Why "total value" is more complex than you think
In traditional banking, your total balance is simple: check your bank account and you see one number. In crypto, your "total value" can be scattered across:
- Multiple wallet addresses (you might have several)
- Multiple blockchains (Ethereum, Arbitrum, Solana, Polygon, and others)
- Multiple position types (tokens in your wallet, tokens deposited in DeFi protocols, tokens staked, tokens borrowed against)
No single wallet shows all of this by default. Your MetaMask shows your Ethereum and EVM-chain balances. Your Phantom shows Solana. Neither shows tokens you have deposited into lending protocols or liquidity pools. This is why dedicated portfolio trackers exist -- and why understanding what each number means is important.
Reading a token entry
The most basic unit in any portfolio view is a token entry. Here is what each field means:
| Field | Example | What it means |
|---|---|---|
| Token symbol | ETH | The shorthand identifier for the token. ETH is Ethereum's native token, USDC is the Circle dollar stablecoin, WBTC is Wrapped Bitcoin on Ethereum. |
| Amount held | 2.5 ETH | How many units of this token you own in this particular position. This is the raw quantity, not the dollar value. |
| Current price | $2,000 | The current market price of one unit of this token, typically sourced from major exchanges or price aggregators. |
| Total value | $5,000 | Amount multiplied by price. This is what your position is worth right now at market prices. It changes constantly as the price moves. |
| 24h change | +3.2% | How much the price has changed in the last 24 hours. A useful short-term indicator, but daily moves in crypto are often noise rather than signal. |
This is straightforward for tokens sitting in your wallet. But in DeFi, things get more nuanced.
Understanding different position types
If you use decentralized finance protocols, your portfolio is not just tokens in a wallet. It includes positions across various protocols, each with different characteristics and risks. Here are the main types you will encounter:
Wallet
Tokens sitting directly in your wallet, not deposited into any protocol. These are fully under your control and can be sent or swapped at any time (subject to gas fees). This is the simplest type of holding.
Deposited / Supplied
Tokens you have deposited into a lending protocol (like Aave or Compound) to earn interest. They are no longer visible in your wallet balance, but you still own them and can withdraw them. You typically receive a receipt token (like aUSDC) representing your deposit.
Borrowed
Tokens you have borrowed from a protocol, using other tokens as collateral. These are liabilities -- you owe them back. A complete portfolio view should show borrowed amounts as negative or as debt, since they reduce your net worth.
Staked
Tokens locked in a staking contract to earn rewards, often by helping to secure a proof-of-stake blockchain. Staked tokens may have a lockup period or unbonding period before they can be withdrawn. Common examples include staked ETH (via Lido, Rocket Pool, or Coinbase) and staked SOL.
LP Position (Liquidity Pool)
Tokens deposited into a liquidity pool on a decentralized exchange. LP positions are more complex because they represent two underlying tokens in a specific ratio. The value of your LP position changes with the prices of both tokens, and you may experience impermanent loss.
Locked / Vesting
Tokens with a time lock that prevents withdrawal until a specific date. Common in governance (you lock tokens to vote) and with vesting schedules for team or investor tokens. These have value but zero liquidity until the lock expires.
Collateral
Tokens deposited to back a loan. If you borrow USDC using ETH as collateral, your ETH is locked in the lending protocol. You still own it, but you cannot withdraw it until you repay the loan. If the value of your collateral drops too far, it may be liquidated to cover the debt.
Understanding yield numbers: APR vs APY
If you have deposited or staked tokens, you will see yield rates quoted as either APR or APY. These are related but different:
- APR (Annual Percentage Rate): The simple interest rate over a year, without compounding. If you deposit $1,000 at 5% APR, you earn $50 over a year (assuming the rate stays constant).
- APY (Annual Percentage Yield): The effective rate including compounding. If rewards are reinvested (compounded) throughout the year, the actual return is higher than the APR. A 5% APR compounded daily works out to roughly 5.13% APY.
Important caveat: In crypto, yield rates are almost always variable. The APR or APY you see is a snapshot of the current rate, not a guarantee of future returns. Rates change constantly based on supply, demand, and protocol mechanics. A protocol showing 10% APY today might show 3% next week if more depositors arrive and dilute the rewards. Treat displayed rates as indicative, not fixed.
The hidden stuff most trackers miss
Even if you use a portfolio tracker, there are important aspects of your portfolio that most tools do not surface clearly.
Underlying exposure
This is one of the most important and least understood concepts in crypto portfolio management. Many tokens are wrappers or derivatives of the same underlying asset. For example:
- wstETH, stETH, cbETH, rETH -- all different tokens, but they all represent ETH underneath. If you hold ETH in your wallet plus stETH in a lending protocol plus wstETH in another, your actual exposure to ETH price movements is the sum of all three.
- USDC, USDT, DAI, FRAX -- all different stablecoins, but they all track the US dollar. Your total dollar-denominated exposure includes all of them.
- WBTC, tBTC, cbBTC -- wrapped versions of Bitcoin on Ethereum. Holding these gives you Bitcoin price exposure, not Ethereum.
If your tracker shows these as separate line items without connecting them, you might think you are diversified across ten tokens when you really have concentrated exposure to two or three underlying assets.
