Tether Prints $1 Billion Q1 Profit, But Its $8.23 Billion War Chest Remains Contested

Tether reported $1.04 billion in net profit for the first quarter of 2026 and lifted its reserve buffer to a record $8.23 billion, even as global markets churned through fresh volatility.

The figures come from a quarterly attestation by accounting firm BDO. They confirm USD₮ liabilities sit near $183 billion against $191.77 billion in assets, leaving over $8.2 billion in surplus capital.

Treasury yields drove the Q1 profit

The reserves are concentrated in short-duration government paper. Direct and indirect exposure to U.S. Treasury bills reached approximately $141 billion as of March 31.

This ranked Tether the 17th-largest holder of U.S. government debt globally, according to the company.

That position is also the engine. With Treasury bills yielding above 4%, $141 billion in exposure throws off multi-billion-dollar annual interest income, the same dynamic that drove first-quarter profitability.

The $8.23 billion buffer is, in practical terms, accumulated yield rather than externally injected capital.

A sustained drop in short-term rates would compress the model directly.

Gold and Bitcoin Sit Outside the Safety Net

Beyond Treasuries, Tether holds roughly $20 billion in physical gold and $7 billion in Bitcoin (BTC). Together they account for around 14% of the reserve base.

The company frames the mix as a deliberate hedge against macroeconomic stress, but unlike Treasuries, both assets trade daily and can swing the surplus figure either way.

Bitcoin alone has experienced quarterly drawdowns above 30% in past cycles.

Token supply held near $183 billion through the quarter, with USD₮ in circulation up more than 5 billion units into early Q2 alongside the launch of the Tether Wallet self-custody product.

The unresolved question sits at the bottom of the press release. Tether says its long-pending full audit has “formally commenced” this quarter, the first time the company has placed that process inside an attestation.

Until the work concludes, the $8.23 billion buffer remains an attested figure, not an audited one.

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Disclaimer: The content above is only the author's opinion which does not represent any position of Followin, and is not intended as, and shall not be understood or construed as, investment advice from Followin.
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