Crypto Borscht

Great analogy! It's very visual. Let's imagine the crypto market as a set of different fruits from which we make borscht.

Bitcoin (BTC$BTC ) is like beetroot. It's the foundation, the most important ingredient. Without beetroot, borscht won't be borscht. Bitcoin gives the dish its main color and taste.

Ethereum ( $ETH ) is like carrots and potatoes. These ingredients add heartiness, sweetness, and texture. They make the dish richer and more complex. They are important, but not as much as beetroot.

Stablecoins ($USDT, $USDC) are like water or broth. It's what everything cooks in. The broth itself is almost tasteless, but without it, nothing will turn out. It provides volume and a base for all other ingredients.

Altcoins are like onions, cabbage, peppers, and all other vegetables. There are many of them, they are different, and each adds its unique flavor. Some of them can make the borscht very tasty and unusual, while others can ruin it. And, of course, they can be added in different ways depending on the recipe.

New altcoins (meme coins) are like spices. They can be very sharp and can either make a dish memorable or completely ruin it. You need to be very careful with their quantity.

Market manipulation is like someone adding lots of salt or sugar while you aren't looking. It changes the entire flavor of the dish.

An investor is a chef. He decides which fruits and in what quantity to add. He must know the recipe and make sure the borscht doesn't burn.

Crypto index: "Basic Set for Borscht"

What if you don't want to think about which vegetables to buy and just want to have a good, balanced borscht?

The cryptocurrency index is like a ready-made set for borscht. Instead of buying beetroot, potatoes, carrots, and other vegetables separately, you buy one package. Everything is already mixed in the right proportions, and it allows you to invest immediately in the whole "borscht market."

This set (index) can consist of the top 10 or top 20 largest and most reliable cryptocurrencies. It's like a ready-made set where there is already beetroot, potatoes, carrots, onions, and other trusted vegetables. It allows you to achieve average market returns and reduce risk, because if one "potato" goes bad, you still have many other vegetables that will make the dish tasty.