Tether Hires Big Four Auditor, USDT Enters First Attestation Phase
Original Title: KPMG Just Ended the Tether Debate. Here's Why That Changes Everything.
Original Authors: Douglas C Borthwick, Ali Davoudi, Phil Larmon, Old men, New Money
Translation: Peggy, BlockBeats
Editor's Note: For the past nine years, the controversy surrounding USDT has almost never stopped. Whether the reserve is real, the structure is transparent, and the risks are underestimated. However, these discussions have always remained at the "unverifiable" level, and the market could only oscillate between trust and suspicion without providing a clear answer.
This time, Tether's introduction of KPMG for an audit changes that. It does not equate to endorsing Tether, nor does it mean the risks have disappeared, but for the first time, Tether has been brought into an auditable financial framework.
The market does not build trust based on narratives but will reprice based on verifiability. For institutions, an audit opinion from KPMG is far more significant than any regulatory bill still in play; it provides not a commitment but a basis for judgment.
Whether stablecoins can transition from controversial assets to verifiable, configurable financial infrastructure, the answer will be given by the market's response going forward.
Below is the original text:
Tether Introduces Big Four Audit for the First Time
Tether has engaged KPMG to conduct a comprehensive financial audit of its USDT reserves. With a $127 billion asset scale, almost a decade of regulatory scrutiny, exchange delistings, settlement fines, and continuous questioning of "systemic risk," all will now be laid out on the ledger.
Note: KPMG is one of the global "Big Four" accounting firms. Their audit results are recognized by banks, funds, regulators—once they sign, it is equivalent to entering the "institutional trust system."
This is not a rumor but a confirmed fact. If you understand the significance of the "Big Four audit" in institutional finance, you will realize that this is the most important leap in stablecoin credibility since Circle's listing.
Background: Tether has also previously released "proofs" (attestations), such as quarterly reserve disclosures and third-party audit reports.
But that's not an audit. Assurance can only tell you "what is" at a specific point in time; an audit will trace how those assets "came to be," whether internal controls are effective, and if financial statements are reliable over a period of time. The difference between the two is like a photo versus an X-ray.
KPMG never easily takes on clients, let alone a client burdened with significant regulatory and political baggage. If they are willing to provide an opinion on Tether's reserves, it means their accounts can withstand scrutiny under the GAAP framework; it also means Tether itself has enough confidence to undergo an almost "forensic-level" comprehensive review. This is not the behavior one would expect from a company engaged in a fractional reserve game.
Why This Is More Important Than Any Legislation
The U.S. Congress is still discussing the "CLARITY Act." The latest draft prohibits stablecoin issuers from earning interest on user balances, reducing retail attractiveness but clearing the way for institutional adoption. Banks win, the industry gets a framework, and retail loses incentives.
But Washington overlooks one thing: the market will not wait for regulatory approval to decide what is "trustworthy." Institutions look at audited financial statements, not at the political maneuvering in the legislative process. An audit opinion from KPMG can more directly enhance the legitimacy of stablecoins than a bill that takes two years to pass and another year to implement.
Thirty years of market experience have repeatedly validated the same rule: capital flows can prove the subject of a balance sheet, not the promise of the subject. From 1990s emerging market sovereign debt to the 2008 Iceland bank bonds to the cyclical fluctuations of Latin American exchange rates, the rule has remained unchanged. Tether is transitioning from being "a class under question" to "a verified class."
Industry Structure Ripple Effects
The spillover effect of this event is very direct: if KPMG ultimately issues an unqualified audit opinion, all stablecoin issuers without Big Four audits will instantly face a "credibility gap."
Circle already has audit endorsement, and so does Paxos. But Tether, the longest-standing and most controversial participant in the industry, once it obtains institutional-grade certification, will reshape the entire market structure.
The Market Has Consistently Misjudged Tether
The market has repeatedly predicted that Tether would collapse under regulatory pressure or be replaced by more "compliant" competitors—2018, 2020, 2022, 2024, the narrative keeps appearing, but it has never materialized.
The reason is that Tether has solved the core issue faced by all stablecoin issuers: liquidity.
It covers all markets, all jurisdictions, all exchanges, operating 24/7. You can use USDT directly in Lagos, Lahore, Lima without access to the U.S. banking system. This is not a flaw but the most essential value proposition for the 90% of the world unable to access the Circle banking network.
Wall Street has been waiting for regulators to "kill" Tether, but the reality is that Tether is leveraging regulation to counteract the "unauditable" narrative.
What This Means for You
If you hold stablecoins, this will change your risk assessment framework. A Tether audited by Moore Cayman is no longer the same class of asset as an unaudited tool. Counterparty risk will not disappear but will be repriced. Institutions that previously avoided USDT will reassess its allocation value; exchanges that were delisted due to regulatory pressure will also need to explain why an audited asset is still "too risky."
If you are building crypto products, this is more like an infrastructure moment. Stablecoins are no longer just speculative tools but are becoming "settlement rails." Like SWIFT in the 1980s became the cross-border payment standard, stablecoins are gradually becoming the settlement standard of the digital age. The audit of Tether is a sign of its institutionalization.
If you come from traditional finance, this is more like a "moment of reckoning": when the "Big Four" start auditing an asset class that regulators have long seen as unsafe, it means decision-makers now believe the risk is manageable. It is not an ideological shift but the outcome of actuarial logic.
What to Look for Next
First is the audit result itself. KPMG's opinion will either confirm the reserves or raise concerns. If it is the former, institutional adoption will significantly accelerate—pensions, corporate treasuries, payment institutions will gain access to the "compliance blanket."
If the audit reveals major issues or issues a disclaimer, it will be a different path. However, Tether is unlikely to proactively bring in the Big Four in a situation where the outcome is unpredictable, which is a "confidence bet" in itself.
Also, keep an eye on Circle's stock price. ARK Invest increased its position by $24 million after a 20% drop in its stock price, with Cathie Wood believing that the stablecoin market is expanding, not imploding. If Tether's audit validates the entire asset class, Circle will also benefit, rising tide lifting all boats.
That 'never-been-hacked' thing has finally received the certification it should never have received. And Wall Street, once again, was the last to realize the shift had occurred.
You may also like

