Tether is backing two critical infrastructure providers – LayerZero Labs and Anchorage Digital – as the stablecoin issuer shifts its strategy toward enabling institutional adoption of digital assets.
The dual investments target the two primary obstacles restraining mainstream financial participation: the fragmentation of assets across competing blockchains and the absence of clear regulatory frameworks. LayerZero addresses the technical problem; Anchorage Digital addresses the institutional one.
Together, they suggest Tether is betting that the path to ubiquitous stablecoins runs through regulated infrastructure rather than around it.
Tether announced on Tuesday a strategic equity stake in LayerZero Labs, the creator of an interoperability protocol that enables assets to move seamlessly between blockchains. The investment validates LayerZero's technology following a year of significant real-world deployment.
USDt0, a cross-chain version of Tether's USDT built on LayerZero's infrastructure, has facilitated more than $70 billion in cross-chain transfers since launch, demonstrating that fragmentation can be solved through working technology.
"Tether invests in infrastructure that is already delivering real-world utility," CEO Paolo Ardoino said in a statement.
LayerZero CEO Bryan Pellegrino said Tether's investment represented "the ultimate validation" following USDt0's success. The protocol has become the dominant bridging standard in digital assets, and Tether's backing signals alignment with its technology roadmap.
Last week, Tether separately committed $100 million in equity to Anchorage Digital, America's first federally regulated digital asset bank. The investment deepens an existing partnership – Tether already uses Anchorage's infrastructure for custody and stablecoin issuance.
The company holds a national bank charter and offers staking, custody, settlement, and stablecoin issuance services to institutions. Its regulatory standing distinguishes it in a sector where most platforms operate outside traditional banking frameworks.
Anchorage Digital CEO Nathan McCauley said the investment validates the company's thesis that "digital assets would only scale through secure, regulated foundations."


Lawmakers in the US House of Representatives and Senate met with cryptocurrency industry leaders in three separate roundtable events this week. Members of the US Congress met with key figures in the cryptocurrency industry to discuss issues and potential laws related to the establishment of a strategic Bitcoin reserve and a market structure.On Tuesday, a group of lawmakers that included Alaska Representative Nick Begich and Ohio Senator Bernie Moreno met with Strategy co-founder Michael Saylor and others in a roundtable event regarding the BITCOIN Act, a bill to establish a strategic Bitcoin (BTC) reserve. The discussion was hosted by the advocacy organization Digital Chamber and its affiliates, the Digital Power Network and Bitcoin Treasury Council.“Legislators and the executives at yesterday’s roundtable agree, there is a need [for] a Strategic Bitcoin Reserve law to ensure its longevity for America’s financial future,” Hailey Miller, director of government affairs and public policy at Digital Power Network, told Cointelegraph. “Most attendees are looking for next steps, which may mean including the SBR within the broader policy frameworks already advancing.“Read more
