> Crypto.com’s decision to delist Tether follows regulatory clarification from the Canadian Standards Association (CSA) in December. The update was posted to the Ontario Securities Commission’s website.
Interesting, looks like a blanket statement that any stablecoin could be considered a security or derivative.
> the CSA is of the view that stablecoins, or stablecoin arrangements, may constitute securities and/or derivatives. Crypto trading platforms that are registered or that have entered into a pre-registration undertaking are reminded that they are prohibited from permitting Canadian clients to trade, or obtain exposure to, any crypto asset that is itself a security and/or a derivative.
Ontario’s securities regulator is on par with the toughest state securities regulators in America. They also have cross-border powers that lends them the jurisdictional heft of the American financial system.
> any remaining USDT balances would “automatically” be converted to Circle’s USD Coin, another stablecoin that tracks the price of the dollar.
Does not follow from the CSA's stated position:
> the CSA is of the view that stablecoins, or stablecoin arrangements, may constitute securities and/or derivatives
---
Why are they willing and able to have customers with USDC balances, but not USDT? Based on the CSA's position, wouldn't they want to delist all stablecoins?
I wonder how Tether getting broadly delisted would impact crypto prices.
Theoretically, its cash on the sidelines, so shouldn't impact the price.
Increases the likelihood of tether imploding as withdrawals shrink the proportional size of any reserve issues. That could certainly create a lot of negative attention, raising fear and dropping price.
Practically, I think tethers are often cash set aside for purchasing crypto in the future, so I wonder if this will lead to a significant portion USDT converting into BTC and other cryptos to become more 'liquid' in terms of transferability within the crypto banking system. (Not all exchanges people hold Tethers on are necessarily hooked up to their banking info for a wire transfer). Some might trade to BTC to move the value, which could increase price.
Who knows, will be interesting to see how it plays out if/when it plays out.
I think it just pushes these markets to switch to usdc, which is a good thing as (1) making crypto more tied to audited assets (2) make redemption subject to AML.
The problem is that Tether is either worth $1 (Current status quo), or $0 (When everyone loses faith in it.)
It will transition from one to the other at... Some point. And there will, by definition, be a lot of bagholders who have not managed to redeem it in time.
The rest of the ecosystem will not have a soft landing from that. Oh, sure, anyone who bought USDC will be fine, but all the non-pegged coins will be in for a very, very rough ride.
I imagine that if it's partially backed, and everyone tries to redeem, and they try to defend the peg in order to not admit that it's insolvent, then they'll redeem at $1 until they can't, at which point it will be worth ~$0.
The most likely scenario is that Tether is _overall_ solvent, though not in liquid assets.
What would likely happen in case of a bank run is:
1) Tether will defend the peg and redeem at $1
2) Tether will freeze redeems because of limited liquidity
3) Tether will fill face huge pressure and regulatory threats
4) Some people will want to exit USDT immediately at a discounted price (say $0.5), while some others will buy discounted USDT hoping once Tether solves its liquidity issues or bankrupt they could get more than $0.5 per USDT.
TLDR: USDT will most likely not go to $0 in case of default. Most likely there will be speculation on Tether's illiquid assets value that could be sold back to pay creditors.
We don't really know this, and a lot of their assets seem to be things like "corporate paper", which may simply be IOUs from exchanges they've given Tethers to.
> At this point, the question should be: what makes you believe they are insolvent?
A history of lies about audits, for a start. Admissions that they weren't fully backed in court at various points in the past (73% was bandied around by their own people at some point). Plus if the 'corporate paper' situation is anything like described, in any sort of crunch situation it could prove to be worthless.
> So we're free to come up with our various estimates. None more correct than the other.
Doesn’t this seem like a massive, systemic threat in itself, that an audit-dodging, opaque institution underpins the ecosystem?
Even if it is all present and correct (for some definition of present and correct) shouldn’t we be highly suspicious purely because of this evasive behaviour?
If you believe their figures, given their history of outright lies, and the fact that even the crypto-friendly auditing companies are dropping crypto company clients left right and centre (including BDO, who apparently signed off on this stuff, who are "evaluating" their services to the crypto economy - https://www.wsj.com/livecoverage/stock-market-news-today-12-...)
>and the fact that even the crypto-friendly auditing companies are dropping crypto company clients left right and centre
This has to do with the auditing companies being risk adverse as regulatory pressure around crypto increases. It doesn't mean that the reports they made were fraudulent.
For years their website claimed that the company was regularly audited, when they hadn't (still haven't AFAICT) undergone a single audit.
> This has to do with the auditing companies being risk adverse as regulatory pressure around crypto increases.
In at least some cases I think it has more to do with concerns over how the reports they were producing were being used by their clients -
"Mazars Group said in a statement to CNBC that it had “paused its activity relating to the provision of Proof of Reserves Reports for entities in the cryptocurrency sector due to concerns regarding the way these reports are understood by the public.”
“They do not constitute either an assurance or an audit opinion on subject matter. Instead they report limited findings based on the agreed procedures performed on the subject matter at a historical point in time,”
>For years their website claimed that the company was regularly audited, when they hadn't (still haven't AFAICT) undergone a single audit.
Have you considered they may have audited it themselves? Just because there wasn't an audit published by an external auditer that doesn't mean no one has ever audited their accounts.
I don't think it's a stretch at this point to say they have a history of, at the very least, being highly economical with the truth and misrepresenting their own level of transparency. And I do think your argument is unreasonable.
Take a look back to 2017 on the wayback machine -
"Every tether is always backed 1-to-1, by traditional currency held in our reserves. So 1 USD₮ is always equivalent to 1 USD."
"Our reserve holdings are published daily and subject to frequent professional audits."
The burden is absolutely on so-called "stable" coin issuers, exchanges, and other parties trying to sell crypto assets to prove that they are somehow the exceptional case of responsible grownups working within the ecosystem...b/c the "success stories" of circa 2019 are turning out to just be the folks who had the biggest scams running, and no one seems to be able to explain what's actually changed since then. (Hint: nothing! Nothing has changed, except that some of the rubes are becoming aware that they're the suckers left holding the bag, which makes actual cash somewhat thinner on the ground.)
Yes, sure, many of the exchanges are still running and money is moving around, so _someone_ is making a profit. But every time another domino falls the stans immediately challenge everyone to prove that _this particular_ actor is somehow insolvent, since obviously the rest of the ecosystem is sound...and in fact, the future of finance! Really!
It all stinks, just like it did a year ago, and five years before that.
To your numbers: they're made up, based on "value" of other crypto assets being shifted around, with no accounting standards, audits, or regulatory scrutiny to validate or back them.
As a layman trying to understand all this, doesn't the latest BDO report on their transparency page https://tether.to/en/transparency/#reports indicate ~40 billion usb to be in US treasury bills? That sounds pretty safe/OK to me, or what am missing? Do you accuse BDO of issuing bullshit reports?
Which seems to indicate that they signed an agreement with BDO Italia, "an independent subsidiary" of BDO. Not sure if that's significant in itself. Probably not.
And third, well, it's not an audit, it's more of a "Reserve balances look OK to us on this date" report. It doesn't (for instance) take into account any other liabilities the company may have.
So I'd say this is (as another poster mentioned) better than nothing, which is what they used to give, but worse than an actual audit.
> At this point, the question should be: what makes you believe they are insolvent?
Their unwillingness to undergo an audit, combined with their constant lies on this subject.
This is something that literally every financial company on earth is capable of doing in an above-board fashion. That they haven't done so is deafening.
But the claim about Tether problems is about solvency, not liquidity. If they are insolvent then
1. They defend the peg
2. Run out of money
3. Remaining tether is worth $0.
Now, probably they will not defend until exactly 0, and maybe they will have some illiquid assets that will be worth something, but I think $0.5 on a dollar is extremely ambitious. Kind of like FTX isn’t a liquidity issue, it’s a solvency issue.
> But the claim about Tether problems is about solvency, not liquidity.
I don't think solvency is really at stake for Tether. They have so much capital at this point that they are filthy rich just with treasuries returns. Of course that's just my opinion, you're free to disregard it.
The main risk IMHO is their greed in investing in illiquid assets.
> If they are insolvent then
> 1. They defend the peg
> 2. Run out of money
> 3. Remaining tether is worth $0.
My (picky) point is that no, this does not happen, because a company becomes bankrupt and ceases operation before $0.
Even now, there are people actively buying FTX accounts at a discount, expecting to cash in once the liquidation settlement is over.
Right. As I suggested in another comment, this belief is more of an article of faith than one based on actual facts.
But, my point to GP is that USDT redemption is offchain, and peg defense (for algorithmic stablecoins) or price discovery (for Tether) is onchain. So the market determines the onchain rate.
If it goes to 70c, for example, arbitrageurs will likely step in to pick up cheap USDT and take on the redemption risk. Of course if the market loses complete faith and no party is willing to take on the redemption risk (an unlikely scenario imo), the onchain rate could fall to zero.
> If it goes to 70c, for example, arbitrageurs will likely step in to pick up cheap USDT and take on the redemption risk.
Only if Tether is visibly doing redemptions. If they freeze redemptions then you'd be dumb to pay 70c for their magic beans. So there's a tight linkage between the onchain price and redemptions.
If it’s 70% backed for example, not being algorithmic is exactly why they will first redeem at $1 for the first 70% withdrawals, and then declare bankruptcy and the last 30% are worth $0.
In practice if this is the case they will probably redeem the first 50%, and then run and hide with the remaining 20% USD they have.
I think by working so hard to remain off-radar this whole time, they’ve been setting themselves up for a rug pull if the music truly stops. I mean yeah I think they’ll try to defend the peg for a while but if it’s clear it’s over, the incentives are pretty damn strong for them to cut and run with whatever they can carry.
If a run on a theoretically partially backed Tether, the initial folks trying to redeem would get fully paid out from the reserves. This would be done in an effort to make Tether seem stable, with the hope that people regain confidence, and not everyone tries to redeem.
Everyone withdrawing when they have money gets $1, everyone trying to withdraw after insolvency hits gets $0. If this were to occur the secondary market would bear some small but nonzero value representing the off chance that it is a liquidity issue and not a solvency issue.
