Token Side Sheets
Module summary
The Token Side Sheet provides a complete view of any token you click on, combining live market data, contract-level insights, and an integrated swap interface so you can act instantly on what you see.
Every panel in this view is powered by real on-chain data, ensuring faster and more accurate updates than traditional explorers or DEX aggregators.
By opening a token’s side sheet, you can:
Monitor real-time price action. View detailed charts, volume, and holder activity without leaving the main screen.
Trade directly from discovery. Instantly swap into or out of the token using the built-in trading widget, which works across supported networks.
Verify safety and ownership. Review automated contract audits, honeypot checks, and liquidity information to understand potential risks before trading.
Analyze on-chain structure. See who owns what and where liquidity pools reside across DEXes and LPs.
Explore related intelligence. Connect token-level data with cluster-level trends, price predictions, or wallet behaviors surfaced elsewhere in Hōkū.
This feature is designed to turn every token mention in Hōkū into an actionable research hub — so when you see a new opportunity, you can analyze, validate, and trade all within the same interface.
Token Side Sheets can be launched from nearly every module in Hōkū and will generally contain the same information, except for when launched from a Trade Signal Alert where alert specific info is shown as a separate tab.
Features
Data category tab
When a token’s side sheet is opened from a Trade Signal Alert, two categories of information become available: Signal Info and Token Details.

These tabs let you switch seamlessly between the alert-specific insights generated by Hōkū’s predictive models and the broader on-chain fundamentals of the token itself, all without closing the panel or losing context.
Signal Info displays the details of the active or historical trade signal. You’ll see the predicted price movements across time horizons, the clusters driving the signal, and metrics such as confidence, duration, and re-entry count. Information on the data found on this tab can be found on the Trade Signals Alerts page.
Token Details expands the view to include the full token data set: live chart, swap interface, holder breakdowns, liquidity positions, and security analysis. Information on the data found on this tab is in the next section of this page.
By separating these two views, Hōkū keeps predictive analytics and token fundamentals clearly organized. This makes it easier to understand why an alert was triggered and what the underlying asset actually looks like before deciding whether to trade.
Embedded price chart
The price chart in the token side sheet is a standard TradingView-style chart, one of the most advanced charting systems in crypto. It lets you study price movement, trading volume, and wallet activity without leaving Hōkū. Here’s how to make sense of what you’re seeing and how to use the main features.
Zoom and navigation controls
You can drag the chart to move through time, zoom with your mouse or trackpad, or hover over a candle to see its open, high, low, and close prices. Buttons at the top let you undo or redo recent actions, and the camera icon takes a quick snapshot of your current view. There is also a zoom button
in the left-side button menu.
Optional holders subchart
The optional Holders Chart adds an entirely new layer of insight to the price chart by showing how the number of wallets holding a token changes over time. You can turn it on or off using the diamond icon
found in the upper bar. When enabled, a smooth blue line appears below the main price chart. This line tracks the count of distinct wallets that currently hold the token. Each point represents a moment in time meaning as the number rises, more wallets are accumulating; when it falls, holders are exiting their positions.
Timeframes and date ranges
You can adjust how much data is shown by changing the chart’s timeframe. Shorter intervals show each candle as just a few minutes of trading, which is useful for fast-moving tokens. Longer intervals show broader trends over days or weeks. Clicking the down arrow on the right will expand the menu to show all available selections.

Date ranges, or the length/period of time shown in the chart is controlled by selecting any of the time period values
shown at the bottom of the chart.
Price pairs and info
At the top of the chart, you’ll see the pair being analyzed.
The first symbol is the token you’re viewing; the second is what it’s being traded against. This helps you know which market the price data is coming from.
In the upper right corner of the chart area, you'll find key details about the trading pair currently shown on the chart.

It includes the token pair, the exchange or liquidity pool it trades on, the selected time interval, and the live price data: the open, high, low, and close values for the current candle along with the percentage change.
Indicators and strategies
The Indicators menu lets you overlay technical tools such as moving averages, volume, or other metrics. These can help you see trends, volatility, and momentum. None of these offerings are generated by Hōkū or Deep3 Labs and many require specialized technical expertise to use effectively.

