Bessent Stakes Credibility and Taxpayer Money on Argentina Bet
The New York Times just confirmed that America's Treasury Secretary is making an unprecedented, extremely risky $20 billion bet on Argentina—a serial defaulter with a terrible track record—using taxpayer money through an obscure fund with minimal oversight.
Financial experts think it's reckless. The administration is being secretive about terms. It bypasses normal safeguards.
And on the exact same day, Tether announced raising the exact same amount ($20 billion) through a private placement.
The Times never mentioned this.
They also never mentioned:
- Howard Lutnick manages Tether's reserves
- Lutnick is Commerce Secretary
- Both Lutnick and Tether invested in the same Argentine companies
- Tether is critical to Argentina's economy
- Argentina's gold disappeared as Tether's gold appeared
- The Trump administration has extensive cryptoconflicts
Maybe all of this is just coincidence. Maybe the timing is just remarkable happenstance.
Maybe Lutnick's dual roles don't matter. Maybe Argentina's gold and Tether's gold are completely unrelated.
Maybe Tether buying Argentine farmland has nothing to do with the bailout.
Or maybe, just maybe, American taxpayers are about to bail out a company that facilitates international crime and money laundering because that company is now too important to let fail—and because the people making policy decisions stand to profit personally.
The New York Times gave us half the story.
The other half involves a stablecoin company, a missing pile of gold, and a Commerce Secretary with the world's most obvious conflict of interest.
Someone should probably look into that.
https://archive.fo/2025.10.20-030008/https://www.nytimes.com/2025/10/17/us/politics/trump-argentina-bailout-bessent.html #Argentina #Tether #crypto #ScottBessent #HowardLutnick #Tether #ArgentinaBailout #ExchangeStabilizationFund #cryptocurrency #gold
@cryptadamist
"'I will be out of the country': the excuses of Karina Milei, Caputo and Lugones to dodge questioning in Congress"
Karina Milei, President Milei's sister and Chief of Staff, claimed "agenda conflicts" to skip congressional testimony about LIBRA scandal—despite being back in Buenos Aires.
Economy Minister Caputo and Health Minister Lugones also refused to appear.
Reminder: On Feb 14, 2025, Javier Milei promoted memecoin $LIBRA which rocketed to $4.5B market cap in 40 minutes, then crashed 95% as insiders cashed out $100M+.
Key players: Hayden Davis (Kelsier Ventures CEO) allegedly bragged about paying Karina Milei to "control" the president. Mauricio Novelli introduced crypto operators to Milei. Whistleblower Diógenes Casares (Stream Finance) warned of $5M bribes before launch.
The scandal, dubbed "Cryptogate," triggered impeachment calls, 100+ fraud complaints. Same team also launched TRUMP, MELANIA, and ENRON tokens. Circle froze $58M in USDC.
Milei's approval: 57.6% disapproval. Congress demands answers—but officials won't show up.
More: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/$Libra_cryptocurrency_scandal
there's an old fashioned run on the bank currently underway at one of #Tether's biggest customers: Cambodia's infamous #Huione / #HuionePay / #HuioneWallet / #Xinbi.
According to TRM Labs Huione-linked wallets have received almost $100 billion #USDT since 2021. That’s roughly four nimitz class nuclear powered aircraft carriers worth of Tether’s USDT token.
Though the flash crash decimated some traders, its damage was fairly limited. But with regulators out of the picture, rapid proliferation of high-risk crypto products, and crypto firms integrating into traditional finance, this will likely be remembered only as a warning that went unheeded.
Institutions lost the most in terms of dollars, but the true extent of the damage may be slow to appear. Binance’s hastily implemented $100 million institutional bail-out program suggests things may be worse underneath the surface.
In the chaos, one trader profited ~$150 million from well-timed shorts. With an offshore crypto trading platform, potentially offshore trader, and no regulators apparently interested in crypto enforcement, the possibility that someone was trading on White House inside info will likely go unexamined.
A practice called auto-deleveraging likely saved some exchanges from accumulating huge amounts of bad debt, but it also likely slowed recovery by thinning liquidity even further — and it increased the nerves of traders who saw even profitable positions unwound.
But the biggest factor in the meltdown was leverage. As prices dropped, leveraged positions were forcibly liquidated. This contributed to sell pressure, causing prices to go lower, triggering more liquidations. A classic crypto “death spiral”.
Cascading liquidations were worsened by crypto exchange glitches which left some customers watching helplessly as stop-losses failed to trigger or trades to add more collateral to at-risk positions failed to execute.
Though leverage is not unique to crypto, some things are: the extremely high leverage offered by some platforms (100x or more), the ability to use highly volatile cryptoassets as collateral, the speed at which positions can unwind, and limited requirements for position monitoring or risk management.
As trading activity spiked, exchanges went down or suffered outages that prevented people from placing trades or shoring up their positions. Binance, Coinbase, Kraken, Robinhood, and several other major platforms were all reported to experience significant service interruptions.
It all started when Trump’s threat to further increase tariffs on China by 100% caused traders to panic sell crypto, with some fleeing for safer assets like Treasury bills and gold.
Bitcoin plummeted 10% in the span of minutes, and other tokens were even harder hit. Altcoins like Solana plunged 40%, and Trump’s own memecoin dipped more than 60%.
Volatility only increased as market makers withdrew. Some accused these institutions abandoning their responsibility during a critical time, while others reasoned that they have no regulatory or other mandate to stabilize markets — potentially at their own expense.
Crypto’s October 10 flash crash, following a Trump social media post threatening severe tariffs on China, caused $19 billion in liquidations. It’s a signal that the market most eager to be taken seriously may also be the one least equipped to handle real-world shocks.
Newsletter: Anatomy of a crypto meltdown
October 2025 brought the most dramatic crypto flash crash of all time, but it was only a dress rehearsal for the systemic crisis the industry is building toward.
https://www.citationneeded.news/anatomy-of-a-crypto-meltdown/
the #MAGA rehabilitation of FTX's Sam Bankman-Fried is almost complete. apparently SBF did nothing wrong and actually #Biden just stole all the FTX customer money with his weaponized DOJ. also something something ukraine.
expect a full #pardon.
(ICYMI the @amuse account is a #fascist propaganda / #disinfo arm of the trump administration with 666,000 followers responsible for some of the most egregious disinformation to hit the platform)
first verified death from friday’s #crypto market purge was a ukrainian scumbag named Konstantin Ganish AKA “Kostya Kudo”
russian bots are working overtime on the everything app painting this as a symbol of deep ukrainian corruption. #grok is already fully convinced this guy worked for #Zelensky (and maybe he did, i dunno. all i can see is is the #disinfo machine is running in high gear right now and it's hard to figure out what actually happened here. i wouldn't be surprised it he worked for FSB, ukraine, or both).
welcome to the future.
https://cryptobriefing.com/konstantin-galish-crypto-death-lamborghini/
Crypto lending — a major factor in the 2022 crypto meltdown — is having a comeback. In fact, one crypto lender just hired the guy accused of bankrupting BlockFi after he extended a huge line of credit to FTX based on a pinky swear.
The bitcoin community is fighting over an upcoming software change that one developer has warned will be the end of bitcoin. He has reportedly discussed creating a trusted group of censors with the authority to alter data recorded on chain.
Coinbase has launched a campaign claiming that “big banks want another bailout”. Those worried about bailouts should probably worry more about poorly regulated crypto firms integrating themselves into the financial system.