Close Menu
Invest Insider News
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Tuesday, March 31
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest Vimeo
    Invest Insider News
    • Home
    • Bitcoin
    • Commodities
    • Finance
    • Investing
    • Property
    • Stock Market
    • Utilities
    Invest Insider News
    Home»Bitcoin»Tether Was Born On Bitcoin. Twelve Years Later, Is It Coming Back?
    Bitcoin

    Tether Was Born On Bitcoin. Twelve Years Later, Is It Coming Back?

    March 31, 20266 Mins Read


    HONG KONG-CHINA-CRYPTOCURRENCY-BANKING-TECH

    The symbols of bitcoin and the stablecoin Tether (USDT) are displayed at a cryptocurrency store in Hong Kong on July 29, 2025.

    AFP via Getty Images

    On March 21, Tether completed a 14-month integration to bring USDT back to Bitcoin via the Lightning Network’s Taproot Assets protocol. It was a quiet milestone for a $184 billion asset that was born on Bitcoin’s Omni layer in 2014 before migrating to Ethereum, Tron, and a growing list of alternative chains.

    But the go-live was only the first step. Over the past three months, Tether has poured more than $20 million into three Bitcoin infrastructure startups: Speed ($8 million), Ark Labs ($5.2 million), and Utexo ($7.5 million). Each is building a different piece of what these companies describe as the plumbing needed to make Bitcoin a serious settlement network for dollar payments.

    I spoke with executives at three companies working on this infrastructure. None speak for Tether directly, but what they describe, independently, is a coordinated push to turn Bitcoin into a stablecoin settlement layer using Lightning’s speed and a new generation of Bitcoin-native protocols.

    Lightning’s quiet growth

    The Lightning Network has grown far more than most observers realize.

    A recent report from River, compiled with data from roughly half the known Lightning providers, found the network crossed $1 billion in monthly transactions in November 2025, processing 5.2 million payments with an average size of $223. Jesse Shrader, CEO of Amboss Technologies, projects that to roughly $15 billion annually.

    Bobby Schell, VP of Marketing at Voltage, says his company alone processes about 25% of all Lightning payments. He described an iGaming company running a pilot through Voltage that sent 87 bitcoin in under a month, with only 5% to 7% of its customers enabled. In Africa, an exchange called Chipper Cash integrated Lightning over a weekend and saw half of all Bitcoin transactions migrate to the layer 2 with no marketing at all.

    Cash App has also integrated Lightning across all Square terminals, according to Schell. At the 2025 Bitcoin conference, the company disclosed that it earns 9.75% yield on its Lightning node by providing liquidity to the network.

    But Lightning has a measurement problem. The network is private by design.

    “It is incredibly opaque, which is an advantage when it comes to stablecoin payments,” Shrader said. “People aren’t able to track exactly how much payments are happening on Lightning.”

    Why dollar payments change everything

    For all its growth, Lightning has been limited to moving one asset: bitcoin. For most businesses, that is a problem.

    “Stablecoins have found product market fit,” Schell acknowledged. “The dollar has global product market fit and stablecoins are the best instance in how to send dollars.”

    Stablecoin transaction volume crossed $33 trillion in the past year, dwarfing Lightning’s Bitcoin volumes. The total stablecoin market recently hit $316 billion, with Tether commanding 58% of it. The gap between Lightning’s payment technology and the assets businesses actually want to move has been the main barrier. With USDT now live on Taproot Assets, the companies building around it say that barrier is falling.

    Shrader puts it in competitive terms. Tron, which currently handles the majority of USDT transfers, charges between $1 and $4 per transaction and serves what he estimates is a $20 trillion annual market. Lightning settles instantly at near-zero cost.

    “You’re telling me that we’re going to be stuck with our typical payment processors that are charging 3% to 4% and doing two-week settlement times,” Shrader said, “instead of moving to more efficient technology that does instant settlement?”

    Three approaches, one goal

    What makes this moment different from previous false starts is that multiple companies are building complementary infrastructure simultaneously.

    Voltage is building enterprise plumbing. The company offers a credit product that lets businesses send payments over Bitcoin rails while settling in dollars, meaning the business never touches bitcoin or experiences volatility. Schell says the Lightning Network with Taproot Assets functions as a foreign exchange layer, swapping between bitcoin and stablecoins natively within the protocol.

    “Our line of credit product enables businesses to send over the Bitcoin rail,” Schell said. “You never touch Bitcoin, never experience volatility. But if you’re a Bitcoin-native business, great. Send and receive Bitcoin, settle in Bitcoin. Businesses now have optionality.”

    Schell confirmed Voltage has “direct relationships” with the stablecoin issuers and is coordinating on rollout strategy.

    Amboss Technologies is taking a novel approach. The company’s RailsX product will enable cross-currency payments on Lightning. Initially it will use wrapped stablecoins to demonstrate demand. Shrader describes the end state as Lightning becoming a decentralized exchange where users deploying bitcoin and stablecoin liquidity become automated market makers.

