Tether (USDT): A Beginner’s Guide, Controversies And More

Have you ever bothered looking into the kind of USD currency that centralized exchanges like Bittrex and Binance use? Well, I am guessing not.

These centralized exchanges use some mutated version of USD, popularly known as USDT.

Why is this special USDT used? Let’s explore and find out in this detailed analysis of Tether (USDT).

We will touch base on the following points in this article:

  • What Is Tether?
  • How Does Tether Work
  • Why Use Tether?
  • Tether Fees
  • Tether Market Cap
  • How To Buy Tether?
  • Tether Controversy
  • Future Plans Of Tether & Conclusion

What Is Tether?

What Is Tether

Tether, or USDT, is the cryptocurrency version of the US dollar and this USDT is pegged to fiat-USD reserves in the 1:1 ratio. Tether is also popularly known as a stable coin.

The main use case of Tether is to provide stability to this wild volatile crypto market and provide a stable use case to:

  • Blockchain companies
  • Exchanges
  • Individuals & Traders

By leveraging the blockchain technology, Tether allows you to store, send, and receive digital tokens pegged to dollars, euros, and yen person-to-person, globally, instantly, and securely for a fraction of the cost of any alternative.

How Does Tether Work?

All tethers are initially issued on the Bitcoin blockchain via the Omni Layer protocol, which is why they exist as a cryptocurrency token.

Each tether unit issued into circulation is backed by a one­-to-­one ratio (i.e. one Tether USDT is one US dollar) by the corresponding fiat currency unit held in deposit by Hong Kong-based Tether Limited. (The conversion rate is 1 tether USD₮ equals 1 USD.)

By having this one to one backing, the cryptocurrency market gets a stable cryptocurrency on which they can rely on for hedging/shorting/longing while completing their trades.

Let us say you know that the Bitcoin market is bearish. In that case, you can close down your position by entering into USDT and buy BTC back when you think the probabilistic bottom is reached via same USDT.

Why Use Tether?

Why Use Tether

In this modernized and tokenized world it is important to have stable tokens like Tether for any individual or business due to the above-mentioned features that it provides.

Adding a stable digital currency solution to your business by integrating with Tether has its benefits:

  • Easy setup
  • API integration
  • Full infrastructure support
  • Wallet provider

Tether Fees

Tether Fees

One of the USPs of Tether is very low to nil transaction fees.

  • The cost of sending USDT from a Tether wallet to another Tether wallet is Zero
  • The cost of sending USDT from a Tether wallet to another Tether enabled wallet is Zero.
  • The cost of sending USDT from a Tether Wallet to bank account is 10 basis points
    or $20 USD (whichever amount is greater will apply to all wallet deposits and withdrawals funded from your bank account)

Tether Market Cap

There is no upper limit cap on the supply of USDT tokens as the concept is to issue 1:1 pegged tokens.

According to CoinMarketCap, the total circulating supply of USDT is USD 2,806,421,736 USDT and the current price of each unit is $1. That values it at approximately $2.8 billion (at the time of writing this article).

 

How To Buy Tether?

One can buy Tether (USDT) from many exchanges because these exchanges use USDT instead of USD to bypass the banking regulations.

USDT is the main facilitator in this and that is why some of the popular exchanges from which you can buy USDT are:

Tether Controversy

When you have such a powerful use case like Tether, controversies come as no surprise and needless to say, Tether has quite a few.

The first is the deep ties between Tether and Bitfinex which is a huge red flag as the top management of Tether and Bitfinex share a lot of names.

Tether Controversy

Plus, Tether has been accused of printing digital fiat USDT token that is used on Bitfinex to artificially pump and dump crypto markets.

Not just that, Tether claims it is a clean and transparent company which can be audited anytime but so far all the effort to fairly audit Tether have failed.

A recent one being the Friedman LLP, their Auditor.

We confirm that the relationship with Friedman is dissolved.  Given the excruciatingly detailed procedures Friedman was undertaking for the relatively simple balance sheet of Tether, it became clear that an audit would be unattainable in a reasonable time frame. As Tether is the first company in the space to undergo this process and pursue this level of transparency, there is no precedent set to guide the process nor any benchmark against which to measure its success. (Tether)

This clearly shows that Tether does not have enough reserves in USD to complete a fair audit.

Future Plans Of Tether & Conclusion

Tether currently supports US Dollars (USD), Euros (EUR), and is expected to support Japanese Yen (JPY) soon. For now, a tethered currency is represented by â‚®, hence the tether platform fiat currencies are denoted as USDâ‚®, EURâ‚®, and JPYâ‚®.

Plus, they have plans for regular fair audits too, but the specifics of that are still unknown.

In the end, I would only say that the future looks dicey if the regulators decide to go hard on Tether and Bitfinex but that’s not the case for now.

Also, if you hold a significant amount of USDT, you should reconsider, because if USD crashes, you might lose your USDT value too in that proportion.

Lastly, the humongous supply of Tether shows that there is a great demand for stable coins. That is why the crypto community is finding innovative ways to establish fairer stable coins that are better than Tether.

Official Tether resources

Some official links that will keep you updated on Tether:

Here are a few other hand-picked articles for you to read next:

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4 thoughts on “Tether (USDT): A Beginner’s Guide, Controversies And More”

  1. Kumar

    Really helpful guide. Thanks Team.

  2. Alex Michael

    SUDHIR KHATWANI i love reading your blog post, there are always educative and i always learn a one or two from your platform. keep up the good work you have a student in me. Thanks.

  3. Yush

    A good guide. One very important piece of information missing: Tether+Bitfinex both have been served a subpoena and are under investigation by the US CFTC. The dissolvement between Tether and their auditor Friedmann LLP coincided with the timing of the subpoena. Also, the official statement by Tether, that Friedman’s audit was too thorough and time consuming doesn’t make sense. Plus 3-4 months have gone by and they haven’t hired a new auditor. So, it’s not unreasonable to think that there are things Tether doesn’t want an Auditor to find.

  4. Arguan Modeth

    The whole concept of a stable currency, snailmoney (fiat) or E-money (Crypto), seems like wishful thinking. The number and value of things to own keeps changing and the currencies that you can exchange them for keep changing in value and availability. Why would the E-money market be the one place that wasn’t volatile? The USD goes up and down against all other currencies all the time. I say don’t call it Tether, call it dumb-ass. It is time to start thinking about abandoning snail money altogether. You can’t swim if your holding onto a sinking ship.

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