Stablecoin bill done, let’s see about tether

Discussion in 'Crypto Assets' started by GlobalMacro90, Jul 17, 2025 at 4:09 PM.

  1. The stablecoin act “genius” is officially official. It is heading to Trump‘s desk now.

    in the legislation that is about to be signed into US law, there is language that says:


    Every stable coin must be backed one to one with high quality assets, which include treasury bills and repo agreements.

    Funds must also be held separately and not re-hypothecated in any way. There is also transparency and auditing requirements, including monthly disclosures, and independent audits

    So here we are, the moment of truth. Will tether comply with these new rules? All the truthers who have missed thousands of percents in bitcoin because of this alleged tether conspiracy will really have egg on their faces if tether just simply complies.

    I honestly don’t know what’s gonna happen. If tether doesn’t comply, it doesn’t necessarily mean they’re a fraud or anything. It could just mean that they won’t be operating in the US and essentially dominate stablecoins around the rest of the world.

    My guess is that they try to be compliant with the US though since we have by far of the biggest market.

    judgment day is upon us boys! Any predictions?

    @johnarb @orbit23 @RedDuke @Pekelo
     
    johnarb likes this.
  2. ph1l

    ph1l

    They will likely comply via the foreign issuer loophole in the bill.
    https://thelemur.org/2025/07/14/is-...for-tether-in-the-new-stablecoin-regulations/
    https://www.llamarisk.com/research/examining-tether-s-regulatory-status-in-el-salvador
     
  3. This article is really long. What is the loophole?
     
  4. ph1l

    ph1l

    "If Secretary Bessent concludes that Salvadoran reserve requirements are “comparable” to those of the United States, Tether would be allowed to issue stablecoins to U.S. consumers while operating outside U.S. jurisdiction."
     
  5. lol Banana Republic financial requirements for stable coin. Yeah that will really make me confident in the whole scheme. The fact that this loophole exists is because the grift would fail if it required real audits.
     
  6. johnarb

    johnarb

    There is currently no product market fit for US $ stablecoins in the US, but if it gets adopted widely, you will see hundreds if not thousands of US banks failures

    stablecoins in a mobile app or desktop app is equivalent to a checking account, except 24/7/365 and instant transfers, pennies to transfer $1000 or $100,000 even across borders

    and worse than that, Americans will learn with a little effort using DeFi such as AAVE, or Ethena with Pendle, they can get much higher yields than 5%

    There are over 20 Trillion Eurodollars in the world, that's a big enough market that Tether is competing with against other US $ stablecoins, they don't need to worry about the US market, tbh

    Just heard on a podcast, Tether makes in 4 days what USDC makes in the whole year


     
  7. orbit23

    orbit23

    Tether will just add another line to their terms of service saying US people can't use them and it's business as usual.
     
  8. mervyn

    mervyn

    you think this is a loophole how? tether is not going to be under us jurisdiction, otherwise folks will run.
     
  9. Americans thinking again that whatever they decide in their country applies to the whole world. :D

    Tether has been pumping other coins without any audit or backing assets for years. In Hong Kong, where they will ignore that bill.