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SEC Approves Bitcoin Industry ETF as Tether Faces Renewed Scrutiny: A Regulatory Crossroads for Crypto

The first full week of October 2021 marked a pivotal moment in cryptocurrency regulation, as the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission sent mixed but consequential signals to the rapidly growing digital asset industry. Between a groundbreaking ETF approval, stark warnings about stablecoin risks, and a bombshell investigative report on Tether’s reserves, regulators and market participants found themselves on a collision course that would shape the industry for years to come.

TL;DR

  • SEC approved Volt Equity’s Bitcoin Industry ETF covering ~30 companies including Tesla, Coinbase, and PayPal
  • Bloomberg investigation revealed Tether loaned Celsius $1 billion USDT backed by Bitcoin collateral
  • SEC Chair Gary Gensler stated the agency has no plans to ban cryptocurrencies
  • Circle (USDC issuer) disclosed receiving an SEC subpoena in July 2021
  • White House reportedly considering a wide-ranging executive order on cryptocurrency regulation

Volt Equity ETF Gets the Green Light

In a move that broadened institutional access to the Bitcoin ecosystem, the SEC approved Volt Equity’s application to launch an exchange-traded fund based on a basket of companies driving what the fund described as a revolution in the Bitcoin industry. The ETF included approximately 30 companies, among them Tesla, Twitter, Square, Coinbase, and PayPal.

While this was not the spot Bitcoin ETF that many in the industry had been hoping for, the approval represented a significant step. It provided traditional investors with a regulated vehicle to gain exposure to the broader Bitcoin economy without directly holding the cryptocurrency. The approval also fueled speculation that a true spot Bitcoin ETF might not be far behind, contributing to Bitcoin’s rally above $55,000 during the same week.

However, the SEC simultaneously delayed decisions on several spot Bitcoin ETF applications, pushing deadlines into November and December 2021. This calibrated approach suggested that while the commission was open to expanding crypto-related investment products, it remained cautious about directly exposing retail investors to cryptocurrency price volatility.

Gensler Draws the Line: Regulation, Not Prohibition

SEC Chair Gary Gensler delivered what many in the crypto community interpreted as a reassuring message: the commission had no intention of banning cryptocurrencies. Gensler emphasized that such a prohibition would require congressional action, and his agency’s objective was to bring the crypto industry within existing investor-protection frameworks.

At the same time, Gensler identified stablecoins as a particular threat to financial stability. He warned that if the stablecoin market continued to grow at its current pace, it could eventually pose systemic risks to the broader economy. This framing suggested that stablecoin regulation would be a top priority for the SEC and other financial regulators in the months ahead.

Bloomberg’s Tether Investigation Raises Alarm Bells

Perhaps the most consequential regulatory development of the week was a lengthy investigative report published by Bloomberg on October 7, which raised serious questions about the reserves backing Tether (USDT), the largest stablecoin by market capitalization with approximately $68.4 billion in circulation at the time.

Among the report’s most striking revelations was the disclosure that Tether had loaned Celsius $1 billion in USDT in exchange for Bitcoin as collateral. This arrangement meant that a portion of the reserves supposedly backing USDT at a one-to-one ratio with the U.S. dollar were actually loans collateralized by a volatile cryptocurrency.

The investigation also raised concerns about Tether’s vast holdings of commercial paper, which would make the company the seventh-largest holder of such debt globally. According to documents seen by Bloomberg journalists, these holdings included billions of dollars in Chinese company debt. A former Tether banker was quoted describing the company’s investment approach as akin to running a hedge fund rather than maintaining conservative reserves.

Additionally, the report noted that Tether’s primary banking partner in the Bahamas no longer held the bulk of the company’s assets, retaining only about $15 billion. These findings reignited longstanding concerns about whether USDT was fully backed by reserves and whether the stablecoin could withstand a sudden surge in redemption requests.

Circle’s SEC Subpoena Adds to Stablecoin Pressure

The regulatory net around stablecoins extended beyond Tether. Circle, the issuer of USDC, disclosed that it had received a subpoena from the SEC in July 2021 and was cooperating with the investigation. With USDC’s market capitalization exceeding $33 billion at the time, the disclosure underscored that regulators were scrutinizing the entire stablecoin sector, not just its most controversial participant.

Reports also emerged that the Biden administration was exploring the possibility of regulating stablecoin issuers as banks, a move that would subject them to far more stringent capital requirements, auditing standards, and regulatory oversight. The White House was also said to be considering a comprehensive executive order on cryptocurrency that would coordinate regulatory efforts across multiple federal agencies.

Why This Matters

The events of this week in October 2021 represented a regulatory tipping point for the cryptocurrency industry. The simultaneous approval of a Bitcoin-adjacent ETF, the intensifying scrutiny of stablecoin reserves, and the clear signal from the SEC that regulation rather than prohibition was the path forward, all pointed to a maturing relationship between digital assets and traditional financial oversight. The questions raised about Tether’s reserves would eventually lead to broader market contagion, while the regulatory framework discussions initiated during this period would form the foundation for stablecoin legislation in the years that followed. For investors and industry participants, the lesson was clear: regulatory compliance was becoming a non-negotiable cost of doing business in crypto.

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

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14 thoughts on “SEC Approves Bitcoin Industry ETF as Tether Faces Renewed Scrutiny: A Regulatory Crossroads for Crypto”

  1. Volt Equity ETF tracking 30 companies including Tesla and Coinbase was such a roundabout way to get BTC exposure. glad we have spot ETFs now

    1. roundabout is generous. it was basically a tech sector ETF with BTC-adjacent companies. spot ETFs made it obsolete overnight

  2. Tether loaning Celsius $1B USDT backed by BTC collateral and somehow nobody batted an eye until everything blew up. the signs were everywhere

    1. Tether loaning Celsius $1B in USDT backed by BTC collateral was a ticking time bomb. when BTC dropped, the collateral cascade was inevitable

      1. BTC drops and the cascade writes itself. collateralized lending with volatile assets always ends the same way during deleveraging events

    2. colat_implosion

      tether_truth the BTC collateral cascade was mathematically guaranteed. when BTC dropped below the maintenance margin on that 1B USDT loan the forced selling accelerated the crash

  3. Gensler saying no plans to ban crypto in the same week as all these enforcement actions. the mixed signals were deafening

    1. no plans to ban but also no plans to clarify anything. that was the Gensler playbook for three years straight. exhausting

      1. three years of strategic ambiguity was the playbook. give enough guidance to not get sued but never enough for the industry to plan around

  4. reading this in 2024 with spot ETFs trading feels surreal. the industry fought for every inch of regulatory ground

  5. the White House considering an executive order on crypto in 2021 feels like ancient history now. we went from regulatory uncertainty to ETF approvals in under 3 years

    1. feels like ancient history because it was. 2021 was the warmup act for the real regulatory fight that played out through 2024 and 2025

      1. gensler_era 2021 was not a warmup it was the blueprint. every enforcement action since then followed the exact same pattern of ambiguity then litigation

  6. etf_archaeologist

    Volt Equity tracking 30 companies to get indirect BTC exposure and charging a premium for it. spot ETFs made that fund obsolete in 18 months

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