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Tether, the world’s largest stablecoin issuer, has hired KPMG to conduct an audit of its financial statements as it tries to build credibility ahead of a US expansion plan and potential fundraising.
The company has also hired PwC, a second Big Four accounting firm, to help it ready its internal systems for the audit, said people familiar with the matter.
Tether on Tuesday announced it had “entered a formal engagement with a Big Four accounting firm to complete its first full independent financial statement audit”, but did not name the firm.
The El Salvador-based company had boasted that it would be “the biggest ever inaugural audit in the history of financial markets” and “a defining moment not only for Tether, but for the evolution of modern finance itself”.
Its $185bn dollar-linked stablecoin USDT is the reserve currency of the digital asset market and the company reaps profits from investment returns on the assets backing its tokens.
Its purchases of US Treasuries have made it one of the most significant links between the global financial system and the volatile world of cryptocurrency.
Tether has faced questions since it was founded in 2014 over concerns about illicit activity conducted using the token as well as the transparency and quality of its asset reserves.
A financial statement audit, if completed, could smooth the path to a funding round designed to put a valuation on the company and support an expansion in the US, where it has launched a new dollar-pegged token intended to be compliant with federal regulations enacted last July.
The FT last month reported Tether had encountered apprehension from potential investors in its efforts to raise $15bn to $20bn at a $500bn valuation. Investors looking at the deal have flagged the high valuation and risks surrounding the company given past run-ins with regulators.
In 2021, the Commodity Futures Trading Commission alleged Tether made misleading statements about having enough dollars to back its stablecoin. Tether paid a $41mn fine without admitting liability.
Tether has made several key appointments to its leadership as it eyes global expansion and deploys its vast profits into investments. Its chief financial officer, Simon McWilliams, joined last year and oversees a finance team based in London.
KPMG, while the smallest of the Big Four firms, has a significant market share auditing financial services companies. Tether last year hired a digital assets specialist from KPMG’s Canadian business to become its head of internal audit, according to LinkedIn and a person familiar with the matter.
PwC has been trying to increase its work with digital assets after initial caution. The firm has a global digital assets team with staff in the US, the UK and about 30 other countries.
Tether, KPMG and PwC declined to comment.
The Genius Act, signed into law by President Donald Trump in July, marked the first time the US has regulated stablecoins. As well as USDT, Tether also runs a US-based stablecoin called USAT, launched earlier this year.
The accounting firm BDO Italia publishes monthly “attestations” that USDT is backed by the assets Tether claims, but its reports fall short of the full financial statement audit that will be conducted by KPMG.
“Trust is built when institutions are willing to open themselves fully to scrutiny,” Tether’s chief executive, Paolo Ardoino, said in Tuesday’s announcement on the appointment of a Big Four auditor. “This audit represents years of work to strengthen our systems so that Tether can meet the highest standards applied in global finance.”
Additional reporting by Ellesheva Kissin
