# Пов'язані статті щодо Tether

Центр новин HTX надає останні статті та поглиблений аналіз на тему "Tether", що охоплює ринкові тренди, оновлення проєктів, технологічні розробки та регуляторну політику в криптоіндустрії.

USDT Market Cap Approaches Ethereum's: What Signal Does This Convey?

The market capitalization of USDT has nearly reached that of Ethereum, making it the second-largest cryptocurrency after Bitcoin. This prompts an examination of what this signifies and what it does not. Firstly, this does not relate to economic security. Unlike some Web3 systems where a governance token's value must underpin the security of its applications (e.g., oracles), USDT's stability is not backed by the value of the underlying blockchains it operates on. Tether, the issuer, controls the assets, and can freeze, reissue, or abandon tokens on a compromised chain. While stablecoins require functional blockchains, a chain's native token market cap does not provide direct security for the stablecoin. Secondly, USDT's growth does not inherently reflect poorly on Ethereum. USDT is a dollar-pegged store of value, while ETH represents a claim on future Ethereum network revenue. Their valuations are driven by different factors. USDT's rising market cap simply indicates strong demand for stablecoin utility, independent of Ethereum's technological merits or competitive position. The core insight is the overwhelming market demand for permissionless dollar transfers. This is the most established and essential use case in crypto. It requires minimal technological sophistication—essentially just a trusted issuer's promise of redemption on a functional chain. This explains why stablecoin supply has grown exponentially while the combined market cap of major non-stablecoin cryptocurrencies like Bitcoin, Ethereum, and others has stagnated for years. Users primarily seek accessible dollar-denominated assets. They largely disregard the issuer's credibility (as seen with Tether's dominance over more credible alternatives like USDC or BlackRock's BUIDL) and are indifferent to the governance or decentralization of the underlying blockchain. As long as a stablecoin is widely accepted and easy to transfer, users will adopt it across any chain. The trend suggests that the market for permissionless stablecoins could continue to expand far beyond the total value of the smart contract platforms that host them, driven by this singular, powerful use case.

Foresight News07/10 06:09

USDT Market Cap Approaches Ethereum's: What Signal Does This Convey?

Foresight News07/10 06:09

The Impact of OUSD on Circle, Tether, and Paxos: Not a Simple Negative, but a More Complex Competitive Landscape

OUSD's Impact on Circle, Tether, and Paxos: A Nuanced Competitive Reshuffle The launch of OUSD, a new stablecoin initiative, has complex implications for the stablecoin market. For Circle (CRCL), the initial 15-20% stock drop reflects legitimate competitive concerns but is not a "death sentence." Circle retains deep liquidity, existing integrations, and first-mover advantages. A potential restructuring or termination of its Coinbase partnership could even double its net revenue in the short term, providing more competitive freedom. However, OUSD, backed by Stripe's engineering and product strengths, could become the default stablecoin within the Stripe ecosystem for new adopters, challenging USDC's position. OUSD does not solve the core barrier for corporate adoption: it remains a credit exposure to its issuer (likely a Bridge-related entity), which, like Circle, is not an investment-grade entity. Large banks and asset managers could still capture the most lucrative enterprise use cases. Circle must accelerate its payment/fintech product development and consider defensive M&A. For Tether, OUSD targets a different market segment. Tether will continue focusing on distribution channels not prioritized by Stripe or Circle. Its market share may decline over time, but within a significantly growing total market. Paxos faces the greatest pressure. OUSD undermines the key selling points of its USDG stablecoin, and Paxos's regulatory advantages may diminish as frameworks mature. This poses a more existential challenge, explaining Paxos's recent shift back to its brokerage-as-a-service business.

marsbit07/05 02:09

The Impact of OUSD on Circle, Tether, and Paxos: Not a Simple Negative, but a More Complex Competitive Landscape

marsbit07/05 02:09

OUSD's Impact on Circle, Tether, and Paxos: Not a Simple Negative, but a More Complex Competitive Reshuffle

This article analyzes the impact of the newly announced stablecoin OUSD, backed by a consortium including Stripe, on major incumbents like Circle (USDC), Tether (USDT), and Paxos (USDG). For Circle, the announcement is not a simple negative. While the initial market reaction was rational, it's not a "death sentence." Circle retains deep liquidity, existing integrations, and first-mover advantage. A potential restructuring or termination of its exclusive revenue-sharing deal with Coinbase could even near-double its net income in the short term, providing more competitive flexibility. However, within the Stripe ecosystem, OUSD, with its strong engineering and product focus, could become the default choice, displacing USDC for new integrations. Circle must accelerate its own fintech product development and consider defensive M&A. OUSD does not directly threaten Tether's core markets, which focus on different distribution channels. Tether's market share may decline over time but within a significantly growing overall market. Paxos faces the greatest pressure. OUSD undermines the primary value proposition of its USDG stablecoin, and Paxos's regulatory advantages may erode as frameworks mature, posing a more existential challenge. This explains Paxos's recent strategic pivot towards brokerage-as-a-service. A fundamental unresolved issue for enterprise adoption remains: if issued by a Bridge-related entity, OUSD, like USDC, still represents a credit exposure to a non-investment-grade issuer, unless a parent company guarantee is provided. Large banks and asset managers entering the space later could still compete for the most lucrative enterprise use cases.

链捕手07/05 02:08

OUSD's Impact on Circle, Tether, and Paxos: Not a Simple Negative, but a More Complex Competitive Reshuffle

链捕手07/05 02:08

Do Robots Also Need Encrypted Wallets? Stablecoin Giant Tether Bets on German Company NEURA Robotics

Do Robots Need Crypto Wallets? Stablecoin Giant Tether Bets on German Firm NEURA Robotics German robotics company NEURA Robotics has secured up to $1.4 billion in what is claimed to be the largest-ever funding round in the full-stack robotics industry, valuing the company at $7 billion. The Series C round attracted major investors like Tether, Qualcomm, Amazon, NVIDIA, Bosch, and the European Investment Bank. NEURA, founded in 2019, initially focused on AI-powered collaborative robots (cobots) for industrial automation, later expanding to autonomous mobile robots, service robots, and humanoid robots. Its core strategy is evolving from a hardware manufacturer to the operator of "Neuraverse," a platform designed to enable different robots to share learned experiences and data, creating network effects. A key, crypto-focused aspect of this investment is Tether's involvement. Tether plans to integrate its open-source Wallet Development Kit (WDK) into NEURA's robot platforms. This would embed self-custody wallet functionality, allowing robots to autonomously handle payments and settlements for tasks under pre-set rules—envisioning use cases in logistics or Robotics-as-a-Service (RaaS) models. This move could position stablecoins and crypto wallets as potential "machine payment infrastructure." Additionally, the partnership will see Tether's QVAC (QuantumVerse Automatic Computer) edge-AI framework tested and deployed within Neuraverse. This aims to enable low-latency, offline-capable AI decision-making directly on robots, reducing reliance on cloud computing for critical, time-sensitive operations. The investment underscores Tether's broader ambition to expand beyond being just a stablecoin issuer into AI, energy, and digital infrastructure, with NEURA's robotics network serving as a testbed for merging crypto-based financial layers with edge-based intelligence for the future of automation.

marsbit06/16 09:14

Do Robots Also Need Encrypted Wallets? Stablecoin Giant Tether Bets on German Company NEURA Robotics

marsbit06/16 09:14

活动图片