Every month, the Pyth contributors collect informative data points on the network, its growth, as well as its performance.
Disclaimer
All data points shown in the charts and graphs are just rough approximations of the overall performance of Pyth. Due to its permissionless nature, any dApp can plug and integrate with Pyth without letting the Pyth contributors know about it. Certain information such as dApps TVS, Trading Volume and Total Integrations may provide incomplete depiction of the Pyth metrics.
- Data Publishers
Data is king, and the Pyth network stands committed to onboarding only high-quality data sources and establishing a natural bridge — without intermediaries — between these sources and the end-users.
- Price Feeds
On-chain protocols need sustainable price references, which means they need oracle services. The more price feeds are supported, the more an oracle can provide value to protocols.
- #PoweredByPyth Applications
The metrics include all known on-chain dApps composing with Pyth; sometimes, a team using Pyth data may not tell us. (If this is the case for you, let us know here and we’ll get you featured).
From an integrations perspective, one segment the crypto community may oversee is off-chain applications needing pricing data in their own environment: this is a segment we expect to see a strong uptick in the future thanks to Pyth’s unique offering and quality assurance.
- Total Value Secured
One of the most important metrics is the Total Value Secured (TVS) by the Pyth’s price feeds. Price feeds are crucial for your operations, whether you are a borrow-lending protocol or a synthetics platform.
- Total Trading Volume
Consider the amount of trading volume dependent on Pyth data. Each protocol has its Pyth integration: perpetual contracts using a CLOB or a vAMM use Pyth as their index reference to set the funding rate. Synthetics platforms use Pyth price feeds as the exchange rate basis for swaps in between synthetic assets. Finally, futures or options protocols (specifically DOVs) integrate Pyth feeds for their derivatives settlement.
- Client Downloads
Pyth network is open-sourced, and its data is freely queryable.
You can check Pyth’s adoption rate by looking at NPM and Rust downloads.
NPM (“Node Package Manager”) is the default package manager for JavaScript’s runtime Node.js, which is needed whenever you want to integrate Pyth on your website frontend.
A (Rust) crate is a binary or library. The crate root is a source file that the Rust compiler starts from and makes up the root module of your crate. This enables you to call on-chain data and make your protocol works.
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