Chart appearance
You can switch between different chart styles depending on your preference. On the upper bar, you'll find a candlestick icon
that when clicked offers a range of different chart types.

You'll also find an option to switch to full screen mode in this upper bar, which is controlled by the cornered box icon
.
On the bottom right, you'll also find a series of controls
to toggle between normal and logarithmic scales, or to view percentage changes instead of price values. These simply change how the data is displayed, not the data itself.
Drawing tools
On the left side of the chart, you’ll find tools for drawing lines, shapes, or notes.

These are useful if you like to mark trends, identify support and resistance, or highlight key moments on the chart.
Chart Settings
The Chart Settings menu, which is launched by clicking the gear icon
in the upper right, lets you customize how the chart looks and behaves.

You can adjust candle colors, borders, and wicks, change precision or timezone, and fine-tune scales, lines, and background elements to match your visual preferences or trading style.
Swap widget
The Swap widget lets you trade the selected token without leaving the side sheet. Here’s how each control works so you can move from idea to execution in a few clicks. It will automatically search multiple DEXs to find the best available price and liquidity for each token. Note that new or low liquidity tokens may not be available, which will be indicated by the following message in the token selector box.

To trade these tokens, you will need to seek out an available DEX outside of Hōkū.
Standard swaps
Trading tokens in Hōkū is generally the same as in any standard DEX. The UI is similar to all popular DEXs.

To execute a swap from within Hōkū, follow the same process you would on any other DEX.
Connect and verify network. Make sure your wallet is connected and you’re on the same network shown on each token tile. If the network doesn’t match, switch networks in your wallet first.
Choose tokens (From / To). The top tile is the token you’re sending; the bottom tile is the token you’re receiving. Click either tile to change the token. The small external-link icon opens the token’s contract page for verification.
Enter an amount (or use Max). Type the amount you want to swap in the From field. Your available balance appears under the field; click Max to use it all (leaving a little for gas is usually wise).
Flip direction (Optional). Use the up
or down
arrow between the fields to reverse the trade (receive the top token and send the bottom one).Check live quote & USD estimate. Below the inputs you’ll see the estimated rate (e.g., “1 ETH ≈ 0.03 WBTC”) and dollar estimates for each side. These update automatically as prices move.
Verify settings (slippage & preferences). Open the
icon to set slippage tolerance and other preferences. A tighter slippage protects you from price moves but may cause the swap to fail in volatile markets; a wider slippage increases the chance of filling but can result in a slightly worse price.Check Fees, gas, and safety. The widget shows gas/cost estimates and may warn about high price impact or low liquidity. Review these before confirming, especially on new or thinly traded tokens.
Execute the trade. Click Swap, confirm in your wallet, and wait for the transaction to finalize on-chain. After confirmation, balances update automatically and you’ll see the received token in your wallet. If it’s your first time swapping a token, your wallet will ask you to approve the token before you can swap. This is a standard, one-time permission so the router can spend the specified amount.
Cross-chain swaps
Cross-chain swaps let you trade tokens between different blockchains all in one step. You don’t need to manually bridge, send, or re-swap your tokens. Everything happens automatically behind the scenes.
To execute a cross-chain swap, first enable that option from within the token selector menu by clicking into either the From or To token selection box.

This option is available for both From and To tokens, allowing you to effectively swap any token across any network enabled in Hōkū. Note that cross-chain swaps may take longer to execute because of the bridging and routing happening behind the scenes.
Gasless swaps
Gasless swaps allow you to complete a trade without needing to hold the native gas token of the network. They are generally available in all situations, except when the swap directly involves the native token of that network. To enable gasless swaps, click the toggle switch just above the swap button.

