#APRO isn't aiming to take the place of existing oracles. Its strategy is more considered: it's built as supporting infrastructure for complex data, not just for dominant raw price feeds.
Rather than fighting for every feed, APRO steps in where traditional oracles face difficulties—with data processed by AI, inputs from real-world assets (RWAs), and signals that need more than basic combining. This approach makes adoption a helpful addition, not a disruptive force, reducing the difficulty for protocols already using established oracle systems.
The interesting aspect of this setup is the uneven valuation. With a relatively low fully diluted valuation (FDV), APRO doesn't need to capture the entire oracle market to support its growth. Gaining users step-by-step—one sector, one RWA application, one AI-native protocol at a time—can lead to a disproportionately large impact on its valuation.
This positions APRO not as a bet on replacement, but as a hedge on new data pathways: if on-chain finance continues to shift towards RWAs, AI agents, and structured products, complementary oracles will become essential.
Low expectations, a widening scope, and growth driven by adoption—that's the profile APRO is quietly developing.


