It is your decision, if you don't worry about privacy and you want speed over privacy and security, then carry out your trade there, but don't leave funds there, send them to your non custodial wallet afterwards.
I was planning on buying 1 BTC from Binance, with transfers of 5k euros each time. The amount of BTC will be sent to my ledger nano x immediately after it is available on the exchange. It will be kept on the ledger device and I am not intending to trade any time soon.
If the government comes after me, I can tell them I lost my ledger device or I can report it as stolen. They can never know.
If it gets to that point, I can give my ledger device to my wife (she is from South America) and have her transfer the BTC to her own savings account.
Which immediately leads me to my next question.
I expect my government (EU) to attack BTC, and Binance will not allow this kind of transaction to my wife (non EU). If there is 1 BTC on the ledger and I keep it there, can I ever transfer that BTC to a friend's account (non EU) without either Binance or the government knowing where that BTC came from?
Half of the funds in your savings account is a whole lot of money, hope it is an amount you can afford to lose.
It was intended as a 20% deposit to buy real estate. But my parents own multiple properties which I will inherit anyway. Also the mortgage intrest rates have gone up dramatically and with such high inflation I do not think it is a wise move to take on a mortgage now. I'd rather just inherit the properties, keep working like I always do and invest my earnings in crypto + precious metals as a hedge against the inflation.
BTW on Binance you register with KYC and once you send funds into their platform every transaction you make there can be linked to your identity. It is not so in Bisq because there is no KYC requirement and your funds go directly to the seller. If you want to buy Bitcoin there, you take up an existing order or you create yours, the seller's Bitcoin and your security deposit will be locked in a 2 of 2 multisignature wallet, once you send the payment to the seller's account, the both of you signs with each of your keys and the funds is released into your wallet, which you can then move to any of your address you wish, this way i don't think it's possible for anyone to know what you bought with half of your savings.
Correct me if I am wrong. But given the complete anonymity in Bisq I get a feeling that I can not call for help when something goes wrong with a purchase.
I also don't have friends who are involved in BTC and I don't intend on sharing sensitive information with more tech savvy family members etc.
The multisignature wallet you mentioned sounds complicated. You say we both sign with our keys. I assume this is the seed phrase. I have always sworn to never enter that phrase online as it exposes me to hackers. This has already happened to me once with a regular visa card.
And upon completion of the transaction, I assume that the BTC I bought ends up in my Bisq account. I assume that this is my BTC address but it is not linked to my identity. I hope I can transfer it from here to my ledger device instantly.
This is all new to me and it seems like I have to try this with 20 bucks a few times so I can get comfortable with it.
What I find questionable about the whole BTC discussion is that at some point I will have to convert my BTC to currency anyway, for it to have value.
So no matter if I bought it on Bisq, or on Binance. If BTC ever gets to 1 million euros and I wish to use it for buying real estate, I will have to convert it to cash and then the banks + government will impose their control.
It just feels like I am going to get involved in a witch hunt and I already know that my bank will treat me like a criminal because I invest in BTC.
It does not stop me though.
Even if BTC only has a 2x potential for the future, that still is a much better option than leaving my savings in a bank where they lose 10% of its purchasing power. every year. The bank clerk offered me a 2% rate on a savings account. I literally laughed at her