dYdX Enhances Security Measures Following $9 Million Loss in Targeted Attack
Decentralized exchange dYdX has implemented new risk management measures after a targeted attack led to a $9 million depletion in its insurance fund.

Laffer: I'd like to know how you run your stablecoin business. What do you buy? How do you do it? Where does your initial funding come from? Do you intervene to stabilize it, like the Bank of England does?
Paolo Ardoino: Let's start with the mechanics. USDT is a digital dollar. If a company wants to apply to issue USDT from Tether, it first registers on Tether's main market. You can find it at tether.to. Registration involves a KYC/AML process. We want to make sure we know who we're talking to and the legitimacy of the company or individual. Once this process is established, the company is authorized to apply to issue USDT. This means they must wire, for example, $100,000 to a Tether bank account. Once Tether receives the wire, it asks for a blockchain address to which it will send $100,000 in USDT. This company will use these USDT for transactions or other purposes. At some point, they'll come back to Tether with the USDT. They'll say, "I want to redeem it." Now they send these USDT to the address Tether displays on the main market platform. They send the USDT, Tether receives the USDT, and then Tether sends the money back. Tether's Reserves: Laffer: What did Tether do with the $100,000 during this interim period of, let's say, six months? Paolo Ardoino: Tether invests its reserves in different assets. Historically, we have invested in a variety of assets. Before the end of 2021, the reserves were primarily invested in A1 and A2 rated commercial paper. We've never taken any risk and have never had any defaults. But in 2022, Tether committed to the community to begin moving the majority of its reserves into U.S. Treasuries. So today, Tether holds over $130 billion in U.S. Treasuries, mostly short-term, with maturities of less than 90 days. The average maturity is 81 days. Tether's reserves are 80% in cash and cash equivalents in the form of U.S. Treasury bonds, with gold and Bitcoin also forming part of its reserves. Tether holds over 90 tons of gold and over 100,000 bitcoins. The total reserves backing USDT exceed $6 billion in all USDT tokens in circulation, so it's essentially collateralized at a rate of 103% to 104%. Tether has been working to increase its holdings of U.S. Treasury bonds. Therefore, all newly issued USDT has essentially gone into U.S. Treasuries. Tether's holdings of U.S. Treasury bonds may be less than $100 billion at the beginning of 2025, but they are steadily increasing. Tether has pledged to continue purchasing U.S. Treasury bonds. According to recent statistics, Tether is now the 16th largest holder of U.S. Treasury bonds, exceeding South Korea, Germany, the UAE, Spain, and Australia. Tether was the fifth largest purchaser of U.S. Treasury bonds in 2024. USDT currently has 450 million users, with 30 million new users added each quarter in emerging and developing markets. Laffer: Why don't you create two separate stablecoins, one backed by gold and one backed by dollars? Why mix them together? Paolo Ardoino: Tether actually has a gold-backed stablecoin called Tether Gold, which currently has a market capitalization of $1.2 billion. We have reasons to hold some gold in our reserves. But in the long term, we will hold 100% in U.S. Treasuries. Tether Audits, Transparency, and Regulation Laffer: Are your financial statements public? Are you regulated by anyone? Are there any regulators who can inspect you? Paolo Ardoino: Tether publishes quarterly audit reports, which are independent audits conducted by BDO. BDO is a top-five auditing firm, and it provides independent confirmation of the reserves. They have direct contact with the institutions where Tether holds its reserves. Tether's Treasuries, by the way, are held at Cantor Fitzgerald. In early 2024, Cantor Fitzgerald Chairman Howard Lutnick (now the US Secretary of Commerce) stated very publicly on Bloomberg TV: "I saw the reserves. They have reserves. I spent a lot of time doing due diligence on their reserves." Despite this, we are conducting quarterly audits. This is published on the transparency page on the tether.to website. The previous US administration launched Operation Stranglehold 2.0, which made it difficult for the top Big Four accounting firms to participate in any cryptocurrency-related matters. Things are changing. The new administration is very supportive of cryptocurrencies, and of course, stablecoins. Now the Genius Act has been passed, which is a great move because it makes audits easier. Transparency is very important to us. Laffer: How is Tether regulated now? Paolo Ardoino: The US Genius Act has been