---
title: "Stablecoin and RWA PR: How to Position a Tokenization Project for Bloomberg,"
description: "Most RWA and stablecoin projects default to crypto-native press and miss the institutional audience that actually moves capital. Here's how to pitch Bloomberg, FT, and WSJ instead."
author: "Shilika Jain"
date: "2026-06-18T20:52:02.545+00:00"
tags: ["Stablecoin", "RWA", "Blockchain PR", "Web3 PR", "Crypto PR services", "institutional media", "tokenization", "media strategy"]
canonical: "https://www.shilikajain.com/blog/stablecoin-rwa-pr-bloomberg-ft-institutional-press"
---

# Stablecoin and RWA PR: How to Position a Tokenization Project for Bloomberg,

By [Shilika Jain](https://www.shilikajain.com/authors/shilika-jain) — 6/18/2026

Most RWA and stablecoin projects default to crypto-native press and miss the institutional audience that actually moves capital. Here's how to pitch Bloomberg, FT, and WSJ instead.

---

# Stablecoin and RWA PR: How to Position a Tokenization Project for Bloomberg, FT, and Institutional Press

There is a specific kind of founder frustration that happens around month four of a PR retainer. The CoinDesk hits are stacking up. The Blockworks recap ran. Decrypt covered the raise. And yet the institutional LPs, the family office allocators, the asset managers who actually write eight-figure checks: they have never heard of the project.

This is the CoinDesk Ghetto. It is comfortable, familiar, and almost entirely invisible to the audience that moves real capital.

The stablecoin and RWA space has a version of this problem that is worse than almost any other vertical in crypto, because the gap between where the institutional press narrative is and where most project communications are aimed has become enormous. And it grows every quarter.

## Why the Institutional Window Is Wide Open Right Now

The numbers are hard to ignore. Stablecoin market capitalization crossed $320 billion in March 2026, driven not by retail speculation but by institutional inflows and the passage of the GENIUS Act, the first comprehensive federal stablecoin framework in U.S. history. The on-chain tokenized RWA market (excluding stablecoins) has surpassed $32 billion as of mid-2026, up more than 200% year-over-year. Six categories of tokenized assets have each independently crossed $1 billion in value: private credit, commodities, U.S. Treasuries, corporate bonds, non-U.S. government debt, and institutional alternative funds.

The asset managers overseeing capital that could flow into these products are not reading Decrypt. The 2026 Investment Adviser Industry Snapshot records $176.8 trillion in assets under management across registered advisers. That universe reads Bloomberg, the FT, the WSJ, and institutional research from McKinsey and BCG before reading anything in the crypto press.

Bloomberg has published multiple tokenization stories per month in 2026. Anna Irrera has covered blockchain's adoption in repo markets. Ryan Weeks has reported on tokenized equity structures. Olga Kharif's institutional crypto coverage reaches the pension funds, asset managers, and macro investors who drive large-capital positioning. Stories on that desk reach the audience that actually moves markets. The FT has run longform features on RWA market structure, regulatory developments under MiCA and the GENIUS Act, and the divergence between compliant and non-compliant issuers. The IMF called tokenization "a fundamental reconfiguration of financial architecture." That framing is now in mainstream financial media. The journalists covering it are not waiting for a press release. They are actively looking for sources who can anchor the story with data, regulatory context, and operational specificity.

Most RWA projects are not in that conversation. They are still pitching their token generation event to crypto reporters.

## Understanding the Institutional Beat Map

Before you send a single pitch, you need to understand who covers what. Institutional financial journalists are not interchangeable.

**Bloomberg's crypto and digital finance desk** covers the intersection of blockchain and capital markets. Stories that land here connect tokenization or stablecoin infrastructure to a specific institutional behavior: a settlement efficiency gain, a regulatory compliance posture, an asset manager's product decision. The reporters on this desk have backgrounds in traditional financial journalism and evaluate pitches the way finance editors do. They want named sources, verifiable data, and a "why now" that connects to what their readers care about this week.

**The Financial Times** approaches RWA from the perspective of capital markets structure, regulatory risk, and cross-border finance. FT journalists who cover tokenization want to understand what it means for existing market participants, including custody banks, prime brokers, and clearing houses, as much as for the tokenization platforms themselves. The FT is particularly strong on EU regulatory developments under MiCA and the divergence between European and American approaches. If your project operates across jurisdictions, that angle is a genuine FT entry point. Data-led pitches do particularly well; FT journalists have noted that proprietary, exclusive data sets are among the most valuable things a source can offer.

