Tether (USDT) — the world’s largest stablecoin by market capitalization — has never received any loan from the bankrupt cryptocurrency lender Celsius, according to the chief technology officer.
Paolo Ardoino, CTO at Tether and Bitfinex crypto exchange, took to Twitter on Jan. 31 to announce that Tether has “never borrowed from Celsius.”
The tweet came in response to the Celsius bankruptcy examiner report, which allegedly mistakenly implied that Tether was among Celsius’ borrowers alongside firms like Three Arrows Capital, which borrowed $75 million from the firm.
Released on Jan. 31, the examiner report mentioned that “Celsius’s loans to Tether were twice its credit limit” on page 183.
The report notes that “Tether’s exposure eventually grew to over $2 billion,” which became an issue in late September 2021 as it was described to the risk committee as presenting an “existential risk” to Celsius.
Denying any exposure to troubled Celsius, Ardoino suggested that examiner Shoba Pillay mixed up prepositions in the examiner report, actually meaning “Celsius loans from Tether” instead of “Celsius loans to Tether.”
“Either is a typo or a mis-characterization,” Tether CTO wrote in a Twitter thread started by Financial Times reporter Kadhim Shubber.
Shubber also mentioned that the examiner report is associated with some level of miscomprehension, stating:
“The examiner’s report above describes Celsius having ‘loans’ to Tether, but I think the exposure comes from Celsius having posted collateral in excess of the amounts it borrowed from Tether.”
As previously reported, Celsius allegedly borrowed $1 billion from Tether with Bitcoin (BTC) in 2021, with founder Alex Mashinsky stating that Celsius was paying an interest rate between 5% and 6%. In June 2022, Tether said it liquidated the $900 loan, which came about a month after Celsius halted withdrawals.
Related: Celsius publishes list of users eligible to withdraw majority of assets
The amount of the loan was much bigger than $1 billion, though, according to the latest examiner report. “Celsius had borrowed $1.823 billion of the stablecoin USDT from Tether, posting as collateral $2.612 billion of its assets under management,” examiner Shubber wrote, adding that the collateral amounted to 17% of all Celsius’ assets.
Apart from providing massive loans to Celsius, Tether is known as an early investor in the bankrupt firm. In 2020, Celsius secured a $10 million equity raise from Tether, with CEO Mashinsky highlighting an important endorsement by the firm.
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