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by unknown_apostle 3069 days ago
In all seriousness, who needs USDT when you (supposedly) got USD? Who would wire millions of actual USD to buy USDT to buy other coins?
3 comments

Money Laundering?

You have $1M in dirty money. Wire it to Tether for some Tethers. Go on Bitfinex and buy lots of bitcoin. Transfer the bitcoin to a legitimate exchange. Sell for clean USD.

This could be a very valuable (and lucrative) service in certain circles, I have no doubt. One thing that could jeopardize the livelihood (...and lives?) of people running a business in this space would be a steeply falling Bitcoin price. They would probably do anything to keep the price up. Like issuing more magic tethers and buying Bitcoin with them.

But even then...

Why USD -> USDT -> BTC -> USD?

Why not USD -> BTC -> BTC -> BTC -> USD?

What does the extra layer of USDT really add legally, except for some added obfuscation that a few extra "intra-bitcoin" transactions would add as well?

(Genuine question, this is one of the more fascinating stories I've heard in a while :-)

It's my understanding that Tether transactions aren't traceable because there isn't a public blockchain...and possibly not even a blockchain at all. So the obfuscating step is the USD->USDT transaction. The rest of the process is getting clean money back.
Tether is on Omni layer. Its transactions are registered on the Bitcoin blockchain and I think that makes it traceable.

USD -> USDT and back is traceable using standard investigations of books and banking transcripts of entities dealing with Tether's managers.

Also, Tether is by now an internet-wide phenomenon. It's in the spotlight. And yet it keeps growing.

Bitfinex doesn't accept USD, so if you want to buy on Bitfinex you have to use USDT.

I can imagine that there are bank accounts out there full of USD that, let's say, wouldn't pass KYC/AML. Those people can't use Coinbase/Gemini, but maybe they are welcome at Bitfinex.

some exchanges don't deal in USD (only USDT)