A class-action complaint accuses the companies behind the stablecoin tether of “propping and popping the largest bubble in history”, leading to disappearance of US$265-billion in cryptocurrency wealth.
Filed in the US district court in New York on Sunday on behalf of a handful of investors, the complaint accuses the issuer of the stablecoin — a category of tokens that seek to avoid price fluctuations, often through pegs or reserves — of manipulating bitcoin prices.
Because tether’s owners also own the Bitfinex exchange, the suit alleged, they can execute effectively unbacked bitcoin buy orders, that don’t cost them anything, with unbacked tether. Tether claimed to be backed 1:1 by fiat reserves, but its issuer revealed earlier this year that it may also use other assets to support its value. The buy orders can artificially push up prices in the illiquid crypto market, the complaint said.
“Whatever the case might be and however the court might find the outcome, this suit will bring an unprecedented level of transparency to tether,” Emin Gun Sirer, an associate professor at Cornell University, said on Twitter. “That’s something that almost everyone will agree is a good thing for the whole space.”
A spokesman for Tether, which is based in Hong Kong, didn’t immediately return a request for comment. On 5 October, Tether said on its Website that it “anticipates meritless and mercenary lawsuit based on bogus study.”
“Tether and its affiliates have never used tether tokens or issuances to manipulate the cryptocurrency market or token pricing,” the statement said.
Damages
The lawsuit alleged that the plaintiffs suffered damages as a result of market manipulation. It also accused the defendants of racketeering and intentionally defrauding investors. Roche Freedman, which recently won the lawsuit against Craig Wright, who claims he created bitcoin, represents the plaintiffs.
“As someone who has been invested in bitcoin and the growth of the cryptocurrency ecosystem since 2013, I believe that bad actors in this space have stunted development and consumer confidence,” David Leibowitz, one of the plaintiffs, said in a statement e-mailed by his lawyers.
Tether is no stranger to legal woes. In April, the New York attorney-general accused the companies behind tether and Bitfinex of “comingling” and losing more than $850-million in client and corporate funds. — Reported by Olga Kharif, (c) 2019 Bloomberg LP