Wall Street veteran says these Tether risks are behind crypto market selloff

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Caitlin Long, the founder of crypto bank Avanti Bank and a leading blockchain advocate, took to Twitter yesterday to explain the market sell-off, linking it to stablecoin issuer Tether.

Long reasoned that Tether, which revealed the assets that back its dollar-pegged currency for the first time last week, could have contributed to the brutal market drop, one that liquidated over $2.38 billion over the past day alone.

“Tether finally disclosed how it invests reserves & it was a big negative surprise (not previously knowable at this level of detail). This news probably contributed a lot to #crypto selloff since Wednesday,” she tweeted, adding:

“Why? Because now risk managers at #crypto hedge funds almost certainly will require haircuts on Tether, which means traders had to sell #crypto to reduce their total risk exposure.”

3/ Why? Because now risk managers at #crypto hedge funds almost certainly will require haircuts on #Tether, which means traders had to sell #crypto to reduce their total risk exposure.

— Caitlin Long 🔑 (@CaitlinLong_) May 15, 2021

Tether issues

Tether has been mired in controversy for a large part of its history. The company issues and maintains the $53 billion USDT network, which theoretically holds an equivalent amount at a regulated, registered bank for each Tether coin (as the crypto maintains a 1:1 peg with the US dollar).

But some critics say holding that type of money in a bank is improbable. Tether, on its part, has rarely provided third-party audits of its holdings and has endured several court cases on the nature of its business.

📢Tether releases quarterly information about the composition of its reserves backing issued tether tokens ⬇https://t.co/LP72rAuDtz

— Tether (@Tether_to) May 13, 2021

Last week, however, it revealed its reserve holdings to the public for the first time, stating a bulk of its backed reserves were in cash, cash equivalents, or other short-term deposits with the remainder in secured loans, corporate bonds, and ‘other’ investments.

The firm said 65.39% of the backing arose from an unspecified ‘commercial paper,’ while the remaining came from fiduciary deposits (24.2%), cash (3.87%), reverse repo notes (3.6%), and Treasury bills (2.94%). A small percentage was backed by Bitcoin as well, it added.

Credit risk is why crypto funds are selling?

But despite the reveal, Long said the move meant Tether holders faced a probable credit risk. “Based on Tether’s new disclosure, both #Tether’s probability of default & loss severity in default just went up,” she tweeted.

5/ Based on Tether’s new disclosure, both #Tether’s probability of default & loss severity in default just went up. Why? Because CREDIT RISK.

— Caitlin Long 🔑 (@CaitlinLong_) May 15, 2021

She noted that Tether’s underlying funds were invested in ‘credit assets’ of questionable quality (not all assets are created equally), and could even include “short-term, lower-risk, liquid securities.”

Long noted Tether’s reserve portfolio resembled that of a credit hedge fund—or a traditional fund that invests or trades just credit-backed products. “Need LOTS more disclosure now. So many new questions,” she added.

“I can only guess how US regulators reacted to Tether’s announcement. Tread carefully, peeps. I’ve thought for a while that a #stablecoin crackdown is inevitable. Will this trigger it?” she said.

Don’t piss off the regulators

It’s not like Long’s tweet thread was a takedown of Tether. The Wall Street veteran, who is also an integral member of the Wyoming Blockchain Task Force, said she would continue to defend Tether as it was a “bridge” to the US dollar and is an integral part of the broader crypto market.

She, however, added, “But I can’t defend Tether’s choices on asset allocation & making no risk disclosure. What a missed opportunity! Not helpful to our industry.”

“Like it or not, one of the best things for the industry at present would be getting Stablecoins to be OK w/ US regulators (esp the Fed & the SEC),” she ended.

The post Wall Street veteran says these Tether risks are behind crypto market selloff appeared first on CryptoSlate.

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