Tether discloses full reserve breakdown for the first time
Cash, cash equivalents, other short-term deposits and commercial paper make up 75.85% of Tether’s proven reserves as of March 31.
Tether Holdings Limited, the company behind the popular Tethet (USDT) stablecoin, released a full breakdown of its reserves on Thursday, offering more transparency about the composition of its assets.
More than three-quarters of Tether’s reserves are held in cash, cash equivalents, other short-term deposits and commercial paper as of March 31. Within this category, commercial paper accounts for 65.39%, fiduciary deposits for 24.20%, cash for 3.87%, reserve repurchase agreement notes for 3.6% and Treasury bills for 2.94%.
Beyond this category, secured loans accounted for 12.55% of Tether’s reserves. Corporate bonds, funds and precious metals represented 9.96%, and “other investments,” including digital tokens, were 1.64%.
“Today’s publication reflects our continued dedication to making this information public as part of our ongoing commitment to transparency and setting the standard in our industry,” the company said.
Tether has been submitting periodic reports about the status of its reserves since reaching a settlement with the New York Attorney General’s Office in February. The latest disclosure, however, was the first time that Tether provided a full breakdown of its assets. As Cointelegraph recently reported, Tether has already passed multiple assurance tests from Moore Cayman, a Cayman Islands-based accounting network that has confirmed that the company’s consolidated assets exceed its liabilities.
The stablecoin issuer reached a major milestone in late last April after it minted its 50-billionth USDT token. As a U.S. dollar-backed stablecoin, that means company assets exceed $50 billion.
The market capitalization of USDT now stands at roughly $57.8 billion, according to Coingecko. As a comparison, Tether’s market cap first reached $40 billion in late March.