RedStone launches RedStone Live

RedStone introduced RedStone Live, a product that it says lets users create market data feeds beyond traditional provider limits. (x.com). The launch is positioned as expanding custom oracles and data‑market functionality for on‑chain use. (x.com)

RedStone has launched RedStone Live, a new product for building custom market data feeds for on-chain trading and tokenized assets. (redstone.finance) RedStone says the service delivers low-latency data for United States and non-United States equities, commodities, foreign exchange, indexes and crypto, with delivery either by WebSocket off-chain or directly on-chain. The company’s site says RedStone now serves 110-plus blockchains, 1,300-plus assets and 170-plus clients. (redstone.finance 1) (redstone.finance 2) The company published a blog post dated March 30, 2026 describing RedStone Live as “real-time data” for “24/7 markets.” On its product page, RedStone says feeds can be configured by methodology, weighted across preferred sources and expanded with market-hours or session data. (blog.redstone.finance) (redstone.finance) An oracle in crypto is a data bridge: it carries prices and other outside information into smart contracts that cannot fetch that data on their own. RedStone’s pitch is that builders should be able to define how a feed is assembled instead of choosing from a fixed menu of assets and update rules. (docs.ton.org) (redstone.finance) That matters for tokenized stocks, commodities and other real-world assets that trade across different venues and time zones. RedStone says its new service keeps pricing traditional assets outside exchange hours by using perpetual futures markets during off-market sessions, when many providers stop updating. (redstone.finance) RedStone has been expanding beyond standard crypto price feeds into infrastructure for institutions and tokenized assets. In a March 18, 2026 post about its Tempo integration, the company said it was already supplying oracle data for BlackRock’s BUIDL fund and European treasury assets via Spiko. (blog.redstone.finance) The company is also trying to distinguish itself on sourcing and verification. RedStone says Live aggregates data from licensed institutional sources, brokers, alternative trading systems, market makers and on-chain markets, then signs each update cryptographically so downstream users can verify where it came from. (redstone.finance) RedStone frames the product as a response to a market where perpetual exchanges, liquidation engines, synthetic asset platforms and portfolio tools want faster and more tailored feeds. Its website says the goal is to let teams launch “any asset, any methodology, any market” without waiting for a provider’s governance process to add support. (redstone.finance) For now, the launch extends RedStone’s broader push to sell itself as a modular oracle stack rather than a single price-feed product. The company’s homepage lists RedStone Live alongside its existing price feeds, proof-of-reserve tools, Oracle Extractable Value product Atom and low-latency service Bolt. (redstone.finance)

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