
Bringing real-time ETF prices on-chain empower developers, protocols, and institutions with real-time access to ETFs.
Pyth Network has launched real-time price feeds which will extend Pyth’s coverage to some of the world’s largest and most actively held and traded ETFs, including products managed by BlackRock, State Street and Vanguard
Unlike synthetic tokens or mirrored instruments used in DeFi to approximate ETF exposure, Pyth’s feeds provide the actual traded price on-chain and in real time.
The new price feeds cover a diverse range of ETFs across asset classes and geographies, including US equities, global indices, commodities, fixed income, real-world assets, and multi-asset portfolios. Many of the included funds offer exposure to popular investment strategies based on sectors, styles, dividends, and yield.
“Market data isn’t just unaffordable for the majority of participants; at its foundation, it’s structurally exclusive. Nasdaq’s data revenue more than doubled over the past decade, while ICE pulled in $1.4 billion from data and connectivity services in 2023 alone,” said Mike Cahill, CEO of Douro Labs, a leading contributor to the Pyth Network.
“And while that system works for a handful of incumbents, it locks out builders, limits innovation, and slows the evolution of smarter financial products. That’s why Pyth is opening the door to high-fidelity data, delivering real-time financial information straight from top institutions.”
With reliable, real-time pricing for the world’s most traded ETFs, developers can build more sophisticated, benchmark-aware applications that reflect real-world market structure.
“With the launch of Pyth’s real-time ETF price feeds, we’re rewriting the market data economy, bringing traditional asset rails into programmable finance,” added Cahill.
“It’s time that everyone—not just the top 1%—has access to real-time information. Now, builders can create smarter products, traders can gain real-world market context, and institutions can tap into high-fidelity market data without the legacy costs or infrastructure holding them back.”