Cryptocurrency CEXs are flocking to sell US stocks, and traditional brokerages are facing an "uninvited guest."

Will the SpaceX IPO Hurt Bitcoin? Here's What Traders Are Watching

Foreign selling in the South Korean stock market accelerates, with cumulative net sales reportedly reaching $75 billion this year
On June 9, The Kobeissi Letter, citing Goldman Sachs data, reported that global investors are selling South Korean stocks at an unusually rapid pace. In the latest trading session, foreign investors sold about $801 million worth of Kospi constituent stocks again; total foreign outflows last week reached about $10 billion, and the market has been in net foreign selling on nearly every trading day over the past month. According to the data cited in the report, foreign investors have sold about $75 billion worth of South Korean stocks so far this year. Meanwhile, South Korean retail and institutional investors together recorded roughly $69 billion in net buying over the same period, suggesting that the market’s main buying support has come from domestic capital rather than returning overseas funds. The information currently disclosed still mainly comes from The Kobeissi Letter’s retelling and Goldman Sachs data summaries, while public details on the statistical period and the specific definition of “selling” remain relatively limited.

Fortune Warns of Strategy’s Financing Structure Risks as Bitcoin Premium Narrows
Fortune warned that Strategy’s Bitcoin treasury model faces growing financing risks as MSTR’s net asset premium narrows and preferred stock dividend pressure increases.

Ferrari Challenge Le Mans: Carl Moon to Dominate in WEEX Livery

Sahara AI Responds to SAHARA’s Sharp Drop: No Contract or Product Security Issues Found, Internal Investigation Underway
Sahara AI responded to SAHARA’s 60% price drop, saying no token contract or product security issues have been found and an internal investigation is underway.

