Two products can track almost identical assets while giving users completely different ownership rights, tax documents, trading hours, and failure points. The wrapper, the legal and technical structure around the basket, determines all of that.
| Wrapper | What Changes |
|---|
| Traditional Fund Or Private Trust | Access may be limited by eligibility, subscriptions, redemptions, and private-placement terms. |
| Exchange-Traded Product | Shares can trade through a brokerage account, but market price can differ from NAV. |
| On-Chain Index Token | Users hold a tokenized basket or strategy, with smart-contract and liquidity risk. |
| Self-Built Basket | The user buys each asset, chooses weights, stores keys, and handles rebalancing. |
Check the wrapper before the holdings list. The same underlying coins can be packaged in ways that are either accessible via a regular brokerage account or require a crypto wallet, a specific exchange, and comfort with smart contracts.
Traditional Fund or Private Trust
A traditional fund or private trust packages crypto exposure without giving users direct control of the underlying coins. Whether you can access it depends on the product, jurisdiction, whether you meet eligibility criteria, and what the redemption terms allow. Some of these products do not trade publicly at all, which means getting in or out is not as simple as placing a trade.
Crypto Exchange-Traded Product (ETP)
An exchange-traded product trades on a stock exchange just like a share, which makes it accessible through most brokerage accounts. That familiarity is the main advantage. The trade-off is that the share price can diverge from the actual value of the underlying assets, so you can pay more than NAV when the product is in demand, or less when it is not.
For comparison with single-asset exposure, Bitcoin ETF products and Ethereum ETF products give targeted exposure to one major asset, while a multi-asset index fund spreads the wrapper across several eligible coins. CryptoSlate's crypto ETF coverage is a useful starting point when comparing these structures.
On-Chain Index Token
An on-chain index token puts the basket into a smart contract on a blockchain. You hold the token in a wallet rather than through a brokerage. That gives you access to DeFi tools and removes the need for a traditional custodian, but it adds contract risk, oracle risk, governance risk, and limited recourse if something breaks. There is no prospectus, no regulator, and no fund manager to call.
Self-Built Basket
A self-built basket lets you copy the idea of an index without paying a fund manager. You pick the assets, set the weights, buy them directly, and rebalance when needed. The upside is lower costs and direct ownership. The downside is that every operational step falls on you: venue selection, wallet management, tracking cost basis, handling delistings, and adjusting weights when the market moves.
Example: BITW Crypto Index Funds (Prev. Bitwise 10 Crypto Index Fund)
BITW is a useful case study because it shows how a real product can change names, structure, and legal form while keeping the same ticker.
“Bitwise 10 Crypto Index Fund” is the previous name of this fund. The current public product is the Bitwise 10 Crypto Index ETF, ticker BITW, listed on NYSE Arca.
The fund track the Bitwise 10 Large Cap Crypto Index, holds 10 assets, charges a 0.75% sponsor fee, and uses Coinbase Custody Trust Co., LLC as its digital asset custodian. The SEC approval order describes monthly rebalancing and notes that real trading can create costs and performance differences versus the index.
| What To Check | Why It Affects BITW Research |
|---|
| Current Name | Older materials may use Bitwise 10 Crypto Index Fund while current materials use Bitwise 10 Crypto Index ETF. |
| Ticker And Venue | BITW trades by ticker, but the venue and listing status determine access and market structure. |
| Benchmark | The Bitwise 10 Large Cap Crypto Index defines the target basket. |
| Holdings | Constituents and weights can change after rebalancing or methodology updates. |
| Sponsor Fee | The fee reduces the crypto represented by each share over time. |
| Tax Document | The wrapper can affect whether users receive fund-specific tax forms. |
| Premium Or Discount | A share can trade above or below the value of its underlying basket. |
| Risk Disclosures | The product is not a direct investment in crypto assets and is not suitable for every investor. |
The name alone does not tell you what you are buying. Legacy trust materials, current ETF documents, and third-party summaries can all describe the same ticker differently. Always use the current fund page and SEC filings as your source, not a headline or cached description.