On the same day, a new report surfaced about Noble Bank, Tether’s banking partner, revealing its poor financial health. The Puerto Rick bank served as a fiat gateway to it, as well as BitFinex, a well-known Bitcoin exchange. But when the bank announced that it was open for sale, both Tether and BitFinex decided to call it quits.
The revelations argue whether Tether, which promised transparent auditing of his USD holdings in its whitepaper, misled its community or not. The project first fired Friedman LLP., their financial auditor, then hired Freeh Sporkin & Sullivan to do a “non-financial audit,” – as Stu Hoegner, Tether’s general counsel quoted, and later dismissed the possibility of a financial review in near-term.
“The barriers to getting audited are simply too big to overcome right now, and not just for us,” he told media.It has led the cryptocurrency community to believe that Tether is printing fake dollar bills in the form of USDT. According to them, Tether might not even have the money to back their USDT supplies, which is why they are willing to sell Noble Bank for a cost of $5-10 million. The bank itself came under the scrutiny of the Puerto Rican bank regulator last year, though the authorities never charged them publicly. Amidst the chaos, it is the investors who have started to believe that Tether could be a misleading company, if not a scam entirely.
Most concise explanation so far in the thread — Luke Martin (@VentureCoinist)
Looks like about $5 million exited Tether for dollars yesterday on Kraken. — Chris Carolan $=1/∞ (@spiralcal)If there come a time when it hits the ground and loses its USD peg, then the best the market could witness is investors swapping their weaker USDT holdings with other coins, notably Bitcoin. Nevertheless, if there could be the slightest possibility of coming come out clean, Tether should not miss it.
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