Let's say there is 60 Billion total Tether, but only $30 Billion backing it.
As soon as people realize the issue, they will trade USDT for USD. Tether will defend the peg, spending $30 Billion to hold it's value at 1 USDT for $1.
Thirty Billion later, the overall situation is 30 Billion USDT remaining, but the bank vaults are empty nothing left over to defend the peg.
Tether could be worth $0.50 if the company said "We lost half the money and need to reset the peg". They would have to then redeem all the outstanding Tether, as no one will trust them. Therefore, this is unlikely to happen, as it will end the company.
Given its either worth what you paid for it and there is a non-zero risk its work zero, there is absolutely no reason you should ever own it for more time that its absolutely required.
> I wonder how Tether getting broadly delisted would impact crypto prices.
No reason to think it affects prices at all. The exchange would offer a cash pair or other stablecoin pair. Most centralized exchanges are combining stablecoin pairs anyway to transparently offer one USD pair.
Tether is most often used as a pair on derivatives (ie perpetual futures). An exchange won't delist tether without having an alternative for perps.
The only reason anybody brings up this stuff is because of all the narratives people spin about tether.
At the limit, the exchange would only redeem it at par if Tether the company can also do so, right? That's the big open question since Tether has never publicly completed an audit.
The results are mixed. They have a mix of treasuries, junk bonds and cash. Definitely not as risk free as they should be, but not to the point where you could call it a Ponzi.
Overall a global move to another stable coin would be good, but it takes time.
A state managed stable coin backed by the BCE or fed would really help.
You certainly can’t get $1 for literally $1 anywhere unless you are using an American bank/credit card that you are an American customer of. The exchange rate is far worse
What makes you think the spread on turning Pesos (-> BTC) -> USDT, or vice versa is any better? Market makers and exchanges don't work for free.
And since you can't buy groceries or pay rent with tether, and you need to convert it from/to fiat, you're not actually solving any problems by using it.
The biggest leaps in the crypto sector come from external action. Collectively, everyone knows how to do better more resilient stable value. Collectively, everyone knows the limitations of custodial arrangements.
They just won't act, en masse, until they have to.
If the government stayed out of crypto we would all be using single signature accounts with Silk Road having a monopoly and crashing every few hours on super slow Onion routes, just like it was 2012.
It really doesn't matter for the interesting things happening in Crypto. Bitcoiners are fine with the price changing. Web3 and other utility including cheap and fast value transactions (think Lightning and Cardano) will continue to focus on the tech and adoption. Sure some will be discouraged from using something volatile for payments but this will show something volatile is better than a failing "stablecoin".
So I won't even say the sooner the better. I don't know what the best timing is. No matter the timing it will help some and hurt others. That's what happened in the 2008 bailouts.
Probably little impact. The spot prices you see on the exchanges are manufactured to an extent, via wash trades. Large block size crypto trades are done off the exchanges with lower price. How low nobody knows.
1. Tether isn't an investment, it doesn't pay yield, and the only direction it can go is down. It's either worth $1 (it's current value), or $0 (when it falls apart). That's not an investment. At least when I go to Vegas, and put my wallet on black, I can win money.
2. Since when were Canadians unable to... Buy stocks..? Mutual funds? Index funds? REITs? BTC? Degeneratively day-trade options and meme stocks and margined-to-the-neck forex?
Exactly. Not sure they understand how things work in Canada at all. If anything, average investors in Canada can more easily access investable assets compared to American counterparts. For instance, there is no pattern day trading equivalent.
International wire transfers take from 1 to 5 working days to complete. Sometimes more when the receiving bank requires additional documentation or refuses the transfer. They also cost a lot more (~50$ per transfer) and sometimes require a physical visit to a bank branch.
You did not _really_ "wire money to someone in <1h".
Your bank signaled its willingness to move money to an other bank, who is in turn trusting enough of your bank to preemptively display that money as "received" while the actual settlement will happen the next day.
Modern, traditional, banking and brokerage is not based on actual fund transfer, but on the layering of trust relationships and complicated settlement state machines to give the impression of instantaneous transfers.
All operations done on money "just received" is done on margin, though at 0 cost.
What you say is generally true for standard cross-border payments, however two financial institutions in a single market should be able to execute a fully settled deal in less than an hour, RTGS (real-time gross settlement) systems are one of the available options in pretty much every market. Fedwire in USA, Target2 across EU countries and other systems elsewhere will not use some layering of correspondent banks and settling cover payments/fees after some business days, it will be a fully settled transaction pretty much immediately.
In Australia our RTGS is called RITS (Reserve Bank Information and Transfer System) and settlement is generally instant[1]. It's relatively new (2018) but it is pretty amazing.
Even before this our system wasn't too slow - I can barely remember but I think transactions were mostly always settled in a single business day. When I lived in the US (2013-2015) I was really surprised by how painful and slow it was to do a lot of basic banking stuff.
Something to note is that the Fed is shaking out FedNow instant payments, and they go GA mid 2023. This is instant settlement of amounts up to $25k per transaction, ramping to $100k over time. It should be expected that FedWire persists (with somewhat slower settlement times) for greater amounts. It costs the bank a few cents per transaction (the service runs on a cost recovery model), but it’s expected this cost won’t be passed along to the customer due to cost savings over checks and ACH.
> I literally just wired someone money today and it was <1 hour.
I can't count how many times I've had to explain to people that domestic wire transfers are actually really, really fast. Even international wire transfers occur relatively quickly in my experience, though obviously I can't vouch for every country:country combination.
I get the impression that a lot of Tether/crypto proponents have never actually dealt with normal banking at scale, they've only heard about it through exaggerated depictions designed to make crypto look like the better option.
Don't get me wrong: There are a lot of areas where normal banking is imperfect and can improve! However, replacing it with an unregulated asset operated by a shady company that has been proven to have been lying about their reserves once already is not an improvement.
Also, you don't need Tether specifically to transfer crypto around quickly. Most people would just transfer their crypto directly. It wouldn't make any sense to convert your Bitcoin to Tether to transfer to another exchange just to convert it back to Bitcoin and pay exchange fees on both ends.
I just transferred some USDC on the algorand network. It took 4 seconds for the transfer to complete, it cost me less than $0.01 in transaction fees, funds were instantly available to spend in the other account, and nobody called me to ask why I was moving my own money.
Depends what you mean by “holding” USD. Is it under your mattress? Or in a bank? Is it a bank in Venezuela or Lebanon?
Holding USDT is kind of holding USD. You just have Tether in the middle.
Main utility (value?) of stablecoins is to “bridge” USD fiat into crypto though.
Interestingly, crypto.com (exchange) keeps a “USD” balance for its customers, which is separate from its USDT balance. You can deposit/withdraw to/from your “USD” balance via fiat (bank transfer) or a basket of stablecoins like USDC, BUSD etc. Binance does this as well, and FTX before. They all kept USDT separate though. Worth considering why this is the case.
> They all kept USDT separate though. Worth considering why this is the case.
Because they’re not dollars, it’s a token that is supposed to be pegged to a dollar. It’s not a dollar until you redeem it for an actual dollar. In that respect it’s the same as USDC.
Disclaimer: I cannot tell you whether Tether is actually backed by anything. I cannot tell you everything listed is always a good thing for the user or for society at large. These are broad points and may not apply to particular jurisdictions, banks, cases etc.
* You don't need multiple bank accounts in multiple countries with multiple banks requiring multiple onboarding, KYC and ongoing fees and management.
* It's faster and cheaper to move around than USD via banks (and near zero chance of a transfer failing because of KYC etc).
* All payments are (short of government action) final, you can be confident you have actually been irrevocably paid if you get tether. Your bank may reverse a transfer at will...
* It's actually more versatile within Crypto as many places in crypto prefer not to use USD itself.
* You can hold and transfer tether with basically no access to USD itself, the global financial system etc. So if you live in a place with very tight controls on capital (eg China or Zimbabwe). (I personally think this is a very under appreciated property of crypto for those of us in free, stable currencied nations)
* It's much harder to trace you as the owner (if used correctly, big if).
Coincidentally, the exchange Gemini (operating in the US along other countries under a NY state Bitlicense) just started listing it, after holding out for a while.
I don’t have a public link to announcement, but it shows up on their currency list now and it appears on the Gemini exchange.
Since no one is actually investing in Tether (since it’s a deflationary asset), I presume the only purpose of labeling it a “security” is to just make it illegal.
Given the fact that the trucker protesters were using Tether/cryptocurrency to fund their demonstrations, this is a very bad look for the Canadian government.
Well, you see, there are two types of inflation, monetary and price.
Monetary inflation is when you increase the money supply through the printing press or digging up new gold or whatever. The converse for monetary deflation.
Price inflation != monetary inflation though “they” want you to believe it is.
> Given the fact that the trucker protesters were using Tether/cryptocurrency to fund their demonstrations, this is a very bad look for the Canadian government.
Given that security regulators are regulating a crypto exchange with standard rules that apply to all crypto exchanges, I think it's a very good look for how a regulator should act.
How a bunch of yahoo random protestors are "funding" their demonstrations is completely and utterly irrelevant. If they were using CAD or USD, would it make a difference to how the currency regulators should work?
I think people are underestimating the problems that a blanket Tether ban from North American markets would cause. You think a Tether ban would cause people to switch to USDC? Ok, but that means some Tether needs to vanish and some USDC needs to be created. How does that happen? Ideally, it goes from Tether -> USD -> USDC... and there lies the problem. We don't know if there is enough USD in Tether's coffer to redeem all the withdrawals. And if there is not, or even if there is a doubt about it, then it becomes a game where the last person to withdraw loses. How would that look for crypto in general? How would people react to USDC if they or someone they know just got burned by another stablecoin last week?
Exactly everything is insolvent. If tomorrow people were like hey everyone USD is going to fail you’d get the Great Depression unless the fed printed money. And there isn’t nearly enough paper money for it.
That's wildly and obviously untrue. Let's look at the definition of insolvency[1] "when an individual or company can no longer meet their financial obligations to lenders as debts become due."
Take a trivial example - a person with no debts. You have to concede such people do exist in the world.
They are by definition not insolvent, and cannot be. Even if the currency completely collapsed and USD had zero value this would not make them insolvent because they have o debt and therefore no financial obligations.
