> 20. Because of Tether’s inability to conduct significant banking activity during this time, it could not itself hold dollars sufficient to back the hundreds of millions of new tethers that had entered the market. Until September 15, 2017, the only U.S. dollars held by Tether ostensibly backing the approximately 442 million tethers in circulation was the approximately $61 million on deposit at the Bank of Montreal.
That's 14% of the cash required to back the issued Tether at the time.
I think I trust ag.ny.gov much more than theblockcrypto.com...
It suggests the latter is 100% made up news, possibly with the aim of market manipulation by sentiment bots who will be fooled for a few minutes until humans intervene.
I would also prefer to trust that source, however it is written as a press release. So they write it to make them look as positive as they can and stress the Bitfinex bad points. The blockcrypto article seems to indicate that the accounts were now balanced, but the ag.ny.gov makes no mention of it, which is expected if they are still trying to paint bitfinex as a wrongdoer, but calls into question their impartiality, so it becomes difficult to accept either at face value.
The settlement agreement[1] I suspect is a good middle ground.
It looks like the NYAG believes the loan from bitfinex to tether has now been repaid, but makes no claims about either having sufficient reserves to cover liabilities.
> I would also prefer to trust that source, however it is written as a press release. So they write it to make them look as positive as they can and stress the Bitfinex bad points.
Whereas theblockcrypto is quoting Bitfinex's counsel who is weasel wording over people's understanding of what a "finding" is at law?
> The blockcrypto article seems to indicate that the accounts were now balanced
Given that in 2019, Tether's lifetime holdings were $2.1B and even that was not fully backed, and they're now printing $3.5B a week, I'm intensely curious how they are comfortable drawing that conclusion.
Page 4 of the agreement:
> 20. Because of Tether’s inability to conduct significant banking activity during this time, it could not itself hold dollars sufficient to back the hundreds of millions of new tethers that had entered the market. Until September 15, 2017, the only U.S. dollars held by Tether ostensibly backing the approximately 442 million tethers in circulation was the approximately $61 million on deposit at the Bank of Montreal.
That's 14% of the cash required to back the issued Tether at the time.