passed, but the US Treasury still needs to provide detailed procedures. Tether is registered in El Salvador and is regulated under El Salvador's stablecoin regulatory regime. Before the Genius Act, virtually no jurisdictions, or almost no jurisdictions, had stablecoin regulatory regimes, though some had sandboxes. After the Genius Act, all other countries will begin copying it, potentially taking two years, until everyone is subject to roughly the same regulations. Tether is an 11-year-old company. Tether cooperates with over 250 law enforcement agencies in over 50 countries. The beauty of blockchain technology is that it makes everything incredibly transparent. Tether has partnered with many companies, including Chainalysis and TRM Labs, over the past decade to build these highly efficient and precise internal tools to track transactions. What happens to US dollar stablecoins in the face of dollar inflation? Laffer: Do you guarantee the value of your stablecoins? Paolo Ardoino: We have never had a redemption failure. Every dollar is always redeemable for one dollar, with a 10 basis point redemption fee. Laffer: The dollar is inflationary and a terrible currency. Is there a good mechanism for USDT to increase in value with inflation? Paolo Ardoino: I don't think inflation will ever go away, at least not in the short term. There are several solutions. One is a tokenized money market fund, but this is a bit tricky because it would become a security. It's difficult to tokenize a money market fund and then have 1.4 billion people in Africa use it. The SEC would take a very strong stance on this. There are two approaches to stablecoins. One is to share profits with holders, which some stablecoins are doing, but they again face risks with the SEC. The second is to retain the accumulated value starting with one dollar. The token will appreciate in value, and it won't be worth one dollar anymore. Some people have tried to do this, but the problem is the user experience is terrible. Unfortunately, people are used to thinking in dollars, and you have to constantly do math in your head. I thought there was a better way. We created this product called Alloy. Alloy essentially mints Alloy using Tether Gold, a gold-backed stablecoin, as collateral. You can go long gold, which technically means you're short the dollar. Decentralized lending platforms for cryptocurrencies use Bitcoin and Ethereum as collateral to lend dollars. We can do the same thing with gold by putting Tether Gold into a smart contract. You own that gold, lock it up, and borrow against it at 80% collateralization. This way you have a dollar-denominated value that you can use in your daily life, but you're still long gold. You mentioned that the dollar has actually depreciated by 99% since 1913. That's why we came up with a product that allows you to both go long gold and borrow digital dollars to counter this. Of course, if the value of the collateral drops, there's a risk of liquidation. Emerging markets love USDT. Laffer: I hear you describing two markets. One is the African market, where people are willing to use dollar-denominated stablecoins; the other is the developed world market, where we don't need the dollar. Paolo Ardoino: While the dollar isn't perfect, and it can't compare to Bitcoin or gold, it's good enough for people in places like Turkey, Argentina, Brazil, Africa, Nigeria, all of Africa, and Southeast Asia. If you're a father in a Turkish family, working from January to December, and ending the year poorer than you were at the beginning, I've spoken to many people in Turkey, even in the government, who are thrilled with USDT because their inflation rate was 50% last year and 70% the year before. That's why a digital dollar would still have a huge impact on these people. Bitcoin is better, gold is better, but even just owning dollars is an investment for them. If I remember correctly, the number of individuals using USDT as a savings account has peaked. But we're starting to see a shift, primarily driven by commodity traders. Commodity traders are realizing that stablecoins are the best way to trade commodities. If you have a ship somewhere in the Middle East, waiting to load some crude oil and waiting for a wire transfer to clear, using a stablecoin can significantly improve capital efficiency for these commodity trading firms. This is what we're seeing today. Tether announced in October or November 2024 that we would begin facilitating some of these transactions, and now there's tremendous demand for USDT from commodity traders. Why? Because if you have a stablecoin, you can potentially send it to somewhere in Africa, where you can use it to pay salaries, buy houses, or buy equipment. This is why all commodity traders prefer using USDT because on the sell