Follow Slashdot blog updates by subscribing to our blog RSS feed

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
Bitcoin The Almighty Buck

A $4 Billion Hedge Fund Is Shorting Tether's Stablecoin (decrypt.co) 41

Fir Tree Capital Management, a $4 billion hedge fund, is shorting Tether as the largest stablecoin in crypto faces down scrutiny from regulators. Decrypt reports: According to clients of the firm and reported by Bloomberg, Fir Tree has constructed a way to short Tether in an "asymmetric trade." In other words, the risk is minimized and the potential to generate profit -- the firm's clients reportedly say -- remains high. The hedge fund is also reportedly betting that its decision could generate a profit within 12 months. The firm's concerns center around the stablecoin provider's $24 billion in high-yield commercial paper, which the firm also believes is linked to Chinese real estate developers.

Chinese real estate has been facing down a debt of its own, led by China Evergrande Group, whose liabilities exceeded $300 billion in December 2021, when it missed a debt payment deadline. While Tether -- the company -- says it does not own any commercial paper linked to Evergrande, Bloomberg reports that Fir Tree expects some of the commercial paper Tether does own will lose value. Investors reportedly said this could cause a potentially large drop in the reserves held by Tether.
Speaking to The Block last month on the financial risks posed by stablecoins, U.S. Congressman Warren Davidson called Tether "a time bomb." He added: "There isn't transparency or disclosure there. They acknowledge that they have commercial paper, but they don't disclose what exactly that is. That's where I think that a framework that compels disclosure does provide investor protection."
This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

A $4 Billion Hedge Fund Is Shorting Tether's Stablecoin

Comments Filter:
  • Blah blah blah. So much talk for so much nothing. I may have to be done with Slashdot for a while. Just too much of this non-news pollution.

    • This is actually somewhat interesting, although in no way related to the fact of it being crypto related.

      If someone has put their reserves into Evergrande, well, they are fucked. Evergrande as it currently stands is nothing but a dumping ground for the toxic portion of Chinese real estate investment, meant to load the sludge off to fools on the international market for the losses to be swallowed outside of the country. That the crypto crowd would be oblivious to such matters should be of no surprise to any

    • Blah blah blah. So much talk for so much nothing. I may have to be done with Slashdot for a while. Just too much of this non-news pollution.

      I just went long some popcorn!

  • news for nerds?
  • Fuck. Fuck. Fuck.

    This is not good. We do *not* want Wall Street gambling on Crypto. We need to stop this. Right now. In 2008 they gambled on houses and it cost you and me trillions. The Millennials _still_ haven't recovered from it.

    Imagine how bad the crash will be when the thing backing all their loans and securities is pretend dollars on windows PCs. How many layoffs, how many hours of unpaid overtime for the ones _not_ laid off, how much of our taxpayer dollars will go to "too big to fail" compan
    • We do *not* want Wall Street gambling on Crypto.

      That's for everyone else to do.

    • Nobody is holding you hostage, move your crypto to something not "backed" by tether. Or maybe the real reason you're pissed is because the cat is coming out of the bag...
      • Wall Street holds us all hostage. If they fail they have set themselves up such that they are failure would cause a total economic collapse. We all lose our jobs and they would be chaos, War and likely Mass starvation. That's what too big to fail means. It means we've let a handful of individuals and their privately run companies put themselves in a situation or if we let them fail everything around us collapses. Unless you're somehow a subsistence farmer able to post on slash Dot you are affected by this t
        • rsilvergun, I read a lot of your posts and this thread here really feels like you're sipping something out of a bottle tonight and letting loose the conspiracy cougar.

          But, I ain't about to argue. Wall Street has positioned themselves such that not only are they too big to fail - but any idiot idea they ever think of is also too big to fail, no matter the outcome. So... cheers?

    • by jemmyw ( 624065 )

      Being able to bet on things being overvalued isn't such a bad thing. The 2008 crash was caused by over valuation which itself was caused by bad data, the rating of the debtors, which was created nefariously specifically to increase the value of the packaged loans. If someone had noticed and shorted sooner perhaps the crash could have been avoided. Or you know, if it was properly regulated.