Not really, if they fail because of bank run reasons, it might be better for them to liquidate the assets slowly first, to stave off the run. Ymmv, check the accounting.
There is no possibility of a "bank run" if tether is actually 1:1 backed with USD. But it's almost certainly not, and that's why it's effectively fraudulent
They could be backed in USD denominated illiquid assets that may take time to unwound (it's kinda dumb from a treasury management POV if you keep everything in cash).
They can use overnight instruments, and its still pretty much impossible for there to be a bank run.
But it begs the question, is Tether meant to be a viable stablecoin, or is it a fractional reserve piggy bank for the Tether owners to earn interest from?
Clearly they're running it like the latter. Why would the crypto industry consolidate on something scammy like that?
That's a good point. If it's a pure stablecoin, would it be sustainable? It doesn't make sense to run a stablecoin as a charity/loss leader as there is a very real cost to treasury management and depreciation unless Bitfinex is trying to commoditize their complement.
Plenty of money market funds run with 0.1% fees. SGOV for one. These things aren't expensive to manage, it's pretty much on autopilot.
Ideally a stablecoin would be non-profit and run strictly for quality purposes with audits etc. Why would you ever need more than one? The desire to skim some off the top is far too pervasive in crypto
That was my understanding at first, but re-reading, I think it's just pointing out that digging is likely to expose a fraud with massive consequences (which I agree with). Of course, we should still do it
> We don't know if there is enough USD in Tether's coffer to redeem all the withdrawals.
Isn't that a good reason to get away from it? Since, it seems to just be a massively fraudulent vehicle that has been a direct cause of both booms and busts in Bitcoin?
What about the stocks that make up the S&P500/the ETFs/mutual funds that track it? I know it isn't on the scale of "crypto scam" but a lot of people think along the lines of:
can you trust the U.S. government to do the right thing/be efficient/effective? not really
therefore, lots of debt that'll never get paid back
wall street/robinhood "manipulating" markets, basically designing it almost like a casino to extract money from those who get addicted to "trading"
stock market is where wall street + U.S. corporations (greedy CEOs/boards) + government/politics (regulation, interest rates, etc.) all meet
and it's less fraudulent than crypto?
i'm not saying this is what i think. i read a lot of this (pretty much MAGA crazed conspiracy theorist weirdos) on stocktwits. a non zero amount of people think this.
I wouldn't say I'm aiming to spread them. I'm asking a bunch of people more educated than I (HackerNews readers) if there is any truth/concern to any of it.
You can find 10 posts in the past 30 days where people here are saying "omg, greedy corporation does greedy thing".
Just the other day we had a post saying "maybe the U.S. economy won't continue to grow forever and the stock market won't continue to return 7% a year"
Asked ChatGPT
> Is Wall Street known to be trustworthy and moral?
> Over the years there have been many instances of scandals, manipulation and fraud on Wall Street, which has damaged the reputation of the street.
Asked it this as well
> Are there instances of the U.S. government hiding the truth/lying to its citizens/being inefficient with taxpayer money?
> There have been instances in history where the U.S. government has been accused of hiding the truth, lying to its citizens, or being inefficient with taxpayer money.
I'm just trying to have a conversation. These MAGA people get a ton of power when you shut them down because they can point and say "see! listen! they don't want our points to be voiced! that means we're onto something"
Of course you wouldn't say that, but what matters isn't where you claim you're aiming, it's what you're doing: parroting MAGA crazed conspiracy theories.
"Argument from ChatGPT" is much worse than Argument from Authority. If you can't come up with your own arguments, then don't quote ChatGPT's arguments to me, just admit you're out of arguments.
Oh no, by shutting down and not listening to MAGA conspiracy theory parrots like you, I'm giving them power, because then they'll point fingers and lie, you threaten??!
Well they'll certainly point fingers and lie even if I listen to them too, so be it.
Hmm, now where have I heard that "I don't believe what I'm saying, I'm just askin' questions" line before, again and again?
Tucker “Just Asking Questions” Carlson Wants to Know What Putin Ever Did to You
> Of course you wouldn't say that, but what matters is what you're doing, not were you claim you're aiming.
How is me trying to discuss what somewhere between 0 and 50% of registered American voters believes in regards to "crypto fraud versus Wall Street fraud versus the stock market has been running on 0% interest rate money is basically fake fraud" whatever it is you're accusing me of doing?
I'm surprised somebody who has been on this site since 2014 with 20,000 karma is this rude/accusatory.
I and your other down voters are shutting down conversations about MAGA conspiracy theories, because this is not the place for them.
It's also not an appropriate place to post ChatGPT output instead of writing your own arguments.
Is it ChatGPT who told you to point fingers and play the victim of oppression if somebody tries to shut you down for spreading MAGA conspiracy theories, or did you come up with that yourself?
The point is that when you are spreading their conspiracy theories and telling people to let them speak and not silence them or else, that makes YOU one of those MAGA people you're warning us about. Witting or unwitting, you're useful to them.
I’m sorry but if he didn’t include that last paragraph this would have led to an interesting discussion because what he wrote is true. I disagree with the summary he’s made from that, or perhaps I disagree with the weight he’s giving to US default risk being close to that of crypto, but he’s hardly spouting some MAGA conspiracy like QAnon.
He literally admitted he hears what he's parroting from MAGA crazed conspiracy theorist weirdos, and while he claims not to believe them, he still spreads their conspiracy theories anyway, and on top of that tells people not to shut them down or else they will point fingers and play the victim. So what? Let them. They won't suddenly act reasonable and tell truth if we don't shut them down.
"i read a lot of this (pretty much MAGA crazed conspiracy theorist weirdos)"
When Tucker Carlson says "I'm just asking", he's not just asking questions, he's spreading misinformation on purpose.
And again I repeat, since you seem to be ignoring it: he tried to quote ChatGPT to support his lack of a valid argument. Nobody comes to this site to have arguments with ChatGPT, and ChatGPT and language models were certainly not the topic of this conversation. He might as well have been quoting his cat walking across the keyboard.
He was unsuccessfully trying to use ChatGPT output to prove his point. If he had a valid argument that he thought of himself to support his point, then he would have posted it instead of first parroting crazy MAGA conspiracy theory weirdos (which makes him their tool, witting or not), then parroting ChatGPT (which makes him a fool).
Even if he frames himself as merely a self-appointed ambassador to HN for crazy liars, he's still spreading their crazy lies. And if he trusts everything ChatGPT says so much, then he can PRIVATELY ask it "I’ve read X by conspiracy group Y. I think I believe it but I want to ask others first as I think they’re crazy weirdos." instead of trying to spread those crazy lies and conspiracy theories here.
Hacker News is not an appropriate forum for parroting crazy MAGA conspiracy theories or ChatGPT drivel as fact, or whining about how you're the victim of oppression and censorship for being downvoted and shut down when you're clearly breaking the rules.
And his threat not to shut him down or else he'll point fingers and claim to be the victim of censorship doesn't matter if crazy liars will spread crazy lies in retaliation for being shut down, because they spread crazy lies no matter what you do, so his threat that we should not shut him down for spreading crazy lies because it will make crazy liars spread crazy lies is tautological and meaningless.
ChatGPT's answers on questions like this aren't going to be usefully correct: they're merely going to repeat at best a synthesis/summary of what people have said on the topic in extant writings. But this is a question about trust and morals, which cannot be decided merely by consensus; any meaningful answer to it must be rooted in an actual value system and an understanding of trust.
> ChatGPT's answers on questions like this aren't going to be usefully correct: they're merely going to repeat at best a synthesis/summary of what people have said
It might repeat what some people have said. ChatGPT isn't designed to determine a consensus or to use a representative sample.
Fair. My point was largely that it doesn't "know" or "understand" anything itself, in order to draw conclusions; it merely has a whole lot of text in it and a model that allows it to associate that text very convincingly to look like it knows stuff. Thus, any answer it gives on a question like this will not be based on a comprehensive analysis of data, but rather on what the model predicts people would most likely say about the subject.
We've now seen 351 years of debts being paid on time, so why would you think the government is suddenly not going to pay its debt? You'd need a strong thesis to explain why the 351 year old trend is coming to an end.
If people are willing to lend to the gov't (by purchasing bonds), then why is it not sustainable? Those who are doing the lending is effectively proclaiming that they don't foresee a stoppage of future lending.
The level at which GDP growth is higher than interest payments.
The more important aspect is not that there's debt, but how it is spent and what is being spent on. If the spending is poor (aka, the spending is malinvestment), it doesn't matter that the current or projected future servicing is OK.
Using a metric like debt to GDP does not tell the whole story.
> Type "At what level does debt-to-GDP ratio hinder a nation?" into ChatGPT
Wow, is this what we’ve come to? This is a valid thought process now?
I have no strong views on your point. But I really don’t think it’s safe to trust the very-convincing and very-possibly-incorrect responses generated by ChatGPT to inform your views (on anything).
ChatGPT would only have a cogent answer to that if there were a well-accepted cogent answer in the extant literature.
To the best of my understanding, any answers to that question in extant literature are either going to be highly theoretical, or about situations that are not sufficiently similar to that of the modern US to be helpful.
Please stop using ChatGPT to write your comments. Nobody here is here to have a conversation with ChatGPT, and anyone who wants to talk with ChatGPT instead of actual human beings can do that privately without polluting the conversations of real human beings.
Furthermore, this number only increases when the increase in the debt is greater than the increase in the nominal GDP (a number much higher than the real growth of the economy, since the nominal GDP includes inflation, which, in this situation, can be thought of as a good thing). If the debt grows at 5% a year and the nominal GDP grows at 5% a year, then the ratio of debt-to-GDP remains largely unchanged, especially during eras when interest rates are low.
In 2021 the euro area (17 countries) had a quarter when their nominal GDP growth rate was an astounding 45%:
The point is, we can increase the debt every year, from now till the end of time, and that is sustainable, so long as the growth of the debt is less than the growth of the nominal GDP.
Sorry, I guess this is a tangent, but wouldn't that depend on how you define debt?
IIRC the US government failed to pay pensions for Civil War or WW1 soldiers, and the British government did something similar regarding bonds or pensions for WW1 or WW2 soldiers.
