In traditional banking, repeated deposit-and-lend cycles let a single dollar of reserves support multiple dollars of claims. Decentralized finance produces an analogous structure with tokens. Constructing a Token Graph of 10,200 tokens across 200 blockchains, this paper maps the resulting hierarchy and shows that, by late 2025, each dollar of base assets supports $4.7 of total claims. An embedded yield correction disentangles two channels that raw data conflates: a compositional channel, where lending protocols concentrate in deeper tiers and mechanically raise average yields; and a liquidity channel, where each derivation step reduces secondary-market depth and depresses yields in liquidity-sensitive pools. The liquidity channel concentrates in DEX pools and vanishes in lending pools. A yield decomposition shows that the tier gradient operates entirely through fundamental protocol yields, not incentive-token emissions; quantile regressions reveal that the structural associations concentrate in the upper tail of the yield distribution, with near-zero effects at the median. These findings reframe DeFi's "double counting" as a structural risk question and identify liquidity fragmentation as the primary mechanism associated with yield variation across the token hierarchy.