Tether is the most captivating story you’ve never heard of. A first mover in the stablecoin space, Tether’s flagship product has grown to a monster $167 billion in market cap with just around 200 employees and $13 billion in profits last year, making it one of the most successful corporations on the planet. (And it was cofounded by a
Mighty Duck, but that’s a story for another time.)
And yet, the company has been dogged by accusations of
opacity, compliance blunders, and worse throughout its decade-long history, including a settlement with the New York attorney general and a
reported investigation by the Department of Justice’s Southern District of New York office. Just last year, it seemed the crypto giant was marching into the crosshairs of the SDNY—a potential existential threat for a company that needs access to U.S. Treasuries to survive.
To put it mildly, Tether’s fortunes changed with Trump’s election. For years, it was unclear who held the Treasuries that serve as the reserves backing up Tether’s stablecoin, with journalists racing to figure out the offshore banks like the Bahamian Deltec servicing the crypto firm. Thanks to Tether’s own sketchy accounting process, critics argued that Tether didn’t even hold the reserves it claimed to, though the company vociferously denied the claim. Then, in early 2023, Tether
revealed it was working with the New York financial firm Cantor Fitzgerald, with Cantor’s CEO Howard Lutnick publicly
defending the company in early 2024. One year after that, Lutnick would become Trump’s commerce secretary.
Tether has been on a meteoric rise ever since. After Congress passed the Genius Act, which established regulations for the stablecoin sector, Tether’s CEO, Paolo Ardoino, scored a prime seat at Trump’s signing ceremony in July, alongside other CEOs, including Gemini’s Winklevoss twins and Coinbase’s Brian Armstrong.
That was only the beginning. Yesterday, Ben Weiss and I
reported that Tether made its most brazen move yet by hiring Bo Hines, the 29-year-old former Yale wide receiver and two-time congressional candidate that Trump tapped in January to lead his far-reaching crypto agenda. After Hines announced his departure from the role just over a week ago, the crypto industry rumor mill churned with guesses about where he would end up. Hines
told us last Thursday that he was deciding between five final offers. It turns out it wasn’t a difficult choice.
Hines, whom Jessica Mathews and I
profiled in April, will help lead Tether’s expansion in the U.S., which Ardoino has said will include a new, U.S.-based stablecoin compliant with the new Genius regulations. With a $167 billion moat that blows its competitors out of the water, Tether is betting that it can beat new entrants into the stablecoin wars, from
Stripe to
Citi. And with its shiny new hire, Tether is hoping the critics forget about its past.
Leo Schwartz
X: @leomschwartzEmail: leo.schwartz@fortune.comSubmit a deal for the Term Sheet newsletter
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