Tether Gold Holdings Near $20 Billion After Q1 Purchases

Tether’s gold holdings climbed to nearly $20 billion by the end of the first quarter of 2026, driven by continued precious metals purchases that expanded the stablecoin issuer’s reserve diversification beyond its dominant U.S. Treasury position.

Tether’s Gold Holdings Approach $20 Billion

Tether’s March 31, 2026 attestation, conducted by BDO, listed US$19,837,696,372 in precious metals. That figure places Tether’s gold position just $162 million short of the $20 billion mark.

Tether Precious Metals, March 31, 2026
US$19,837,696,372
Tether’s March 31, 2026 attestation listed US$19,837,696,372 in precious metals, the exact reserve line that supports the near-US$20 billion framing. Source: Tether International Q1 2026 attestation.

The same attestation reported total assets of US$149.3 billion against total liabilities of US$141.0 billion. That gap produced an excess-reserve buffer of US$8.2 billion, reinforcing the company’s claim that every USDT token is fully backed.

Excess Reserves at Quarter End
US$8,232,209,778
The same March 31, 2026 attestation reported an excess-reserve buffer of US$8,232,209,778, adding context to Tether’s quarter-end reserve position. Source: Tether International Q1 2026 attestation.

Direct and indirect U.S. Treasury exposure still dominated reserves at US$141.2 billion. Gold now represents roughly 13% of Tether’s total asset base, up from a smaller share at the end of 2025.

How Q1 Purchases Drove the Increase

The precious metals line item stood at US$17.45 billion on December 31, 2025, according to Tether’s prior-quarter attestation. The jump to nearly $19.84 billion by March 31 represents a quarter-over-quarter increase of approximately US$2.39 billion.

Reuters reported that Tether’s gold holdings rose to about 132 metric tons by March 31, up from about 126 metric tons at the end of December. That roughly 6-ton addition in Q1 was notably smaller than the 27 metric tons purchased during Q4 2025, suggesting a deliberate slowdown in accumulation pace.

Part of the dollar-value increase also reflects higher gold spot prices during the quarter, meaning the $2.39 billion gain came from both new purchases and price appreciation on existing holdings.

Why Tether’s Gold Position Matters for Markets

A nearly $20 billion gold allocation inside a stablecoin reserve portfolio is unusual. Most stablecoin issuers hold reserves almost exclusively in short-term government debt and cash equivalents. Tether’s growing gold position signals a deliberate diversification strategy that treats precious metals as a meaningful reserve component.

The $8.2 billion excess-reserve buffer adds another layer. Even after accounting for its gold exposure, Tether maintains a cushion that exceeds the total reserves of many smaller stablecoin competitors. As stablecoin yield rules advance through Congress, the composition of issuer reserves is drawing increasing regulatory attention.

Tether’s reserve strategy also arrives as legislators work through the CLARITY Act’s framework for stablecoin reserve requirements, which could eventually define what counts as acceptable backing. Whether gold qualifies under future rules remains an open question that the ongoing legislative push may eventually answer.

USDT’s market cap currently sits at roughly $189.6 billion, making it the largest stablecoin by a wide margin. With gold now comprising a significant share of backing assets, any major shift in precious metals prices would have a measurable impact on Tether’s reserve arithmetic, for better or worse.

Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial or investment advice. Cryptocurrency and digital asset markets carry significant risk. Always do your own research before making decisions.

Share This Article
Thiago Alvarez is a crypto and fintech analyst at Coinwy, covering blockchain payments, DeFi protocols, and digital asset regulation. With a background in financial technology and compliance analysis, Thiago focuses on evaluating the operational viability and regulatory positioning of emerging crypto projects. His work examines token economics, cross-border payment infrastructure, and institutional adoption trends across global markets.
Exit mobile version