Ask most people to name a cryptocurrency and they’ll say Bitcoin. Ask them to name a second and many will say Ethereum. They are the two largest and best-known crypto assets in the world, and both form part of Crossgate Capital’s portfolio.
But while they are often mentioned in the same breath, they were built to do very different jobs and understanding that difference is one of the clearest ways to understand crypto itself.
Bitcoin was the original cryptocurrency, designed to be a scarce, secure store of value often described as “digital gold”. Its strength lies in being simple, robust and limited in supply. Ethereum came later with a broader ambition to be a programmable platform on which other applications can be built. “If Bitcoin is digital gold, Ethereum is closer to a digital engine, the infrastructure powering a vast range of decentralised applications,” said Scott Lester, Director of Crossgate Capital.
The simplest way to think about it is purpose. Bitcoin is primarily about holding value securely over time. Ethereum is about doing things, running the “smart contracts” and applications that underpin decentralised finance, tokenisation and much of the wider digital-asset economy.
Why Crossgate holds both
Crossgate views Bitcoin and Ethereum as complementary, not competing. Bitcoin is intended to provide a foundational store-of-value anchor, while Ethereum provides exposure to the infrastructure layer on which a fair proportion of the digital economy is being built. Holding both means the portfolio is not reliant on a single narrative which is precisely why Crossgate considers owning both matters.
“People treat it like a rivalry, but we see Bitcoin and Ethereum as doing two different jobs,” Scott Lester said. “Bitcoin is about holding value securely; Ethereum is about building on top of it. We don’t think investors should have to choose, both earn their place in our portfolio.”
But the story doesn’t stop at two
As significant as Bitcoin and Ethereum are, they are only part of the story. Crossgate holds a diversified portfolio of 13 crypto assets, spanning sectors such as payments, decentralised finance, oracles, and the intersection of blockchain and artificial intelligence. Each individual asset must have a market capitalisation of at least NZD $500 million at the date of purchase, and the focus is on networks with strong, real-world use cases.
“This breadth is deliberate. The crypto market is a complex ecosystem where different narratives drive value at different times, and a portfolio holding only one or two assets may miss the potential growth occurring elsewhere,” Scott Lester said
Lester added, “Bitcoin and Ethereum are the cornerstones, but they are not the whole building. Alongside them we hold a further 11 carefully selected assets across different sectors, because the digital-asset economy is now many sectors, not just one. That diversification is how we aim to give investors exposure to the whole landscape, not just the two most famous names.”
Bitcoin and Ethereum are an essential starting point for understanding crypto, and both are included in Crossgate’s portfolio. But the company’s approach is to pair these two anchors with a diversified, professionally managed and securely held selection of other crypto assets so investors gain considered exposure across the digital-asset economy rather than focusing all their eggs in one Bitcoin basket.
“Most people arrive through Bitcoin’s front door. But the more you understand this space, the more you realise there’s a whole world beyond it and that’s the world a diversified portfolio is built to capture,” Scott Lester said.
Crossgate Capital Limited is the issuer of the product. The Product Disclosure Statement is available at crossgatecapital.co.nz and should be read before making any investment decision.




