TL;DR:
Euronext FX is extending its market data reach into blockchain-native infrastructure, joining Pyth Network as a data publisher for institutional spot FX, non-deliverable forwards, and precious metals pricing. The move gives Pyth Pro subscribers access to pricing sourced from one of Europe’s deepest FX venues, at a moment when institutions are increasingly rethinking how market data is distributed. What makes the announcement notable is that it pushes traditionally closed institutional pricing into a more programmable and modern delivery framework.
Euronext sits at the center of continental market infrastructure, operating regulated exchanges across Amsterdam, Brussels, Dublin, Lisbon, Milan, Oslo, and Paris. Its FX venue aggregates liquidity from global banks, hedge funds, and proprietary trading firms, producing institutional pricing across major currency pairs and precious metals. By publishing into Pyth Pro, Euronext is not listing a separate product on a side channel. It is feeding directly into aggregated market data, strengthening the quality and depth of price formation available through a single integration.

That matters because foreign exchange and precious metals remain among the most fragmented asset classes in global finance. Prices can vary by venue, geography, and counterparty, creating blind spots across risk systems, settlement workflows, and cross-border liquidity management. Pyth says Euronext’s contribution will be combined with data from more than 120 institutions already publishing through the network. The practical implication is a broader institutional view of markets that have historically been locked behind proprietary terminals and vendor relationships.
The shift is also symbolic. Euronext is one of six institutions that recently joined Pyth alongside the launch of the Pyth Data Marketplace, though its role is distinct from firms distributing proprietary datasets through that marketplace. Instead, Euronext is contributing directly to Pyth’s aggregated feeds, adding institutional FX and metals pricing to a network that already spans more than 3,000 price feeds across major asset classes. The larger signal is that the institutions closest to price formation are starting to treat modern distribution infrastructure as part of market structure itself, not as a peripheral experiment. Pyth describes the publication as the first time this institutional FX and precious metals data has been made available through onchain infrastructure, underscoring how distribution models are shifting as more traditional institutions adopt programmable rails to extend reach without giving up institutional-grade pricing standards and context.