Tether is preparing for its most ambitious organizational expansion to date, announcing plans to hire 150 new employees over the next 18 months, lifting its global workforce from 300 to roughly 450.
The move marks a clear shift away from Tether’s historically ultra-lean operating model and reflects the company’s growing confidence as USDT approaches a $185 billion market capitalization, generating record profits across volatile market conditions.
Tether’s hiring push is designed to support a broader transformation into what executives describe as a “comprehensive group” focused on technological freedom, rather than a single-product stablecoin issuer.
Most of the new roles will be technical in nature, with a heavy emphasis on engineers tasked with building what Tether internally refers to as a “freedom tech stack.” This stack spans not only digital finance, but also telecommunications, energy infrastructure, and decentralized services.
At the same time, the company is materially strengthening its governance layer. The recent appointment of Simon McWilliams as Chief Financial Officer signals a more centralized and institutional approach, with London becoming a key operational hub for finance, risk management, and compliance.
Job postings linked to the expansion highlight how geographically and functionally diverse the new roles will be. Beyond core engineering and compliance positions, Tether is recruiting for highly specialized functions across multiple regions, including:
AI filmmakers in Italy
Venture associates in the UAE
Regulatory and policy specialists in Ghana and Brazil
This spread underscores Tether’s intent to operate as a globally distributed organization rather than a jurisdiction-anchored issuer.
The hiring spree coincides with Tether overseeing a rapidly growing investment portfolio of roughly 140 assets across digital and traditional sectors.
Recent allocations illustrate how far the company has moved beyond stablecoins alone:
Commodities & reserves: A $150 million investment in Gold.com, reinforcing links between digital assets and physical gold reserves.
Media & crypto infrastructure: $775 million into Rumble and $100 million into Anchorage Digital, deepening exposure to U.S.-regulated platforms.
Traditional assets: Stakes spanning European football, including Juventus, and agricultural businesses in South America.
Tether’s decision to scale headcount by 50% is more than a staffing update. It reflects a strategic recalibration: moving from a minimal issuer optimized for efficiency into a multi-vertical global operator with deeper regulatory engagement, broader technological ambitions, and a growing real-world footprint.
As USDT cements its role as the dominant stablecoin in global crypto markets, Tether appears to be positioning itself not just to defend that dominance—but to build the infrastructure around it.
The post Tether Scales Up: Stablecoin Giant Plans 50% Workforce Expansion as Profits Surge appeared first on ETHNews.


