Tether isn’t a bank. It isn’t regulated like one. Yet it holds $141 billion in US Treasuries—more than most central banks—and generated $1.04 billion in quarterly profit from an infrastructure monopoly nobody is discussing. We examine how a company registered in the British Virgin Islands became the plumbing for a $2 trillion asset class, why its attestations aren’t audits, and what happens when Washington finally decides to regulate what Tether actually is: a shadow monetary intermediary sitting at the center of systemic risk.
Tether has quietly become one of the world’s largest holders of US government debt—ranking alongside sovereign nations—by controlling 70% of the stablecoin market. The business model is deceptively simple: collect $184 billion in deposits, park them in Treasury bills yielding 4-5%, keep the coupon, and pay depositors zero. Result: $4 billion annualized profit with virtually no regulatory overhead, deposit insurance costs, or compliance burden a traditional bank would face. Key Takeaways: • Tether’s Treasury holdings ($141B) exceed those of most G7 central banks—a concentration of market infrastructure in private hands with no Federal Reserve oversight • The profit engine ($1.04B/quarter) depends entirely on a regulatory arbitrage: Tether operates as a monetary intermediary but is regulated as a crypto company, not a bank • Moore Cayman Islands attestations are not audits—they certify point-in-time snapshots, not continuous reserve backing or redemption capacity under stress • The $8.2B reserve buffer sounds large until you model redemption velocity in a crisis; in 2022, USDT barely held its peg during TerraUSD contagion • If GENIUS Act or similar legislation passes, Tether’s compliance costs spike dramatically—but so does its regulatory moat against competitors
Tether stablecoin risk USDT Treasury holdings crypto systemic risk financial intermediary regulation stablecoin collapse scenario
Edge Capital Insights — Sharp analysis for serious investors.
New episodes every week. Subscribe wherever you listen to podcasts.

Leave a Reply