RedStone Launches Price Oracles on Stellar Mainnet
The post RedStone Launches Price Oracles on Stellar Mainnet appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com.
Oracle provider RedStone has launched its price feed infrastructure on the Stellar network, introducing a new data layer for decentralized finance (DeFi) applications on a blockchain historically focused on payments and stablecoin transfers. The deployment makes price feeds for major crypto assets and stablecoins available on the Stellar mainnet, including Bitcoin (BTC), Ether (ETH), USD Coin (USDC) and PayPal USD (PYUSD). The rollout also includes pricing data for the Franklin Templeton BENJI tokenized money market fund. RedStone said the feeds are designed to support financial applications like lending markets, decentralized exchanges (DEXs) and tokenized real-world asset (RWA) platforms building on Stellar. The launch adds a new infrastructure provider to Stellar’s emerging DeFi stack as developers experiment with lending, tokenized assets and onchain financial services. Stellar expands DeFi infrastructure RedStone said the price feeds rely on a deviation-based update system and freshness checks intended to ensure data accuracy for financial applications. “Stellar has long demonstrated its strength as a blockchain for real-world financial activity, particularly in payments and stablecoins,” RedStone co-founder Marcin Kazmierczak said in a statement. He added that an enterprise-level oracle infrastructure was “what has been missing” for the network to unlock more advanced financial applications. Related: ‘ClickFix’ hackers pose as VCs, hijack QuickLens in latest crypto attacks RedStone operates in a competitive oracle market dominated by Chainlink. Data from DeFiLlama shows Chainlink secures about 64% of the market by value, followed by Chronicle with 11%. Internal protocol oracles account for about 6%, while Pyth and RedStone hold about 5.8% and 5.5%, respectively. Blockchain oracle market share data. Source: DefiLlama Oracle risks highlighted by recent exploit The launch comes weeks after a DeFi exploit on Stellar highlighted risks tied to price feeds and collateral valuation in lending protocols. On Feb. 21, attackers drained roughly $10 million from a YieldBlox…
Filed under: News - @ March 5, 2026 9:20 am