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Tether Cut Commercial Paper Reserve by 17% in Q1, Accountants Say

The reduction has continued with a further 20% cut since April 1, which will be reflected in the Q2 report, the stablecoin issuer said.

Updated May 11, 2023, 6:54 p.m. Published May 19, 2022, 2:49 p.m.
Tether symbol (Shutterstock)
Tether symbol (Shutterstock)

Tether reduced its commercial paper holdings by 17% from $24.2 billion to $20.1 billion in the first quarter, according to its latest attestation report.

The majority of this $20.1 billion(around $18 billion) is comprised of A-1 and A-2 paper, which qualify as investment grade, according to the report. A list of ratings agencies grading the commercial paper wasn't specified other than, "Standard & Poor’s ratings, or equivalent ratings by Moody’s, Fitch or other nationally recognized statistical rating organizations" in the footnotes. The geographic location of the commercial paper issuers was also not found in the report.

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The reduction in commercial paper has continued with a further 20% cut since April 1, which will be reflected in the second-quarter report, Tether announced Thursday. On June 30, 2021, commercial paper and certificates of deposit totaled $30.8 billion, or 49% of Tether's assets at that time.

Tether has also slightly reduced its cash deposits from $4.2 billion to $4.1 billion and increased its U.S. Treasury bond holdings from $34.5 billion to $39.2 billion since its last report.

The latest report also revealed that $286 million of its assets were held in foreign government bonds with a maturity of less than 180 days. In Tether's previous report, through the end of last December, there was no mention of holdings of any non U.S. government bonds, according to Barron's.

The "other investments" category, which includes digital tokens, has remained consistent, falling slightly from $5.02 billion to $4.96 billion. This area has been thought of as the most troubling aspect of the attestation reports because of uncertainty about what exactly these assets are, which Tether doesn't disclose.

Furthermore, the report does not account for the recent pullback in crypto markets witnessed since early May.

Tether's attestation report is authorized by accounting firm MHA Cayman. As part of a settlement with the New York attorney general in February 2021, Tether must release quarterly attestations of its assets and liabilities in order to be more transparent when it comes to what exactly backs its tether stablecoin.

Tether now has a total of $82.4 billion in assets, up from $78.7 billion on Dec. 31.

Read more: Despite Recent Bumps in the Road, Stablecoins Will Stick Around

UPDATE (May 19, 15:45 UTC): Added more details.

UPDATE (May 20, 21:16 UTC): Added details about Tether's holdings of foreign government bonds in fifth paragraph.

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