Stablecoin Tether (USDT) is the third biggest cryptocurrency by market capitalization, and it is obviously the biggest stablecoin on the market. However, it's popularity does not necessarily means it is a great invesment. Theter is know in the crypto comunity not for being the best stablecoin in the market, and guess what, a lot of people here hate it. First of all, to better understand the Theter problem, we should take a look at the differnt types of stablecoin DIFFERENT TYPES OF STABLECOINS
1) USDT IS ONLY BACKED BY 2.9% IN CASH RESERVESThis is probably the most problematic. Holding Theter is not the same as holding U.S. dollars. The price may be pegged to the dollar, but if there was a run on Tether(lots of people tried to swap their Tether for dollars), there's no guarantee the company would have enough cash to pay out (and people who held the coin would be fucked). Theter is in fact backed up by cash, cash equivalents, secured loans, corporate bonds and other investments. The trouble is that Tether hasn't released information about what types of loans it has made. We don't know who the borrowers are or what types of debt it is. Most importantly, we don't know how easy it would be for Tether to access that money. With that being said, USDT is only backed by 2.9% cash reserves 2) Tether has had trouble with the New York Attorney General's officethe New York Attorney General reached a settlement with iFinex, the parent company of Tether and crypto exchange Bitfinex. Investigators accused the companies of unlawfully hiding losses. Attorney General Letitia James said, "Tetherβs claims that its virtual currency was fully backed by U.S. dollars at all times was a lie." iFinex had to pay an $18.5 million fine and is no longer allowed to operate in New York. It will have to provide quarterly reports on its reserves, hence the breakdown we talked before. The company denies any wrongdoing. 3) If Tether fails, it could shake the whole crypto industryThe worry is that Tether is operating in a similar way to a bank or other financial institution, but without any of the regulations that banks follow to protect consumers and prevent economic crises. That's why there's such a push for stricter stablecoin regulation: to protect both the economy and the crypto industry. As Rohan Grey, assistant law professor at the Willamette University College of Law told the Financial Times, "The growing world of stablecoins arguably underpins the entire crypto community right now. If that collapses, the whole space could collapse". CONCLUSIONAs I stated before, USDT is not the only stablecoin, there are serveral ones that are either more transparent about what money they hold or they are either less centralized, so why the fuck are people still using it? And you? Do you think that USDT is a ponzi? If so I would be glad if you commented down here! [link] [comments] |
You can get bonuses upto $100 FREE BONUS when you:
π° Install these recommended apps:
π² SocialGood - 100% Crypto Back on Everyday Shopping
π² xPortal - The DeFi For The Next Billion
π² CryptoTab Browser - Lightweight, fast, and ready to mine!
π° Register on these recommended exchanges:
π‘ Binanceπ‘ Bitfinexπ‘ Bitmartπ‘ Bittrexπ‘ Bitget
π‘ CoinExπ‘ Crypto.comπ‘ Gate.ioπ‘ Huobiπ‘ Kucoin.
Comments