**The Wall Street Journal** comes at RWA through the lens of corporate decision-making. Who is the CFO or treasurer who chose to use tokenized instruments, and what were the operational drivers? The WSJ wants the enterprise story, not the protocol story. If your project has real corporate treasury clients or institutional fund users, a WSJ pitch should lead with that end-user narrative, not your technology stack.

This beat map matters because sending a tokenomics explainer to a Bloomberg capital markets reporter is the fastest way to get mentally filed as "crypto PR person, do not respond to."

## What These Reporters Actually Need

The most common mistake RWA founders make when they do try to pitch institutional press is pitching their project instead of a story. Bloomberg and FT reporters are not writing product profiles. They are covering market structure, institutional behavior, and regulatory dynamics. Your project may be the evidence for the story, but it cannot be the point of the story.

Here is what institutional financial reporters need to run a piece:

**Verifiable on-chain or financial data.** Bloomberg journalists tap Bloomberg's own data terminals and cross-reference primary sources rigorously. If you say your protocol has processed $400 million in tokenized Treasury transactions, you need to be able to show wallet-level evidence or audited financials. The bar is materially higher than crypto-native press, where a founder's assertion often runs as fact. Projects that have third-party attestations, independent audits, or verifiable on-chain data streams are dramatically easier to pitch because the reporter can independently verify the core claim.

**Named institutional counterparties.** A tokenization protocol that has signed a term sheet with a recognizable asset manager, custody bank, or TradFi institution is a story. The same protocol in stealth mode, processing anonymous wallet transactions, is a blog post. Before you pitch Bloomberg, ask yourself whether you can put a name, a title, and an organization on the institutional adoption you are describing. If the answer is no, you are not yet ready for institutional press.

**Regulatory specificity.** The GENIUS Act, MiCA, the SEC's evolving stance on digital asset securities, the OCC's reserve requirements: institutional reporters covering this space understand the regulatory landscape in detail. A pitch that says "our compliant stablecoin infrastructure" without specifying which framework, under which jurisdiction, with which supervisory authority, signals that you either do not understand the regulatory environment or are deliberately obscuring it. Either interpretation kills the pitch.

**A market-level angle that transcends your project.** The strongest pitches do not lead with "we have a product announcement." They lead with a market observation, something the reporter's audience needs to understand, and then position the founder as a source who can speak to it with authority. "The stablecoin market has crossed $300 billion but institutional adoption is concentrated in three instruments" is more interesting to an FT reporter than "we have launched a yield-bearing stablecoin."

## The Language Shift That Changes Everything

The language of crypto-native press and the language of institutional financial press are not the same language. This is the operational detail that most founders miss.

In crypto press, you talk about TVL, tokenomics, TGE timelines, smart contract architecture, and protocol emissions. In institutional financial press, you talk about yield structure, custody model, counterparty risk, regulatory standing, settlement efficiency, and liquidity mechanics. You explain your stablecoin's reserve composition the way a money market fund manager would, not the way a DeFi protocol founder would. You describe tokenized Treasuries in terms of the T+0 settlement advantage for institutional cash management, not in terms of on-chain yield optimization.

This is not dumbing things down. It is translating between two different professional vocabularies that are both technically sophisticated. The institutional finance audience understands what a repo agreement is, what a custodial arrangement implies for counterparty risk, and what a "substantially similar" determination under the GENIUS Act means for their compliance obligations. What they do not know is how these familiar concepts operate when the underlying infrastructure is programmable. That is your translation job, and it is a genuine skill.

When you make this translation fluently, you stop being a crypto founder pitching an asset manager and start being a capital markets infrastructure expert who happens to be building on blockchain. That positioning shift is worth more than any single press placement.

## Building the Pre-Pitch Infrastructure

Institutional media coverage does not happen from a cold pitch. It happens from a relationship built before you need it.

The mechanics of this are not complicated, but they require patience. Follow the reporters who cover your beat: not just their stories, but their engagement on LinkedIn and X, the questions they are asking publicly, the angles they keep returning to. When they write a piece adjacent to your project's work, respond substantively. Not with marketing copy, but with a specific observation that adds to what they reported. Over three or four of these interactions, a reporter learns that you are a source who adds value rather than noise.

When you are ready to pitch, pitch a relationship, not a story. Send a short note, three to four sentences maximum, that references a specific piece they wrote, offers a data point or observation they did not have, and opens a conversation rather than demanding placement. The best days for outreach are Tuesday and Wednesday mornings. The subject line should describe what the source knows, not what the company wants covered.

