Crypto has a strange problem.
The industry has built thousands of protocols, dozens of chains, complex lending markets, liquid staking tokens, perps venues, prediction markets, LP positions, points programs, NFT ecosystems, and yield strategies.
But the average on-chain user is still expected to monitor all of this manually.
You open one app to check your wallet.
Another to check your lending position.
Another to check your perps.
Another to check your LP range.
Another to check your prediction market exposure.
Another to follow governance proposals.
Another to see if a protocol changed its parameters.
Another to understand whether your position is actually safe.
This is not portfolio management. This is tab management.
And that is exactly the problem Otomato is trying to solve.
Most crypto portfolio trackers answer one basic question:
“What do I own?”
That is useful, but it is not enough anymore.
In DeFi, the more important questions are usually:
“Is my position at risk?”
“Did something change?”
“Do I need to act?”
“Is my yield still competitive?”
“Did my health factor move too close to liquidation?”
“Did my LP position go out of range?”
“Did borrow rates suddenly spike?”
“Did a protocol I use get affected by an incident?”
“Did a market I am exposed to resolve?”
“Did my points, rewards, or eligibility change?”
A dashboard can show information. But a dashboard does not necessarily protect you.
The real issue is that DeFi moves faster than most users can monitor. A lending rate can change while you are asleep. A collateral asset can move quickly. A pool can go out of range. A protocol parameter can be updated. A position can slowly become dangerous without triggering any obvious warning from the interface you used to create it.
Static portfolio trackers are good at displaying the past and present.
But DeFi users increasingly need tools that understand context and surface what matters before it becomes expensive.
Otomato is a DeFi assistant that monitors your on-chain positions and sends action-oriented alerts when something important happens.
Instead of asking users to constantly refresh dashboards, Otomato detects positions automatically and follows them across different verticals of crypto, including DeFi, perps, prediction markets, tokens, and NFTs.
The idea is simple:
Your portfolio should tell you when it needs your attention.
Not every price move matters. Not every notification deserves to interrupt you. https://otomato.xyz/ is designed around low-noise, high-signal alerts that are connected to your actual positions.
For example, Otomato can help notify users about things like:
The goal is not to create another dashboard that users have to check.
The goal is to create an intelligence layer that watches the portfolio for them.
Crypto users are becoming more sophisticated, but the tooling around them has not fully caught up.
A single active user might have:
Each of these positions has its own risk profile.
Some are sensitive to price. Some are sensitive to rates. Some are sensitive to liquidity. Some are sensitive to expiry. Some are sensitive to protocol-level events. Some are sensitive to market resolution.
The user should not have to manually build a mental monitoring system for every protocol they touch.
That is where a portfolio-aware assistant becomes useful.
Crypto already has alert bots. But many of them are too generic.
A basic alert bot might tell you:
“ETH is down 5%.”
That can be useful, but it is not necessarily actionable.
A portfolio-aware alert is different.
It understands that ETH being down 5% matters more if you have borrowed against ETH, provided liquidity in an ETH pair, opened a perp position, or used ETH-related collateral in a lending market.
The same event has a different meaning depending on the user’s position.
That is the core difference.
Otomato is not just trying to send more notifications. It is trying to send better ones.
A good crypto alert should answer three questions:
This is especially important in DeFi, where risk often appears gradually before it becomes obvious.
Imagine you have a lending position.
A normal dashboard shows your collateral, debt, and health factor. But unless you check it regularly, you might miss when conditions change.
Otomato can monitor that position and notify you if the risk becomes more relevant.
Now imagine you are providing liquidity in a concentrated liquidity pool.
Your position might be earning fees while it is in range, but if the price moves outside your range, your capital stops behaving the way you expected. Many users only notice this after the opportunity has already passed.
A useful assistant should detect that and tell you.
Or imagine you are using Pendle.
Fixed yield, PTs, YTs, LP positions, expiries, and implied yields can be powerful, but they also require attention. Missing an expiry or failing to understand a change in market conditions can hurt returns.
Otomato can help turn those events into clear alerts.
Or imagine you are trading on Hyperliquid.
Perps move quickly. Orders, margin, funding, and liquidation risk matter. A portfolio-aware assistant can help users stay aware without living inside the trading interface all day.
Or imagine you are using Polymarket or other prediction markets.
Market odds can move, markets can resolve, and positions can shift in value. A tracker that understands prediction exposure can be much more useful than a simple wallet balance view.
Across all of these cases, the principle is the same:
The user does not just need data.
The user needs context.
One of the hardest parts of crypto tooling is onboarding.
Power users might be willing to configure custom alerts manually, but most people will not.
They do not want to set ten conditions across five apps.
They do not want to manually enter every position.
They do not want to maintain a personal risk dashboard.
They want to connect a wallet, or paste an address, and get useful information.
That is why automatic position detection is important.
Otomato is designed to identify relevant on-chain positions and monitor them without requiring users to build their own alert system from scratch.
This matters because the best alert system is the one users actually keep using.
The bigger shift here is from passive tracking to active intelligence.
A portfolio tracker tells you what exists.
A DeFi assistant tells you what matters.
That difference becomes more important as on-chain finance becomes more complex.
In traditional finance, users rely on brokers, banking alerts, risk systems, portfolio managers, and dedicated infrastructure.
In crypto, many users are still acting as their own risk manager, analyst, trader, yield strategist, and operations team.
That might be manageable with a few spot tokens.
It becomes much harder with DeFi.
Otomato is part of a broader category of tools that recognize this shift. As crypto portfolios become more fragmented, the interface layer has to become more intelligent.
The future wallet or portfolio tool will not just show balances.
It will understand positions.
It will detect risk.
It will summarize what changed.
It will tell users when something deserves attention.
And eventually, it may help users act directly from those alerts.
Crypto is moving toward more specialized ecosystems.
Users are no longer only holding assets on Ethereum mainnet. They are using L2s, appchains, perps platforms, prediction markets, NFT ecosystems, and new DeFi primitives across many networks.
At the same time, user behavior is becoming more strategy-driven.
People are not just buying tokens.
They are looping stablecoins, farming points, trading perps, holding PTs, providing liquidity, hedging exposure, collecting rewards, and participating in prediction markets.
The surface area of risk has expanded.
The surface area of opportunity has expanded too.
That creates a tooling gap.
If crypto wants more users to participate safely and intelligently, it needs better monitoring infrastructure.
Otomato is building for that gap.
The next generation of crypto portfolio tools will not be judged only by how clean their dashboards look.
They will be judged by whether they help users make better decisions.
Can they detect what matters?
Can they reduce noise?
Can they surface risk before it becomes painful?
Can they help users understand their own positions without forcing them to become full-time analysts?
That is the direction Otomato is taking.
Instead of building another static portfolio tracker, Otomato is building a portfolio-aware DeFi assistant.
A tool that watches your on-chain positions, understands what is relevant, and alerts you when something important changes.
In a market where opportunities and risks move 24/7, that kind of assistant is not just convenient.
It is becoming necessary.