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S&P Global Ratings has downgraded Tether's
stablecoin to "weak" from "constrained," marking the lowest score on its stablecoin stability scale, due to heightened exposure to high-risk assets such as and gold in its reserves . The ratings agency cited concerns that Bitcoin, now accounting for 5.6% of USDT's reserves, exceeds the 3.9% overcollateralization margin, leaving the stablecoin vulnerable to undercollateralization if Bitcoin's value declines . Tether's gold holdings, which reached $12.9 billion by Q3 2025, also contributed to the downgrade, as S&P highlighted the lack of regulatory clarity and transparency around these non-traditional reserve assets . The firm warned that a combination of falling Bitcoin and gold prices could erode the reserves' coverage ratio, undermining USDT's 1:1 peg to the U.S. dollar .Tether's reserve composition has evolved significantly, with high-risk assets now constituting 24% of its holdings as of September 2025, up from 17% a year earlier. These include secured loans, corporate bonds, and physical gold, alongside Bitcoin
. S&P emphasized structural weaknesses, such as limited transparency on reserve management, no asset segregation to protect users in case of insolvency, and unclear credit quality of custodians and counterparties . The agency also noted that the U.S. GENIUS Act, which mandates stablecoins be fully backed by low-risk assets like Treasuries, could further pressure Tether's compliance posture, given its 8% allocation to secured loans .Tether CEO Paolo Ardoino has fiercely rejected the downgrade, calling it a product of "traditional finance's loathing" for a model he claims operates independently of "a broken financial system." In a public rebuttal, Ardoino argued that USDT's performance-maintaining its dollar peg despite market volatility-proves its resilience and that the agency's methodology is outdated
. He also framed Tether's reserve strategy as a deliberate shift toward overcapitalization, asserting the company holds "no toxic assets" and has generated over $10 billion in net profit through Q3 2025 .The downgrade highlights broader tensions in the stablecoin market. While USDT remains the largest stablecoin with a $184 billion market cap, its reliance on non-traditional reserves contrasts with competitors like
, which emphasize regulatory compliance . Tether's aggressive gold accumulation-surpassing the reserves of nations like Hungary and Greece-reflects a strategic pivot to diversify against fiat devaluation and macroeconomic uncertainty . However, this approach risks alienating regulators and investors wary of opaque asset backing, particularly as global scrutiny of stablecoins intensifies .Analysts warn that S&P's downgrade could amplify skepticism toward privately managed stablecoin reserves, especially as the industry grapples with balancing innovation and transparency. For
, the challenge will be navigating a regulatory landscape increasingly hostile to non-compliant assets while defending its market dominance in a sector where trust is paramount .Quickly understand the history and background of various well-known coins

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