About a-team Marketing Services
The knowledge platform for the financial technology industry
The knowledge platform for the financial technology industry

A-Team Insight Blogs

Kaiko Launches Decentralised Exchange Liquidity Pool Data Feed

Subscribe to our newsletter

Cryptocurrency data provider Kaiko has launched a new decentralised exchange (DEX) liquidity pool data feed, covering the Uniswap, SushiSwap, Curve Finance and Balancer markets.

Building on the launch of Kaiko’s DEX data feed in November 2021, which provides trade data for the same four DEX exchanges, Kaiko will now display comprehensive liquidity data from those endpoints, both historically and in real time, enabling Kaiko’s clients to have visibility over all four DEX liquidity pools.

“Unlike traditional markets, where centralised exchanges provide order book data, decentralised exchanges don’t actually operate order book,s everything is deployed on the blockchain. So from an order entry perspective, to create a feed of liquidity events, what we have to do is capture all individual addresses submitting or removing supply on-chain,” says Bediss Cherif, Head of Product at Kaiko.

Kaiko is looking to address the fact that access to standardised liquidity pool transactions and token reserves on multiple DEXs has, until now, been limited. Kaiko’s Liquidity Pool data enables financial institutions and enterprises to easily analyse market depths and the activities of liquidity providers, to better understand the market.

“The problem we are solving is that DEX liquidity pool data is supposed to be public, but there is a lack of transparency, because no one can see who’s providing liquidity where, and what is the actual state of the liquidity pool at any given point in time, even though the data is there,” says Cherif.

“With our DEX Liquidity Pool Data Feed, we not only capture the data, we also reverse engineer all the rules of the automated matching algorithm and the code embedded in the smart contracts, and build the market data feed out of that. And because we capture everything going to these pools, we can provide the services to track – on chain – which addresses are putting money in and where the money is going, which can also help with things like market abuse monitoring and surveillance, which is essential for financial institutions.”

Launching with these four liquidity pools provides a good foundation for further DEX coverage, says Cherif.

“With this set of four, we have the hardest, the most popular, the most institutional, and one that gives us an idea of the complexity to add coverage. So with these four, we have a pretty good idea of the road ahead and the challenges that will need to be overcome as we grow our coverage.”

Subscribe to our newsletter

Related content

WEBINAR

Recorded Webinar: Navigating the Build vs Buy Dilemma: Cloud Strategies for Accelerating Quantitative Research

For many quantitative trading firms and asset managers, building a self-provisioned historical market data environment remains one of the most time-consuming and resource-intensive steps in establishing a new research capability. Sourcing data, normalising symbologies, handling corporate actions and maintaining infrastructure can take months and absorb significant budget before a single model is tested. At the...

BLOG

BitGo and Susquehanna Build First Institutional OTC On-Ramp to Prediction Markets

Prediction markets have attracted growing institutional interest as tools for price discovery around political, economic, and event-driven outcomes, but participation has remained largely confined to retail platforms with workflows that most institutional trading desks cannot operationally support. BitGo and Susquehanna Crypto are now attempting to close that gap with what they describe as the first...

EVENT

TradingTech Summit New York

Our TradingTech Summit in New York is aimed at senior-level decision makers in trading technology, electronic execution, trading architecture and offers a day packed with insight from practitioners and from innovative suppliers happy to share their experiences in dealing with the enterprise challenges facing our marketplace.

GUIDE

AI in Capital Markets Handbook 2026

AI adoption in capital markets has moved into a more disciplined phase. The priority is now controlled deployment: where AI can be used safely, where it can deliver measurable value, and how outputs can be governed, monitored and evidenced. The 2026 edition of the AI in Capital Markets Handbook examines how AI is being applied...