Pyth Network â a key trading data pipeline set to service decentralized finance (DeFi) projects on Solana â will go live on Thursday.
Known as an âoracleâ in crypto lingo, the data distributor will shortly begin pumping price quotes for crypto assets, FX markets, futures and equities into nodes supporting the Solana blockchain. There, developers can use it to build DeFi tools like lending projects.Â
At least 17 market makers, quant shops and exchanges had pledged to support Pyth, including one of Solana blockchainâs big backers, the crypto exchange FTX.Â
By signing up, you will receive emails about CoinDesk product updates, events and marketing and you agree to our terms & conditions and privacy policy.Jump Trading, Cumberland, LMAX, Virtu Financial and Genesis are also in the mix; late-comer quant firm Hudson River Trading joined Monday.
Pyth is looking to those straight-from-the-source data streams for an advantage in the oracle arms race. Whereas older DeFi chains such as Ethereum have robust data distribution networks, Solanaâs scene is more nascent; Chainlink on Solana isnât even in testnet yet.
Jump Tradingâs Mike Cahill said Pythâs âfirst-partyâ professional data is more trustworthy than third-party data aggregation protocols.Â
âIt could be that thereâs people out there â freelancers â who are just screen-scraping to get the data,â Cahill said. âWhat Pyth does is it gives us an undisputed and legal source of data.â
Cahill said Pythâs data partners send their ticks directly to Solana nodes, allowing price updates every 400 milliseconds (Solanaâs blocktime). Thatâs far speedier than Ethereumâs blocktime of 10-15 seconds, which serves as a natural speed cap to the largest DeFi networkâs on-chain oracles, according to Chainlink.
âThis is about as fast as you can getâ with a blockchain, said Cahill.
Even so, 400 milliseconds feels slothlike against the high-frequency trade times deployed by firms like those feeding data into Pyth, including Jump, which heavily assisted in Pythâs development. They make billions of dollars by executing orders in millionths of a second.Â
âHistorically, trading firms would just trade on exchanges, and would typically be consumers of market data,â Cahill said, explaining how Pyth allows Jump, Virtu and Hudson River to be âin the kind of data-selling seatâ for the first time.
Using that data will be free-of-charge â to begin with, at least. Chi Zhao, an external spokesperson for Pyth, said itâs âanticipatedâ that there could be monetization potential down the road. Monetization decisions would be up to âPyth Governance,â she said.
But details surrounding Pythâs governance model remained murky at press time Wednesday (Pythâs website said a white paper is âcoming soonâ), raising the uncommon prospect of a mainnet launch before a backend reveal. Zhao said the white paper is under development.