The assessment is primarily based on a single, highly relevant source. The majority of the provided sources are irrelevant to the specific claim about Fidelity Crypto's deposit and withdrawal functions. For example, sources about Federal Reserve meetings, mutual funds, and third-party news releases on Fidelity's site offer no information on the topic. However, the article from the Emory Wheel, despite its low authority, is highly relevant. It provides a beginner's guide to adding cryptocurrency to a portfolio and, in a list of steps, explicitly mentions "Withdraw crypto to your wallet." This is a direct piece of evidence suggesting that withdrawal is a feature available in the context being discussed, which involves Fidelity. While the authority of a student newspaper is low, it is the only piece of evidence that directly addresses the functionality in question. Furthermore, no other source, including the high-authority ones from Fidelity itself, contradicts this claim. The official Fidelity sources confirm the company's involvement in cryptocurrency products (like Bitcoin ETFs), which lends plausibility to them offering a platform with standard features like withdrawals. Given that the only relevant evidence directly supports the statement and there is a complete lack of contradictory information, the statement is assessed as likely true with high confidence based on the provided material.