WEEX Deposit/Withdrawal Dynamic Island: Your Asset Status, Always in Sight

Scaling Crypto Derivatives: The Digital Asset Infrastructure Behind High-Volume Trading
In the fast-moving digital asset ecosystem, derivatives platforms face an extreme architectural test. High-leverage futures markets demand more than just standard security—they require absolute operational precision, zero-latency matching engines, and ironclad structural scalability, all while navigating intense market volatility.
As global platforms scale to meet these demands, the industry is shifting away from rigid, monolithic setups toward a more agile, "decoupled" infrastructure philosophy.
The Blueprint for High-Volume Copy TradingFor elite global exchanges like WEEX (founded in 2018), this architectural choice becomes critical when scaling high-volume retail features like social copy trading. When thousands of users automatically mirror the real-time strategies of elite traders simultaneously, it triggers sudden, monumental spikes in concurrent transactional volume.
To prevent execution latency or settlement bottlenecks during these peak volatility events, a platform's primary engine must remain entirely dedicated to risk management, copy-trade synchronization, and order matching.
The Architectural Rule: New-generation platforms must separate front-end user execution engines from heavy backend infrastructural overhead to eliminate operational friction.
By separating these layers, platforms can maintain complete sovereignty over their trading environments and user experiences while strategically aligning with institutional-grade infrastructure ecosystems. This strategic framework allows modern exchanges to leverage advanced Digital Asset Custody infrastructure such as Cobo’s behind the scenes, ensuring that backend wallet management scales elastically alongside trading spikes.
Capitalizing on Market Momentum and 400× LeverageIn a derivatives arena where platforms offer up to 400× leverage on perpetual contracts, capital efficiency and market agility are core business metrics. To capture market momentum, an exchange needs the ability to rapidly expand its asset offerings, supporting everything from legacy crypto assets to sudden, trending altcoins across a massive library of trading pairs.
Adopting a flexible, scalable Wallet-as-a-Service (WaaS) solution such as Cobo’s could completely rewrite the development timeline for high-growth exchanges. Instead of spending months of engineering capital building out custom backend wallet architectures for every new blockchain network, platforms can deploy localized infrastructure in days.
This agility allows platforms to instantly scale their listings to over a thousand trading pairs without compromising security or delaying time-to-market. It mirrors the exact operational advantages seen during high-velocity market events, similar to how advanced wallet infrastructure empowers platforms during sudden asset surges; allowing exchanges to pass that speed and liquidity directly to their global user base.
A Mature Foundation for GrowthThe synergy between trusted infrastructure ecosystems and global trading platforms represents the natural evolution of a maturing crypto market. As WEEX continues to scale its global spot and derivatives offerings for over 6 million users, adopting robust backend paradigms proves that platforms no longer have to compromise between cutting-edge trading velocity and uncompromised structural security.

Morning Report | BitMine increased its holdings by 126,971 ETH last week; trader Eugene announced his exit from the crypto market

Wang Chuan: How can one not feel anxious after the neighbor Old Wang made thirty times profit by investing in storage stocks? (Seven) - A quarter-century cycle

Get Paid to Onboard? Try WEEX’s New Homepage with Rewards for Registration, Deposit & Trade

WEEX Custom Layout: Build Your Perfect Trading Workspace in Seconds

See “Buy Walls” & “Sell Walls” Instantly: WEEX Launches the Depth Chart for Smarter Trades

What Is Quick Trade on WEEX? 2 Ways WEEX Ends Chart-Panel Jumping

Morning News | Five major virtual asset platforms in South Korea have experienced 57 incidents of hacking and system failures in six years; Grayscale submits registration application for Canton ETF

Should we escape the peak? The principle of the tail-end market in the stock market

RootData: May 2026 Cryptocurrency Exchange Transparency Research Report

Founder of Baixing.com: My Experience with Claude Code in Fourteen Points
Cryptocurrency CEXs are flocking to sell US stocks, and traditional brokerages are facing an "uninvited guest."
Will the SpaceX IPO Hurt Bitcoin? Here's What Traders Are Watching
Foreign selling in the South Korean stock market accelerates, with cumulative net sales reportedly reaching $75 billion this year
On June 9, The Kobeissi Letter, citing Goldman Sachs data, reported that global investors are selling South Korean stocks at an unusually rapid pace. In the latest trading session, foreign investors sold about $801 million worth of Kospi constituent stocks again; total foreign outflows last week reached about $10 billion, and the market has been in net foreign selling on nearly every trading day over the past month. According to the data cited in the report, foreign investors have sold about $75 billion worth of South Korean stocks so far this year. Meanwhile, South Korean retail and institutional investors together recorded roughly $69 billion in net buying over the same period, suggesting that the market’s main buying support has come from domestic capital rather than returning overseas funds. The information currently disclosed still mainly comes from The Kobeissi Letter’s retelling and Goldman Sachs data summaries, while public details on the statistical period and the specific definition of “selling” remain relatively limited.
Fortune Warns of Strategy’s Financing Structure Risks as Bitcoin Premium Narrows
Fortune warned that Strategy’s Bitcoin treasury model faces growing financing risks as MSTR’s net asset premium narrows and preferred stock dividend pressure increases.
Ferrari Challenge Le Mans: Carl Moon to Dominate in WEEX Livery
Sahara AI Responds to SAHARA’s Sharp Drop: No Contract or Product Security Issues Found, Internal Investigation Underway
Sahara AI responded to SAHARA’s 60% price drop, saying no token contract or product security issues have been found and an internal investigation is underway.
