Bridges supported
20+ providers
Covers canonical, liquidity, and messaging bridges used in production.
Plan and execute cross-chain transfers with aggregated routes, gas estimates, and risk scoring for major bridges. Professional investors running multi-chain strategies who require institution-grade reporting and risk controls. Detect anomalies, suspicious approvals, and governance changes before funds are at risk. Developer density is high with an increasing number of local exchanges and gaming studios.
Bridges supported
20+ providers
Covers canonical, liquidity, and messaging bridges used in production.
Route simulation time
< 2 seconds
Evaluate costs and SLAs before sending funds cross-chain.
Arbitrum One profile
High-throughput rollup popular with sophisticated DeFi protocols.
Rollup compression keeps most swaps under $0.30 with finality in seconds.
Compare bridge routes by cost, latency, and slippage across approved providers. Pre-compute gas requirements on source and destination chains before signing. Surface trust and risk annotations (custodial vs. canonical) to guide treasury decisions.
Hard to consolidate portfolio exposure across chains and venues. Consolidated NAV and PnL reporting across custody providers.
GMX, Camelot, and perpetual protocols rely on deep liquidity analytics. Live monitoring of contract upgrades, proxy changes, and admin key usage.
Live monitoring of contract upgrades, proxy changes, and admin key usage. Tooling must optimize for mobile devices and integrate with INR on-ramp analytics.
Token scanner sweeps of newly listed assets interacting with your treasury. Tooling must optimize for mobile devices and integrate with INR on-ramp analytics.
Mapping transacting wallets to known entities for counterparty risk scoring. Tooling must optimize for mobile devices and integrate with INR on-ramp analytics.
We combine public incident databases, chain security advisories, and on-chain telemetry to weight each provider.
Upload policy rules (allowed chains, minimum confirmations, spend limits) to block non-compliant routes.
Yes. Aggregated routes consider intermediary hops when they reduce cost or improve settlement time.