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Tether CEO plans to allocate as much as 15% of its portfolio towards gold

Tether CEO Paolo Ardoino announced that the crypto group plans to allocate between 10%-15% its investment portfolio towards physical gold. This is in addition to?the existing bullion backing some of their products.

El Salvador-headquartered Tether ?said it has about 130 metric tons of physical gold to ?back ?its products, after adding 27 tons in the fourth quarter. Ardoino said that they have been purchasing around two tons per week.

Ardoino did not disclose the exact value of Tether's portfolio of investments or how much gold was in it.

It's difficult to choose which one I like best. In a video, he said that it was like having two children and having to choose which one is the most beautiful.

Tether does not have an annual target for buying gold bullion. Instead, it will make the decision on a quarterly basis.

Ardoino stated that Tether had been buying gold with its profits. It started in 2020, during the COVID-19 Pandemic. Then it continued to purchase as geopolitical tensions increased in its wake.

"The world at the moment is not a happy place. Every day, gold reaches new highs. Why? "Because everyone is afraid," Ardoino said. The gold price increased by 64% last year.

Tether has said that it purchased large quantities of gold to support the Tether USDT, a stablecoin with circulating tokens worth $186 billion, and the Tether gold token XAUT, which is valued at $2.7 billion.

Gold prices are up 22% this year. They reached a record $5,311 per troy ounce in the United States on Wednesday, a result of buying spurred by a falling confidence?in the dollar, and concern about the independence of the Federal Reserve.

Ardoino, who said that Tether employs about 250 people, invests in U.S. Treasury Bills and other assets to back up its USDT stablecoin.

Ardoino expects Tether to earn more than $10 billion in 2025, and perhaps even $13.7 billion in 2024.

Tether also invested in U.S. Treasuries and bitcoins, as well as the tech sector, gold royalties firms, and other assets. (Reporting and editing by Alexander Smith; Polina Devlint)

(source: Reuters)