Crypto for Advisors: Crypto Universe

In today’s Crypto for Advisors, Fabian Dori , Chief Investment Officer at Sygnum Bank , explores why crypto is more than just an asset class and looks at the institutional adoption of decentralized finance.

Then, Abhishek Pingle , co-founder of Theo , answers questions about how risk-adverse investors can approach decentralized finance and what to look for in Ask an Expert.

Sarah Morton

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Crypto Is Not an Asset Class — It's an Asset Universe

Moody's recently warned that public blockchains pose a risk to institutional investors. At the same time, U.S. bitcoin ETFs are drawing billions in inflows. We’re seeing the start of a long-awaited shift in institutional adoption. But crypto's real potential lies far beyond passive bitcoin exposure. It's not just an asset class — it's an asset universe, spanning yield-generating strategies, directional plays, and hedge fund-style alpha. Most institutions are only scratching the surface of what's possible.

Institutional investors may enhance their risk-return profile by moving beyond a monolithic view of crypto and recognizing three distinct segments: yield-generating strategies, directional investments, and alternative strategies.

Like traditional fixed income, yield-generating strategies offer limited market risk with low volatility. Typical strategies range from tokenized money market funds that earn traditional yields to approaches engaging with the decentralized crypto finance ecosystem, which deliver attractive returns without traditional duration or credit risk.

Crypto for Advisors: Crypto Universe

These crypto yield strategies may boast attractive Sharpe ratios, rivalling high-yield bonds' risk premia but with different mechanics. For example, returns can be earned from protocol participation, lending and borrowing activities, funding rate arbitrage strategies, and liquidity provisioning. Unlike bonds that face principal erosion in rising rate environments, many crypto yield strategies function largely independently of central bank policy and provide genuine portfolio diversification precisely when it's most needed. However, there is no such thing as a free lunch. Crypto yield strategies entail risks, mainly centered around the maturity and security of the protocols and platforms a strategy engages with.

The path to institutional adoption typically follows three distinct approaches aligned with different investor profiles:

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