Tether's newly launched American stablecoin has cleared its first reserve check — and for the first time, a Big Four auditor has put its name on a Tether-linked product.
Key Takeaways
Tether's new US stablecoin passed its first independent reserve check.
A Big Four firm verified it — but only this product, not Tether overall.
It's competing with USDC, but still tiny in comparison.
Deloitte signed off on the reserve report for USAT, a dollar-pegged token launched in late January 2026 as Tether's regulated play for the U.S. market. The attestation, covering data as of January 31, 2026, confirmed the coin is fully backed — and then some.
The Numbers
Total reserves came in at $17,604,716 against a circulating supply of 17,501,391 USAT tokens, leaving a surplus of roughly $103,325 — a backing ratio of about 100.57%.
The reserve breakdown: $3,654,716 held in cash across bank and brokerage accounts, with the remaining $13,950,000 parked in reverse repurchase agreements collateralized by U.S. Treasury securities.
The token's market cap has since climbed to close to $20 million, according to reports, as listings on U.S.-based exchanges including Kraken and OKX have driven early adoption.
Structure and Oversight
USAT was built from the ground up as a federally compliant alternative to Tether's global USDT. Anchorage Digital Bank — one of the few federally chartered digital asset banks in the country — serves as the issuer. Cantor Fitzgerald, a major bond dealer, manages and custodies the reserve assets.
The stablecoin was designed to align with the GENIUS Act, federal stablecoin legislation enacted in 2025. Bo Hines, a former White House crypto official, leads the operation.
Attestation vs. Audit
Worth being precise about what Deloitte's involvement actually means. This is a third-party attestation — a point-in-time snapshot of reserve balances — not a full financial audit of Tether's broader business. The distinction matters, and critics of the company have consistently pushed for the latter.
Tether's transparency record has long been a liability. The company paid a $41 million fine in 2021 after regulators found it had misrepresented what was actually backing USDT. Years of pressure from institutional players, regulators, and competitors followed.
The Deloitte engagement is a meaningful step, but it is narrow in scope. It does not examine the full breadth of Tether's global operations or confirm anything beyond this single product's reserve position at a single point in time.
Market Context
USAT is positioned squarely as a competitor to Circle's USDC, which has long dominated the U.S. institutional stablecoin market. By anchoring the product in federal compliance infrastructure — a chartered bank as issuer, a primary dealer as custodian, and Big Four attestation — Tether is making a clear bid for the institutional business it has struggled to capture with USDT.
Whether the market treats this as a genuine transparency upgrade or a carefully constructed image correction effort remains to be seen. The $20 million market cap, while growing, is a rounding error compared to USDT's position in global markets.
For now, the report stands as the most verifiable documentation Tether has produced for any of its products — and that, in this industry, counts for something.