When you initiate a swap, you simply confirm the trade by signing an off-chain message with your wallet, no separate gas payment is required from your balance. A relayer then processes the transaction on-chain and covers the gas cost upfront. The small cost of this service is automatically included in the final swap price, so everything happens in a single, seamless step. This means you pay for the transaction in the token you are selling, rather than needing a native token like ETH. If the transaction fails, no gas is spent and nothing is deducted from your wallet. Combined with Cross-chain swaps, this feature makes accessing tokens across networks far simpler.
Security analysis
The Security Analysis section provides automated contract safety checks from multiple third-party providers. These assessments are displayed directly as they’re reported. Deep3 Labs does not modify, verify, or endorse the results. Because these tools rely on automated contract scanning, their findings are occasionally inaccurate or incomplete, so users should interpret them as indicators, not guarantees.
There are three categories of security analysis:
The custom TokenSniffer Risk Score. It's considered overall contract safety score, calculated from a variety of on-chain checks. These include ownership control, liquidity conditions, and code similarity to known scam contracts. The higher the score, the cleaner the contract appears according to TokenSniffer’s internal algorithms.
Honeypot detection and a custom score from Honeypot.is. This information focuses on whether a token can be freely sold after being purchased. It tests the token by simulating real buy/sell transactions, then assigns a risk rating from 1 to 100 and indicates whether a honeypot was detected.
Automated smart contract auditing from TokenSniffer and Go+ Security. Both provide line-by-line smart contract analysis to identify potentially dangerous functions. These checks detect features like proxy contracts, minting permissions, anti-whale limits, self-destruct functions, and more. Each property is displayed with an icon showing whether it exists, can be modified, or is absent. Because both providers use independent scanning engines, their results may differ slightly for the same contract.
TokenSniffer
Token Sniffer analyzes the contract for known risks such as honeypots, ownership privileges, or hidden fees. These are shown in the Contract Analysis section.

They also assign a numeric score summarizing potential concerns that ranges from 0 to 100, followed by a list of detected issues. You can click for more details or cross-reference the findings on Token Sniffer’s own site for a full breakdown. In some cases, they will provide a specific warning flag for the most high risk tokens or tokens that are known scams (according to TokenSniffer). That means that typically, the TokenSniffer score will be presented in one of the following formats.


Honeypot.is
Honeypot.is simulates real buy and sell transactions to determine if tokens can actually be sold once purchased. It reports the number of holders and contracts analyzed and assigns a risk level (from Low to High). If the tool detects a honeypot or restrictive behavior, it will flag the token accordingly.
It's important to note that just because a token is not a honey pot currently, does not mean it won't be in the future. Some smart contracts are modifiable, allowing the owner to change it such that you will not be able to sell it in the future.
The Honeypot.is tile can appear in several different states depending on the outcome of its automated analysis. Below are a few examples.
No Honeypot Detected (Low Risk). The token passed all simulated buy and sell tests successfully, and no suspicious restrictions were found. This usually includes a low risk score such as
1/100.

No Honeypot Detected (Medium Risk). The contract passed honeypot testing, meaning most users can buy and sell normally. However, the analysis detected that a small number of wallets were unable to sell, which raises a moderate concern. This state typically appears with a mid-range risk score (for example, 31/100) and includes a flag explaining the issue, such as “Some users cannot sell their tokens.”

Honeypot Detected (High Risk). The analysis found that most wallets cannot sell their tokens, a strong indicator of a honeypot scam. This state is shown with a high risk score such as
100/100and additional warning flags describing what failed the test.

No Honeypot Detected (Unknown Risk). The contract could not be fully verified, often because its source code isn’t available or there wasn’t enough holder data to analyze. It’s labeled “Unknown” since hidden functionality could still exist.

Go+ Security
Go+ performs a deep contract feature analysis, identifying functions like “mintable,” “blacklisted,” or “anti-whale” mechanics. The table summarizes whether these features are present, absent, or modifiable. Icons indicate the detection source, and results from multiple providers may differ due to their distinct scanning methods. In the table below, the results from Go+ are in the column noted by their logo
while the TokenSniffer results are found in the column noted by their logo
.
Any negative finding is noted by a red check
, which indicates a potentially malicious or negative contract attribute was found. It's entire row will also be highlighted in red, even if only one provider detected the attribute.

