- Richard Heathcote, who stepped down as Tether Holdings’ CIO in March 2026 to take an advisory role after leading the company’s investment deals spree, is working with investment bank PJT Partners to sell part of his 1.26% stake in the privately held stablecoin giant — one of the first known secondary market transactions involving Tether equity, giving the market a rare opportunity to see how institutional buyers value a share of the world’s largest stablecoin operator.
- Tether is the issuer of USDT, the world’s dominant stablecoin by market cap, and has become one of the most profitable financial companies in the world relative to headcount — generating an estimated $13 billion in net profit in 2023 alone by investing its reserve assets (primarily US Treasuries) at elevated interest rates while maintaining a lean operation; a 1.26% stake implies significant dollar value depending on the valuation buyers and sellers agree on.
- Tether remains privately held and has long resisted full public disclosure of its reserves and financials, though it has published quarterly attestations; a secondary stake sale via PJT Partners brings institutional rigor to the price discovery process and suggests Heathcote is seeking a sophisticated buyer rather than selling into the crypto OTC market — the choice of PJT (a Wall Street M&A and restructuring advisory firm) signals the transaction is being run as a formal financial process.
- The stake sale comes as the stablecoin sector is at a regulatory inflection point: the US GENIUS Act and EU MiCA framework are establishing formal rules for stablecoin issuers, which could either entrench Tether’s dominance (by raising barriers to entry) or create new challengers (by providing a regulatory pathway for bank-issued stablecoins from JPMorgan, Bank of America, and others); the timing of a secondary sale now, ahead of full regulatory clarity, may reflect a judgment about where Tether’s competitive position peaks.
What Happened?
Richard Heathcote, who until earlier this year served as chief investment officer of Tether Holdings — the issuer of USDT, the world’s largest stablecoin — is planning to sell part of his 1.26% stake in the company, Bloomberg reports. Heathcote is working with PJT Partners, the Wall Street advisory firm, to find buyers for a portion of his holding. He stepped down as CIO in March 2026 to take an advisory position after leading Tether’s investments division through a significant expansion into Bitcoin holdings, venture investments, and other alternative assets. As a privately held company, Tether equity rarely changes hands publicly, making this one of the first known secondary transactions in Tether shares and an unusually direct signal of how sophisticated institutional buyers value the company.
Why It Matters?
Tether is among the most profitable financial companies in the world by headcount. With USDT reserve assets primarily invested in US Treasuries, Tether has generated billions in annual net income at elevated interest rates — an estimated $13 billion in 2023 alone — while remaining private and disclosing only quarterly third-party attestations rather than full audited financials. A secondary stake sale via a formal investment bank process provides the market with something it has rarely had: a price signal for Tether equity from institutional-quality buyers conducting real due diligence. The valuation implied by the transaction will be closely watched by crypto market participants, competing stablecoin operators (Circle, Paxos), and regulators who have long struggled to establish Tether’s true financial position. The choice of PJT Partners as advisor — a firm known for complex financial restructurings and M&A — suggests Heathcote is treating this as a serious institutional transaction, not an informal block trade.
What’s Next?
The price at which Heathcote sells will be the most closely watched datapoint in crypto finance for 2026 — it will provide the first institutional market-derived valuation for Tether equity and could catalyze further secondary sales by other Tether stakeholders. The timing also raises questions about strategic positioning: the US stablecoin regulatory framework (GENIUS Act) is still being finalized, and bank-issued stablecoins from JPMorgan and others are entering the market with regulatory advantages Tether currently lacks. If institutional buyers price in that regulatory risk, the stake sale price could reflect concern that Tether’s near-monopoly on dollar stablecoin circulation is more vulnerable than its current USDT market cap suggests. Watch for the transaction to close and any valuation leaks, which could move USDT competitors like USDC and emerging bank-issued stablecoins.
Source: Bloomberg









