Tether $500B Valuation Raise Comes Ahead of Fed Rate Cuts

Tether, the company behind the world’s largest stablecoin USDT, is reportedly in talks to raise up to $20 billion at a potential $500 billion valuation. Bloomberg first reported the discussions, which Tether’s CEO Paolo Ardoino later confirmed, stating the company is “evaluating a raise from a selected group of high-profile investors.” If realized, this would catapult Tether into the same valuation range as Wall Street giants like JPMorgan Chase at ~$600 billion — a staggering leap for a firm born in the crypto trenches.
From $173 Billion Market Cap to $500 Billion Valuation
As of today, Tether’s USDT commands a market capitalization of around $173 billion, cementing its role as the third-largest digital asset after Bitcoin and Ethereum. Moving from $173B to a $500B company valuation implies nearly a 3× multiple on its market footprint, an aggressive figure that reflects investor belief not only in USDT’s dominance but also in Tether’s ability to expand into new frontiers.
Tether is no longer just a stablecoin issuer. The company has announced ventures into AI, commodities, and energy infrastructure, while also preparing to launch a U.S.-focused stablecoin “USAT.” This diversification push is meant to position Tether as a global financial powerhouse, not just a crypto utility.
What This Means for Digital Assets
A confirmed Tether 500 billion valuation would mark the first time a crypto-native company rivals the world’s largest banks. The message to the industry is clear: stablecoins are becoming systemic infrastructure.
For digital assets, this would represent a turning point. Stablecoins already power the majority of global crypto trading and cross-border flows. A valuation on par with JPMorgan signals that the market now sees them as integral to global liquidity and settlements — no longer peripheral tools but central pillars of finance.
Why Raise Capital Now?
On paper, Tether doesn’t need the money. It reported over $13 billion in net profit in 2024, and in the first half of 2025 alone it generated $5.7 billion, with a reserve buffer of more than $5.4 billion.
But the raise is less about necessity and more about timing. Tether’s profit engine is built on its massive holdings of U.S. Treasuries — over $120 billion worth. With yields at 5%, this translates into $6 billion of annual income. Roughly half of Tether’s profit comes directly from Treasury yields.
Forecasting 2025 Profits
The numbers so far:
- Q1 2025 profit: $0.8 billion
- Q2 2025 profit: $4.9 billion
- First half: $5.7 billion
If H2 performs similarly, 2025 net profit should reach $11–12 billion, with potential upside to $13–14 billion if Bitcoin and gold holdings continue to contribute mark-to-market gains. That keeps Tether broadly in line with its record 2024.
The Interest Rate Squeeze
Here’s the looming challenge: on September 17, 2025, the Federal Reserve cut rates by 0.25%, bringing the benchmark down to a range of 4.00%–4.25%. Two more cuts are expected before year-end, potentially dragging yields down from the 5% range toward 2–3% by 2026.
For Tether, that’s existential. Every 1% drop in average Treasury yield shaves off roughly $1.2 billion in annual profit. If rates settle closer to 2–3%, Tether’s net income could shrink by 30–50%, dropping from $13B+ to nearer $6–8B a year.
By seeking a record-breaking valuation now, Tether is effectively capitalizing on peak profitability — before margins compress in a lower-rate environment.
The Bigger Picture
Tether’s bid for a $500 billion valuation underscores two truths about today’s financial world:
- Stablecoins are no longer a crypto sideshow — they are serious contenders in global finance.
- The sector’s profitability, and perhaps its valuations, are deeply tied to central bank policy.
If the raise succeeds, it would cement Tether as one of the most valuable financial institutions on earth. But the bigger test will come in 2026, when interest rate cuts reshape its margins. The question then is whether Tether can maintain its dominance and justify Wall Street-sized valuations once the high-yield era fades.