Monday, June 6, 2022

Thoughts on Tether's $10.5 billion contraction

As the world's largest stablecoin, Tether has attracted its share of critics. There are several strains of Tether criticism.

Under one strain, Tether is a black box used to manipulate the price of bitcoin higher. I've never subscribed to this critique. It seems far-fetched to me, much like the theories about gold price suppression.

Other critics see Tether as a fraud, say like Madoff or Enron. They stress many of Tether's documented past transgressions. They could be right. But I hope they're not, since that would inevitably mean a lot of people getting hurt.

For my part, I'm not a skilled enough financial bloodhound to be able to sniff out fraud. I've generally started from the assumption that the public information that Tether has disclosed, most importantly its attestation reports, is accurate. A stablecoin attestation report is an examination of a stablecoins reserves, or assets, by an external auditor.

Having generally based my analysis of Tether on its assets, that analysis has always suggested that Tether (in its current incarnation) is doomed, at least in the long term. I suppose that this gets me to a similar ending-point as the Tether-as-fraud critics, albeit via a different route.

The stablecoin competitive dynamic is best characterized as a jog to the top (rather than a race to the bottom). Over a long enough period of time, the safest and most transparent issuers will be the winners. Let me explain why.

Because stablecoins don’t pay interest to customers, customers aren’t compensated for bearing the risk of the issuer’s underlying investments. This incentivizes users to migrate towards the stablecoins with the safest investments and most transparency, the good money eventually displacing the not-so-good.

Of the big three stablecoins (Tether, USD Coin, and Binance USD), Tether has always had the riskiest investment profile. As of Tether's last attestation report, for instance, 14.4% of its assets were comprised of an opaque collection of secured loans, other investments, and corporate bonds & funds (see list below). Meanwhile, Tether's competitors USD Coin and Binance USD are currently 100% invested in Treasury bills, cash, and money market funds.

List of Tether's assets from its March 2022 attestation report [pdf]


In addition to a difference in asset quality, I'd argue that USD Coin and Binance USD have better legal protections for users in the event of failure. Binance USD in particular operates under the New York stablecoin regulatory framework, which obliges Binance USD's issuer, Paxos, to operate as a trust. Trusts are effective mechanisms for ring-fencing customer funds from an issuer's other creditors.

Given Tether's outsized allocation to risky assets and fewer protections in the case of insolvency, Tether was always destined to be a victim of a jog to the top. That is, as the riskiest stablecoin it was fated to drip-drip market share to USD Coin and Binance USD until it shrunk into irrelevancy. And that's what has been happening. In the chart below, Tether's dominance has been steadily declining.



(For more on the jog to the top dynamic, I've written about it here, here, and here.)

On May 12, that slow drip turned into a rush, as the chart below shows. For the prior two years Tether had been growing, albeit at a slower rate than its competitors USD Coin and Binance USD. But over the ensuing two weeks, around 10.5 billion Tethers were quickly redeemed, a reduction of 12.6%. Meanwhile, USD Coin and Binance USD grew by around 5 billion units.

I'd argue that Tether's May contraction wasn't the product of the slow grinding attrition of a jog to the top. It was something more serious: an old-fashioned bank run. 

What might have brought the run on?

Once again, I blame Tether's weakest-link investments: the 14.4% of Tether's assets allocated to secured loans, other investments, and corporate bonds & funds.

What is the makeup of Tether's other investments? We don't know. Tether has never bothered disclosing these details. We also don't know what sort of collateral Tether has accepted for its secured loans, or the rating of the corporate bonds that it hold, or what kinds of "funds" it owns.

Combine this paucity of information with a big drop in cryptocurrency prices over the previous months, and I suspect that by May 12 financial market participants had begun to fill in the blanks with their own worst-case scenarios. A big enough hit to the value of Tether's other investments, for instance, would have meant that Tether was insolvent: that it didn't have enough assets to meet all redemption requests. (Here are Patrick Mackenzie's efforts, for instance, to run the accounting on Tether's solvency.)

For large Tether owners, there would have been two ways to approach a potential Tether insolvency. One option was to just ignore the problem. As long as everyone else does the same and holds on to their Tethers, then a strange sort of let's-all-pretend equilibrium emerges; Tether's peg holds and no one loses.

The other approach is to redeem now while Tether still has a large but limited supply of Treasuries and can easily meet redemption requests. If everyone else follows this same strategy, a run develops. No one wants to be the last one out, since the only assets remaining to support latecomers' redemption requests would be Tether's questionable assets, the ones potentially wiped-out during the prior crypto price crash. Being the last one out could mean only getting paid 30 or 40 cents per dollar.

The second of these two reactions likely took over on May 12, leading to the 10.5 billion contraction in Tether. Luckily for Tether, the big slide in bitcoin and crypto prices has halted. And with the pessimism surrounding all things crypto having dissipated, the run on Tether seems to have ended, at least for now.

Before another crypto market decline hits, I'm hoping that Tether seizes the opportunity to make a few changes.  

First, Tether should immediately disclose details about the nature and value of its weakest-link assets: its secured loans, other investments, and corporate bonds & funds. By doing so it would reassure the market and break the collective urge to flee Tether come the next big drop in crypto prices. Tether should also begin the process of unwinding and selling-off its weakest-link assets, investing the proceeds in Treasury bills and investment grade commercial paper. Without risky assets, Tether would be relatively immune to big falls in crypto prices, and this in turn would reduce the threat of a run on Tether.