      Now here is a similar situation, hopefully one we're not all quite so exposed to. Lack of transparency, suspicious data,

      • One odd/interesting thing is that the people who raised the red flags about subprime borrowers ended up being wrong about who was the problem. Subprime borrowers didn't actually end up defaulting at high rates. The people who defaulted at high rates were prime borrowers who had taken out mortgages for investment properties. (I collected a few links and studies on the topic here. [metafilter.com])

        ...which seems to suggest that we would've been better off with more loans to subprime borrowers buying a first house, and le

        • The economists in the popular press weren't going to be allowed to talk about the extremely high risk. Furthermore the goal of the narrative after the 2008 crash was to blame individual consumers for buying homes they couldn't afford. The goal is always to blame individual consumers instead of investors, especially institutional investors. We do the same thing with the welfare Queen narrative at austerity politics in general. It's just more getting people to punch down and ignore the people who are really r
      • Houses have a value because you can live in them. Crypto has absolutely no value. It is just an expense in the form of the hardware electricity and water used to produce the bits and bytes. Because of that if we have a bubble based on crypto when that bubble bursts unlike in 2008 when Banks could at least seize the houses and recover some of the lost profits there will be absolutely no profits to be recovered and there'll be no floor and no bottom to that market crash. It'll make Great depression look like
        • by jemmyw ( 624065 )
          Well I agree but that means what? We should allow the bubble to continue existing forever? Shorting might be this bubble's prick, lance that boil before it gets too big.
    • Is that what you want? And if so, what for?

      Some people stand to profit when a market crashes. If the housing bubble pops, don't tell me you're not gonna call up a Realtor and ask if they can find some sweet pre-foreclosure deals.

      Speaking of how a down market can be a good thing, do you remember not too long ago when no one was buying oil because everything was on Covid lockdown? Damn, I miss those nearly empty roads and cheap gas.

    • Based on the contents of the article, this "short" is nothing but an indirect way to short Chinese real-estate. Which probably won't work anyway. If it takes ~12 months for the USDT price to collapse, they won't even make much money thanks to the lending rates on Kraken.

  • Some people will bet on anything, and for a while, they look good. Easy come, easy go. The big problem is regular folks "investing" their hard earned cash, then losing it all, when the bets did not pay off. You can be damn sure the top guys have their profits safely invested, while they play games with their clients' money.

  • Always wondered why Centre.io's USDC got short shrift.

    SMH.

  • by FeelGood314 ( 2516288 ) on Friday March 11, 2022 @09:31PM (#62349707)
    Fir Tree believes Tether is not backed and will eventually drop below $1 and then collapse to near zero. If they are right they make money and they reveal a fraud. This is like the people that shorted Nortel in 20 years ago. They knew the companies financials were bogus and by shorting the stock they did other investors a favour by preventing the stock from rising further in the stupidity that was the dotcom bubble.
    The Tether short is much safer than most. Tether can't rise over $1.01 So you could probably short a billion Tether for less than 10 million a year (for Tether holders getting 1% interest is better than 0% for just holding it). If you guess wrong you lose 10 million, if you get it right you get 990 million. I'll go in for 100k on that risk.
  • by gurps_npc ( 621217 ) on Friday March 11, 2022 @09:56PM (#62349783) Homepage

    Typically they under-preform. Real hedge funds do not even try to beat the market.

    Mainly because they are designed to maintain wealth not create it. Despite the idiots hating on them, they are not some special 'get rich' scheme that wealthy people have outlawed for the common folk.. That is just a fever nightmare of the extremists on the left (note, the extremists on the right call everyone communists, they are not better).

    Instead, hedge funds are designed to ensure that people KEEP their wealth. That is why they so often engage in shorting and other bear strategies. You go to them because you are afraid the market will crash, not to become a millionaire. As they are doing something that is only needed by the wealthy, they do not bother with the additional regulations needed to let poor people invest with them.

    Yes, a few idiots try use hedge funds to make wealth with them. Some Hedge Funds even beat the market. But that is not their intended purpose.

    Look, wealthy people do a ton of evil in the world, but hedge funds betting against the market are not one of them. Call them out for not paying the taxes and fines. Accuse them of treating speeding tickets as the cost of owning a Ferrari rather than punishment. Demand they actually go to jail rather than pay off their victims.

    But stop complaining about Hedge Funds. It just makes you look ignorant.

  • Tether Ltd. has never been forthcoming about their assets. I would be shocked if some hedge fund manager had finally nailed down what Tether Ltd. actually owns, and I would be equally shocked if Tether Ltd. stayed in Chinese real estate long enough to get completely wiped out; besides, Tether Ltd. is notorious for minting for USDT when it's not at all clear that they have any assets backing said USDT at all. There are no market forces tying the actual value of USDT to Tether Ltd.'s holdings. It trades at

"The vast majority of successful major crimes against property are perpetrated by individuals abusing positions of trust." -- Lawrence Dalzell

Working...