featured article
Announcements
Pyth Pro X is an institutional market data subscription built specifically for exchanges operating multi-asset markets.






Pyth Pro for AI Agents: Institutional Market Data for Autonomous Finance
Announcements
Mar 31, 2026


Pyth Pro for AI Agents: Institutional Market Data for Autonomous Finance
Announcements
Mar 31, 2026
AI agents need better data than humans do. Pyth Pro for AI Agents delivers 3,000+ institutional price feeds, one integration, zero licensing friction.


Introducing Pyth Pro X: Institutional Market Data Built for Exchanges
Announcements
Mar 18, 2026


Introducing Pyth Pro X: Institutional Market Data Built for Exchanges
Announcements
Mar 18, 2026
Pyth Pro X is an institutional market data subscription built specifically for exchanges operating multi-asset markets.


Introducing the Pyth 24/7 Oil Index: Continuous Oil Pricing for Global Markets
Announcements
Mar 17, 2026


Introducing the Pyth 24/7 Oil Index: Continuous Oil Pricing for Global Markets
Announcements
Mar 17, 2026
The Pyth 24/7 Oil Index delivers a continuous reference price for oil, built from institutional and onchain data sources.


How US Equities Actually Trade: Sessions, Gaps, and What Most Data Providers Miss
Research
Mar 9, 2026


How US Equities Actually Trade: Sessions, Gaps, and What Most Data Providers Miss
Research
Mar 9, 2026
US equities trade across four sessions and 16+ venues. Most price feeds cover one. Here's how the market actually works and how Pyth prices all of it.


How Gold Prices Work: A Guide to XAU Market Structure
Pyth Primers
Feb 24, 2026


How Gold Prices Work: A Guide to XAU Market Structure
Pyth Primers
Feb 24, 2026
Gold trades across three venues with three different prices. Here's how LBMA, COMEX, and OTC markets actually work — and what it means for gold data.


What Is NBBO and Why Does It Matter for Market Data?
Research
Feb 23, 2026


What Is NBBO and Why Does It Matter for Market Data?
Research
Feb 23, 2026
NBBO is the standard benchmark for equity data quality. Here's what it is, what it doesn't cover, and how to use it to evaluate any data provider.