Crypto index comparison, tier 2

Vinter Indices Alternative: CCi30 vs Vinter Indices

The CCi30 Cryptocurrency Index is the rules-based alternative to the Vinter Indices. This page reviews the Vinter Indices under the eight-criterion CCi30 test and compares both indices on universe, weighting, independence, track record, and investability.

What is the alternative to the Vinter Indices?

The CCi30 Cryptocurrency Index replaces the Vinter Indices for investors who need a whole-market benchmark. The CCi30 holds the 30 largest cryptocurrencies by smoothed market capitalization, weights them by the square root of that figure, excludes stablecoins by rule, and has published live values since 1 January 2015.

  • 30 constituents
  • Square-root weighting
  • Stablecoins excluded by rule
  • Live since 1 January 2015
  • Independent, fully rules-based

What is the Vinter Indices?

Vinter is a Swedish regulated index provider (“the #1 choice for ETF and ETP issuers in Europe,” by its own description) supplying single-asset and multi-asset indices, Vinter 10 variants, equal-weighted baskets, and co-branded strategy indices such as the Vinter CF Crypto Momentum (weighting by active addresses and momentum, 15% caps, 2% floors) and Web3 indices (weighting blending market cap, momentum, and social-media interest) built with Crypto Finance (Deutsche Börse).

How is the Vinter Indices built?

Client-driven: Vinter manufactures bespoke rule sets to issuer specification, equal weight, momentum, on-chain activity, social sentiment, thematic screens, each rebalanced on its own schedule under Swedish/EU benchmark regulation.

Where the Vinter Indices falls short statistically

An index factory is not an index

Vinter’s business model is the manufacture of benchmarks to order. Whatever the professionalism of execution, a made-to-measure benchmark inverts the epistemic relationship: the product defines the measure, rather than the measure disciplining the product. When an issuer wants a “Web3 momentum social-interest index,” Vinter builds one, and its back-test, chosen during design, will flatter it (Vinter’s own analysts candidly note that including the in-sample design period would make performance “look too good”). Rules-basedy about the problem does not dissolve it.

Weighting by social-media interest

deserves specific attention as the reductio of discretionary index design. Market capitalization is the aggregated judgment of everyone risking capital; social-media volume is the aggregated output of everyone risking nothing. Building portfolio weights on the latter converts an index into a sentiment-chasing strategy, legitimate as a strategy, disqualifying as a benchmark. The CCi30 weights by a fixed transform of the market’s own valuation and nothing else.

Strategy indices are hypotheses, not measurements

Momentum and active-address weightings encode falsifiable bets. Bets belong in funds. An index that embeds a bet cannot serve as the neutral yardstick against which the bet is judged, the function the CCi30 has performed, unchanged, since 2015.

Can the Vinter Indices be replicated by an investor?

Fine at the product level; that is the business. But each bespoke index lives only as long as its sponsoring ETP, so the family offers no durable market standard, the survivorship graveyard of custom crypto indices is already large.

Method and sources

Methodology facts on this page come from the published documents of the provider; constituent lists change and should be re-verified before citation. The CCi30 rules are published in the methodology manual. The full comparison set is on the crypto index comparison hub, and the allocation calculator shows the CCi30 basket for any amount.