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> whether Tether is fully collateralized ultimately doesn't matter. As long as there are well-capitalized parties (Bitfinex, other exchanges) that want to prop up Tether, it will be fine This is true for every pile of toxic crap that's ever been financially engineered. The problem is the entangled financial health of the backer (in this case, Bitfinex and other crypto exchanges) with the backee (Tether). If creditors to the system (in this case, lenders to and customers of the exchanges together with holders of Tether) don't have transparency into the health of the nodes, a small crisis of confidence can prompt a run. (How do you know the parties are "well capitalized"?) Critically, this can occur even if the original impetus was survivable. The opacity causes people to doubt the system's survivability, which avalanches into a run that no system can survive. Perversely, everyone knows this pattern, which increases the chances of small perturbations careening out of control. Add in that a crisis in any part of this system creates a systemic risk and the outcome becomes, as it's been across history, inevitable. Holding Tether is putting money into a 19th century free bank, except instead of interest you get to stick a finger to the Man. |
LOL yes I am assuming some sarcasm here. Sticking ones finger up to the man by.. holding cash equivalents in forms not eligible for FDIC insurance, yes!!