Tether Holdings Ltd, the issuer of the largest stablecoin, USDt, reported that its total market capitalization had crossed over $64 billion for the first time in history.

The company called the event a “milestone,” adding that it is another indication of the cryptocurrency market’s “continued trust and confidence” in their stablecoin, USDt.

In detail, Tether’s business model revolves around providing digitized dollars to cryptocurrency traders and investors. In doing so, the company offers them a way to park their volatile digital assets into USDt, another digital asset that maintains a 1:1 to the US dollar.

As a result, Tether assists crypto traders and investors cut through the hassle of transferring their digital asset sale proceeds to a bank account.

The company’s business model has secured itself in the crypto industry, insomuch that the trades between Bitcoin and USDt are typically come to be twice the trades between Bitcoin and the real US dollar.

Signaling crypto demand

Tether officials have earlier clarified that its fresh USDt issuances take place in response to meet orders from customers.

Therefore, a rising USDt market cap indicates that traders and investors may want to purchase the stablecoin and deploy it to purchase digital assets like Bitcoin and Ethereum and/or put them into yield farming contracts to earn annualized returns.

A rising Tether issuance rate typically coincides with spikes in the Bitcoin market. For instance, the total market cap of USDt was around $4 billion in March 2020 but rose to over $61 billion in May 2020. The same period witnessed Bitcoin rising from below $4,000 to almost $65,000.

Bitcoin price versus USDt issuance. Source: LongHash

Moreover, Bitcoin’s correction from $65,000 to $30,000 coincided with a flat Tether market cap.

Later, BTC recovered on new endorsements from Tesla’s Elon Musk and Twitter’s Jack Dorsey and fears of higher inflation led by the Federal Reserve’s loose monetary policies.

Meanwhie, Glassnode data reports that 20% of Tether supply is currently locked in decentralized finance projects’ smart contracts.

USDt supply in smart contracts (pink) versus rival USDC (green). Source: Glassnode

“I foresee Tether continuing to virtually ‘print’ (mint) more and more Tether as the crypto industry continues to grow,” Gustavo De La Torre, business development director at n.exchange said, hinting at a potential market boom that may follow in the sessions ahead.

“The growing supply indicates that the crypto ecosystem believes in its own system, carving out a means to peg trading pairs with an asset other than the US dollar.”

Commercial holdings

In June, JPMorgan & Chase analysts noted that Tether’s large commercial paper holdings show that banks are not willing to take the company’s cash. That could be due to the US Office of the Comptroller of the Currency’s guideline that orders banks to work with only those stablecoin issuers whose coins are 100% backed by reserves.

Tether reserves allocation from May report. Source: Tether

The banking giant added that providing Tether banking services would risk “likely raise reputational risk concerns” for financial institutions. However, Stuart Hoegner, Tether’s general counsel, rubbished JPMorgan’s outlook, stating:

“With respect to reputation, we believe we are seeing the opposite: more and more counterparties are comfortable with Tether and our transparency initiatives and are keen to work with us.”

Regulation watch

Tether’s $64 billion “milestone” also appears as stablecoins in general attract tighter scrutiny from regulators.

The U.S. Treasury Department, the Securities and Exchange Commission, and Federal Reserve have expressed their concerns about the potential of dollar-pegged digital assets to cause global financial instability and obscure transactions associated with money launderers and other online criminals.

Related: SEC Chairman says cryptocurrency falls under security-based swaps rules

But to De La Torre, crypto traders have ignored regulatory threats over stablecoins’ feasibility as a product. He said:

Should regulatory pressure heighten, other well regulated stablecoins like USDC may dominate American markets, however, Tether will still be relevant in other regions of the world.

Bob Reid, chief executive and co-founder of Everest, also highlighted Circle USDC’s attempt to mousetrap the U.S. market by attempting to get a national banking charter. The executive noted that Tether might follow a similar path to gain legitimacy in the U.S. or be ousted from the country altogether. 

“Tether risks befalling in the same way as Binance, a shunned nomad with half the governments of the world hating them,” he told Cointelegraph.

The views and opinions expressed here are solely those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of Cointelegraph.com. Every investment and trading move involves risk, you should conduct your own research when making a decision.

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