Right, I don't think there is a good phrase for it, but I believe when economists make this statement they mean Britain, Canada, the USA, Australia and New Zealand. I could say "Anglosphere" but some people think that phrase is racist.
I used to believe this wasn’t the case. Even the ICO craze in 2017/2018 didn’t sway my opinion. I genuinely thought crypto was the future of finance. This most recent bull cycle from 2020 to late 2021 changed my mind. I believe crypto use cases don’t extend far beyond fraud, gambling, or purchasing illegal goods. Every new project that claims to have some inherent value is just a disguise for gambling, and or straight up fraud.
My impression is that cross-border payments are a pretty small use case, especially if you mean legal cross-border payments. I.e., “something the law allows you to do but you can’t find a financial institution to do it.”
> censorship-resistance
Sure, but again, fairly niche at this point in time in western countries. Most financial censorship cases I’ve heard of in the U.S. sounded pretty well deserved.
> trust networks
This is a niche of a niche outside. You could just say “cryptography enthusiasts” instead.
> access to credit
Example? As in, someone with bad credit can still borrow on crypto?
>> See Cross-border payments, censorship-resistance
Both being illegal. If something is censored by government, the tools to bypass or defeat that censorship are likely illegal, especially if used to distribute uncensored copied of that material. If governments have regulated payments across a particular border, bypassing those regulations is also very likely illegal.
I understand the pain point, but I just don’t see crypto as an industry capable of solving it. Just look at how centralized some of these new networks and tokens are.
What about gold, jewelry and precious stones, cash? They can be stored on one's person or in a secure place. They also have underlying value. They're also actually censorship resistant, compared to cryptocurrencies which have been banned in multiple countries, and any determined state can block at the ISP level.
This was published as a result of the agreement Tether made with the NY State Attorney General. If the NYAG had not taken action against Tether, would they have ever released this information.
Note the percentage of cash and the percentage of "commercial paper" for which none of the issuers are disclosed. Are those issuers banks. Are they other crypto startups. Are they affiliated crypto entities (like Alameda was to FTX).
Perhaps I have missed the other pages of this financial disclosure from Tether, where further details are found.
The latest report [1] shows < 0.1% assets held in commercial paper. They didn't disclose individual issuers, but they've previously disclosed the credit ratings for the commercial paper and most were A-2, A-1, and A-1+ (equivalent to BBB and better for bonds). Since they were able to rotate out of the commercial paper, the credit worthiness of it was good enough.
There's a separate line item for "Secured Loans" which is where money lent to affiliated crypto entities would go. Tether previously stated that these loans would also be wound down. [2]
They have a mix of assets (as you'd expect, because they have different liquidity requirements). But the majority is in short term (<45 day) US Treasury Bonds or Cash and Bank deposits. The other largest asset class is money-market funds, which is a pretty well understood asset class.
Weird how they said they were going to release monthly attestations through them and then did exactly one 4 months ago, and then in December BDO said they were going to stop dealing with crypto companies.
Can someone explain to me how did they manage to mess it up?
Issuing stable coin seems like an easy business on paper. You collect $$$, mint coins, collect interest on those $$$ in a bank and that's your profit. Does everyone become greedy and lose the treasury in gambling instead, or what?
> stable coin seems like an easy business on paper
For one, finding a bank that will hold your money will be tough. They’re taking on significant liability, for the AML officer, personal criminal liability.
Ok, but they could still do some wealth management solution that's practically risk free. With the amount of deposits they don't even need to beat inflation to turn significant profit.
> they could still do some wealth management solution that's practically risk free
Mechanically, what does this mean? When someone buys Tether from you, to which bank account do you have them wire the money? By the way, your suggestion is a reasonable leap. But it still involves handling U.S. dollars, and now you've added a new regulated area (wealth management).
It's easy to imagine the transgressions starting small. Say you have someone ready to wire you $100mm. You don't yet have a bank account, but you're working on it. Do you tell them to pound sand? Or do you temporarily use a side account, to hold the funds until the main one is ready?
What I meant by saying 'it seems easy on paper' is that the need to be profitable shouldn't force you to make decisions which eventually lead your treasury to not being valuable enough to back the minted coins.
Also: Perhaps I don't understand how tether works, but I don't see why they need to be liable for holding customer funds. Why do they need a deposit/withdrawal process at all? Can't they just do the following?
IF USDT on open markets is <$1 THEN buy coins and burn them
IF USDT on open markets is >$1 THEN mint coins and sell them
And then they can do whatever they want with the treasury, no? Store it in banks or buy US treasury bonds, etc. Just don't lose it.
How about something like "You buy US treasury bonds, then give those bonds to us in exchange for xyzcoin"? Likewise redemptions always paid in treasury bonds?
I'm not very familiar with how treasuries get bought/sold/transferred between parties. But they seem pretty cash-equivalent, Uncle Sam will sell as much as you want, and your profit margin is baked into it.
> Likewise redemptions always paid in treasury bonds?
This is better! But a couple issues. One, this means the U.S. Treasury has an open book into your in and outflows. Not sure that's Tether's vibe. Two, you've limited yourself to people who can transfer Treasuries. Given Tether doesn't provide consumer redemption, this isn't a huge issue. But transferring Treasuries takes more financial savvy than wiring cash, and that savvy is likely to ask for their interest (as is common in collateral arrangements).
Because your execs are affiliated with other companies and suddenly those other companies lack liquidity and need a loan. If you’re Tether, that other company is Bitfinex. If you’re FTX, that other company is Alameda.
If the other company makes good use of the loan and recovers to pay the original company back — great, you still have enough assets to cover your deposits. That may be what happened with Bitfinex. On the other hand, the other company might go tits up. Now the first company has no money to cover deposits, declares bankruptcy, and if all is right in the world the execs see some punishment.
> Can someone explain to me how did they manage to mess it up?
Ideas: Greed, incompetence, a combination of the two.
Just guesses out of thin air: Collect $1b, don't just keep $1b sitting around in low-risk instruments 1:1. Take $200m for yourself. Try to turn it into $1.2b through risky investments.
Because at that point, they are a bank. Nothing fancier, nothing further, a bank. They aren't going to be a better bank than the bank at which they deposit the real money, so what do they do instead? Just say that they're totally not a bank, not at all, and that's why they don't need to do any of the fancy paperwork or background checks or meet minimum reserve requirements, because those are things that banks are required to do, and they're definitely not a "bank".
So now there's a business where the only way to make money is to break the regulations that exist to stop banks from doing exactly what they're doing. It's in the cryptocurrency environment, where the entire culture is made up of scammers, chumps, and chumps who aspire to be scammers. And in that environment, there's a big pile of money that could be transferred out without any oversight at all.
At that point, it isn't just that people "become greedy", but that every single aspect of the situation is aligned to select greedy people and create a situation that rewards theft.
> So now there's a business where the only way to make money is to break the regulations that exist to stop banks from doing exactly what they're doing
so it worked for uber & AirBNB, i'm sure these companies doing this are asking why not for them?
Hotels are locally regulated, with side effects for maybe one town if a few go backrupt. This gives nationwide startups leeway to out-innovate regulators. Banks can have a much larger reach if they fail, and so are federally regulated. This prevents the same from happening. There are no startups seeking to out-innovate the FAA, for example.
Where do you suggest they park all that USD $$$. Banks wont touch them. You can't just buy Treasuries, as that requires having banks. Even in a bank such a high balance is not FDIC insured, so what if there's theft/fraud/etc. Its not as trivial as it sounds, and eventually you'll end up needing to create what amounts to a bank.
> Can someone explain to me how did they manage to mess it up?
You're assuming an intent to make (all) customers whole.
In Ponzi Scheme you collect $$$, mint coins or forge other confirmation, move money to Panama or spend it and when asked to pay out, you use other investors money. The only reason for making some customers whole is to keep the scheme going.
The problem for Ponzi operator starts when too many victims want they money back and there is no big enough source of it to cover payouts.
Most Tether users either aren't in North America and/or are directly holding on-chain. Add up all the US and Canadian centralized exchanges, and accounts for much less than 10% of Tether's outstanding float. Now I certainly don't know if Tether has enough reserves to redeem 100% of their supply, but I'm almost certain they can redeem 10%.
Banks have short term liabilities (customer deposits and certificates of deposit) and long term assets (business loans, mortgage loans, etc.). A bank cannot call its business and mortgage loans from the borrower, so the maturity mismatch can create credit crunches for banks.
Tether has short term liabilities (tokens) and short term assets (T-bills, money market funds, bank deposits, etc.). Because most of their assets are in short term "cash equivalent" assets with lots of liquidity, Tether can more easily deal with large redemptions as they did in April - July when their market cap went from $83B to $66B.
They claim and BDO Italia attests that these are the assets they hold. USDC likewise posts attestation reports, so we "know" Tether's assets as well as we do USDC's.
That exposes you to the price of BTC. USDT and USDC should both be pegged to USD, so (in theory) the market won’t move against you while you’re trading.
A BTC transaction can easily take 30 minutes to confirm. In that time, the price of BTC fluctuates and if there’s an exodus from tether to BTC, it could fluctuate a lot.
So from what you're saying, I gather that in a hypothetical USDT -> BTC -> USDC repositioning, even if you were to execute the first USDT -> BTC leg, you wouldn't be able to execute the next BTC -> USDC leg until after this first transaction to BTC has been "confirmed", and each leg of the trade "can easily take 30 minutes to confirm" all the while exposing the position to BTC downside volatility risk?
I find it very strange that crypto exchanges don't handle execution, confirmation and settlement in the same way as traditional markets.
Also, wasn't the major sell point of stablecoins to enable direct crypto-to-crypto transactions without ever needing to first settle in fiat currency, e.g. USDT -> USDC, as opposed to USDT -> USD -> USDC?
>I find it very strange that crypto exchanges don't handle execution, confirmation and settlement in the same way as traditional markets
I'm not sure what he is talking about. On centralized exchangers execution, confirmation, and settlement happen nearly instantly. Unlike with stocks there is no 2 day settlement time.
