Some companies have started using cryptocurrency to make payments to China, specifically the stablecoin Tether, which is pegged to the U.S. dollar, reports Bloomberg.
You can't just announce that you have a new currency that is pegged to a currency. You can peg one currency to another, but only by expending resources to keep the values together, regardless of other relative demand for each.
Even if you have a lot of resources, it's not always possible to maintain a peg.
Tether (USDT), the largest stablecoin by market capitalization, may be "constrained" in its ability to maintain its peg to the U.S. dollar, S&P Global Ratings said Tuesday, citing concerns about its reserve transparency and risk appetite, among other issues.1
The ratings agency gave an asset assessment score of 4 out of 5, with a 1 being the best possible score.
"Our asset assessment of 4 (constrained) reflects a lack of information on entities that are custodians, counterparties, or bank account providers of USDT's reserves," says the report.
So, What's Bothering S&P Global About Tether?
Now, Tether discloses details about its reserves every quarter and the ratings agency analyzed the latest data where it found some concerns.
First, the S&P assessment points out that much of Tether's reserves are held in "low-risk assets" like short-term U.S. treasuries. Even in those cases, Tether does not offer information about "custodians, counterparties, or bank account providers of the assets."
Tether's reserves also include double-digit and opaque exposure to riskier assets.
"The riskier assets making up 15% of the collateralization ratio comprise corporate bonds, precious metals, bitcoin, secured loans, and other investments," the report adds. "Given the type of assets and limited transparency on their composition, such as their denomination and the borrowers of the secured loans, there is potential exposure to credit, market, currency, and interest risks that cannot be quantified."
The report also points to the lack of a regulatory framework, limitations on primary redeemability, and lack of asset segregation as other shortcomings of the stablecoin.
This is not the first time Tether's reserves have received attention. In 2021, Tether was a subject of enforcement actions by the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) and New York Attorney General for improper information about the reserves backing the stablecoin.23
That sounds like it doesn't. Like, someone might be willing to sell you this at a fixed rate, but if those backing reserves become exhausted, there's no guarantee that you don't wind up in a situation where you can't get dollars back.
This is true. A couple of years ago Tether (along with its sister company Bitfinex, a crypto currency exchange) settled allegations by the New York state in the U.S. by paying a fine (in the double-digit millions), admitting that claims that Tether was backed by fiat at all times was "a lie".
A major issue with this coin is that it is not subject to regulation by any authority (it's owned by iFinex based in the British Virgin Islands), so they may claim whatever they want.
I don't know what exactly made them choose Tether, but one reason might indeed be that they don't have much choice (alternative crypto coins are arguably far too volatile to serve as a means of payment for companies with higher bills). Maybe because the company has an office in Hong Kong as far ad I know (at least they had one not long ago). Maybe also because there is a higher volume, maybe because there is also a Tether variant pegged to the Chinese yuan (it hss the same shortcomings as the USDT, but a much lower volume). I don't know.
But let's not forget that it can be tracked as it's on a blockchain. If they seek to circumvent sanctions and hide their money trail, that's not a good idea.
In a nutshell: anyone who says that the sanctions don't work should read stories like that and they might change their mind.
I didn’t realize enormously usurious loans were basically a whole institution in Russia, but hearing about it now, I’m 0% surprised that it is, given how Russia works these days.
In 2023, Russians took out a record-breaking one trillion rubles (approximately $11.2 billion) in payday loans — 30% more than in 2022. Some experts predict that this figure could increase again by as much as 25 percent in 2024. By the end of 2023, the number of Russians using “microfinance organizations” (MFOs) had reached 19.9 million, which is 2.7 million more than in the previous year. And as of the end of the first quarter of 2024, about 32 percent of these loans were overdue.
Currently, the average monthly income of Russians applying for payday loans is 50,000 rubles, or about $562, while the average size of these loans is 9,990 rubles ($112). In general, Russians turn to payday loans to purchase food and clothing as well as to pay off older loans, economist Nikolai Kulbak told Holod. Most people who use payday loans in Russia use them more than once: in 2023, about 83.4 percent of payday loan recipients were repeat customers.
Kulbak told Holod he also expects to see a continued rise in the number of payday loans being issued in Russia. “Banks used to give loans even to clients who were already devoting most of their income to paying off existing loans; now they’re increasingly refusing people,” he said, adding that he expects the trend to persist for the next six months since inflation does not seem to be slowing down. “The fewer loans banks approve, the more people turn to MFOs. Ultimately, this leads to an increase in bankruptcies,” said the economist.
In addition to the traditional personal bankruptcy process, Russian law allows certain categories of the population, such as pensioners, to go through a simplified, out-of-court bankruptcy process. More than 12,000 people initiated this process in the first quarter of 2024 — more than five times the number of people who did so in the same period the previous year. The number of judicial bankruptcies rose by 18.2 percent to 89,800 over the same period.
TikTok should be banned in Europe. The fact that the app we get served is not allowed in china, and that in china it serves educative content to kids means it is just a weapon of war for the CCP.
Russian steel companies are now bartering metal for any goods that Chinese businesses are willing to offer. This way, no cross-border financial transactions are needed at all.
Cryptocurrency: Even less convenient than the barter system.
meduza.io
Heiß