Replying to Avatar Nunya Bidness

Balance Sheet Imperialism

Here’s the framework: the U.S. government issues debt in the form of Treasuries. Tether buys that debt, then mints USDT stablecoins backed by those same securities. Those stablecoins are distributed globally, especially into regions with unstable currencies or limited access to dollars. The result? A fast, private back channel for exporting dollar liquidity around the world—without ever touching a bank, the Fed, or the SWIFT network.

This isn't some fringe mutation. Tether now holds more U.S. Treasuries than some major sovereign nations. At this scale, it's not just a stablecoin issuer—it's functioning as a kind of offshore, shadow dollar syndicate, converting U.S. debt production into digital dollars for global consumption.

Traders, businesses, and individuals in dollar-starved regions are using USDT as a substitute for traditional banking access. Every new issuance reinforces demand for U.S. Treasuries, helping finance U.S. deficits while strengthening the dollar’s role in international markets with almost no one

realizing it's actually U.S. Dollars they are using.

It’s a synthetic version of the U.S. dollar, circulating outside of U.S. jurisdiction, but still backed by U.S. debt.

U.S. Treasury Issues Debt

Tether Purchases Treasuries

Tether Mints USDT Stablecoins Against Treasuries

Global Distribution of USDT

Increased Demand for USDT

Tether Acquires More Treasuries

U.S. Treasury Issues More Debt

Rinse and Repeat

Whether this is sustainable or desirable is another conversation. But one thing is clear: Tether is playing a strategic role in extending the lifespan of the dollar itself. And it's going to work!

The real question becomes: What happens when (not if) Tether stops buying Treasuries and backs the entirety of already issued Tether with Bitcoin (and also, possibly, gold)?

I suspect that an agreement was reached where they can only back their token with treasuries.

It doesn't stop them acquiring Bitcoin with the coupon they get from the treasuries.

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Discussion

They can back with other stuff but this whole thing is morphing into what I presented here. Still, they will be buying bitcoin. That's for sure but in the meantime (10-25 years) they are going to export US Dept the likes of which no economist can fathom.

I like that it makes it easier for people to swap in & out of Bitcoin.

It makes accepting Bitcoin more attractive.

It's gotta be better than a CBDC right?

Brilliant discussion. If I may, I believe that CBDCs and Tether have the same functionalities in theory, but, the CBDCs being local have the potential to actually do some damage to the local population (eyes on the ground).

In contrast, I doubt that the USA agencies monitoring Tether give two shits about politicians, journalis, or other people of interest in other countries, nor can they (the world being big).

I’m not at all sure. Exporting the amount of debt I foresee is going to make really poor countries even poorer.

The whole fiat system is extractive.

Those poor countries are probably already deep in dollar denominated debt. Their citizens are already pretty screwed.

Individuals accessing a better fiat is probably a good thing for them, particularly if they can swap it out for Bitcoin easily.