Can Crypto Firms Really Compete in the Gold Market?
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Tether’s recent exit of two high-profile metals traders highlights a deeper challenge: breaking into the traditional commodities world isn’t easy. Despite holding one of the largest private gold reserves and aggressively accumulating over 70 tons in a year, the company’s attempt to blend crypto strategy with institutional bullion trading is facing friction. The hires were symbolic of a bigger goal—to rival major banks in gold trading—but their quick departure suggests the gap may be wider than anticipated.
Gold markets are built on trust, relationships, and established systems that have evolved over decades. While Tether continues to dominate in gold-backed stablecoins like XAUT, scaling that into a full-fledged trading powerhouse is a different game entirely. This moment may force a rethink: is the future about disrupting gold markets—or working within them?
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tether’s strength in gold-backed tokens like Tether Gold (XAUT) demonstrates product-market fit, but scaling into trading infrastructure is a separate challenge
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Breaking into gold markets isn’t easy at all
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Relationships run that space.
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XAUT works, but scaling is another level
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Different game outside crypto bubble.
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Iinstitutions don’t move that fast.
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Gold market built over decades.
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Hiring big names isn’t enough.
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Blending crypto + commodities is complex.
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Respect the legacy systems.
