This article breaks down five key altcoins — Ethereum, Solana, Ripple (XRP), Litecoin, and one emerging name — that financial advisors should have on their radar. You’ll learn what makes these projects stand out in terms of utility, institutional interest, and long-term potential, and why understanding them helps advisors speak to clients with confidence in a market that extends well beyond Bitcoin.
When most clients think of crypto, they think of Bitcoin. And for good reason: it’s the original, the largest by market cap, and the “digital gold” narrative is widely understood.
But the crypto market isn’t a one-asset story anymore. Beyond Bitcoin, there’s a over trillion altcoin universe, and your clients have heard of it. They’re reading about Ethereum staking, seeing news about Ripple’s bank partnerships, or asking about Solana’s speed.
For advisors, that means one thing: you need to know the big names, and what they actually represent.
Here are five altcoins every advisor should understand — and how they might fit into conversations about allocation, risk, and opportunity.
If Bitcoin is digital gold, Ethereum is digital infrastructure.
Ethereum is not only a cryptocurrency but a platform behind decentralized finance (DeFi) and a growing web of blockchain-based applications. Developers build on Ethereum the way startups once built on the internet. Financial institutions can use it to issue assets (debts, money market funds…) or equivalent of cash (stablecoins) as tokens. This is also the infrastructure used by many secondary networks (such as Sony’s Soneium, Coinbase’s Base, Sam Altman’s World) to settle their transactions, which makes it essential to the development of the ecosystem.
For advisors, two points stand out:
Clients who want to go “beyond Bitcoin” often start with ETH, and advisors who can explain why it matters will lead those conversations.
Think of Solana as Ethereum’s faster, cheaper rival.
Solana’s claim to fame is transaction speed and cost efficiency. It can process thousands of transactions per second with low fees, making it attractive for payment networks, decentralized apps, and next-generation DeFi.
It’s also volatile: the network has faced outages and critics. But Solana has rebounded strongly, attracting big-name projects and even interest from traditional finance.
For advisors, Solana represents:
Like Ethereum, Solana is used by financial institutions, notably to issue securities and stablecoins.
Ripple is unique because it’s trying to connect banks, not to replace them.
XRP, Ripple’s token, is used in cross-border payments and settlement solutions, targeting inefficiencies in the SWIFT system.
For advisors, the key talking points are:
Clients might ask if XRP is “the banker’s crypto.” Advisors should know enough to say: it’s a bridge asset aiming to improve how global payments work.
Litecoin has been around since 2011 and it’s easy to dismiss it as “old news.” But LTC has staying power. It’s technically similar to Bitcoin (a capped supply, proof-of-work), but designed for faster and cheaper payments.
Why advisors should care:
For conservative clients exploring altcoins, Litecoin might be one of the least controversial entry points.
Finally, advisors should keep an eye on emerging names that are gaining developer and institutional traction. That’s where Sui (SUI) comes in.
Launched by former Meta engineers from the team that developed the Diem blockchain project, Sui is designed to tackle two of crypto’s biggest pain points: scalability and user experience. Its architecture enables parallel transaction processing — meaning it can handle a huge number of operations at once and offers fast finality (transactions are confirmed in seconds). This is critical for applications like gaming, payments, and NFTs, where speed and smooth UX are non-negotiable.
It’s an ecosystem being built with institutional-grade standards in mind.
Bitcoin will always be the anchor of most crypto discussions. But clients don’t stop there — and neither should advisors.
Understanding Ethereum, Solana, Ripple, Litecoin, and one or two emerging names such as Sui allows advisors to:
Advisors don’t need to recommend every altcoin under the sun but knowing the five that matter most builds credibility and opens the door to better, more confident crypto conversations.
For more news, information, and strategy, visit the CoinShares Crypto ETF Hub.
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