DIA has introduced a new blockchain oracle designed to calculate the fair value of illiquid digital assets, aiming to improve pricing reliability across the rapidly growing decentralized finance ecosystem.
Blockchain oracle provider DIA announced the launch of DIA Value, a pricing infrastructure designed to compute the intrinsic value of illiquid digital assets. The product aims to address a growing challenge in DeFi where many tokenized assets do not trade frequently enough on secondary markets to produce reliable price feeds.
The company says the system calculates fair value using verifiable onchain data such as smart contract state, redemption rates, and reserve balances rather than relying solely on market trades.
The rise of tokenized real world assets and yield bearing tokens has created a new challenge for decentralized finance infrastructure. According to industry data from RWA.xyz and DeFiLlama, more than $100 billion in capital is currently locked in tokenized assets that may not trade actively on open markets.
Traditional oracle systems usually rely on market activity to determine price. When trading volume is low, those price feeds can become stale or vulnerable to manipulation. This creates risks for DeFi protocols that depend on accurate data to manage lending positions, collateral value, and liquidations.
For example, on October 10, 2025, roughly $19 billion in leveraged DeFi positions were liquidated within 24 hours after oracle systems transmitted stressed market data that triggered automated liquidation mechanisms across protocols.
For assets with thin order books, these events highlight a structural issue.
DIA’s new oracle attempts to address this issue by calculating intrinsic asset value instead of relying on the latest market trade.
According to the company announcement, DIA Value determines pricing using the most direct and verifiable data sources available, including:
For example, a yield bearing staking token like stETH can be priced according to the actual redemption value recorded in its protocol smart contract rather than the last price traded on a decentralized exchange with limited liquidity.
This approach allows DeFi protocols to obtain a price that reflects what the asset can realistically be redeemed for instead of relying on potentially distorted market data.
The oracle is already being used by several DeFi projects across multiple sectors. According to the announcement, integrations include Euler, Morpho, Silo, and Hydration.
These integrations support several use cases such as:
Projects working with yield bearing stablecoins and tokenized assets say accurate valuation is critical for maintaining trust and stability within DeFi systems.
In addition, the system can support complex assets such as yield generating tokens, staking derivatives, and tokenized securities, all of which may lack consistent trading activity on secondary markets.
DIA says the product is designed with institutional adoption of blockchain finance in mind. Many traditional financial assets entering DeFi, such as tokenized treasuries or structured funds, do not trade continuously like cryptocurrencies.
In traditional finance, illiquid assets are often priced using methods such as net asset value calculations and mark to model valuation frameworks. DIA argues that blockchain technology allows those same approaches to be executed transparently and continuously using onchain data.
The company says DIA Value complements its existing oracle product called Market, which currently provides pricing data for more than 3,000 liquid digital assets across over 60 blockchains.
Together, the two systems aim to provide complete pricing infrastructure for both liquid and illiquid assets in DeFi.
I see this launch as a necessary evolution for DeFi infrastructure. In my experience, pricing problems have been one of the biggest hidden risks in decentralized finance. When oracles rely purely on market trades, thin liquidity can easily distort prices and trigger cascading liquidations.
What I find interesting about DIA Value is the shift toward fundamental valuation instead of last trade pricing. That is a concept traditional finance has used for decades. Bringing it to blockchain through transparent onchain data could make DeFi systems far more stable as more tokenized real world assets and institutional capital enter the space.
If DeFi wants to support complex assets safely, accurate intrinsic pricing will likely become essential infrastructure rather than a niche feature.
The post DIA Targets $100 Billion DeFi Pricing Gap With New Value Oracle appeared first on CoinLaw.


