Chainlink just added 10 new integrations across 6 services and 14 chains. The list includes sovereign regulators, institutional asset managers, BTCFi protocols and emerging L2 liquidity layers.
Chainlink adoption update 🔗
Recently there were 10 integrations of the Chainlink standard for 6 services and 14 different chains.
New integrations include @BermudaMonetary, @galaxyhq, @KelpDAO, @re, @StateStreetIM, @SolvProtocol and @tydrohq.
$LINK everything. pic.twitter.com/p1wi7yF54k
— Chainlink (@chainlink) May 10, 2026
New integrations include Bermuda Monetary Authority, Galaxy, KelpDAO, Re, State Street Investment Management, Solv Protocol and Tydro. Each represents adoption from a different corner of the financial system. Together they show how broad Chainlink is becoming the standard layer.
Bermuda’s central bank is continuing the chain
The Bermuda Monetary Authority is Bermuda’s sole financial services regulator. It supervises banks, insurers and crypto companies. It issues the country’s national currency and administers the sovereign monetary system. It also regulates major crypto exchanges such as Binance, Coinbase and OKX under Bermuda’s Virtual Asset Service Providers framework.
A central bank integrating Chainlink is no small announcement. It is a sovereign-level regulator that uses the same infrastructure that DeFi protocols use to access trusted data. That kind of overlap between regulatory and crypto-native systems didn’t exist three years ago.
State Street and Galaxy bring institutional weight
State Street Investment Management is a large traditional asset manager. It is launching on-chain cash and tokenized funds via the SWEEP fund alongside Galaxy and Ondo. The positioning is deliberate. State Street is leading the way on the CLARITY Act and stablecoin yield limits with an on-chain treasury and cash management strategy. The integration represents the first major US custodian to go 100% on-chain for its funds.
Galaxy is a global leader in digital assets and data center infrastructure, trading publicly as $GLXY. Galaxy provides custody, mining, prime brokerage and blockchain infrastructure for institutional clients. Adding Chainlink to that stack reinforces what a serious institutional crypto infrastructure actually looks like.
KelpDAO and Solv bring DeFi-native use cases
KelpDAO is an Ethereum liquid staking protocol that provides rETH for users staking liquid staking tokens such as sETH. The integration comes after KelpDAO paused rSETH contracts on the mainnet and multiple L2s following a hacking investigation. Adopting Chainlink as part of the recovery and forward roadmap signals from which the protocol is being rebuilt.
Solv Protocol runs SolvBTC and xSolvBTC, tokenized Bitcoin for DeFi yield and staking. Solv has shown strong BTCFi fundamentals despite security challenges and price volatility. The Chainlink integration adds the data layer that BTCFi actually needs to function reliably.
Re and Tydro round out the new wave
Re is an on-chain capital protocol focused on real risks. The positioning is Web3 infrastructure for traditional finance. Re bridges on-chain capital with real-world asset risk management, specifically focused on institutional RWA tokenization. That use case requires reliable off-chain data, and that’s exactly what Chainlink offers.
Tydro is a decentralized, non-custodial liquidity protocol built on Ink Onchain, an L2 ecosystem. The integration uses Chainlink data feeds to optimize yields and cross-chain DeFi mechanisms within the Ink ecosystem.
Conclusion
Ten integrations across 6 services and 14 chains. The list goes from a sovereign central bank to traditional asset managers, to BTCFi protocols and to L2 liquidity layers. Chainlink is deployed in categories that typically do not share infrastructure.
The Central Bank of Bermuda, State Street, Galaxy, KelpDAO, Re, Solv and Tydro all chose the same standard. That kind of convergence is what builds long-term resilience, and that’s why “$LINK everything” starts to look less like a slogan and more like a description of what is actually happening.