For decentralized exchanges you can do it in 1 transaction executing both trades atomically. Modern token swaps will look for the optimal series of trades to make from available DEXs to give you the best rate. It can automatically check if it's better to go straight from USDT to USDC or if it's better to swap to bitcoin first. Sometimes it makes sense to split it up so some of it is direct swap and the other part of it uses an extra leg to get a better deal.
I’m not a big trader, but people send me BTC about once per week. It takes 30 minutes easily to get the transaction confirmed on the blockchain. Before that, it’s not clear the transaction is legit. And I have had one or two transactions that don’t reach the magic number of 6 confirmations. I’m not sure how the sender pulls that off, but I alert them of it, don’t deliver the goods, and they haven’t complained (knowing they sent a fraudulent transaction? I don’t know)
It’s my understanding those confirmations are being done by miners who get a small fee that me or the sender’s pay.I see this labeled as “network fee”.
If someone is trading between USDT and bitcoin they are not going to be doing it on the bitcoin network. They are going to be doing it on a CEX where there is no confirmation time or they will be using a derivative such as wrapped bitcoin on another network such as Ethereum.
The 30 minute wait would only make sense if you were to trade USDT for bitcoin on a CEX, then send that money using bitcoin to another CEX to execute the next trade to USDC.
> you wouldn't be able to execute the next BTC -> USDC leg until after this first transaction to BTC has been "confirmed", and each leg of the trade "can easily take 30 minutes to confirm" all the while exposing the position to BTC downside volatility risk?
Precisely.
> find it very strange that crypto exchanges don't handle execution, confirmation and settlement in the same way as traditional markets
You don’t have to use an exchange to trade crypto. You can send crypto from one wallet to another without any exchange or anyone else in the middle (Except miners who are paid to confirm the transaction)
The end game here and rug pull will be a mass conversion on exchanges to any and every other asset from usdt. Most likely this will far exceed almost every exchanges actual reserves and they will internalize the buy side and add some numbers to a database. Exchanges will attempt to redeem all the USDT they now hold, the USDT they didn't also fabricate out of thin air that is. This bank run on Tether exposes Tethers own lack of liquid reserves causing both Tether and said exchanges to become insolvent taking everyone down with them. After an event like this the utility of crypto will remain but the money won't return for a long long time. This is how I see this all going. I think places like coinbase, kraken etc Will survive but almost no one will care when the shell game is over.
You assume tether will allow redemption of $1 USD for each 1 tether it receives. I believe tether makes no such guarantee you can actually redeem USD for your tethers.
> We don't know if there is enough USD in Tether's coffer to redeem all the withdrawals
I'd take it a step further and say that we know Tether's USD coffers aren't deep enough to cover withdrawals. They've fully and publicly accounted for the assets that back UST and it's almost entirely in cryptocurrency which will nose dive the second people start divesting.
You seem to think that ignoring this glaring liability will somehow make it go away or will buy enough time for people to safely divest. It simply won't. The only cure for this cancer is sunlight and an ugly haircut for Tether holders.
The only way to fix this is for unstable stablecoins to fail hard and have it serve as a warning for future investors not to play with fire.
These are valid concerns but I don't think are reasons not to have a blanket ban. Delay in addressing the issue is simply going to result in a worse outcome for recovery because if it is a fraud[1], the ongoing costs of operation and any outflows to insiders are just going to eat away at the assets that should go back to victims. If by some strange turn of events it's not a fraud a ban would cause the backers of Tether to see sense, be transparent etc and get back on track.
In the stock world, you can't have an ETF without credible audits, regulatory checks etc. Generally speaking that means if I have an ETF which someone says will track the SPX, it has an underlying asset basket comprising the stocks in the SPX and a redemption/creation mechanism where creating new units is contingent on assets being added to the basket to ensure redemption is later possible. Vice versa, redemption involves selling those assets to give back cash.
You don't get to just say "don't look behind the curtain. Your gold is there but you don't get to look at it".
[1] Which I have said for a very long time that it very likely _is_ simply on the basis of logic. If it's not a fraud there really is no reason whatsoever not to allow an audit and have full transparency about underlying assets. They don't do this and therefore are most likely a fraud. The reason they have always given (that giving transparency about their list of assets would allow others to duplicate their strategy) is the epitome of weaksauce and reason for concern in itself. For the people creating an ETF, the ETF is a source of funding because you have the ability to swap basket assets for units and do creative things when you see units available for purchase in the market. The edge doesn't come from having super seekrit strats about what goes in the asset basket. Any alpha from teh basket contents would cause undue volatility and the ETF not to track the reference index properly.
ATM, Binance needs a lot of cash, as they are still having >$50M a day in withdrawals.
We know (from chats that were made public by FTX employees) that they are working with Tether to make sure that everything looks backed and solid and regain confidence.
It is not impossible that Binance is already in the hole, and using some of Tether's cash, or that such a position is imminent.
If we give Binanace time to stabilize before there is a run on Tether, then their combined coffers will be much larger, thus preventing the crash.
I don't see much of a need for USDT or any stable coin to be on centralized exchanges for much longer. Its useful as a place to park value on-chain via DEXs in between trades, kind of like Treasuries IRL. Even for Bitcoin its actually easier to trade WBTC on an EVM chain with stable coins. IMO It's silly to hold anything on a central exchange, they should go away for everything but fiat on/off ramps.
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[ 2.6 ms ] story [ 308 ms ] thread> Crypto.com’s decision to delist Tether follows regulatory clarification from the Canadian Standards Association (CSA) in December. The update was posted to the Ontario Securities Commission’s website.
Official Guidance CSA: https://www.osc.ca/en/news-events/news/csa-provides-update-c...
> the CSA is of the view that stablecoins, or stablecoin arrangements, may constitute securities and/or derivatives. Crypto trading platforms that are registered or that have entered into a pre-registration undertaking are reminded that they are prohibited from permitting Canadian clients to trade, or obtain exposure to, any crypto asset that is itself a security and/or a derivative.
Ontario’s securities regulator is on par with the toughest state securities regulators in America. They also have cross-border powers that lends them the jurisdictional heft of the American financial system.
Logically Crypto.com's action:
> any remaining USDT balances would “automatically” be converted to Circle’s USD Coin, another stablecoin that tracks the price of the dollar.
Does not follow from the CSA's stated position:
> the CSA is of the view that stablecoins, or stablecoin arrangements, may constitute securities and/or derivatives
---
Why are they willing and able to have customers with USDC balances, but not USDT? Based on the CSA's position, wouldn't they want to delist all stablecoins?
Canadian Standards Association deals with things like helmets and electrical product safety.
Theoretically, its cash on the sidelines, so shouldn't impact the price.
Increases the likelihood of tether imploding as withdrawals shrink the proportional size of any reserve issues. That could certainly create a lot of negative attention, raising fear and dropping price.
Practically, I think tethers are often cash set aside for purchasing crypto in the future, so I wonder if this will lead to a significant portion USDT converting into BTC and other cryptos to become more 'liquid' in terms of transferability within the crypto banking system. (Not all exchanges people hold Tethers on are necessarily hooked up to their banking info for a wire transfer). Some might trade to BTC to move the value, which could increase price.
Who knows, will be interesting to see how it plays out if/when it plays out.
The problem is that Tether is either worth $1 (Current status quo), or $0 (When everyone loses faith in it.)
It will transition from one to the other at... Some point. And there will, by definition, be a lot of bagholders who have not managed to redeem it in time.
The rest of the ecosystem will not have a soft landing from that. Oh, sure, anyone who bought USDC will be fine, but all the non-pegged coins will be in for a very, very rough ride.
The most likely scenario is that Tether is _overall_ solvent, though not in liquid assets.
What would likely happen in case of a bank run is:
1) Tether will defend the peg and redeem at $1
2) Tether will freeze redeems because of limited liquidity
3) Tether will fill face huge pressure and regulatory threats
4) Some people will want to exit USDT immediately at a discounted price (say $0.5), while some others will buy discounted USDT hoping once Tether solves its liquidity issues or bankrupt they could get more than $0.5 per USDT.
TLDR: USDT will most likely not go to $0 in case of default. Most likely there will be speculation on Tether's illiquid assets value that could be sold back to pay creditors.
What makes you believe this?
- 66B in liabilities
- 17B in redemptions over a 2 month period (proof of some liquidity)
- 8 years of operation
- 100s of millions in annual revenue
How many billions are they short? What redemption rate would it take? Which catalyst?
At this point, the question should be: what makes you believe they are insolvent?
Edit: assets -> liabilities
We don't really know this, and a lot of their assets seem to be things like "corporate paper", which may simply be IOUs from exchanges they've given Tethers to.
> At this point, the question should be: what makes you believe they are insolvent?
A history of lies about audits, for a start. Admissions that they weren't fully backed in court at various points in the past (73% was bandied around by their own people at some point). Plus if the 'corporate paper' situation is anything like described, in any sort of crunch situation it could prove to be worthless.
Yes, I should have said 66B in liabilities. We don't know how much they have backing these liabilities.
> A history of lies about audits, for a start ...
Indeed. So we're free to come up with our various estimates. None more correct than the other.
Doesn’t this seem like a massive, systemic threat in itself, that an audit-dodging, opaque institution underpins the ecosystem?
Even if it is all present and correct (for some definition of present and correct) shouldn’t we be highly suspicious purely because of this evasive behaviour?
It was. But it's increasingly less so. The market has hedged this risk somewhat, by decreasing its market share: https://www.theblock.co/data/decentralized-finance/stablecoi.... And will likely continue to do so.
Tether decreased the amount of corporate paper it was exposed to throughout 2022.
December 03, 2021: 44.24% of the reserves was corporate paper
September 30, 2022: 0.07% corporate paper
Over this time frame Tether's shareholder captial cushion (assets - liabilities) increased from $137,337,226 to $250,107,738
If you want to be accurate you can say most of their assets are US treasury bonds.
Such as?
>and the fact that even the crypto-friendly auditing companies are dropping crypto company clients left right and centre
This has to do with the auditing companies being risk adverse as regulatory pressure around crypto increases. It doesn't mean that the reports they made were fraudulent.
For years their website claimed that the company was regularly audited, when they hadn't (still haven't AFAICT) undergone a single audit.