    “This is going to be the first DEX without needing to create a separate token other than Bitcoin,” Shrader said. “Bitcoin is the native token of this DEX.”

    Ark Labs, which received $5.2 million from Tether in March, is building a different kind of Bitcoin layer 2. Rather than relying on Lightning’s channel-based architecture, Ark Labs uses what founder Marco Argentieri calls “virtual transactions”: pre-signed Bitcoin transactions that execute off-chain but can be published to the main blockchain if needed.

    Argentieri’s argument is that Lightning handles payments well but lacks the programmability needed for capital markets: escrow, authorization holds, lending, derivatives. Ark Labs aims to provide that programmability while remaining Bitcoin-native, meaning users retain the ability to exit without permission from any third party.

    “The early builders in Bitcoin were very ideological,” Argentieri said. “If everything wasn’t trustless as Bitcoin, then it’s not going to be built. I think that has been the biggest problem.”

    His more contrarian take: native Tether issuance on Bitcoin matters less than USDT0, Tether’s cross-chain bridging protocol. If Ark Labs supports USDT0, wallets built on its infrastructure could receive stablecoins from any chain and settle on Bitcoin rails, without users knowing or caring which network is involved.

    Why now, after twelve years?

    Part of the answer is capital. Investment in Bitcoin-focused infrastructure historically lagged behind funding for Ethereum and Solana projects. That has shifted. Tether’s $20 million across three companies in three months signals the opportunity is being taken seriously by the industry’s largest player.

    Part of it is institutional validation. Bitcoin is now held on corporate balance sheets and traded through regulated ETFs. The same institutions that trust Bitcoin as a store of value are asking whether they can build financial infrastructure on top of it. Argentieri noted that Bitcoin Treasury companies, a category that barely existed two years ago, need infrastructure their boards can understand.

    “You cannot really explain zero-knowledge proofs to a senior board,” Argentieri said. “But you can explain what a pre-signed transaction is and where the risk lies.”

    And part of it is competitive pressure. Tron charges $1 to $4 per USDT transaction. Traditional processors take 3% to 4% with multi-day settlement. Lightning’s near-zero fees and instant finality are a clear technical advantage, now that the dollar-denominated assets are available.

    As Argentieri put it, Tether was born on Bitcoin, left for cheaper blockchains, and now powers much of crypto’s financial infrastructure. “The biggest problem,” he said, “was the plumbing was missing.”

    USDT is back on Bitcoin. Whether the plumbing built around it can compete with Tron’s entrenched network effects will determine whether this homecoming amounts to more than symbolism.



    Source link

    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
    Previous ArticleBitcoin Price Faces Rising Sell Pressure As Downtrend Nears Six-Month Streak
    Next Article Crude Oil Approaches Final Wave as Technical Top Comes Into View

    Related Posts

    Bitcoin

    New Hampshire’s Bitcoin-Backed Municipal Bond Moves Closer With Moody’s Rating

    March 31, 2026
    Bitcoin

    Elon Musk Sees Upside in Potential Quantum Bitcoin Hack

    March 31, 2026
    Bitcoin

    Bitfarms Plans Full Bitcoin Exit to Back AI Shift

    March 31, 2026
    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

    Top Posts

    How is the UK Commercial Property Market Performing?

    December 31, 2000

    How much are they in different states across the US?

    December 31, 2000

    A Guide To Becoming A Property Developer

    December 31, 2000
    Stay In Touch
    • Facebook
    • YouTube
    • TikTok
    • WhatsApp
    • Twitter
    • Instagram
    Latest Reviews
    Investing

    AUD/USD: Spending Surge Flips RBA Outlook as Markets Price in Hikes

    December 6, 2025
    Bitcoin

    Un mystérieuse adresse de 2011 fait transiter des milliards de dollars de Bitcoin (BTC)

    July 15, 2025
    Investing

    TSX subdued with Iran conflict, U.S. inflation figures in focus By Investing.com

    March 11, 2026
    What's Hot

    Dow, S&P 500, Nasdaq futures fall after stock slide deepens ahead of Nvidia earnings, jobs data

    November 18, 2025

    New property laws and changes in 2025 that every homeowner and renter must know | Personal Finance | Finance

    February 13, 2025

    Superior Watershed Partnership Gets $1.6 Million For Summer Utility Assistance

    July 20, 2024
    Most Popular

    Finance expert explains how Tottenham are inspiring Arsenal’s Emirates Stadium expansion 

    October 16, 2025

    UK property map reveals 2024 ‘up-and-coming investment hotspots’

    May 1, 2024

    Donald Trump to Take Stage at Bitcoin Conference This Month

    July 11, 2024
    Editor's Picks

    Bitcoin Miner MARA jumps 17% after striking a deal with Starwood to build AI data centers

    February 26, 2026

    MSTR may have paused it’s BTC accumulation last week

    March 29, 2026

    Sensex crashes 1,800 points, investors lose ₹14 lakh crore: 5 key factors behind stock market crash explained

    March 22, 2026
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest Vimeo
    • Get In Touch
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms and Conditions
    © 2026 Invest Insider News

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.