If the value of Tether's weakest-link assets has been impaired, then mere disclosure isn't going reassure anyone. Tether needs to fill the vacuum by raising new funds. That is, it is insolvent and needs to recapitalize itself. If people who hold Tether stablecoins know that there's a load of new cash sitting in Tether coffers, that'll end their urge to get out the next time the crypto market falls.

The good things about these measures is that they won't only put an end to Tether's chances of facing another run. They'd also solve Tether's longer-term problem of being the victim of a jog to the top.

In my worst case scenario, Tether doesn't do any of these things. It doesn't disclose the nature of its weakest-link assets nor does it make any effort to sell them off. Then the crypto market begins another slide. Investors once again rush to make worst-case inferences about Tether's weakest link assets. A run on Tether develops, but much bigger than the run in May.

By then it may be too late for Tether to make any of the changes that would be necessary to stabilize. In a market rout, getting a recapitalization from other crypto firms may be difficult, if not impossible, and there may be no one willing or able to buy Tether's weakest-link investments. Better to fix things now than later.

12 comments:

  1. Thanks JP ... I've shifted a bit more into the fraud camp of late. An attestation of assets isn't as good as an audit. Maybe they moved the money in on a Wednesday and moved it back out on a Friday. The fact that a subsidiary of a big-name auditor signed off on the attestation doesn't comfort me particularly. And it's ridiculous they haven't revealed the commercial paper investments. That's probably because, if they did so, people could check to see if those trades were made.

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    1. "Maybe they moved the money in on a Wednesday and moved it back out on a Friday."

      Are you 100% sure that an audit would catch this while an attestation wouldn't? How would you rate your knowledge of the intricacies of accounting?

      "And it's ridiculous they haven't revealed the commercial paper investments"

      I don't know why Tether's commercial paper attracts everyone's attention. Tether's commercial paper is investment grade. The stuff that people should be worried about is the company's other investments, secured loans, corporate bonds, and funds. It's these volatile and opaque assets that would drive Tether into insolvency, not its commercial paper.

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    2. The commercial paper issue is like Maddoff’s selling options strategy: it revealed the fraud because the market of legit options was too small for it to be possible, and the returns improbable.

      Same here: the way commercial paper works a position that size cannot be hidden, and there's no reason to hide it in the first place. Ergo they do not have anything close to the commercial paper advertised. The only question is the extent of fraud, not whether there is fraud.

      The auditor is either inside, or just blindly restates whatever fake PDFs Tether copy pasted together. Small guy gets paid well now and can go back to do accounts for local plumbers when it's over. No downside for them.

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    3. As I said at the outset of my blog post, my working assumption is that the attestations are accurate, and my analysis flows from such. If you want to argue that the attestations aren't accurate, fair enough. But that's a different blog post.

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    4. It's all of a piece though. Lies are like cockroaches. There is never just one. Why does a stablecoin have illiquid investments in the first place? That is almost fraud by definition. Once you are at that point, the interesting questions become those that start from the presumption of fraud and work onwards/upwards/backwards from there. Very possibly the entire crypto universe unravels as a planned scam just from the fact that Tether is loaded with illiquid assets.

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    5. The presence of illiquid investments doesn't necessarily translate into fraud. A non-fraudulent stablecoin might decide to shift into illiquid investments because it wants to make a higher profit. I think it's a bad idea to have too many of them. Illiquid investments can't be easily sold to meet redemption requests.

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    6. Fraud does not mean something that is failing. It means something that is not what it says on the tin. Shkreli went to prison for fraud that made money for (some) clients.

      Let's imagine Tether's backing is like 20% actual USD, 50% BTC, 50% ETH, where most of the issuance is coming from over-collaterized continuously margined crypto/tether swaps (hence the more than 100% total). Can all the USDTs be redeemed assuming orderly crypto markets? Yes. Is that fraud? Yes, because they misrepresent what they are and clients unknowingly take the risk BTC/ETH go LUNAtic.

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    7. Yes ... exactly. It's sold as a STABLE coin and it is not stable. At all. Hence it's a fraud. I mean it's obviously a fraud anyway. The George Noble call is real mind-expander. He got the CTO to say, "If we give people more information about our investments they will just keep demanding even more info." I mean jeez ... that is about the shadiest admission I have ever heard.

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    8. "...it is not stable."

      You mean when it traded down to 95 cents last month on exchanges?

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    9. Actually I wasn't aware that it had dipped to 95 cents, but that is of course illustrative of the larger problem: For something to be a true stablecoin it needs to be backed 100% with dollars or T-bills, right? I mean ... what else could be absolutely, positively stable under all circumstances? Nothing I can think of.

      So if it's not guaranteed to be stable in the future, it's not a stablecoin. It's a "cryptocurrency that seeks to maintain a value of $1.00." That is not the same thing!

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    10. "For something to be a true stablecoin it needs to be backed 100% with dollars or T-bills, right? I mean ... what else could be absolutely, positively stable under all circumstances? Nothing I can think of. "

      Yes.

      Or it has to have a lot of capital, like a bank does. But Tether has an incredibly thin layer of capital.

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  2. The only stablecoin 100% backed by cash and attested in real-time has been developed by a company called GREENBOX ($GBOX Nasdaq). This company is launching COYNI for P2P and B2B this quarter. It is audited by ARMANINO on a second per second basis to ensure Investor’s 1-1 cash to COYNI. All others are algos that fail; beware.

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