A panic across the crypto market early Thursday morning in Europe put the stablecoin tether (USDT)’s US dollar peg under pressure, with the token trading as low as USD 0.91 on some exchanges. The crash has led some to wonder why arbitrage traders don’t seem to want “free money.”
At the time of writing (08:50 UTC), USDT had already trimmed most of its losses, although it still remained significantly lower than its peg. On Coinbase, the stablecoin traded for USD 0.983 and on Kraken for 0.982.
Daily chart of USDT/USD on Coinbase:
At its lowest, the stablecoin touched USD 0.91 at around 07:20 UTC on Bitstamp, 9% below its peg.
5-minute chart of USDT/USD on Bitstamp:
The pressure on tether’s peg led to a flurry of speculation in the crypto community about what was going on.
“Call it FUD if you want, but this sustained peg deviation really is unusual. It normally snaps back quite quickly,” wrote one popular user, while several others speculated whether the stablecoin was under some sort of economic attack.
Hinting in the same direction, Samson Mow, the former chief strategy officer at Bitcoin (BTC) development firm Blockstream, said that people should “know when players are just trying to induce panic.”
“USDT isn’t going to lose its peg,” Mow told his more than 200,000 followers.
The drama also led Tether’s chief technology officer Paolo Ardoino to publicly remind people that USDT can be redeemed for USD via Tether’s website.
And given that each USDT can relatively easily be redeemed for USD 1, some users are wondering why USDT was then trading for as low as USD 0.945 on the crypto exchange FTX, asking if the exchange's parent company Alameda “doesn’t want free money?”
It is well known that the crypto trading firm Alameda Research is a
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