DeFi portfolios rarely live in one place. A user may lend on one chain, trade on another, bridge assets between wallets, hold stablecoins in cold storage, and maintain derivatives exposure on Hyperliquid.

The result is a portfolio that is visible in fragments but difficult to understand as a whole.

Why DeFi Breaks Simple Tracking

DeFi positions are not always visible as ordinary token balances. A receipt token may represent liquidity pool exposure. A lending position may include collateral and debt. A staking position may not behave like liquid spot exposure. A bridge may move assets across chains without changing the owner's total portfolio.

This is why DeFi tracking requires interpretation. The question is not only what token appears in a wallet. The question is what exposure the user actually has.

The Portfolio View

A useful DeFi portfolio view should connect wallets, chains, protocol positions, transaction history, prices, PnL, cost basis, and risk. It should help users understand whether the portfolio is concentrated in a protocol, chain, asset, or strategy.

For an active DeFi user, this can change the entire review. A portfolio that looks diversified by token count may be concentrated in one chain or market factor. A stablecoin strategy may carry issuer or protocol concentration. A yield position may change liquidity and risk.

Raster's Role

Raster is designed to bring DeFi exposure into the broader portfolio intelligence view. DeFi activity can then be reviewed alongside wallets, Solana, Hyperliquid, spot assets, derivatives, PnL, risk, and performance.

Explore Portfolio Analytics and Risk Analysis.