Bitfinex is sending massive quantities of tether tokens back to the vaults.
The cryptocurrency exchange has overlapping management and owners with Tether Ltd., the company that issues a dollar-linked cryptocurrency of the same name (often abbreviated USDT). Both firms have come under increasing scrutiny following USDTâs dramatic break with dollar parity last week, when the exchange rate briefly dropped as low as $0.85 on the Kraken exchange. It has yet to fully recover.
Itâs notable, then, that a wallet address controlled by Bitfinex has sent 630 million USDT to an address known as the âTether treasuryâ in six large transactions over recent days. The first, of 200 million USDT, was sent the morning of Oct. 14, when Tetherâs dollar exchange rate was beginning to hit multi-month lows.
Another 200 million USDT transaction followed two days later, when the tokenâs price was beginning to recover its peg to the dollar. The other 230 million USDT was sent over the following three days.
Tether treasury balance (labeled âBitfinex Treasuryâ) in red. Image via Next Wave Strat.
These transactions have removed a massive chunk of USDT from circulation: CoinMarketCap shows Tetherâs market capitalization falling by nearly a quarter as a result, to $2.1 billion at the time of writing.
Itâs unclear why Bitfinex is taking supply off the market, but one theory is that Tether is getting out of the stablecoin business, buying back its own tokens at a profit.
This interpretation was put forward in a recent post by Su Zhu, CEO of the Singapore-based fund manager Three Arrows Capital, and a researcher publishing under the name âHasu.â
According to Tetherâs white paper, holders of the token can âredeemâ USDT for U.S. dollars, which â according to the white paper â Tether holds in a bank at a one-to-one ratio with the USDT tokens in circulation. In practice, there is little evidence that people are able to do this, and some token holders have complained that getting fiat currency from the company is impossible.
According to Zhu and Hasuâs argument, Tether is in effect redeeming the tokens with itself, buying them at a discount on the market and transforming the U.S. dollar collateral from a liability to an asset.
Itâs worth noting, however, that the tokens have not been destroyed, as Tether said it would do with redeemed tokens in the white paper.
âAnyone could make money by arbitraging the USDT spread (the price at which it trades for on exchanges),â Hasu told CoinDesk in a private message, adding, âit would make sense that Tether itself would be participating in these buybacks.â
Indeed Dong Zhang, a Chinese over-the-counter (OTC) cryptocurrency trader and Bitfinex shareholder, told CoinDesk that he âactually made moneyâ from USDT arbitrage since the peg broke.
âI buy from people who are losing hope on Tether,â he added.
Hasu isnât the only one to espouse the theory that Tether would pursue this kind of strategy, said a vehement critic of Bitfinex and Tether who goes by Cas Piancey. âIâve had others pose that to me as well,â he told CoinDesk.
But Piancey disagrees with Zhu and Hasuâs assertion that âthere is nothing shadyâ about Tether hypothetically buying its own tokens at a discount. If the company is doing so, he wrote in a private message, it means âTether is only solvent through fraud.â
Matthew Green, a cryptography professor at Johns Hopkins University, echoed that sentiment, writing, âby continuing (perhaps deliberately) to exhibit behaviors that increase customersâ doubts, Tether can make a neat profit at their customersâ expense.â
The recent drop in USDTâs price coincides with growing doubts about the companyâs claim to back its tokens with dollar deposits. The company has been secretive about its banking relationships, which change frequently, according to reports. Nor has the company provided the regular audits of its fiat collateral promised in the white paper.
Tether did not respond to requests for comment before press time. A Bitfinex representative called Zhu and Hasuâs analysis âsurprisingly fair given the multitude of accusations we face.â
Safe deposit box image via Shutterstock