US Lawmakers Red Flag Tether’s Parent Firm for Business With Federal Officials
On Wednesday, November 8, U.S. legislators presented a bill that prohibits federal government officials from engaging in business with iFinex, the parent company of USDT stablecoin issuer Tether. The development comes as the US government announces a crackdown against Chinese blockchain firms.
Tether, China and US Lawmakers
As per reports earlier this year, Tether has been having exposure to Chinese securities and other Chinese firms. New York’s Attorney General has made public documents that disclose Tether Holdings Ltd., the issuer of the world’s largest stablecoin, USDT, previously held securities from Chinese companies in its reserves. This revelation follows years of inquiry and concern about the assets supporting Tether’s stablecoin.
Tether’s reserves encompassed substantial short-term loans to Chinese firms and a significant loan to the cryptocurrency platform Celsius Network. Tether had previously denied any involvement with the debt of China’s troubled Evergrande Group but had not revealed its holdings of other Chinese securities.
Further, the US SEC is also keeping a close watch on Tether’s operations. In September, a report suggested that the company began offering USDT stablecoin loans to customers secretly a year after Tether Holdings pledged to cease providing secured loans.
The latest move underscores Washington’s growing concerns about Chinese connections within the cryptocurrency sector, as stated by the bill’s sponsors.
Cracking Down on Chinese Blockchain Firms
US lawmakers have proposed a law that would prohibit government officials from engaging in transactions with Chinese cryptocurrency firms and prohibit government employees from using Chinese blockchain networks, which support cryptocurrency trading platforms.
Chinese companies such as The Spartan Network, The Conflux Network, and Red Date Technology, which are involved in BSN projects and CBDc Digital Yuan, would be affected by this legislation.
In a statement on Wednesday, the lawmakers said that the aim of this latest legislation is to ensure the nation’s “foreign adversaries … do not have a backdoor to access critical national security intelligence and Americans’ private information”.
In the coming decade, blockchain technology is likely to store sensitive private data for every American, making China’s significant investment in this infrastructure a major concern for national security and data privacy, the lawmakers noted.
- Balancer Hack: $129M in Crypto Assets Stolen, Berachain Validators Halt Chain for Hard Fork
- Breaking: Invesco Galaxy Amends Solana ETF to Disclose Fees, Other Key Details
- Bitcoin Slumps Below $108K, Will Crypto Market Crash on Hindenburg Omen Jitters?
- Nate Geraci Says Spot XRP ETF Launch Soon, Why It’s Big News for Ripple?
- Trader Predicts Dogecoin November Breakout as Murad’s Memecoin Holdings Drop 59% to $27.5 Million
- Ethereum Price As Stablecoin Volume Hits ATH of $2.82T Despite Struggling Crypto Market- Is a Recovery In Sight?
- XRP Price Forecast: Spot ETF Approval Could Propel Token to $3.
- Solana Price Outlook as Solana Whale Goes All-In With $26M Long Position Amid Market Crash– Is a Comeback Ahead?
- ZKsync Price Surges 90% on Vitalik’s Comments: What’s Next?
- $100K or $125K? Crypto Analysts Split on Bitcoin Price Prediction Despite U.S.–China Trade Deal
- Pi Coin Price Prediction After AI Investment Announcement – Is a Bull Run Ahead?
MEXC





