Altcoins

The challenge in accounting for Tether reserves

Accurately accounting for Tether’s reserves is a challenge, even (or perhaps especially) for Tether itself. Twitter user Jay Pinho recently published a website that attempts to track the value of the assets backing Tether to gain some insight into their solvency. It also allows you to tweak the composition to see how that affects the performance.

However, due to Tether’s commitment to remaining as opaque as possible, accurately making this assessment can really only be done by someone with full access to its books.

As of its last assurance, Tether’s reserves are split between four self-described categories:

  • Cash and cash equivalent, other short-term-deposits, and commercial paper
    • This category is further subdivided into:
      • US treasury bills
      • Commercial paper and certificates of deposit
      • Money market funds
      • Cash and bank deposits
      • Reverse repurchase agreements
      • Non-US treasury bills
  • Corporate bonds, funds, and precious metals
  • Other investments
  • Secured loans

In order to understand how Tether values these assets, we need to turn to statements in its most recent Consolidates Reserves Report. Broadly, it values the first category which includes ‘cash and cash equivalents’ at their notional value. Pinho’s website values US treasury bills at their market price, contributing to some of the perceived insolvency of Tether.

Tether transparency: A lesson in lying

Tether, on the other hand, seems to value these assets at their notional value, considering them short-term debt. However, even this category remains somewhat murky, due to including ‘reverse repurchase agreements’ which Bloomberg previously was unable to find an explanation for.

Other assets in Tether’s reserves are even harder to accurately price from the outside. For example, Tether appears to value secured loans at amortized cost, since it believes the assets collateralizing them are sufficiently liquid and valuable. Pinho, however, settles on using an index of corporate bonds to try to assess this category.

Tether has announced its intention to eliminate secured loans from its reserves and we have no insight into what corporate bonds, funds, and precious metals it owns. The company’s ‘other investments’ category allows even less insight, though it likely still contains bitcoin. It’s also unclear if it contains Tether’s venture capital portfolio.

Among the challenges in accurately assessing Tether is that its own statements seem untethered from reality. Tether claims that it updates its transparency page every day, but the amount of quarantined tethers listed for Omni chain has been wrong for years, undercounting the total amount of frozen tethers.

Tether currently lists $32,303,805.00 in quarantined tethers, but there are at least $37,384,625 in frozen tethers on that chain, including:

  • $354,645 at 3H5JTt42K7RmZtromfTSefcMEFMMe18pMD
  • $3,100,000 at 13TASu2eYYRn9PfrMZyfwBJFryoV2oqj7m
  • $30,950,000 at 16tg2RJuEPtZooy18Wxn2me2RhUdC94N7r
  • $940,000 at 1PU73xR1fiRj1t3S44LtYiLqAr17tRcwfp
  • $2,039,980 at 13K5cZHvDBR4Me39PLFS3JaPdaJocm8ygf

As Pinho accurately points out, Tether maintains a small cushion of assets over liabilities, and it’s remarkably stable — except on days when new assurances are released and it will change suddenly. This is hard to understand when Tether claims to update the page every day.

Tether’s own accounting notes suggest that it values many of these credit-based assets at an amount “less than any expected credit losses.” However, Tether’s assurances since March 31, 2022 state that the firm uses a ‘going concern basis of accounting.’ This is highlighted as requiring “significant management judgement with regards to the Group’s liquidity market and credit risks.”

Read more: Tether abandons commercial paper in favor of US Treasuries

The company also highlights that “no provision for expected credit losses was identified.” It further notes that Tether is currently a defendant in legal cases and that “no provision was recognized.”

Presumably, Tether feels that if any of those challenges come to pass, the approximately $250 million in shareholder capital cushion will be adequate to manage it. However, that’s a tiny percentage of its total $66 billion in assets.

Until Tether is willing to provide greater clarity about the composition of its reserves, it’s nearly impossible to accurately assess the firm’s solvency.

Protos has reached out to Tether with questions about its reserves and will update if we hear back.

   

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