> This has to do with the auditing companies being risk adverse as regulatory pressure around crypto increases.
In at least some cases I think it has more to do with concerns over how the reports they were producing were being used by their clients -
"Mazars Group said in a statement to CNBC that it had “paused its activity relating to the provision of Proof of Reserves Reports for entities in the cryptocurrency sector due to concerns regarding the way these reports are understood by the public.”
“They do not constitute either an assurance or an audit opinion on subject matter. Instead they report limited findings based on the agreed procedures performed on the subject matter at a historical point in time,”
https://www.cnbc.com/2022/12/16/mazars-suspends-all-work-wit...
Have you considered they may have audited it themselves? Just because there wasn't an audit published by an external auditer that doesn't mean no one has ever audited their accounts.
I would consider this every bit as bad. “We marked our own homework! And guess what? It was great!”
The whole concept is ludicrous.
Internal audits still have value as it means that someone can't steakily steal money from the reserves without them noticing.
Further, they paid $41 million to settle a case over their lies - https://fortune.com/2021/10/15/tether-crypto-stablecoin-fine...
I don't think it's a stretch at this point to say they have a history of, at the very least, being highly economical with the truth and misrepresenting their own level of transparency. And I do think your argument is unreasonable.
Take a look back to 2017 on the wayback machine -
"Every tether is always backed 1-to-1, by traditional currency held in our reserves. So 1 USD₮ is always equivalent to 1 USD."
"Our reserve holdings are published daily and subject to frequent professional audits."
We know that neither of those things was true.
The burden is absolutely on so-called "stable" coin issuers, exchanges, and other parties trying to sell crypto assets to prove that they are somehow the exceptional case of responsible grownups working within the ecosystem...b/c the "success stories" of circa 2019 are turning out to just be the folks who had the biggest scams running, and no one seems to be able to explain what's actually changed since then. (Hint: nothing! Nothing has changed, except that some of the rubes are becoming aware that they're the suckers left holding the bag, which makes actual cash somewhat thinner on the ground.)
Yes, sure, many of the exchanges are still running and money is moving around, so _someone_ is making a profit. But every time another domino falls the stans immediately challenge everyone to prove that _this particular_ actor is somehow insolvent, since obviously the rest of the ecosystem is sound...and in fact, the future of finance! Really!
It all stinks, just like it did a year ago, and five years before that.
To your numbers: they're made up, based on "value" of other crypto assets being shifted around, with no accounting standards, audits, or regulatory scrutiny to validate or back them.
The burden, perhaps. The question was about belief.
Surely the rest of your comment (rant?) cannot be in response to my comment.
Which seems to indicate that they signed an agreement with BDO Italia, "an independent subsidiary" of BDO. Not sure if that's significant in itself. Probably not.
Secondly, BDO are "evaluating" their ongoing relationship with crypto firms - https://www.wsj.com/livecoverage/stock-market-news-today-12-...
And third, well, it's not an audit, it's more of a "Reserve balances look OK to us on this date" report. It doesn't (for instance) take into account any other liabilities the company may have.
So I'd say this is (as another poster mentioned) better than nothing, which is what they used to give, but worse than an actual audit.
Their unwillingness to undergo an audit, combined with their constant lies on this subject.
This is something that literally every financial company on earth is capable of doing in an above-board fashion. That they haven't done so is deafening.
1. They defend the peg
2. Run out of money
3. Remaining tether is worth $0.
Now, probably they will not defend until exactly 0, and maybe they will have some illiquid assets that will be worth something, but I think $0.5 on a dollar is extremely ambitious. Kind of like FTX isn’t a liquidity issue, it’s a solvency issue.
I don't think solvency is really at stake for Tether. They have so much capital at this point that they are filthy rich just with treasuries returns. Of course that's just my opinion, you're free to disregard it.
The main risk IMHO is their greed in investing in illiquid assets.
> If they are insolvent then > 1. They defend the peg > 2. Run out of money > 3. Remaining tether is worth $0.
My (picky) point is that no, this does not happen, because a company becomes bankrupt and ceases operation before $0.
Even now, there are people actively buying FTX accounts at a discount, expecting to cash in once the liquidation settlement is over.
What do you think this means?
Tether is not an algorithmic stablecoin.
But, my point to GP is that USDT redemption is offchain, and peg defense (for algorithmic stablecoins) or price discovery (for Tether) is onchain. So the market determines the onchain rate.
If it goes to 70c, for example, arbitrageurs will likely step in to pick up cheap USDT and take on the redemption risk. Of course if the market loses complete faith and no party is willing to take on the redemption risk (an unlikely scenario imo), the onchain rate could fall to zero.
Only if Tether is visibly doing redemptions. If they freeze redemptions then you'd be dumb to pay 70c for their magic beans. So there's a tight linkage between the onchain price and redemptions.
In practice if this is the case they will probably redeem the first 50%, and then run and hide with the remaining 20% USD they have.
This continues until the reserves are depleted.
As soon as people realize the issue, they will trade USDT for USD. Tether will defend the peg, spending $30 Billion to hold it's value at 1 USDT for $1.
Thirty Billion later, the overall situation is 30 Billion USDT remaining, but the bank vaults are empty nothing left over to defend the peg.
At this point, USDT snaps to $0 very quickly.
Both are derivative do Both will be block probably
No reason to think it affects prices at all. The exchange would offer a cash pair or other stablecoin pair. Most centralized exchanges are combining stablecoin pairs anyway to transparently offer one USD pair.
Tether is most often used as a pair on derivatives (ie perpetual futures). An exchange won't delist tether without having an alternative for perps.
The only reason anybody brings up this stuff is because of all the narratives people spin about tether.
The results are mixed. They have a mix of treasuries, junk bonds and cash. Definitely not as risk free as they should be, but not to the point where you could call it a Ponzi.
Overall a global move to another stable coin would be good, but it takes time.
A state managed stable coin backed by the BCE or fed would really help.
And since you can't buy groceries or pay rent with tether, and you need to convert it from/to fiat, you're not actually solving any problems by using it.
The biggest leaps in the crypto sector come from external action. Collectively, everyone knows how to do better more resilient stable value. Collectively, everyone knows the limitations of custodial arrangements.
They just won't act, en masse, until they have to.
If the government stayed out of crypto we would all be using single signature accounts with Silk Road having a monopoly and crashing every few hours on super slow Onion routes, just like it was 2012.
So I won't even say the sooner the better. I don't know what the best timing is. No matter the timing it will help some and hurt others. That's what happened in the 2008 bailouts.
1. Tether isn't an investment, it doesn't pay yield, and the only direction it can go is down. It's either worth $1 (it's current value), or $0 (when it falls apart). That's not an investment. At least when I go to Vegas, and put my wallet on black, I can win money.
2. Since when were Canadians unable to... Buy stocks..? Mutual funds? Index funds? REITs? BTC? Degeneratively day-trade options and meme stocks and margined-to-the-neck forex?
Also (somewhat related), I don't think its a coincidence that Canada is a haven for financial fraud https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Wx51CffrBIg.
Or so I hear, not up to date on the latest in the crypto world.
Your bank signaled its willingness to move money to an other bank, who is in turn trusting enough of your bank to preemptively display that money as "received" while the actual settlement will happen the next day.
Modern, traditional, banking and brokerage is not based on actual fund transfer, but on the layering of trust relationships and complicated settlement state machines to give the impression of instantaneous transfers.
All operations done on money "just received" is done on margin, though at 0 cost.
In Australia our RTGS is called RITS (Reserve Bank Information and Transfer System) and settlement is generally instant[1]. It's relatively new (2018) but it is pretty amazing.
Even before this our system wasn't too slow - I can barely remember but I think transactions were mostly always settled in a single business day. When I lived in the US (2013-2015) I was really surprised by how painful and slow it was to do a lot of basic banking stuff.
1. https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/bulletin/2018/sep/the-ne...
https://www.frbservices.org/news/fed360/issues/100322/fednow...
I can't count how many times I've had to explain to people that domestic wire transfers are actually really, really fast. Even international wire transfers occur relatively quickly in my experience, though obviously I can't vouch for every country:country combination.
I get the impression that a lot of Tether/crypto proponents have never actually dealt with normal banking at scale, they've only heard about it through exaggerated depictions designed to make crypto look like the better option.
Don't get me wrong: There are a lot of areas where normal banking is imperfect and can improve! However, replacing it with an unregulated asset operated by a shady company that has been proven to have been lying about their reserves once already is not an improvement.
Also, you don't need Tether specifically to transfer crypto around quickly. Most people would just transfer their crypto directly. It wouldn't make any sense to convert your Bitcoin to Tether to transfer to another exchange just to convert it back to Bitcoin and pay exchange fees on both ends.
This means you can easily create an exchange dealing strictly with crypto if you don't support USD.
Holding USDT is kind of holding USD. You just have Tether in the middle.
Main utility (value?) of stablecoins is to “bridge” USD fiat into crypto though.
Interestingly, crypto.com (exchange) keeps a “USD” balance for its customers, which is separate from its USDT balance. You can deposit/withdraw to/from your “USD” balance via fiat (bank transfer) or a basket of stablecoins like USDC, BUSD etc. Binance does this as well, and FTX before. They all kept USDT separate though. Worth considering why this is the case.
They’re regulated by the USA and I’m sure the terms say they’ll comply with requests from Uncle Sam.
To be clear, the theory is Uncle Sam has no power over Tether's U.S. dollars?
Because they’re not dollars, it’s a token that is supposed to be pegged to a dollar. It’s not a dollar until you redeem it for an actual dollar. In that respect it’s the same as USDC.
* You don't need multiple bank accounts in multiple countries with multiple banks requiring multiple onboarding, KYC and ongoing fees and management.
* It's faster and cheaper to move around than USD via banks (and near zero chance of a transfer failing because of KYC etc).
* All payments are (short of government action) final, you can be confident you have actually been irrevocably paid if you get tether. Your bank may reverse a transfer at will...
* It's actually more versatile within Crypto as many places in crypto prefer not to use USD itself.
* You can hold and transfer tether with basically no access to USD itself, the global financial system etc. So if you live in a place with very tight controls on capital (eg China or Zimbabwe). (I personally think this is a very under appreciated property of crypto for those of us in free, stable currencied nations)
* It's much harder to trace you as the owner (if used correctly, big if).
