Chainlink advanced several non-price developments today. Deutsche Börse moved to publish regulated market data on blockchains via Chainlink. BNB Chain said it will pipe official U.S. economic data on-chain using Chainlink’s standard. Separately, GLEIF detailed an identity partnership, Swift and UBS progressed tokenized-fund workflows with Chainlink, and Plasma joined the Chainlink SCALE program.

Deutsche Börse to publish market data on-chain
Deutsche Börse Group’s Market Data + Services unit announced a strategic partnership with Chainlink. The plan brings multi-asset market data to public and private chains for the first time via Chainlink’s DataLink. The release sets the scope for regulated datasets to reach smart contracts in real time.
The company positioned the move as a way to connect institutional data to on-chain applications. In practice, exchanges, asset managers, and DeFi tools can reference the same official feeds. The announcement emphasized operational delivery rather than token price effects.
Trade press also covered the step, noting the expansion of institutional-grade feeds into blockchain environments. Coverage framed the collaboration as data publication at scale rather than a pilot.
BNB Chain to route U.S. economic data via Chainlink
BNB Chain said it integrated the Chainlink Data Standard to make official U.S. Department of Commerce statistics available on-chain. The posts reference GDP and other macro series that developers can call directly in smart contracts. This follows Chainlink’s August rollout of Commerce Department feeds.

As a result, builders can automate actions tied to government releases. For example, apps can settle payouts or rebalance strategies when BEA figures update. The chain’s announcement highlights the technical path rather than market commentary.
Industry sites echoed the integration, describing how macro data becomes a standard input across ecosystems. Reports today placed the update in the context of broader real-world data initiatives.
GLEIF and Chainlink outline verifiable identity
The Global Legal Entity Identifier Foundation (GLEIF) published details of a partnership with Chainlink. The plan embeds verifiable LEIs (vLEIs) into wallets and contracts so apps can prove the legal entity behind on-chain activity. GLEIF’s release sets identity and compliance as the focus.
Under this approach, issuers, custodians, or fund platforms can attach organizational identity to transactions. Therefore, counterparties can automate checks without custom integrations each time. The documents describe how credentials travel with assets and permissions.
Additional explainers from payments and fintech outlets summarized the benefits for regulated use cases. They highlight alignment with existing frameworks and the potential for standardized attestations.
Swift and UBS pilots advance tokenized-fund workflows
Chainlink detailed a tokenized-fund pilot with UBS that used Swift messages to trigger on-chain subscriptions and redemptions. The workflow used ISO 20022 messaging through Chainlink’s environment and Swift infrastructure. This shows how banks can interact with tokenized funds using familiar rails.
Reports added that Chainlink’s Runtime Environment processed the messages and connected to a Digital Transfer Agent standard. In effect, off-chain instructions initiated on-chain actions inside fund smart contracts. The coverage places this in Swift’s broader strategy around blockchain connectivity.
Business media also noted Swift’s continuing pilots across tokenization and settlement. Together, these items indicate a route from proofs-of-concept toward operational tooling rather than isolated demos.
Plasma joins Chainlink SCALE and teams with Aave
Plasma, a layer-1 focused on stablecoin applications, said it joined Chainlink’s SCALE program and adopted Chainlink as its oracle provider. The announcement cites collaboration with Aave to expand lending and stablecoin use. It positions Chainlink as core infrastructure for the new chain.

