Tether has used its hundreds of billions in assets to become many things, including social media investors, data center lenders, and one of the largest holders of U.S. T-bills. But this week, Tether became something else: a crypto startupâs lender of last resort. The stablecoin giant put up $127.5 million in fundingâsome in loans, some in grantsâto aid the recovery of Drift, a Solana-based derivatives exchange that was pilfered for $285 million by North Koreaâlinked hackers earlier this month.
While the funds wonât cover the full amount that Drift lost in the hack, the money will provide additional stability as the exchange has said it will also begin contributing its own revenue in a bid to make users whole.Â
Tetherâs involvement in the recovery plan has won it plaudits from crypto fans, particularly users of the blockchain Solana, on which Drift is built. Meanwhile, that goodwill may come at the expense of Tetherâs chief rival, Circle, whose USDC stablecoin has long been the most popular on Solana and Drift. Tether and Drift did not immediately return requests for comment.Â
A âmoral quandaryâ
While hacking is hardly uncommon in the crypto world, the Drift breach was particularly sophisticated. The hackers, thought to be working on behalf of the DPRK, approached Drift team members at a cryptocurrency conference in late 2025 and pretended to be from a trading firm looking to build on the blockchain protocol. Eventually, they won sufficient trust to gain deeper access to Driftâs systems, opening the door to steal funds, the company said in a statement.Â
As part of the scheme, the hackers converted their stolen funds, which represented numerous cryptocurrencies, into USDC before whisking the tokens off the Solana blockchain.
Following the breach, many Drift customers have been pointing their fingers at Circle, claiming the firm saw the hack taking place but failed to freeze the USDC, which could have prevented the hackers from making off with the stolen funds.
Circle CEO Jeremy Allaire reportedly said a private company freezing user funds at its own discretion would create a âmoral quandary,â adding that Circle freezes assets only at the direction of law enforcement or the courts. Reached for comment, Circle sent a blog post from one of its executives on the topic of asset freezing.
Tether, meanwhile, appears to have used the episode to gain goodwill at the expense of its rival. Nicky Scannella, lead for the Solana marketing group Superteam USA, swapped $45,000 of USDC for Tetherâs USDT stablecoin following the news of Tetherâs Drift gift.Â
âThe best way to reward [Tetherâs] behavior and punish [Circleâs] behavior is to swap,â Scannella said in a text. âIf we want to see more of thisâŚwe as users need to actually act. Itâs sorta like voting.â
USDC and USDT showed a marginal loss and gain, respectively, in supply on the Solana blockchain in the day following Tetherâs announcement, per DefiLlama data. Still, USDC has around $8.1 billion in Solana stablecoin supply to USDTâs $3 billionâthough Tetherâs coin remains the dominant overall stablecoin with a market cap of $185 billion compared to Circleâs $78 billion.
Tether also gained a new client through the ordeal. Drift will use USDT, rather than USDC, for settlement when the exchange relaunches, the company said in a statement.Â
This story was originally featured on Fortune.com
