Bloomberg partners with Kaiko to standardize blockchain data
Bloomberg aims to bring order to fragmented data distributed by multiple data providers. To achieve this, the company is partnering with Paris-based data provider Kaiko, expanding access to financial data directly within blockchain environments.
Highlights
- Bloomberg Partners With Kaiko to Standardize Blockchain Data
- Bloomberg Expands Financial Data Access Into Blockchain Markets
- Kaiko and Bloomberg Target Tokenized Treasuries Data Integrity
Bloomberg moves into blockchain
Bloomberg, the largest privately held media company specializing in financial data, has announced a partnership with data and crypto analytics provider Kaiko to distribute and license information on-chain for financial institutions, banks, and other institutional clients.
On Thursday, the companies stated that the initiative is designed to address data inconsistencies in tokenized markets. Across many ecosystems, firms may rely on different versions of pricing data, security identifiers, or reference information, increasing the risk of discrepancies and operational inefficiencies.
According to Cointelegraph, the initial use of licensed information will focus on tokenized U.S. Treasuries and repo markets operating on Canton Network, a blockchain built for institutional financial applications.
The integration is aimed at traditional banks, asset managers, and other regulated financial institutions experimenting with blockchain-based versions of traditional financial instruments.
Kaiko CEO Ambre Soubiran said the partnership with Bloomberg will “expand the availability of market data used in traditional markets and now support the next generation of tokenized securities infrastructure.”
Data integrity critical for tokenized markets
Reliable data remains a priority in the digital asset industry, where market participants rely not only on price feeds but also on sentiment indicators and multiple data streams. However, information from different providers and issuers often diverges, potentially leading to inaccurate valuations and decisions.
Participants in tokenized asset markets face similar challenges. According to some industry aggregators, the size of the tokenized asset market may be overstated by as much as twofold.
By embedding a shared licensed data source directly into blockchain environments, Bloomberg and Kaiko aim to provide market participants with a unified dataset, potentially reducing reconciliation disputes and improving overall data integrity.
As we wrote, Bloomberg analyst predicts $15–40B inflows to crypto ETFs 2026
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