Serbia, hmmm the postal address on the site is HOng Kong!
It is quite normal that a team can be made up of people from different countries, and that a company headquarters can be where CEO thinks it is best for his business. The thing would be more credible if each team member had their own Linkedin profile and some references, this way it looks more like good PR and nothing more.
Interesting read Lucius, this gives an insight into the fees they charge.
The fees are reasonable for those who are rich to be able to afford it, but the much bigger question is what do you get for what you pay. If you read some of the posts from Reddit, you could see that there are some very dissatisfied customers who didn’t get what they were hoping for. It's actually about someone having x countries that they claim are tax-friendly, and selling that information to all customers - and most of it is publicly available anyway.
I posted a list of 10 countries which appear to have TAX free laws on crypto, post #2.
Croatia has a similar tax policy as Germany when it comes to cryptocurrency taxation, with the difference that the time period after which the tax is not paid is 2 years from the date of purchase.
Shodno tome, promjena kriptovalute u fiat novac oporezuje se po jedinstvenoj stopi od 10%, a na to treba dodati prirez općine/grada u kojem živite. S iznimkom da, ako držite kriptovalutu dulje od 2 godine, ne morate plaćati porez. Zamjena kriptovalute u drugu kriptovalutu se ne oporezuje.
Consequently, the change of cryptocurrency into fiat money is taxed at a flat rate of 10%, to which should be added the surtax of the municipality / city in which you live. Except that if you hold the cryptocurrency for more than 2 years, you don’t have to pay taxes. Replacing a cryptocurrency with another cryptocurrency is not taxed.