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US Fed Official Calls Tether a ‘Challenge’ to Financial Stability

Eric Rosengren included the stablecoin among what he termed new disruptors to short-term credit markets.

A senior U.S. Federal Reserve official has called Tether's USDT stablecoin a risk to the stability of the financial system.

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In a slide presentation Friday, Eric Rosengren, president of the Federal Reserve Bank of Boston, listed tether among the "financial stability challenges" the U.S. central bank is watching.

Rosengren included the stablecoin among what he termed "new disruptors" to short-term credit markets.

screen-shot-2021-06-25-at-9-07-58-pm

In an interview with Yahoo Finance the same day, he elaborated.

"The reason I talked about Tether and stablecoins is if you look at their portfolio, it basically looks like a portfolio of a prime money market fund but maybe riskier," he said. Tether "has a number of assets that, during the pandemic, the spread got quite wide on those assets." Spread widening refers to a sell-off in the credit markets, when the difference in yield increases between a risky asset such as a corporate bond and one perceived as safe like a Treasury bond.

"I do think we need to think more broadly about what could disrupt short-term credit markets over time, and certainly stablecoins are one element," Rosengren said. "I do worry that the stablecoin market that is currently, pretty much unregulated as it grows and becomes a more important sector of our economy, that we need to take seriously what happens when people run from these type of instruments very quickly."

Read more: Strike Is Phasing Out USDT From Bitcoin-Based El Salvador Remittances, CEO Says

Boston Federal Reserve President Eric Rosengren
Boston Federal Reserve President Eric Rosengren

Wall Street veteran and longtime Bitcoin supporter Caitlin Long found the remarks salient.

"What’s interesting is [Fed governor Lael] Brainard and then [Chairman Jerome] Powell started talking 'stablecoins.' But now Rosengren talks 'tether' by name. That’s an escalation," said Long, the founder and CEO of Avanti Financial in Wyoming.

"The Fed is so practiced, ... at 'Fedspeak' – such carefully constructed statements so that multiple sides of an issue can see their side in what the Fed said," she said. "That was basically the [case with] previous statements about stablecoins. But today the Fed escalated. Rarely are they so explicit like they were today."

Long added that bitcoiners who consider concerns about Tether overblown should not "shoot the messenger."

"I've both defended Tether as breakthrough technology while also calling out that its reserve disclosure opened more questions than it answered," she said, referring to the company's breakdown of the collateral behind USDT, released in May.

Read more: Tether’s Reserve Breakdown Shows Token 49% Backed by Commercial Paper

That breakdown showed nearly half the reserves are in commercial paper, but did not specify the issuers or ratings of those debts, leaving the market guessing about the assets' liquidity and creditworthiness. (Stu Hoegner, Tether's general counsel, later wrote that "the vast majority" of this commercial paper is from issuers rated A-2 or higher, without naming any.)

Rosengren included the composition in another slide from his presentation at a virtual event organized by the Philadelphia Fed.

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USDT plays a key role in the plumbing of the $1 trillion global cryptocurrency market. Traders use it, and to a lesser degree other stablecoins, to quickly move dollar value between exchanges in order to take advantage of arbitrage opportunities.

Read more: A Bridge Called Tether

Stablecoins are designed to trade at par with fiat currencies such as the dollar, and in theory are redeemable 1-for-1 for cash from the issuers. But questions about Tether's backing have loomed over the crypto market for years and were the focus of a probe by the New York Attorney General's Office that the company settled this year.

Despite the long-simmering doubts and conjecture about Tether's finances, USDT has traded at $1 for almost all of its history, as it did Saturday morning UTC.

Honey badger don't care?
Honey badger don't care?

USDT also remains by far the largest stablecoin by market capitalization despite the emergence of competitors with less controversial histories.

That's USDT in green
That's USDT in green

Read more: Millions in Crypto Is Crossing the Russia-China Border Daily. There, Tether Is King

A discussion paper outlining the Fed's thinking on digital payments, including the risks and benefits of central bank digital currencies (CBDC), will come out this summer, Powell said last month in the same speech where he referred briefly to stablecoins without mentioning any by name.

Paolo Ardoino, Tether's CTO, said that while Rosengren's comments are a tribute to the growth of importance of stablecoins and other innovations in crypto, it's important to distinguish between established stablecoins like Tether and "extremely risky" experiments like algorithmic stablecoins going on in decentralized finance.

"It is remarkable that the growing market share of such new financial innovations is being recognized by the likes of the Boston Fed," Ardoino said. "However, it is also an important moment to educate consumers about the difference between stablecoins such as Tether and the various experiments that are constantly taking place in decentralized finance. It is always recommended that investors spend time researching these projects. Opportunities with outsized APYs are extremely risky. Nascent monetary experiments such as algorithmic stablecoins should not be classified in the same category as USDT. Doing so only demonstrates a lack of understanding on the ground floor of the cryptocurrency financial system."

Interestingly, Rosengren signaled that the Fed has been paying attention to lesser-known stablecoins as well.

"We actually had a stablecoin that ran into financial difficulties last week," he said in the Yahoo interview, an apparent reference to Iron Finance's TITAN token, which fell almost to zero in mid-June.

UPDATE (June 25, 00:35 UTC): Adds background about Tether's market role and history.

UPDATE (June 25, 02:57 UTC): Adds more background and related links.

UPDATE (June 26, 21:45 UTC): Adds Tether's response.

UPDATE (June 26, 23:12 UTC): Fixes typos, adds nugget about Iron Finance.

UPDATE (June 27, 02:22 UTC): Embeds video of FTX's Sam Bankman-Fried discussing Tether.

UPDATE (June 27, 23:56 UTC): Adds detail about commercial paper from Tether general counsel's blog post.

Marc Hochstein

As Deputy Editor-in-Chief for Features, Opinion, Ethics and Standards, Marc oversees CoinDesk's long-form content, sets editorial policies and acts as the ombudsman for our industry-leading newsroom. He is also spearheading our nascent coverage of prediction markets and helps compile The Node, our daily email newsletter rounding up the biggest stories in crypto. From November 2022 to June 2024 Marc was the Executive Editor of Consensus, CoinDesk's flagship annual event. He joined CoinDesk in 2017 as a managing editor and has steadily added responsibilities over the years. Marc is a veteran journalist with more than 25 years' experience, including 17 years at the trade publication American Banker, the last three as editor-in-chief, where he was responsible for some of the earliest mainstream news coverage of cryptocurrency and blockchain technology. DISCLOSURE: Marc holds BTC above CoinDesk's disclosure threshold of $1,000; marginal amounts of ETH, SOL, XMR, ZEC, MATIC and EGIRL; an Urbit planet (~fodrex-malmev); two ENS domain names (MarcHochstein.eth and MarcusHNYC.eth); and NFTs from the Oekaki (pictured), Lil Skribblers, SSRWives, and Gwar collections.

Marc Hochstein