Polymarket has moved deeper into traditional finance-linked contracts by using Pyth Network as the resolution source for a new group of products tied to U.S. equities, commodities, and exchange-traded funds.
The rollout adds daily up-or-down and daily close contracts linked to assets such as gold, silver, WTI crude, natural gas, and several major U.S. stocks.
The expansion gives users another set of trading options on a venue that is best known for politics, sports, and current events. It also gives Pyth a larger role in price-based settlements as more crypto firms build products around external financial data.
Pyth backs new asset markets
Pyth announced on Thursday that its data will settle the new contracts launched on Polymarket. The first batch covers more than a dozen U.S. equities, including Tesla, Coinbase, Palantir, Nvidia, and Apple, along with major indices, commodities, and selected ETFs.
Under this setup, outcomes will rely on price feeds published through the oracle network instead of a single exchange reference. Both sides presented the arrangement as a way to give traders a public and verifiable benchmark when contracts reach settlement.
Mike Cahill, the CEO of Douro Labs, tied the move to the need for reliable data in outcome-based trading.
”Prediction markets are the ultimate test of data quality,” he stated.
He added that the model draws from prices contributed by firms that actively trade the underlying assets.
In addition, Mustafa Aljadery, product lead at Polymarket, also pointed to the importance of accurate resolution data.
”Millions of dollars can hinge on a single price point,” Mustafa noted.
He added that the partnership gives the company a trusted reference source as it broadens into finance-related contracts.
New products widen the trading menu
The latest rollout pushes Polymarket beyond event-based contracts and further into daily price action. Users can now take positions on whether selected assets will close higher or lower during the session, rather than focus only on election outcomes, sports events, or headline-driven topics.
That shift opens the door to traders who already follow equities, commodities, and macro trends. It also links prediction trading more directly to earnings reports, interest-rate expectations, energy price swings, and other forces that move public markets each day.
Moreover, the launch comes as other crypto firms test similar ideas. As we reported earlier today, Binance confirmed it is beta testing in-app access to prediction products inside Binance Wallet, with Predict.fun acting as the primary provider.
That approach shows that major digital asset firms are exploring this sector without always rolling out a separate standalone product.
Polymarket’s move fits that broader direction. Instead of creating a different service outside its current venue, the company is adding contracts tied to live financial data.
Pyth Terminal adds live visibility for traders
Alongside the integration, Pyth introduced Pyth Terminal, a live interface for traders, developers, institutions, and resolvers. The product offers real-time price feeds, benchmark comparisons for U.S. equities and foreign exchange, and publisher-level transparency for each listed feed.
For Polymarket users, one of the main features is a public “price to beat” chart that updates every second. That tool allows traders to follow the same live benchmark that will later determine the final outcome of the contract.
The oracle provider stated that more than 125 trading firms, exchanges, and market makers publish first-party data directly to its network.
That design differs from systems that depend on a single venue or a narrow pricing window. The company said the structure gives a broader view of global liquidity and trading activity.
Notably, Pyth has also taken on other public data roles in recent months. In August 2025, the U.S. Department of Commerce selected it to publish gross domestic product data onchain, while Chainlink was chosen to provide key feeds from the Bureau of Economic Analysis.
Expansion lands amid tighter oversight
The finance-linked rollout arrives during an active stretch for Polymarket. On March 27, Intercontinental Exchange, the parent company of the New York Stock Exchange, invested another $600 million in the operator as part of a broader funding plan first agreed in October 2025.
Meanwhile, the company has also tightened its rules. On March 23, it updated market integrity standards across both its main venue and its DeFi operations, adding stricter language around conduct that resembles insider trading or manipulation.
Those changes came as regulators, lawmakers, and sports groups paid closer attention to prediction products.
Furthermore, that pressure increased again after the NFL asked operators including Polymarket and Kalshi to avoid certain sports-related contracts that could be influenced or known in advance.
The request added to the ongoing debate over where lawful prediction trading ends and preventable conduct begins.
Polymarket has also moved to build more tools around onchain trading. On March 18, the company acquired crypto startup Brahma in a move aimed at strengthening wallet and automation features used by traders interacting with blockchain-based markets.


