, you would be selling it for $71,000. That's two-grand in unannounced fees.

But hey, your exchange reminds you all over their website that you only pay a tiny fee on your trade, though that doesn’t really seem to be the case. 

It’s also important to remember that the spread they are talking about is on each trade, not the full spread. Put another way, in the scenario above, if you decided to buy BTC when your search told you the price was $73,000, you actually paid $75,000 because of the spread on the exchange. Unfortunately, the next day your yacht sinks in the harbor. You realize you need the BTC money to pull it out, and because BTC is still trading for $73,000, you ask your good buddies at your exchange to sell your BTC for you and send you the funds. Well, the spread is $71,000, which stings because you paid $75,000 for your BTC and sold it for a $4,000 loss, even though the published price of BTC never changed.  

So, the real spread on that exchange is about six percent. That sure looks like a massive hidden fee, doesn’t it?

Final Thoughts: Beware the Hidden Fees

The ultimate point is, it’s worth being vigilant when your crypto exchange advertises low/no fees for buying crypto. They may, in fact, only charge you a nominal fee for the trade, but at the same time, they may be raking in a massive spread. Alternatively, if another provider has what looks like a high fee but is only adding the fee to the actual market price that you searched for, you may, in reality, be better off.   

It is worth doing the due diligence to check the fine print to be clear on the spread, the explicit fees, and the hidden fees to make sure you get the best deal for your crypto.

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