Embargoed exclusives are the most powerful tool in institutional media relations and the most frequently misused one. If you have a genuinely material announcement, a named institutional partnership, audited financial results, a regulatory approval, offer one reporter an exclusive under embargo. Do not scatter the announcement across ten outlets simultaneously. The institutional press values exclusivity enough that a well-managed exclusive with Bloomberg or the FT will generate more follow-on institutional coverage than a simultaneous release to twenty outlets, because the follow-on reporters see Bloomberg running it and treat it as validated.

## The Pitch Framework for Tokenization Founders

Here is the structure that works for institutional financial press:

**The hook (one sentence):** A market observation, stated as fact, with a number attached. Not "we believe tokenization is the future of finance" since that is a tagline, not a hook. Something like: "The tokenized Treasury market has grown 600% in 18 months, but secondary liquidity remains so thin that most instruments behave more like private placements than tradable securities."

**The authority signal (one sentence):** Why you are positioned to know this. "We process [X] in monthly settlement volume across [Y named institutional counterparties]" or "We have worked with [named regulator or auditor] to build the compliance architecture for [specific structure]."

**The story angle (one to two sentences):** What this means for the reporter's readers and why it is timely. Connect to a recent development, a regulatory deadline, a market event, a competitor's move, that creates the "why now" the reporter needs.

**The offer (one sentence):** What you are offering: data access, on-record executive interview, exclusive pre-announcement briefing. Be specific. "I can share our Q2 settlement data under embargo ahead of our Q3 report" is a concrete offer. "Happy to set up a call" is not.

That is four sentences. An institutional financial reporter receives dozens of pitches daily. The average journalist response rate to PR pitches runs around 3% across the industry. The pitches that get responses are the ones that prove in four sentences that the source understands the reporter's beat better than the other 49 people in the inbox.

## What Disqualifies an RWA Project from Institutional Press

Some things will kill your credibility with a Bloomberg or FT reporter instantly.

**Paid coverage anywhere in your recent history.** Institutional financial reporters research their sources. If your project's media footprint is dominated by sponsored content, press release syndication, or pay-to-play placements, that signals the project cannot earn editorial coverage. That is a significant credibility problem for an institutional story.

**Unverifiable claims.** If your whitepaper describes assets under management that do not appear in any audited or on-chain verifiable source, an institutional reporter will notice. RWA projects in particular need to be scrupulous about the provenance of their numbers, because institutional journalists covering financial products know how to check.

**Crypto-only language in a financial context.** Using "DYOR," referencing "wen mainnet," or describing your token's staking rewards in a pitch to an FT reporter immediately signals that you have not read the outlet you are pitching. It is the equivalent of cold-calling a Goldman banker and asking them to "ape in."

**No named counterparties.** If you cannot put a recognized institutional name on your adoption story, even under embargo for a future announcement, you are not yet at the stage where institutional press can cover you without looking credulous.

## The Sustained Presence Strategy

A single Bloomberg placement is not an institutional PR program. The projects that build durable institutional press profiles treat coverage as a compounding asset, not a one-time event.

The quarterly rhythm works like this: invest one month in building or deepening two to three reporter relationships through substantive engagement and data sharing. Spend the second month preparing one material announcement, a partnership, a product milestone, a regulatory development, and place it as a managed exclusive with your top-priority outlet. In the third month, use the coverage from that exclusive as social proof to expand the conversation to secondary institutional outlets: Reuters, WSJ, CNBC's institutional coverage, financial trade press like Risk.net or the IFR.

Over two or three cycles of this rhythm, a project builds what no press release distribution service can create: a reputation as a reliable source for institutional financial reporters covering the tokenization beat. That reputation is the real asset. The placements are the evidence that it exists.

The institutional capital that will flow into RWA and stablecoin infrastructure over the next five years will follow the narrative that the institutional press has validated. Most tokenization founders are not in that narrative yet. The ones who get there first will find that the capital introduction value of a Bloomberg feature dwarfs anything CoinDesk can generate: not because Bloomberg is a better publication for crypto readers, but because Bloomberg is where the readers are who actually control the capital.

That is the window. It is open. The founders who learn to pitch institutional press before their competitors do are the ones who will close it for everyone else.

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Canonical: https://www.shilikajain.com/blog/stablecoin-rwa-pr-bloomberg-ft-institutional-press
