The six-dimensional model
Most portfolio trackers show you a flat list of tokens and balances. CleanSky is different. Every asset in your portfolio is classified across six independent dimensions, each answering a different question about your money:
- Intents — What is this money for?
- Economic categories — What type of asset is it?
- Underlying exposure — What are you actually exposed to?
- Risk profiles — What is the baseline risk?
- Risk dimensions — How risky is it, and in what way?
- Risk vectors — What infrastructure risks affect it?
These dimensions are orthogonal — they can be combined in any way. View your portfolio by intent, by category, by chain, by underlying, by risk — or any combination. No single view is "the right one."
Intents (Buckets)
Intents are how you organize your capital by its purpose. Think of them as virtual envelopes or buckets — each one defines what you expect that money to do, and what level of risk is acceptable.
Daily Ops
Money for immediate use — gas fees, daily transactions. Low volatility, high liquidity required.
Savings
Long-term capital preservation. Minimal risk tolerance. Stablecoins, lending positions, conservative staking.
Growth
Capital appreciation with controlled risk. Medium tolerance, higher volatility accepted. Blue-chip tokens, diversified LP positions.
Experimental
High risk, high potential return. Small allocations to new protocols, memecoins, aggressive farming strategies.
Each intent defines concentration limits — maximum exposure per token, network, wallet, and address. When an asset exceeds its intent's tolerance, CleanSky alerts you. New, unassigned assets go to a Neutral intent by default.
Economic categories
Not all crypto is the same type of asset. CleanSky classifies every token into its economic category — the same way traditional finance distinguishes between cash, bonds, equities, and commodities:
Fiat / Stables
USDC, USDT, DAI — tokens pegged to fiat currencies. Your "cash" in crypto.
Crypto Native
ETH, BTC, SOL — native blockchain assets. The "equities" of crypto.
Commodities
PAXG (gold), XAG (silver) — tokenized physical commodities.
Bonds / Fixed Income
OUSG, USTB — tokenized government bonds and treasury bills.
DeFi Positions
LP tokens, vault shares, staking receipts — positions in DeFi protocols.
Real World Assets
Tokenized real estate, credit, and other traditional assets brought on-chain.
Underlying exposure
Here's a question most trackers can't answer: If you hold wstETH on Arbitrum, stETH on Ethereum, and cbETH on Base — how much ETH exposure do you actually have?
CleanSky's underlying dimension strips away wrappers, bridges, and derivatives to show your real economic exposure. Those three tokens above? They're all ETH. Your portfolio shows the combined exposure, regardless of which chain or wrapper you're using.
Why it matters: You might think you're diversified across 20 tokens, but if 15 of them are ETH derivatives, your actual exposure is concentrated. Underlying analysis reveals the truth.
Position classification
When CleanSky scans your DeFi positions, it automatically classifies them into human-readable categories. Technical DeFi mechanics become plain language:
| Technical Position | CleanSky Label | What It Means |
|---|---|---|
| Supply USDC in Aave | Savings | Earning 4.2% annually, withdraw anytime |
| Stake ETH in Lido | Time-locked savings | Earning staking rewards, liquid via stETH |
| LP WETH/USDC in Uniswap | Active investment | Earning fees, exposed to impermanent loss |
| Borrow USDC against ETH | Loan | $5,000 borrowed, collateral health visible |
| Deposit in Yearn Vault | Investment fund | Auto-compounding strategy managed by code |
| Long ETH 5x on GMX | Leveraged operation | 5x leverage, liquidation distance tracked |
Risk dimensions
"High risk" means nothing. High in what way? CleanSky doesn't reduce risk to a single number. Instead, it measures six independent risk axes:
Volatility
How much the price moves. SHIB is very high volatility; USDC is very low.
Liquidity
How easily you can exit. ETH is highly liquid; an obscure NFT is not.
Sovereignty
Can someone else freeze or control it? USDT can be frozen by Tether; BTC cannot be frozen by anyone.
Inflation
Purchasing power risk over time. Fiat-pegged stablecoins inherit fiat inflation; Bitcoin has a fixed supply.
Complexity
Technical dependencies. Holding ETH is simple; an LP in a vault on a bridge is highly complex.
Mobility
Cost to move capital. Ethereum L1 transfers are expensive; Solana is nearly free.
Each axis is scored from Very Low (1) to Very High (5). Your portfolio's risk is the USD-weighted average across all assets per axis — then compared against your intent tolerances.
Risk vectors
Risk vectors are infrastructure-level risks that affect any token passing through them. They're first-class entities in CleanSky's model:
- Blockchain vectors — Each chain adds its own risk profile. Ethereum adds high mobility risk (gas costs); Solana adds different sovereignty characteristics.
- Protocol vectors — Using Uniswap V4 adds complexity risk from hooks; Aave adds different smart contract risk than Compound.
- Bridge vectors — Bridging tokens via Stargate or Wormhole adds sovereignty and complexity risk.
CleanSky enforces concentration limits per vector type: up to 100% on a single blockchain, but no more than 30% on a single protocol, or 40% on a single bridge.
The result: Instead of a single "risk score" that tells you nothing actionable, CleanSky gives you a multi-axis picture: "high volatility with low liquidity on a complex position" — that's something you can act on.
See these concepts in action. Paste any wallet address and watch CleanSky organize your portfolio.