Not all stablecoins are equal
Your portfolio might show three stablecoin positions, each worth $1, and you might assume they are interchangeable. But a dollar in USDC (backed by cash reserves and treasuries held by Circle) carries different risks than a dollar in DAI (a decentralized stablecoin backed by a mix of crypto collateral) or a dollar in an algorithmic stablecoin. The face value is the same; the risk profile is not.
Token approvals
Every time you connect your wallet to a DeFi protocol, you typically sign an "approval" allowing the protocol's smart contract to spend your tokens. Many approvals are set to unlimited by default. These approvals persist even after you are done using the protocol. If that contract is ever compromised, the attacker could drain the approved tokens from your wallet. Most portfolio trackers do not show you your active approvals -- but they are an invisible risk sitting in every active DeFi wallet.
Debt and net worth
If you have borrowed tokens from a lending protocol, your net worth is not just the sum of your assets -- it is assets minus debts. A portfolio that shows $50,000 in deposits and $30,000 in borrows has a net worth of $20,000, not $50,000. Some trackers only show the asset side, which can be dangerously misleading.
How CleanSky approaches portfolio reading
CleanSky was built specifically to solve the problems described above. Here is how it differs from a basic wallet view or simple portfolio tracker:
| What you need | Typical wallet / tracker | CleanSky |
|---|---|---|
| Position types | Shows wallet balances; limited DeFi support | Shows wallet, deposited, borrowed, staked, LP, collateral, and locked positions |
| Classification | Flat list of tokens | Organized into Savings, Investments, and Loans for clarity |
| Underlying exposure | Shows each token separately | Strips wrappers to show your true exposure (wstETH, stETH, ETH all mapped to ETH) |
| Net worth | Often shows only assets | Calculates assets minus debts for true net worth |
| Multi-chain | One chain at a time | All supported chains in a single view |
| Privacy | Varies | No signup, no API keys, no custody, no tracking |
| Access model | Connect wallet (signature required) | Paste address (read-only, no wallet connection needed) |
The goal is not just to show you numbers, but to help you understand what those numbers mean for your financial situation. A flat list of token balances tells you what you have. Understanding your positions, exposure, and risk tells you where you actually stand.
Les outils de suivi de portefeuille utilisent generalement l'un des deux modeles d'acces : « connecter le wallet » ou « coller l'adresse ». Des outils comme Zerion, Zapper et DeBank vous demandent de connecter votre wallet et de signer un message -- cela verifie la propriete et peut activer des fonctionnalites comme l'etiquetage des transactions, mais cela expose aussi votre wallet a une interaction avec l'extension du navigateur a chaque connexion. CleanSky adopte l'approche en lecture seule : vous collez simplement une adresse publique de wallet. Comme les donnees blockchain sont publiques, aucune signature ni connexion n'est necessaire pour lire vos soldes et positions. Le compromis est que les outils en lecture seule ne peuvent pas declencher de transactions en votre nom, mais pour la lecture du portefeuille -- ce qui est precisement l'objectif -- cette limitation est en realite un avantage en termes de confidentialite et de securite.
Try it yourself: CleanSky reads your public wallet addresses across multiple chains and protocols. No signup, no private keys, no custody. Just paste an address and see your portfolio analyzed into understandable positions with underlying exposure mapped and net worth calculated. Launch the app to try it.
Reading your portfolio like a professional
Once you understand the components, here is a framework for reviewing your crypto portfolio with a critical eye. Votre tableau de bord (dashboard) de portefeuille devrait afficher une vue unique et consolidee de toutes vos positions -- valeur nette en haut, positions ventilees par type et exposition sous-jacente resumee pour reperer la concentration d'un coup d'oeil.
- Check your net worth, not just total assets. If you have any borrows, subtract them. Your net worth is the only number that matters.
- Look at underlying exposure, not just token names. Group your holdings by what they actually represent. How much exposure do you really have to ETH? To stablecoins? To a single protocol?
- Understand your position types. How much is liquid (in your wallet, immediately accessible)? How much is locked, staked, or used as collateral? Could you exit everything quickly if you needed to?
- Question the yield numbers. Is that 15% APY sustainable? What are the risks? Variable rates can drop to near zero. High yields often come with high risk.
- Review your concentration. If 70% of your portfolio is in a single token or protocol, a failure there could be devastating regardless of what else you hold.
- Do not ignore debt. If your collateral drops in value, your loan-to-value ratio increases, and you could face liquidation. Monitor your health factor if you are borrowing.
Key takeaways
- Your crypto portfolio is likely more complex than a single wallet balance -- assets can be spread across wallets, chains, and DeFi protocols.
- Understand the difference between wallet balances, deposited funds, borrowed funds, staked tokens, LP positions, and locked/vesting tokens.
- APR and APY in crypto are variable rates -- treat them as snapshots, not guarantees.
- Look through token names to see underlying exposure. Multiple token wrappers may represent concentrated exposure to a single asset.
- Net worth equals assets minus debts. If you are borrowing, your total portfolio value is misleading without accounting for what you owe.
- A good portfolio view does not just list tokens -- it helps you understand your positions, exposure, and risk.
- You do not need to connect your wallet to read your portfolio. Read-only tools that use your public address offer the same visibility with better privacy.
For more on the concepts covered here, see our guides on CleanSky concepts, token types explained, DeFi explained, what is DeFi, and understanding risk.