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Tether has given potential investors a hard deadline — commit within 14 days or lose their spot entirely. The world’s largest stablecoin issuer is pushing ahead with a funding round that would price the company at $500 billion, a figure that would put it above some of the biggest names in American banking. A Valuation That Dwarfs Its Own Product That number is striking when held against Tether’s actual stablecoin market cap, which currently sits at around $184 billion. The gap between those two figures reflects what Tether is asking investors to believe — that the company’s future is worth far more than its present. Reports indicate the company has ambitions well beyond issuing USDT, and that broader strategy is baked into the valuation. At $500 billion, Tether would be worth more than JPMorgan, Goldman Sachs, Bank of America, and Wells Fargo. That kind of comparison draws attention. It also raises questions that a two-week deadline leaves little time to answer. The ultimatum is simple: enough investors sign on and the deal moves forward. If not, Tether may shelve the fundraising attempt again. Total crypto market cap currently at $2.29 trillion. Chart: TradingView This Round Almost Never Happened This is not the company’s first run at a major capital raise. An earlier attempt fell apart before it got off the ground. Early discussions reportedly floated a raise of anywhere from $15 billion to $20 billion — figures the company later walked back, calling them upper-end possibilities rather than firm targets. By February 2026, advisers had reportedly pulled the target down to around $5 billion. Concerns about transparency and the $500 billion price tag had cooled some investor interest. CEO Paolo Ardoino pushed back on that characterization at the time, saying demand from investors remained strong and that there was no pressure to rush. Now, with the deadline set, the pressure is very much on. Transparency Push Comes Amid Growing Competition One move Tether made ahead of this round may carry more weight than the deadline itself. The company recently brought on a Big Four accounting firm to conduct its first full audit. Based on reports, it could rank among the largest audits ever completed in the financial industry — a significant step for a company that has long faced scrutiny over how its reserves are managed. The timing is not accidental. Signing a major auditor right before a high-stakes fundraise sends a message to potential investors about where the company is headed on transparency. Meanwhile, competition in the stablecoin space is growing. PayPal, Circle, and a string of traditional financial firms have been expanding their own stablecoin efforts. USDC, run by Circle, holds a market cap of around $32 billion — well behind USDT’s $184 billion, but closing ground. Tether’s dominance is real, but it is no longer uncontested.

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