I don’t have a public link to announcement, but it shows up on their currency list now and it appears on the Gemini exchange.
https://www.gemini.com/prices
CBDCs coming soon to a government-approved centralized exchange near you!
Given the fact that the trucker protesters were using Tether/cryptocurrency to fund their demonstrations, this is a very bad look for the Canadian government.
Which is the definition of monetary deflation…
No, it's the definition of a shrinking money supply. Inflation and deflation are measures on purchasing power, not money supply.
Monetary inflation is when you increase the money supply through the printing press or digging up new gold or whatever. The converse for monetary deflation.
Price inflation != monetary inflation though “they” want you to believe it is.
This is in fact a real annoyance for USDT investors, as Tether does not pay the risk free rate, which they should, as any USD custodian would.
Given that security regulators are regulating a crypto exchange with standard rules that apply to all crypto exchanges, I think it's a very good look for how a regulator should act.
How a bunch of yahoo random protestors are "funding" their demonstrations is completely and utterly irrelevant. If they were using CAD or USD, would it make a difference to how the currency regulators should work?
Take a trivial example - a person with no debts. You have to concede such people do exist in the world.
They are by definition not insolvent, and cannot be. Even if the currency completely collapsed and USD had zero value this would not make them insolvent because they have o debt and therefore no financial obligations.
[1] https://www.investopedia.com/terms/i/insolvency.asp
Insolvent companies usually fail anyway. It's better to catch them early before they can make things even worse for their customers and investors.
But it begs the question, is Tether meant to be a viable stablecoin, or is it a fractional reserve piggy bank for the Tether owners to earn interest from?
Clearly they're running it like the latter. Why would the crypto industry consolidate on something scammy like that?
Ideally a stablecoin would be non-profit and run strictly for quality purposes with audits etc. Why would you ever need more than one? The desire to skim some off the top is far too pervasive in crypto
Isn't that a good reason to get away from it? Since, it seems to just be a massively fraudulent vehicle that has been a direct cause of both booms and busts in Bitcoin?
This is from 2017: https://www.wsj.com/articles/large-bitcoin-player-manipulate...
Ya. It's crypto. Any and every aspect of crypto is at least partially deserving of such description.
can you trust the U.S. government to do the right thing/be efficient/effective? not really
therefore, lots of debt that'll never get paid back
corporations barely turning a profit. https://finviz.com/screener.ashx?v=111&f=idx_sp500&o=-pe ton of stocks with high P/E or no earnings in the S&P
wall street/robinhood "manipulating" markets, basically designing it almost like a casino to extract money from those who get addicted to "trading"
stock market is where wall street + U.S. corporations (greedy CEOs/boards) + government/politics (regulation, interest rates, etc.) all meet
and it's less fraudulent than crypto?
i'm not saying this is what i think. i read a lot of this (pretty much MAGA crazed conspiracy theorist weirdos) on stocktwits. a non zero amount of people think this.
You can find 10 posts in the past 30 days where people here are saying "omg, greedy corporation does greedy thing".
Just the other day we had a post saying "maybe the U.S. economy won't continue to grow forever and the stock market won't continue to return 7% a year"
Asked ChatGPT
> Is Wall Street known to be trustworthy and moral?
> Over the years there have been many instances of scandals, manipulation and fraud on Wall Street, which has damaged the reputation of the street.
Asked it this as well
> Are there instances of the U.S. government hiding the truth/lying to its citizens/being inefficient with taxpayer money?
> There have been instances in history where the U.S. government has been accused of hiding the truth, lying to its citizens, or being inefficient with taxpayer money.
I'm just trying to have a conversation. These MAGA people get a ton of power when you shut them down because they can point and say "see! listen! they don't want our points to be voiced! that means we're onto something"
"Argument from ChatGPT" is much worse than Argument from Authority. If you can't come up with your own arguments, then don't quote ChatGPT's arguments to me, just admit you're out of arguments.
Oh no, by shutting down and not listening to MAGA conspiracy theory parrots like you, I'm giving them power, because then they'll point fingers and lie, you threaten??!
Well they'll certainly point fingers and lie even if I listen to them too, so be it.
Hmm, now where have I heard that "I don't believe what I'm saying, I'm just askin' questions" line before, again and again?
Tucker “Just Asking Questions” Carlson Wants to Know What Putin Ever Did to You
https://www.vanityfair.com/news/2022/02/tucker-just-asking-q...
Fox News is 'Just Asking Questions' About the Safety of Vaccines
https://gizmodo.com/fox-news-is-just-asking-questions-about-...
Seth Meyers Nails Tucker Carlson’s ‘Just Asking Questions’ Nonsense
https://www.thedailybeast.com/seth-meyers-nails-tucker-carls...
How is me trying to discuss what somewhere between 0 and 50% of registered American voters believes in regards to "crypto fraud versus Wall Street fraud versus the stock market has been running on 0% interest rate money is basically fake fraud" whatever it is you're accusing me of doing?
I'm surprised somebody who has been on this site since 2014 with 20,000 karma is this rude/accusatory.
It's also not an appropriate place to post ChatGPT output instead of writing your own arguments.
Is it ChatGPT who told you to point fingers and play the victim of oppression if somebody tries to shut you down for spreading MAGA conspiracy theories, or did you come up with that yourself?
The point is that when you are spreading their conspiracy theories and telling people to let them speak and not silence them or else, that makes YOU one of those MAGA people you're warning us about. Witting or unwitting, you're useful to them.
"i read a lot of this (pretty much MAGA crazed conspiracy theorist weirdos)"
We’re not bulls, we don’t have to charge when we see red (hats).
And again I repeat, since you seem to be ignoring it: he tried to quote ChatGPT to support his lack of a valid argument. Nobody comes to this site to have arguments with ChatGPT, and ChatGPT and language models were certainly not the topic of this conversation. He might as well have been quoting his cat walking across the keyboard.
He was unsuccessfully trying to use ChatGPT output to prove his point. If he had a valid argument that he thought of himself to support his point, then he would have posted it instead of first parroting crazy MAGA conspiracy theory weirdos (which makes him their tool, witting or not), then parroting ChatGPT (which makes him a fool).
Even if he frames himself as merely a self-appointed ambassador to HN for crazy liars, he's still spreading their crazy lies. And if he trusts everything ChatGPT says so much, then he can PRIVATELY ask it "I’ve read X by conspiracy group Y. I think I believe it but I want to ask others first as I think they’re crazy weirdos." instead of trying to spread those crazy lies and conspiracy theories here.
Hacker News is not an appropriate forum for parroting crazy MAGA conspiracy theories or ChatGPT drivel as fact, or whining about how you're the victim of oppression and censorship for being downvoted and shut down when you're clearly breaking the rules.
And his threat not to shut him down or else he'll point fingers and claim to be the victim of censorship doesn't matter if crazy liars will spread crazy lies in retaliation for being shut down, because they spread crazy lies no matter what you do, so his threat that we should not shut him down for spreading crazy lies because it will make crazy liars spread crazy lies is tautological and meaningless.
In the interest of geopolitical curiosity and fairness, what exactly did Putin do to you?
It might repeat what some people have said. ChatGPT isn't designed to determine a consensus or to use a representative sample.
> the model predicts people would most likely say about the subject
Is that truly the design and the output? What "people"? Is "most likely" the goal or output? Is it structured by subject?
Maybe you know, but many people are leaping to conclusions.
Are you using ChatGPT as a source of truth? If so, what do you think about the obvious accuracy issues?
The last time the national government of an English speaking nation defaulted on its debt was on January 2 of 1672, with the Stop Of The Exchequer:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stop_of_the_Exchequer
We've now seen 351 years of debts being paid on time, so why would you think the government is suddenly not going to pay its debt? You'd need a strong thesis to explain why the 351 year old trend is coming to an end.
https://fred.stlouisfed.org/series/GFDEGDQ188S
How will that not limit us going forward / is the current rate of "just add it to debt/never pay it back" sustainable?
Type "At what level does debt-to-GDP ratio hinder a nation?" into ChatGPT
I'm not talking about collapse, I'm talking about hinderance going forward
Raising debt, gotta service it, gotta raise taxes to pay for it or cut costs, no?
https://www.pewresearch.org/fact-tank/2019/07/24/facts-about...
The more important aspect is not that there's debt, but how it is spent and what is being spent on. If the spending is poor (aka, the spending is malinvestment), it doesn't matter that the current or projected future servicing is OK.
Using a metric like debt to GDP does not tell the whole story.
Wow, is this what we’ve come to? This is a valid thought process now?
I have no strong views on your point. But I really don’t think it’s safe to trust the very-convincing and very-possibly-incorrect responses generated by ChatGPT to inform your views (on anything).
To the best of my understanding, any answers to that question in extant literature are either going to be highly theoretical, or about situations that are not sufficiently similar to that of the modern US to be helpful.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/National_debt_of_Japan
Furthermore, this number only increases when the increase in the debt is greater than the increase in the nominal GDP (a number much higher than the real growth of the economy, since the nominal GDP includes inflation, which, in this situation, can be thought of as a good thing). If the debt grows at 5% a year and the nominal GDP grows at 5% a year, then the ratio of debt-to-GDP remains largely unchanged, especially during eras when interest rates are low.
In 2021 the euro area (17 countries) had a quarter when their nominal GDP growth rate was an astounding 45%:
https://data.oecd.org/gdp/nominal-gdp-forecast.htm
The point is, we can increase the debt every year, from now till the end of time, and that is sustainable, so long as the growth of the debt is less than the growth of the nominal GDP.
IIRC the US government failed to pay pensions for Civil War or WW1 soldiers, and the British government did something similar regarding bonds or pensions for WW1 or WW2 soldiers.
https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2021-05-24/belize-de...
In the first 20 companies you compare to scams is Amazon, a company with $500 Billion dollars in sales last year [1].
[1] https://www.macrotrends.net/stocks/charts/AMZN/amazon/revenu...
There are many use cases outside of these. See Cross-border payments, censorship-resistance, trust networks, access to credit, etc.