side, typically in emerging markets, USDT is essentially king. Developed countries need new utility from stablecoins. Paolo Ardoino: USDT is the perfect product for all emerging markets. It will bring huge changes to them. For example, Nigeria's financial system is only 10% efficient, and stablecoins can bring it to 50%. The US financial system is 90% efficient, and stablecoins will only bring it to 95%. I've been very public and outspoken about the lack of need for dollar stablecoins in Europe and the US. In the US, perhaps only a small percentage of people are unbanked. Virtually everyone has a credit card, debit card, bank account, Cash App, and so on. So we need to create something different to bring new utility to users in developed countries. We're going to create a package, not just a product. But I don't want to spoil the story. Laffer: If you don't do this, you're going to be very competitive with other companies. Tether issues USDT, which pays no interest, while holding interest-paying Treasury bonds, which gives you a very large profit. Paolo Ardoino: I'm very proud of this because a few of us Italians made history by getting the world's most powerful government to sign a law. Tether earned approximately $13.7 billion in profits in 2024, and it's likely to exceed that figure in 2025. So, I understand why everyone is very interested in getting a piece of the action. The Genius Act certainly opens the door for essentially all banks and institutions to issue stablecoins. USDT is just a digital dollar. Woods: This raises the question: our banking system is a fractional reserve system. When dollars leave the banking system and enter stablecoins, they leave the banking system. Does this affect the velocity of U.S. money? What are the economic implications of the migration to stablecoins? You just asked whether competition will push the stablecoin world toward something more like a fractional reserve system? Paolo Ardoino: Stablecoins shouldn't be fractional reserves; they need full reserves to ensure stability. The first part of the word "stablecoin" is "stable," which means they'll remain stable no matter what happens. The cryptocurrency industry has experimented with algorithms to try to guarantee the stability of stablecoins, but the Terra/Luna incident in 2022 didn't end well. People should ask themselves why they use stablecoins. What are stablecoins? People sometimes tell me that Tether can freeze USDT or do something with it. Yes, Tether can. USDT is just a digital dollar, and it's subject to the same AML/KYC requirements that banks are subject to. So if you want an asset that's unstoppable and has no owner, it's Bitcoin. If you want a stablecoin, it means you want dollars, and you want some kind of guarantee that at any given time you can get the exact same amount of dollars back in the stablecoin. So it's really about the use case and utility of stablecoins. Stablecoins aren't like a versatile Swiss Army knife. Woods: When people ask me what the biggest surprise in crypto over the past 10 years has been, my answer is stablecoins. We weren't talking about it back then. I knew Tether existed, but we weren't talking about it, and I didn't understand it back then. Paolo Ardoino: If you'd asked me in 2014 or 2015 what USDT's market cap would be in 10 years, I would have been very bold and said $1 billion, because it was designed to facilitate arbitrage between exchanges. But I could never have predicted the explosive growth that would follow after 2020. We didn't have everything figured out from the start. The success of US dollar stablecoins lies in the dollar itself. Lorenzo: Essentially 99% of the stablecoin market is based on the dollar. Do you think there's room for local currency stablecoins like the yen stablecoin? In which markets might local currencies or local stablecoins make sense? Paolo Ardoino: A stablecoin's success outside its native currency is only as great as its success abroad. If you go outside the US and stop 10,000 people on the street and ask them if they'd rather hold their local currency or the dollar, 9,999 people will say they want the dollar. If you go outside Europe, say to Africa, and ask them if they prefer the euro or their local currency, many will ask, "What is the euro?" So, the success of US dollar stablecoins is because everyone knows what the dollar is; it's on everyone's mind. Everyone outside the United States was born trusting the dollar. The dollar is the best product the United States has ever created. That's why a dollar-denominated stablecoin works. You could certainly issue an Argentine peso stablecoin, and it might work, but people would still sell it for dollars. An Argentine peso stablecoin wouldn't add much utility.
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