Tether minted another $1 billion worth of USDT on April 16, as the cryptocurrency market accumulated
Tether minted another $1 billion worth of USDT on April 16, as the cryptocurrency market accumulated significant losses. The billionaire issuance raised criticisms and questions about its legitimacy, while Tethers CEO disclosed the issuance as “inventory replenishment.”
In particular, WhaleWire called Tether out a few minutes after the mint occurred through a post on X (formerly Twitter).
“JUST IN: Another $1,000,000,000 worth of unbacked Tether USDT has been printed out of thin air.”
– WhaleWire
Notably, Tether minted the $1 billion USDT through a smart contract on the Tron Network (TRX). The issuer sent the tokens to the Tether Treasury account labeled by TronScan. As of writing, the account holds $1.19 billion in its stablecoin.
Tether $1 billion USDT inventory replenishment
However, Paolo Ardoino, Tethers CEO, made a public service announcement on X right after the mint. On that announcement, the CEO disclosed this activity as “inventory replenish,” while explaining this was “authorized but not issued transaction.”
Tether‘s ability to easily create billions of dollars worth of unbacked tokens with a few lines of code has raised many controversies around the company. Interestingly, BlackRock (NYSE: BLK) mentioned significant risks related to the crypto market’s high exposure to USDT on its ETF filings.
Furthermore, Circle, the USDC issuer, in partnership with Coinbase, publicly encouraged the U.S. Congress to “go after” Tether.
As a result, these minting activities and the lack of further disclosure on burns and issuance sums up the uncertainties surrounding the company and the stablecoin responsible for the vast majority of cryptocurrencies liquidity in exchanges.
Disclaimer:
The views in this article only represent the author's personal views, and do not constitute investment advice on this platform. This platform does not guarantee the accuracy, completeness and timeliness of the information in the article, and will not be liable for any loss caused by the use of or reliance on the information in the article.
North Korean Malware Targets macOS Users by Evading Apple Notarization
Thune helped cosponsor a crypto bill in 2022 called the Digital Commodities Consumer Protection Act
DeltaPrime Protocol Attacked on Arbitrum and Avalanche, Resulting in $4.8 Million Loss
Polymarket Founder Raided by FBI After Trump Win, Company Says
0.00