Token information
The Token Information section provides a complete on-chain profile of any token you select, combining security, ownership, liquidity, and trading analytics into one unified view. It’s designed to help you understand what’s behind a token, such as who created it, how its supply is distributed, where it’s traded, and whether it shows signs of risk or manipulation.
All data is pulled directly from live blockchain sources and trusted third-party analytics providers, ensuring a transparent snapshot of a token’s structure and market behavior without ever leaving Hōkū.
There are several categories of data shown in this section. Each is described below.
Company data
If the project behind the token provides verified social or communication links, they appear here. These may include a website, social media profiles, or community platforms such as Discord or Telegram. This information helps identify whether the token has a legitimate online presence.

Token data
This section summarizes key on-chain attributes of the token itself, such as its name, ticker, total supply, current price, fully diluted valuation (FDV), and buy/sell taxes if any are applied to each trade. These values are pulled directly from on-chain data and may differ slightly from exchange listings due to real-time blockchain updates.

This section also includes a series of colored icons in the upper right corner. These are automated checks from TokenSniffer on various attributes relating to high-level attributes of the token. To learn more about each, simply hover over that icon. Any negative finding is highlighted in red.

Creator and owner data
Displays the wallet addresses associated with creating and owning the token’s contract. It shows each address’s balance, its percentage ownership, and whether the owner is hidden or visible. This helps reveal concentration of control, for instance, if ownership remains in the hands of a single deployer address.

This section also includes a series of colored icons in the upper right corner. These are automated checks from TokenSniffer on various attributes relating to the token creator or owner To learn more about each, simply hover over that icon. Any negative finding is highlighted in red.

Token holders
Provides insight into how the token’s supply is distributed across wallets. You’ll see:
The total number of holders, and how that count has changed over time.

The share held by the top wallets, such as the top 10, 50, 100, and 500.

A visual breakdown of acquisition types, such as swaps, transfers, or airdrops. Together, these data points reveal how decentralized or concentrated the token’s ownership truly is.

Top traders
Lists wallets that have recently been the most active in trading this token. For each, Hōkū shows their total buy and sell volume, average buy and sell prices, total invested capital, and realized profit or loss. It’s a fast way to see who’s profiting from recent token activity.

DEX data
Shows where the token is actively traded and how liquid each market is. You’ll see each decentralized exchange (DEX) and liquidity pool, along with liquidity depth, pool type (like Uniswap V2 or V3), and the pair contract address. This helps users assess which pools have real volume and stability.

LP data
Displays the addresses holding liquidity-pool tokens (LP tokens), the amount of liquidity each provides, whether those tokens are locked, and what percentage of the pool they control. Locked liquidity typically means reduced risk of a rug pull, while unlocked liquidity can be freely removed by the contract owner.

This section also includes a series of colored icons in the upper right corner. These are automated checks from TokenSniffer on various attributes relating to the token creator or owner To learn more about each, simply hover over that icon. Any negative finding is highlighted in red.

Trade signal alert info
The Signal Info tab appears only when the token side sheet is opened from a Trade Signal Alert within Hōkū.
It displays detailed information about the alert that triggered the view, including its type, strength, affected clusters, and prediction data, giving full context for why the signal was generated. The specific fields shown depend on the alert’s current state: active alerts include real-time prediction data and confidence levels, while historical alerts display past performance and backtesting results.
For more detail, see the dedicated sections for Active Alerts and Alert History on the Trade Signal Alert page.
Usage tips
Confirm a token’s legitimacy before trading
Open the side sheet and scan Company Data, Creator & Owner, DEX/LP Data, and the Security Analysis tiles. Check for working project links, transparent ownership (no hidden owner), reasonable taxes, active DEX pools, and locked liquidity. If any security tile flags serious issues (e.g., honeypot detected), pause and verify on the provider’s site. Hōkū makes it incredible fast and simple to get a quick read on a token's legitimacy.

Assess decentralization and supply concentration
In Token Holders, review total holders and the % held by the Top 10/50/100/500 wallets. A highly concentrated supply can mean sharper moves and easier manipulation; a more distributed holder base typically trades smoother. You can also use the recent %-change box to see whether holder growth is increasing or decreasing over time.


Act immediately with the built-in Swap
When your checks look good, use the Swap panel in the same side sheet. Select the pair, enter size (or Max), confirm slippage in Settings
, and execute. For cross-chain or gasless flows, choose the destination chain or sign the gasless intent and complete the trade without leaving the page.

FAQ
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