Follow-up coverage described ecosystem goals such as cross-chain connectivity and cost sharing for oracle services. This model aims to lower data overhead for builders while networks grow. Publications also mentioned Plasma’s stablecoin supply and performance claims.
Consequently, developers on Plasma can access price and macro feeds through Chainlink from launch. This reduces custom work for data ingestion and helps standardize risk controls in lending markets.
Chainlink bullish structure forms on daily chart
Chainlink’s daily chart shows a strong bullish structure emerging as the price moves away from a recent base near 21 USDT. The setup gained attention after analyst Carl Moon shared a chart outlining the potential breakout path toward 30 USDT.
The chart displays a clear horizontal resistance zone between roughly 23 USDT and 24 USDT. This area coincides with the monthly level and Point of Control (POC), which marks the price level with the highest traded volume during the observed period. The price is currently pressing against this zone after a series of higher lows formed in late September and early October.
If buyers manage a clean daily close above this resistance, the structure would confirm a breakout from the consolidation range that began in August. The projected path, drawn in green on the chart, suggests a sequence of breakout, retest, and continuation phases. In this scenario, the next key supply zone sits around 25 USDT, followed by a measured-move target near 29 – 30 USDT.
The volume profile along the left side of the chart shows a thin zone between 24 USDT and 26 USDT, implying less resistance once the breakout is confirmed. This gap often acts as a “volume vacuum,” allowing price to move faster through the range. If the bullish momentum sustains, the structure aligns with classical breakout-retest-continuation behavior toward the upper target.
Chainlink tests hourly downtrend near 23
Chainlink’s 1-hour chart shows price advancing toward a descending trendline that has capped every rally since mid-August. The latest push carries LINK to ~22.7–22.9, placing the breakout test just below the 23 area. Short-term EMAs curl higher beneath price, signaling improving intraday momentum into resistance.

Momentum gauges back the approach, yet divergences warn against complacency. The top RSI panel tags both regular and hidden bearish divergence from late September into early October, showing price making equal or higher highs while RSI lags. At the same time, the lower RSI panel marks a prior “regular bullish” signal from sub-40 that kick-started the current rise. Together, these readings argue for a binary inflection: confirm strength with a clean breach, or fade back inside the range.
For confirmation, traders typically look for an hourly close above the trendline and the round 23 handle, then a hold on a retest. If that break fails, immediate supports sit near the rising EMAs around 22.3–22.5, with a deeper cushion near 21.8–22.0 where recent higher lows cluster. Until price resolves, the structure remains a compression beneath a well-defined seller line, with momentum improving but still vulnerable to divergence-driven pullbacks.
LINK daily chart prints a bullish flag on Oct. 06, 2025
The LINKUSD daily chart shows a textbook bullish flag forming after a sharp August surge. Price rides above the 50-day EMA, then pulls back inside a downward-sloping channel bounded by two parallel purple lines. Today’s candle pushes into the flag’s upper rail around 23, while volume stabilizes after September’s fade, which often precedes resolution.

A bullish flag starts with a strong, near-vertical advance called the flagpole. Then price consolidates in a small, downward-tilted channel as momentum cools and volume eases. When buyers break the upper boundary on expanding volume and hold the retest, the pattern confirms and typically resumes the prior uptrend.
Here, the structure supports that script. Bulls defended rising support along the lower flag line through late September, and they reclaimed the 50-day EMA last week. Now price challenges the upper band, which acts as the trigger. If LINK closes above the top of the flag and turns that area into support, the continuation target follows the measured projection from the move that preceded the flag. Using today’s chart print near $23.15, a confirmed breakout implies about a 78% extension, placing the objective around $41.1–$41.2. The horizontal marker on the chart near $41.08 aligns with that calculation and frames the next major resistance if momentum carries through.
LINK daily RSI turns upward on Oct. 06, 2025
The RSI chart shows momentum recovering. The 14-day RSI rises to about 56 after rebounding from late-September sub-30 readings. The RSI line also crossed above its signal average near 45–48, which indicates a shift from bearish pressure to constructive momentum.

The backdrop matters. In early August, RSI spiked above 80, then cooled through September as price consolidated. Now the oscillator climbs back into the 50–60 zone where trend confirmations often begin on daily timeframes. As momentum rebuilds, buyers show control on pullbacks and push closes higher more consistently.
However, the signal still sits below the 60–65 band that frequently acts as a “bull range” threshold. If RSI pushes and holds above that area, historical behavior suggests stronger follow-through in price. If it stalls and rolls under its average again, momentum likely fades back into a sideways regime. For now, the turn up, the moving-average cross, and the distance from oversold all favor continued recovery while the RSI holds above the mid-40s.