PancakeSwap launches new portfolio page for tracking tokens and positions across chains

4 hours ago 10

If you’ve ever tried to track your DeFi positions across multiple chains, you know the drill. Open one tab for your liquidity pools, another for your perpetual trades, a third for unclaimed rewards, and maybe a spreadsheet to tie it all together. PancakeSwap just built a page that replaces the spreadsheet.

The decentralized exchange launched a new Portfolio page on June 12, accessible at pancakeswap.finance/portfolio. It aggregates tokens, perpetual positions, liquidity provider positions, unclaimed rewards, and full transaction histories into a single cross-chain interface spanning BNB Chain, Ethereum, Base, and more.

What the portfolio page actually does

The page pulls together every type of position a user might hold on the platform and displays it in one unified view. LP positions sitting in a BNB Chain pool, a leveraged perps trade on another chain, and a handful of unclaimed CAKE rewards all show up on the same screen.

The cross-chain support is the key detail here. PancakeSwap now operates across more than 10 chains as a multichain platform. Tracking activity across that many networks without a unified interface was becoming a real pain point for users, and this page directly addresses it.

A quiet rollout in a loud market

The Portfolio page went live without any prior media leaks or pre-announcements in crypto circles. PancakeSwap opted for a same-day rollout instead, skipping the hype cycle entirely.

The tool builds on a foundation of recent product upgrades. In 2023, the exchange integrated a Position Manager that enabled automated management of LP positions. More recently, PancakeSwap completed a rebuild of its perpetual trading platform in May 2026, upgrading leverage support to as high as 200x. The CakePad feature launched in October 2025 as another piece of the platform’s expanding product suite.

What this means for investors

In DeFi, where positions are scattered across protocols, chains, and wallet addresses, building this kind of unified view is genuinely harder. The data lives in different places, uses different formats, and updates at different speeds.

PancakeSwap solving this for its own platform doesn’t replace dedicated portfolio trackers like DeBank or Zapper, which aggregate across dozens of protocols. But it does something those tools can’t: it integrates natively with PancakeSwap’s own products, meaning the data should be more accurate and more actionable. You’re not just viewing positions. You’re viewing them in the same interface where you can modify them.

Disclosure: This article was edited by Editorial Team. For more information on how we create and review content, see our Editorial Policy.

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