Tether gains Deloitte approval for US stablecoin, but USDT scrutiny persists


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Tether has landed a Big Four accounting firm’s name on a reserve report tied to its US strategy.

On Feb. 27, Deloitte issued an independent accountant’s report on Anchorage Digital Bank’s “USAT Reserve Report,” an attestation covering USAT, a US dollar token issued by Anchorage Digital Bank, National Association, in collaboration with Tether.

The development is notable because Tether has long faced questions about the quality, transparency, and verification of reserves backing its tokens. But the Deloitte work does not cover USDT, Tether’s flagship stablecoin, and the largest dollar-pegged token in the market.

This distinction is central to how the development should be understood.

USAT is a small, federally regulated token issued through an Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC)-regulated national trust bank. USDT is the much larger token that serves as core trading infrastructure across crypto exchanges, offshore venues, and dollar-based trading pairs worldwide.

That means the Deloitte-linked milestone gives Tether a recognizable accounting name attached to a regulated US stablecoin product, but it does not resolve the much broader questions surrounding USDT.

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What Deloitte reviewed

The Deloitte report is narrower than a full corporate audit, and the language in the filing makes that clear.

According to the document, Deloitte issued an Independent Accountant’s Report on Anchorage Digital Bank’s USAT Reserve Report. The engagement did not seek to determine whether Anchorage complied with federal, state, or local laws or satisfied contractual obligations to customers.

Deloitte also said it did not evaluate the design’s suitability or the operating effectiveness of controls.

In effect, the accounting firm examined a reserve report at a specific point in time rather than the stablecoin business’s full legal, operational, or financial condition.

As of Jan. 31, 2026, Anchorage reported $17.6 million in reserve assets against $17.5 million in USAT redeemable tokens outstanding, resulting in a surplus of $103,325.

USAT Reserve
Tether’s USAT Reserves (Source: Anchorage Digital)

The reserve composition was straightforward: $3,654,716 in cash and $13,950,000 in reverse repurchase agreements collateralized by US Treasury securities.

The report said those assets were held in segregated fiduciary trust accounts for the benefit of token holders.

That structure is part of the message Anchorage appears to be sending. The bank has described USAT as a dollar-backed stablecoin for the US market under the post-GENIUS Act framework, with the bank overseeing issuance, reserve management, compliance, and risk controls.

In practical terms, that gives Tether exposure to an onshore, federally supervised stablecoin product with a simpler reserve design than the portfolio behind USDT.

For Tether, that matters politically and commercially. A US-regulated token tied to the company can now point to a report from Deloitte, even if Tether’s main stablecoin still does not have the full audit critics have long demanded.

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Why USDT still matters more

Even so, market attention remains centered on USDT because it is the token that matters most for trading, liquidity, and systemic importance in crypto markets.

USDT’s reserves have never been subject to a full audit. That has remained a persistent concern for investors, regulators, and market observers, especially because the token has become deeply embedded in global crypto market plumbing.

It is also the stablecoin most often scrutinized when questions arise about illicit finance, offshore market structure, or the resilience of stablecoin reserves under stress.

Tether’s latest published Financial Figures and Reserves Report, prepared with assurance work under ISAE 3000 Revised by BDO and dated Dec. 31, 2025, showed $192.878 billion in total assets against $186.540 billion in total liabilities, leaving $6.338 billion in equity.

That equity cushion is far larger in nominal terms than the modest surplus reported for USAT. But it is attached to a significantly larger and more complex reserve book.

According to BDO’s report, Tether’s reserves were concentrated in US Treasury bills and reverse repurchase agreements, but they also included $17.45 billion in precious metals, $8.43 billion in Bitcoin, $2.76 billion in other investments, and $17.04 billion in secured loans.

Tether's USDT ReservesTether's USDT Reserves
Tether’s USDT Reserves (Source: Tether)

That portfolio differs from the narrow cash-and-Treasurys model policymakers increasingly favor for payment stablecoins.

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