BitMEX co-founder Arthur Hayes has raised concerns about Tether’s financial strategy. He claims the stablecoin issuer is taking on risk that could threaten USDT backing.
Hayes analyzed Tether’s latest attestation report and focused on the company’s Bitcoin and gold positions. According to the disclosure, Tether holds $9.86 billion in Bitcoin and $12.92 billion in precious metals.
Tether currently maintains $181 billion in total assets against $174 billion in liabilities. The company’s reserve structure includes $140 billion in cash and equivalents.
The remaining $34 billion sits in Bitcoin, gold, secured loans, and other investments. This means roughly 19% of Tether’s assets are held in non-cash instruments.
Hayes argued that Tether appears to be betting on Federal Reserve rate cuts. Such cuts would reduce income from the company’s massive U.S. Treasury bill holdings.
U.S. Treasury bills make up $112.42 billion of Tether’s reserves. The company also holds $17.99 billion in overnight reverse repurchase agreements and $6.41 billion in money market funds.
Hayes predicted that large USDT holders and exchanges will demand real-time balance sheet access. He expects mainstream media attention to focus on these solvency questions.
One crypto user defended Tether’s approach by explaining that Bitcoin and gold purchases come from profits rather than newly issued USDT. Hayes questioned this explanation by pointing to the gap between cash assets and outstanding liabilities.
Former Citi Research crypto analyst Joseph pushed back against Hayes’ concerns. He noted that Tether’s attestation reports only show matched reserves, not the full balance sheet.
Tether maintains a separate equity balance sheet that includes corporate investments and mining operations. This additional financial strength does not appear in the same disclosure.
Joseph calculated that Tether generates approximately $10 billion in yearly profit. This comes from over $120 billion in interest-bearing Treasuries earning around 4% yields since 2023.
Crypto analyst BitImmortal broke down the reserve structure in detail. He compared it to a fractional reserve system that functions well under normal conditions.
The debate centers on liquidity rather than solvency. Assets exceed liabilities, but the question is how quickly non-cash reserves could be converted during mass redemptions.
Joseph pointed out that traditional banks operate with far thinner liquid reserves. Banks typically hold only 5-15% of deposits in cash-like assets compared to Tether’s more conservative mix.
The key difference is that banks have access to central bank lending facilities. Tether does not have a lender of last resort backing its operations.
S&P Global previously assigned Tether a “weak” stability rating due to concerns about risk asset allocations. Tether dismissed the rating framework as outdated and pointed to its large settlement flows.
Tether is closing its mining venture in Uruguay after electricity pricing negotiations failed. The company is letting go of approximately 30 of its 38 staff members in the country as operations wind down.
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