💰 Is this move fueling the market, or laying a landmine?
Recently, there’s been news again about Tether minting 1 billion USDT on the Tron network. It’s like pouring water into a reservoir—the water level rises, but you have to figure out whether this water is life-saving or drowning.
**Bullish logic chain:** Market liquidity, simply put, is whether there’s enough money to go around. USDT issuance means more ammo in the market, deeper order books, and potentially more active trading. And this time, they chose the Tron TRC20 channel—fees are negligible, transfers are fast, no wonder it’s become the main highway for USDT circulation. Data shows that the USDT supply on Tron has already surpassed Ethereum, and this highway just keeps getting wider.
**But doubts have never stopped:** The core issue is simple—does every USDT minted really correspond to $1 in a bank account? Tether does publish regular audit reports, but transparency has always been a tough nut to crack in crypto. Suddenly injecting 1 billion—what if the market doesn’t need that much money? Asset prices get overinflated, the bubble grows, and in the end, it’s retail investors who get hurt.
What’s even more concerning: who controls this valve? One company can print at will; where does this money go, which exchange does it flow to, who uses it for market making—regular people can’t see through it at all. Centralized minting power with decentralized market slogans—it’s a bit ironic.
**🎯 My take:** In the short term, increased issuance might stimulate the market—after all, there’s more real money in circulation (assuming it’s real). But the long-term risk remains—the trust crisis is a ticking time bomb that someone will eventually have to defuse.
For regular investors, don’t treat every USDT issuance as a “pump signal.” The market isn’t driven by a money printer; fundamentals, sentiment, and capital flows all matter more than this piece of news. Take it as information, don’t act impulsively.
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FloorPriceWatcher
· 7h ago
It's Tether causing trouble again; printing money more frequently than I eat.
View OriginalReply0
WalletDivorcer
· 12-11 14:24
Is it the same old story again? Tether printing money, retail investors taking the bait, the old routine.
View OriginalReply0
CantAffordPancake
· 12-11 00:27
Coming with this again? I knew someone would step in when Tether prints money, and in the end, it's the retail investors who take the fall.
View OriginalReply0
BlindBoxVictim
· 12-09 20:54
Here we go again? As soon as the money printer starts, the market is supposed to rally? I think it's just lulling retail investors, that's all.
View OriginalReply0
JustAnotherWallet
· 12-09 20:54
Here we go again. When will Tether finally get tired of playing this game?
View OriginalReply0
MoonWaterDroplets
· 12-09 20:52
Money printer again? Do they really have ammunition this time, or is it just more bubble blowing?
View OriginalReply0
RektButStillHere
· 12-09 20:48
Printing money again? I think it's bound to blow up sooner or later.
View OriginalReply0
BasementAlchemist
· 12-09 20:47
Here we go again, who can't see through Tether's money-printing trick? Just waiting for the day it blows up.
💰 Is this move fueling the market, or laying a landmine?
Recently, there’s been news again about Tether minting 1 billion USDT on the Tron network. It’s like pouring water into a reservoir—the water level rises, but you have to figure out whether this water is life-saving or drowning.
**Bullish logic chain:**
Market liquidity, simply put, is whether there’s enough money to go around. USDT issuance means more ammo in the market, deeper order books, and potentially more active trading. And this time, they chose the Tron TRC20 channel—fees are negligible, transfers are fast, no wonder it’s become the main highway for USDT circulation. Data shows that the USDT supply on Tron has already surpassed Ethereum, and this highway just keeps getting wider.
**But doubts have never stopped:**
The core issue is simple—does every USDT minted really correspond to $1 in a bank account? Tether does publish regular audit reports, but transparency has always been a tough nut to crack in crypto. Suddenly injecting 1 billion—what if the market doesn’t need that much money? Asset prices get overinflated, the bubble grows, and in the end, it’s retail investors who get hurt.
What’s even more concerning: who controls this valve? One company can print at will; where does this money go, which exchange does it flow to, who uses it for market making—regular people can’t see through it at all. Centralized minting power with decentralized market slogans—it’s a bit ironic.
**🎯 My take:**
In the short term, increased issuance might stimulate the market—after all, there’s more real money in circulation (assuming it’s real). But the long-term risk remains—the trust crisis is a ticking time bomb that someone will eventually have to defuse.
For regular investors, don’t treat every USDT issuance as a “pump signal.” The market isn’t driven by a money printer; fundamentals, sentiment, and capital flows all matter more than this piece of news. Take it as information, don’t act impulsively.