Tether Makes US Pivot, Launches USAT Stablecoin

In a move that signals a strategic shift toward embracing U.S. oversight, Tether has announced plans for USA₮, a new dollar-pegged stablecoin tailored for the American market.
Leading the charge is Bo Hines, a 30-year-old former college athlete and Trump-era policy insider, tapped as CEO of the new entity. Hines' crypto credentials solidified in early 2025 when President Trump appointed him to the Presidential Council on Digital Assets, followed by a stint leading the White House's digital assets advisory council. His experience at the intersection of governance and innovation makes him a fitting choice for navigating USA₮ through U.S. bureaucratic hurdles, though skeptics question whether his political ties could invite partisan scrutiny.
The announcement , made on Friday, comes as Tether's flagship USDT continues to dominate the global stablecoin landscape with a market capitalization topping $170 billion. Yet, this expansion into regulated U.S. territory marks a departure from Tether's historically arms-length relationship with American authorities.
Critics have long accused the company of opacity in its reserve management and potential ties to market manipulation, issues that have drawn federal scrutiny since at least 2018 when U.S. prosecutors probed whether USDT was used to artificially inflate Bitcoin prices. In 2021, New York's attorney general fined Tether $18.5 million for misleading claims about its reserves, forcing the firm to agree to quarterly attestations without admitting wrongdoing. More recently, in 2024, federal authorities seized 200,000 USDT tokens linked to illicit activities, underscoring ongoing concerns over money laundering facilitated by the token's pseudonymity.
Tether's push into the U.S. via USA₮ appears designed to mitigate these risks. The stablecoin will be issued by Anchorage Digital, the nation's first federally chartered crypto bank, with reserves custodied by Wall Street heavyweight Cantor Fitzgerald. According to the announcements, it emphasizes speed and user control, though it explicitly notes it's not legal tender, lacks FDIC insurance, and isn't government-backed. This setup aligns with the GENIUS Act's mandates for transparent reserves and strict governance, potentially allowing Tether to operate domestically without the "comply or die" ultimatum some analysts have warned about.
The timing is no coincidence. Tether, already the 18th-largest holder of U.S. Treasuries, ahead of nations like Germany and South Korea, has profited immensely from its model, reporting over $13 billion in earnings for 2024 alone . But with the GENIUS Act reshaping the regulatory landscape, offshore stablecoins like USDT face exclusion from U.S. markets unless they adapt. By launching USA₮ on its Hadron tokenization platform, Tether aims to leverage its global distribution network while building a compliant alternative, effectively hedging against potential crackdowns.
This foray intensifies competition in the $288 billion stablecoin sector, where Tether's USDT holds a commanding 60-66% market share, dwarfing USDC's 28-30%. USDC, issued by Boston-based Circle, has long marketed itself as the more trustworthy option, boasting full U.S. regulatory alignment and regular audits that appeal to institutional players wary of Tether's past scandals. While USDT excels in trading volume and payments, especially in emerging markets where it serves nearly 500 million underbanked users, USDC is often favored for its perceived safety amid volatility.
Early reactions on X highlight a mix of optimism and caution. Crypto analysts praised the regulatory pivot as a "major step for U.S. dollar dominance," with one post noting it could enable compliant payments for data annotators and other fintech applications. Others pointed to potential market fragmentation, with Spanish-language outlets questioning if USA₮ signals a broader crypto shakeup. One user quipped that Tether's move puts Circle "on defense," echoing broader sentiment that this could redefine stablecoin hierarchies.
If successful, USA₮ could cement Tether's role in bolstering the dollar's digital hegemony, extending its reach from emerging economies to Wall Street. But it remains to be seen if this move will truly resolve transparency issues or is just a superficial rebrand.

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