My impression is that cross-border payments are a pretty small use case, especially if you mean legal cross-border payments. I.e., “something the law allows you to do but you can’t find a financial institution to do it.”
> censorship-resistance
Sure, but again, fairly niche at this point in time in western countries. Most financial censorship cases I’ve heard of in the U.S. sounded pretty well deserved.
> trust networks
This is a niche of a niche outside. You could just say “cryptography enthusiasts” instead.
> access to credit
Example? As in, someone with bad credit can still borrow on crypto?
Both being illegal. If something is censored by government, the tools to bypass or defeat that censorship are likely illegal, especially if used to distribute uncensored copied of that material. If governments have regulated payments across a particular border, bypassing those regulations is also very likely illegal.
This was published as a result of the agreement Tether made with the NY State Attorney General. If the NYAG had not taken action against Tether, would they have ever released this information.
https://tether.to/wp-content/uploads/2021/05/march-31-2021-r...
Note the percentage of cash and the percentage of "commercial paper" for which none of the issuers are disclosed. Are those issuers banks. Are they other crypto startups. Are they affiliated crypto entities (like Alameda was to FTX).
Perhaps I have missed the other pages of this financial disclosure from Tether, where further details are found.
This PDF URL permanently redirects (HTTP 301) to https://tether.to/transparency
There's a separate line item for "Secured Loans" which is where money lent to affiliated crypto entities would go. Tether previously stated that these loans would also be wound down. [2]
[1] https://assets.ctfassets.net/vyse88cgwfbl/1Xfu4398CIoMiuKjPh...
[2] https://tether.to/en/tether-addresses-fud-around-secured-loa...
We can be pretty confident that they don't. If they did they would have a third party accounting firm provide an attestation that they did
The most recent was Sep 2022 by BDO.
They have a mix of assets (as you'd expect, because they have different liquidity requirements). But the majority is in short term (<45 day) US Treasury Bonds or Cash and Bank deposits. The other largest asset class is money-market funds, which is a pretty well understood asset class.
It's not nothing though - certainly more than FTX had.
But I am noting they do have 3rd-party attestations (NOT audits!) which is the same as what Circle does with USDC.
FTX used their FTT token to prop up their balance sheet. This attestations says USDT isn't like that.
(I don't trust any entities in the crypto space, but just for the record)
Oh well, probably nothing!
Did they say this? I thought it was quarterly (same as what Circle does with USDC)
> in December BDO said they were going to stop dealing with crypto companies.
Yeah who would blame them?
Issuing stable coin seems like an easy business on paper. You collect $$$, mint coins, collect interest on those $$$ in a bank and that's your profit. Does everyone become greedy and lose the treasury in gambling instead, or what?
For one, finding a bank that will hold your money will be tough. They’re taking on significant liability, for the AML officer, personal criminal liability.
Mechanically, what does this mean? When someone buys Tether from you, to which bank account do you have them wire the money? By the way, your suggestion is a reasonable leap. But it still involves handling U.S. dollars, and now you've added a new regulated area (wealth management).
It's easy to imagine the transgressions starting small. Say you have someone ready to wire you $100mm. You don't yet have a bank account, but you're working on it. Do you tell them to pound sand? Or do you temporarily use a side account, to hold the funds until the main one is ready?
It's relevant to the difficulty of launching and operating a U.S. dollar stablecoin.
What I meant by saying 'it seems easy on paper' is that the need to be profitable shouldn't force you to make decisions which eventually lead your treasury to not being valuable enough to back the minted coins.
Also: Perhaps I don't understand how tether works, but I don't see why they need to be liable for holding customer funds. Why do they need a deposit/withdrawal process at all? Can't they just do the following?
IF USDT on open markets is <$1 THEN buy coins and burn them
IF USDT on open markets is >$1 THEN mint coins and sell them
And then they can do whatever they want with the treasury, no? Store it in banks or buy US treasury bonds, etc. Just don't lose it.
I'm not very familiar with how treasuries get bought/sold/transferred between parties. But they seem pretty cash-equivalent, Uncle Sam will sell as much as you want, and your profit margin is baked into it.
This is better! But a couple issues. One, this means the U.S. Treasury has an open book into your in and outflows. Not sure that's Tether's vibe. Two, you've limited yourself to people who can transfer Treasuries. Given Tether doesn't provide consumer redemption, this isn't a huge issue. But transferring Treasuries takes more financial savvy than wiring cash, and that savvy is likely to ask for their interest (as is common in collateral arrangements).
If the other company makes good use of the loan and recovers to pay the original company back — great, you still have enough assets to cover your deposits. That may be what happened with Bitfinex. On the other hand, the other company might go tits up. Now the first company has no money to cover deposits, declares bankruptcy, and if all is right in the world the execs see some punishment.
Ideas: Greed, incompetence, a combination of the two.
Just guesses out of thin air: Collect $1b, don't just keep $1b sitting around in low-risk instruments 1:1. Take $200m for yourself. Try to turn it into $1.2b through risky investments.
So now there's a business where the only way to make money is to break the regulations that exist to stop banks from doing exactly what they're doing. It's in the cryptocurrency environment, where the entire culture is made up of scammers, chumps, and chumps who aspire to be scammers. And in that environment, there's a big pile of money that could be transferred out without any oversight at all.
At that point, it isn't just that people "become greedy", but that every single aspect of the situation is aligned to select greedy people and create a situation that rewards theft.
so it worked for uber & AirBNB, i'm sure these companies doing this are asking why not for them?
You're assuming an intent to make (all) customers whole.
In Ponzi Scheme you collect $$$, mint coins or forge other confirmation, move money to Panama or spend it and when asked to pay out, you use other investors money. The only reason for making some customers whole is to keep the scheme going.
The problem for Ponzi operator starts when too many victims want they money back and there is no big enough source of it to cover payouts.
Tether has short term liabilities (tokens) and short term assets (T-bills, money market funds, bank deposits, etc.). Because most of their assets are in short term "cash equivalent" assets with lots of liquidity, Tether can more easily deal with large redemptions as they did in April - July when their market cap went from $83B to $66B.
they claim.... We don't actually know what assets they really decided to hold.
Or did mean that the implied trade is direct USDT -> USDC?
P.S. Genuine question; I don't dabble in crypto.
I find it very strange that crypto exchanges don't handle execution, confirmation and settlement in the same way as traditional markets.
Also, wasn't the major sell point of stablecoins to enable direct crypto-to-crypto transactions without ever needing to first settle in fiat currency, e.g. USDT -> USDC, as opposed to USDT -> USD -> USDC?
I'm not sure what he is talking about. On centralized exchangers execution, confirmation, and settlement happen nearly instantly. Unlike with stocks there is no 2 day settlement time.
For decentralized exchanges you can do it in 1 transaction executing both trades atomically. Modern token swaps will look for the optimal series of trades to make from available DEXs to give you the best rate. It can automatically check if it's better to go straight from USDT to USDC or if it's better to swap to bitcoin first. Sometimes it makes sense to split it up so some of it is direct swap and the other part of it uses an extra leg to get a better deal.
I’m not a big trader, but people send me BTC about once per week. It takes 30 minutes easily to get the transaction confirmed on the blockchain. Before that, it’s not clear the transaction is legit. And I have had one or two transactions that don’t reach the magic number of 6 confirmations. I’m not sure how the sender pulls that off, but I alert them of it, don’t deliver the goods, and they haven’t complained (knowing they sent a fraudulent transaction? I don’t know)
It’s my understanding those confirmations are being done by miners who get a small fee that me or the sender’s pay.I see this labeled as “network fee”.
The 30 minute wait would only make sense if you were to trade USDT for bitcoin on a CEX, then send that money using bitcoin to another CEX to execute the next trade to USDC.
Precisely.
> find it very strange that crypto exchanges don't handle execution, confirmation and settlement in the same way as traditional markets
You don’t have to use an exchange to trade crypto. You can send crypto from one wallet to another without any exchange or anyone else in the middle (Except miners who are paid to confirm the transaction)
Curve protocol has a ton of decentralized usdt pools with massive liquidity. Most people on this thread aren't really into defi, you can tell..
It would look amazing.
The bank run on Tether exposes Tether's systematic lies and inherently unworkable business model.
I'd take it a step further and say that we know Tether's USD coffers aren't deep enough to cover withdrawals. They've fully and publicly accounted for the assets that back UST and it's almost entirely in cryptocurrency which will nose dive the second people start divesting.
You seem to think that ignoring this glaring liability will somehow make it go away or will buy enough time for people to safely divest. It simply won't. The only cure for this cancer is sunlight and an ugly haircut for Tether holders.
The only way to fix this is for unstable stablecoins to fail hard and have it serve as a warning for future investors not to play with fire.
In the stock world, you can't have an ETF without credible audits, regulatory checks etc. Generally speaking that means if I have an ETF which someone says will track the SPX, it has an underlying asset basket comprising the stocks in the SPX and a redemption/creation mechanism where creating new units is contingent on assets being added to the basket to ensure redemption is later possible. Vice versa, redemption involves selling those assets to give back cash.
You don't get to just say "don't look behind the curtain. Your gold is there but you don't get to look at it".
[1] Which I have said for a very long time that it very likely _is_ simply on the basis of logic. If it's not a fraud there really is no reason whatsoever not to allow an audit and have full transparency about underlying assets. They don't do this and therefore are most likely a fraud. The reason they have always given (that giving transparency about their list of assets would allow others to duplicate their strategy) is the epitome of weaksauce and reason for concern in itself. For the people creating an ETF, the ETF is a source of funding because you have the ability to swap basket assets for units and do creative things when you see units available for purchase in the market. The edge doesn't come from having super seekrit strats about what goes in the asset basket. Any alpha from teh basket contents would cause undue volatility and the ETF not to track the reference index properly.
We know (from chats that were made public by FTX employees) that they are working with Tether to make sure that everything looks backed and solid and regain confidence.
It is not impossible that Binance is already in the hole, and using some of Tether's cash, or that such a position is imminent.
If we give Binanace time to stabilize before there is a run on Tether, then their combined coffers will be much larger, thus preventing the crash.
https://youtu.be/-whuXHSL1Pg
[1] https://fakemoneynews.substack.com/p/shorting-tether-for-fun...
[2] https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=34299618