| Good question. With an audit, the auditors get a representation from management that they will provide the truth etc. The auditors would also get third party evidence eg. from the bank providing the audit client's account. For important things you would always get third party evidence from banks, custodians, etc or even just go and check to see if physical things exist! With an attestation or limited/negative assurance engagement, there's no third party evidence. Instead, the auditors just rely on what they are given and whether it looks reasonable. The auditors would state in their "report" that only limited evidence was gathered and not enough to form the basis of an opinion. Basically, limited / negative assurance is not really that useful in most circumstances. Regarding fraud - auditors are not expected to find/uncover fraud under any type of engagement, which is a common misconception. The biggest audit firms won't go any where near tether, and this alone, tells you quite a bit :) |
> Basically, limited / negative assurance is not really that useful in most circumstances.
So what exactly can we glean from USDC having attestations? It’s certainly a step up from Tether in that respect but I’m also not sure it tells us all that much.
Or maybe a better way of asking is: how exactly would you prove that a stablecoin was backed?