Binance Freezes Doge Withdrawals

PLUS: Universal Music Group signed an NFT band, Tether's commercial paper and more |
Join Nexo and start earning free BTC with your friends!

What others are writing...

Off-Chain Signals

  • The 10,000 Faces That Launched an NFT Revolution (Wired)
  • 'We'll see about 200 chains connected through Cosmos' IBC next year', says Tendermint CEO Peng Zhong (Cointelegraph)
  • SEC rejects VanEck's spot bitcoin ETF (The Block)
  • Bumble is swiping right on Web 3.0 and the metaverse (The Block)
  • How DAOs Are Challenging VCs in the Race to Fund Web3 Projects (The Defiant)
  • Bitcoin is consolidating off exchanges (Glassnodes)

A message from Amber

Amber Group is an integrated digital asset platform serving retail and institutional clients by providing deep liquidity, attractive yields, and sophisticated portfolio management tools. With 12 offices on three continents, and nearly a trillion dollars in volume traded, Amber Group offers clients personalized, compliant, and secure service across dozens of digital assets.

 

Find out more at https://www.ambergroup.io/

CoinDesk's "Most Influential" recognizes individuals who've had a big impact on the cryptocurrency and blockchain industry in a calendar year. Chosen by readers and editorial staff, the list features 50 people from across the space, including entrepreneurs, traders, coders, regulators, celebrities and the odd surprise. To have your say on who should make this year's list, check out the form here. The results will be announced on Dec. 6, 2021. 

Putting the news in perspective

The Takeaway

Tethered to China?

Lawrence Lewitinn reporting today. For critics of Tether, the new economy of digital assets is based on the world's oldest profession: real estate speculation. 
 
Crypto markets took a dip Thursday just around the time it was reported that China's Evergrande Group was on the verge of defaulting on a bond payment. While the embattled housing giant ultimately made its scheduled payment of $148 million, questions persist about the long-term prospects for it and other real estate developers in China. Bitcoin, meanwhile, remained above all-time highs by about 5.5%.
 
What does one have to do with the other? Well, think of a detective in a movie who takes a corkboard, some photos and a lot of white strings to put all the parts of a story together.
 
It goes something like this: About half of all bitcoin trades against stablecoin tether (USDT), according to data from CryptoCompare. About half of Tether's roughly $75 billion in assets, which back USDT, is in commercial paper. While Tether (the company) said back in September it doesn't hold Evergrande commercial paper, about a month ago Bloomberg BusinessWeek reported Tether's holdings included "billions of dollars of short-term loans to large Chinese companies – something money-market funds avoid."
 
So while Evergrande may not be on the books, the concern is that the commercial paper may be from other real estate firms.
 
Scaled to size
Understanding the magnitude of size and growth of USDT, bitcoin and Chinese commercial paper may help give some perspective to the latest headlines.
 
Just two years ago, USDT's market cap was a mere $4 billion. Thus, it has grown 19-fold in a matter of two dozen months.
 
In those two years, bitcoin's market cap has gone up eight times, from $159 billion to $1.3 trillion.
 
Meanwhile, based on data from the People's Bank of China, Chinese commercial paper ended Q2 in 2021 at around $900 billion, up from just shy of $700 billion that same quarter in 2019, a gain of less than a third.
 
In absolute terms, the sizes look something like this:

A chart like the one above doesn't give a sense of the rate of growth for each, but this does:

Bitcoin and USDT look somewhat related, but does one move as a function of the other? Perhaps, if one were to scale tether on a different Y-axis like so: 

Perhaps the tail wags the dog. Or perhaps there are other ways to explain things. 

 

Tether's defenders can say that even if one were to assume Tether spent half of every dollar it is said to have taken in over the past two years on commercial paper in China, that would be under one-fifth of new issuances and 4% of the market.
 
That should refute anyone who could try to argue USDT may have fueled China's boom in commercial paper. Yet, does Tether truly own a lot of Chinese commercial paper? Can it be liquidated to meet redemptions? Those questions can only be answered with a little more transparency from the stablecoin's issuer.
 
Given Tether's record to this point, that may take a while.

 

–Lawrence Lewitinn 

Sponsored Content

 

NEAR Predictions: Developers Chart the Bridge to Professional Freedom

 

Today developers operating in Web 3.0 are actively leveraging decentralized infrastructure to create products they want to build, whether it's green non-fungible tokens (NFTs), social networks where users own the data or groundbreaking new technology like sharding. Developers alone have unique tools and access to communities to create such novel products away from traditional corporate structures.

 

They also have the freedom to choose what networks and what tools to use. At NEAR, we believe the future is multi-chain, not "one blockchain to rule them all," which is why we've spent the past 12 months building bridges between networks. A developer on Ethereum, for example, can take advantage of NEAR's speed, security and scalability without having to write any more code.

 

The Chaser...

The Node

A newsletter from CoinDesk

See Previous Editions

Copyright © 2021 CoinDesk, All rights reserved. 

250 Park Avenue South New York, NY 10003, USA

Manage your newsletter subscriptions  |  Unsubscribe from all CoinDesk email 

Related Posts


EmoticonEmoticon

:)
:(
=(
^_^
:D
=D
=)D
|o|
@@,
;)
:-bd
:-d
:p
:ng
:lv