By | Clow
Author:白话区块链
In 2024, a company named Tether presented a performance report that left Wall Street astounded.
$13 billion in net profit, with approximately 150 employees.
Per capita profit is about $85.62 million, nearly 300 times that of Goldman Sachs and 85 times that of Nvidia.
This is not an AI unicorn, nor a top-tier hedge fund. It is merely a stablecoin issuer—the company behind USDT.
When these numbers circulated in financial circles, many people's first reaction was: How is this possible?
But if you understand Tether's business model, you'll realize that this is not only possible but almost inevitable.
01. The World's Most Profitable Business
Tether's profit logic is known in the industry as the "stablecoin float game."
The rules are simple: You give Tether $1 and receive 1 USDT in return. Tether takes your money and buys U.S. Treasury bonds.
The annualized yield of U.S. bonds has long remained above 5%, while USDT never pays any interest.
The difference in between goes entirely to Tether.
As of the end of 2025, Tether's total exposure to U.S. bonds reached $141 billion, making it the 17th largest holder of U.S. bonds globally, surpassing the scale of sovereign nations like Germany and South Korea.
U.S. bonds alone contribute over $4 billion in cash flow to Tether annually.
And this is just the first layer.
The second layer is gold and Bitcoin. Tether holds approximately $17 billion worth of gold and over 96,000 Bitcoins. The sharp rise in gold prices in 2025 brought an additional $5 billion in floating profits.
The third layer is the liquidity premium. What do those who forgo the 5% bond interest get in return? It is the ability to use digital dollars anytime in Turkey, Argentina, Nigeria, and other countries. For markets plagued by high inflation and foreign exchange controls, this liquidity is more valuable than a 5% annual return.
Tether is essentially a global "shadow bank" without branches, tellers, or downtime, specifically capturing the huge interest rate differentials left behind by the inefficiencies of the traditional financial system.
02. Breaking Through the Walls of Traditional Payments
The SWIFT system was built in the 1970s. Half a century later, its core logic remains largely unchanged: relay through correspondent banks, passing through multiple nodes one after another, taking at least 3 to 5 business days, with comprehensive fees as high as 7%.
A payment from the U.S. to Nigeria must go through layers of remitting banks, intermediary banks, and receiving banks, each taking a cut in handling fees.
Moreover, these banks have business hours. A remittance initiated on Friday night won't start "processing" until the following Monday.
In contrast, a USDT transfer can reach the recipient's wallet in less than 30 seconds on the Tron network for a fee of under $1, operating 24/7, 365 days a year without interruption.
The cost difference is particularly staggering. Traditional comprehensive fees for B2B cross-border payments range from 1.5% to 7%, while personal remittances can sometimes exceed 11%; the comprehensive cost on stablecoin networks is typically only 0.5% to 2%.
The deeper impact lies in "reach."
Hundreds of millions of adults worldwide still lack bank accounts. But with a mobile phone and internet access, they can create a crypto wallet and connect to global trade. In Africa and Latin America, USDT has become a common tool for small and medium-sized enterprises to pay international suppliers.
In 2025, a new generation of Web3 POS systems began using NFC technology to enable "tap-to-pay," bringing crypto payments to retail store counters.
This wall is being breached from all directions.
03. Pay-Fi: The Logic of Money Is Being Rewritten
Payment + Finance, this combination has a new name: Pay-Fi (Payment Finance).
Traditional payments solve the problem of "moving money from A to B." Pay-Fi aims to solve the problem of "money moving from A to B while generating interest along the way."
Protocols like Huma Finance are working on tokenizing corporate accounts receivable, providing instant financing through on-chain liquidity pools to address prepaid capital pressures in cross-border trade. As of early 2026, the cumulative transaction volume of the Huma protocol has exceeded $10 billion, and its T+0 real-time settlement capability is attracting increasing attention from traditional financial institutions.
The battle for underlying infrastructure is also underway. Ethereum L2 significantly reduces on-chain transaction costs through Rollup technology; Celestia and EigenDA further lower fees at the data storage layer, making large-scale micro-payments possible. The Tron network, with its vast USDT reserves and extremely low transfer fees, remains the world's busiest stablecoin settlement network.
The stablecoin market itself is also diversifying. USDT dominates offshore payments and emerging markets with about 59% market share; USDC wins over U.S. licensed institutions with compliance and transparency, occupying the vast majority of share in institutional-grade, compliance-first transfer/settlement scenarios. PayPal's PYUSD targets the retail end with its merchant network, and Ripple's RLUSD aims for interbank large-scale settlements.
This market is no longer dominated by a single player but is rapidly moving toward specialized division of labor.
04. The Ambition and Boundaries of Tether
Having made so much money, what does Tether plan to do with it?
Buy mining farms. In Uruguay, Paraguay, and El Salvador, Tether has invested over $2 billion to establish 15 energy and Bitcoin mining sites, aiming to become the world's largest Bitcoin miner.
Buy AI. Through channels like Northern Data Group, Tether has invested over $1 billion in AI computing infrastructure.
Buy robots. At the end of 2025, Tether invested €70 million in Italian AI robotics startup Generative Bionics; simultaneously, it is considering an investment of up to $1.15 billion in German robotics company Neura, with the goal of producing 5 million humanoid robots by 2030.
The logic behind this is not hard to understand: in an economy operated autonomously by AI agents and robots, the value exchange between them requires an instant, programmable digital currency. And USDT is already the most obvious candidate for this role.
Regulators are also adding weight to this story. In July 2025, the U.S. "GENIUS Act" was officially signed into law, opening legal channels for regulated institutions to issue stablecoins and explicitly excluding stablecoins from securities and commodities. The EU's MiCA framework was fully implemented the same year, bringing stablecoins from the "gray area" into the mainstream regulatory视野 (vision/scope).
Core Wall Street circles have also begun to enter the game. U.S. bond primary dealer Cantor Fitzgerald holds about 5% of Tether's equity, and its CEO Howard Lutnick has repeatedly publicly endorsed the authenticity of Tether's reserves. This deep binding means: Tether is no longer just a crypto project; it has quietly embedded itself into the interest network of traditional finance.
05. Summary
From a stablecoin issuer to one of the top 20 global holders of U.S. bonds, and then to an investor in robot factories—every step of Tether's expansion points in the same direction:
The definition of money is quietly shifting from the printing presses of sovereign nations to digital networks that offer higher efficiency and lower friction.
This process is not a revolution but an infiltration.
SWIFT is still operating, banks are still open, and the Fed is still adjusting interest rates. But another system is growing at an astonishing rate in the gaps between them.
For everyone involved, it might be worth asking yourself one question:
In the next decade, in which system will the money in your hands operate?






