TLDR
- Rezolve AI stock slipped 0.19% as SQD reported strong infrastructure growth.
- SQD-supported platforms now hold more than $20 billion in managed assets.
- Daily SQD data volume jumped from 240TB to a record 1.4PB.
- Rezolve links SQD with AI commerce, payments, and transaction systems.
- Subsquid Labs named new leaders to drive institutional SQD expansion.
Rezolve AI PLC (RZLV) shares slipped 0.19% to $2.5750 as the company outlined rapid growth across SQD’s blockchain data operations. SQD-powered platforms now support more than $20 billion in assets, compared with about $11 billion previously. Rezolve views the infrastructure as a key component of its commerce, payments, and transaction data strategy.
SQD Data Volume Reaches Record Levels
SQD increased its daily served data volume more than fivefold during the four months ending in June 2026. Daily volumes rose from about 240 terabytes in February to a record 1.4 petabytes. The increase reflected stronger demand from blockchain protocols, applications and digital asset platforms.
SQD added Lambda, a peer-to-peer trading protocol, to its production customer base. That addition helped expand the assets supported by applications using SQD’s infrastructure. The total now exceeds $20 billion, up from approximately $11 billion.
SQD currently indexes data from more than 225 blockchain networks through one streaming application programming interface. Independent testing recorded 48.5 milliseconds of P90 latency and confirmed the system’s data accuracy. Its production customers include Morpho, GMX, PancakeSwap, RAILGUN, zkVerify, Lambda, and Deutsche Telekom.
Rezolve Connects SQD With Commerce Systems
Rezolve uses SQD as a distributed database layer within its broader commerce and digital payments architecture. The system gives commerce platforms and enterprise tools access to validated onchain information. It also processes data for wallets, payment systems, merchants, and financial platforms.
At the same time, Rezolve combines SQD with its search, checkout, and digital payment products. This structure allows automated systems to compare offers, process transactions, and confirm blockchain activity. SQD supplies the data layer required for these operations across several digital environments.
Commerce systems increasingly require fast and reliable data as automated transaction activity expands. Therefore, Rezolve expects blockchain data infrastructure to play a larger role in payment and settlement processes. The company aims to serve enterprises that need real-time transaction records and verified onchain information.
New Leadership Targets Institutional Expansion
Subsquid Labs appointed Wanja S. Oberhof as chief executive officer to lead SQD’s next growth phase. Former EY partner Robert Jung also joined the business as head of transformation. Founder Marcel Fohrmann will continue supporting protocol development and ecosystem matters.
SQD also formed a board with experience across digital assets, capital markets, technology and institutional operations. Davey Airey will serve as chairman, while several industry executives will join as board members. Rezolve executive Marcel Reichart will also hold a board position.
The new leadership team plans to strengthen SQD’s governance, compliance, reliability, and commercial structure. These changes will support its expansion among financial institutions and larger enterprise customers. SQD has already started discussions with several institutions as part of its commercial rollout.


