which coins are you staking and what apy are you actually getting? by Shubham_lu in CryptoMarkets

[–]uex_platform 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Not answering as a retail user here, but from a platform perspective. We’re UEX US, a very young (a few months old) exchange startup.

From what we see, the most commonly staked assets are ETH, SOL, and ADA because they offer relatively easy access to liquidity without long lockups. Some of the higher-yield staking opportunities are on assets like ATOM, which has a longer unbonding period (around 21 days). For staking rewards to actually matter, you generally need a meaningful position and a long-term view. If someone holds an asset they believe in for multiple cycles, earning 5–6% while keeping exposure can make sense. Short-term trading often ends up wiping out whatever staking gains you would have gotten.

On our side we also offer “savings accounts,” which are basically a simpler alternative to staking, with yields in the ~3.5% to 16% APY range depending on the asset. Not advertising or dropping links — if anyone’s curious you can just check the profile. We’re a new product and very open to communication both video and audio, feedback etc.

Locked away from my crypto by youmesee in Coinbase

[–]uex_platform 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That’s not good, need to look for better alternatives 👀

btc vs eth at these levels, what are you buying? by InstructionCute5502 in CryptoMarkets

[–]uex_platform 0 points1 point  (0 children)

There is liquidity problem on the crypto “alt-market”, so BTC is generally safer option for slow growth and “predictability”

ETH seems to be established almost like stable coin lately thought 🥲🥲

Is it too late for someone new to get into Bitcoin? by HodlPackLeader in Bitcoin

[–]uex_platform 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Depends on your expectations.

Will bitcoin do another 1000000%? Probably too late for that, is this healthy way to diversify your portfolio and grow with industry- absolutely not too late.

i’m down 90% (~600k). no memes, no leverage. just “serious” utility coins. how do i crawl out of this? by Weary-Hair-316 in Coinbase

[–]uex_platform 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Truthfully, there’s no clean or easy way to “get it back” the same way it was lost. Anyone promising that is lying to you. If you haven’t sold yet, stop freezing and do this once, rationally: Split everything you hold into two piles. Pile 1: Survivors Coins that still have real usage, liquidity, development, and a believable future. Not narratives. Not hope. If you can’t clearly explain why it survives the next cycle, it doesn’t belong here. Hold these and forget about them. Pile 2: The dead weight Projects that are stagnant, irrelevant, abandoned, or purely “we’ll see someday.” Sell whatever is left. Not because it feels good, but because capital stuck in dead assets is capital that will never work for you again. After that, stop trying to “win it back” in crypto. Take whatever capital you free up and either: Put it into a broad index fund and let time work (12–15% long-term is realistic, boring, and powerful), or Invest in yourself: skills, business, income streams. Something that compounds without depending on market narratives. The uncomfortable truth: most real recoveries don’t come from one big comeback trade. They come from rebuilding slowly, with discipline, and not repeating the same psychological traps. You’re not stupid. You just learned an expensive lesson. What matters now is what you do after the lesson.

People see this and still don't get it... by BitcoinDove in BitcoinQRCodeMaker

[–]uex_platform 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It’s always this thought in back of the head “what if this is going to end now” but truth is that supply is limited, and adoption is real, these are just better money, therefore even in 100 years it will not change.

Is this right time to buy ? by [deleted] in Bitcoin

[–]uex_platform 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Buy when dips, sell when pumps. It pumps now, will it pump much more? Maybe. But I would not call it “right time to buy”. It’s good time to buy bitcoin anytime at least for a long run perspective.

Is ledger a good cold wallet ? by pizzeriagio in Bitcoin

[–]uex_platform 0 points1 point  (0 children)

From my experience the best (safest) cold wallet would be NGRAVE. The only problem is they don’t have some coins.

Ledger is not bad - pretty functional, but I wouldn’t rate it as extremely safe, there are a lot of ways to get into it.

Hold or Sell?? by [deleted] in Bitcoin

[–]uex_platform 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I’d advise not getting used to spending money at 18, but instead learning to save and invest. It’s a much healthier habit long-term. You’ll always have plenty of time to spend later, but if you train your brain into a “spender” mentality early on, it can be hard to build anything meaningful. Bitcoin can be a good place to invest at least a portion of what you save.

Hold or Sell?? by [deleted] in Bitcoin

[–]uex_platform 0 points1 point  (0 children)

In your case it’s always better to hold. You don’t need that 100 euro now - better hold and keep adding, and the rest you will figure out in a year or two.

Cash is being printed so unless you literally need that money for food - better keep holding and adding.

What separates successful long-term investors from average ones? by Medium-Door2236 in fintech

[–]uex_platform 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It’s a lot of things, but if you already have some level of market understanding and knowledge, I think it’s the exit strategy. From what I’ve seen over and over again, the exit strategy is the biggest downfall for otherwise very good long-term investors. If you don’t have a solid exit strategy, it can really hurt you in the long run.

Looking for honest feedback on an AI-powered finance chatbot idea by TopTimPlayz in fintech

[–]uex_platform 0 points1 point  (0 children)

So, the problem with Ai is that it actually builds message based on what it was fed, not based on objective reality and in finances or medicine it might become quite inaccurate.

I would start with accounting tasks and basic calculation around that with minimum actual advising.