Tether (USDT) in Venezuela has risen about 16% against the bolivar over the past 30 days, climbing from near 690 bolivars to a high of 810 on Binance peer-to-peer markets.
The move tracks a fast expansion of bolivars in circulation. Meanwhile, access to physical cash through official banks continues to shrink.
USDT Climbs 16% in Venezuela as Bolivar Liquidity Tops 2 Trillion
Venezuela’s monetary liquidity surpassed 2.11 trillion bolivars ($3.58 billion) by late May, according to central bank data. The measure expanded by about 69% in the first quarter alone.
Since January, the money supply has more than doubled.
The acceleration reflects a widening mismatch between the supply of traditional foreign currency and a growing demand from citizens seeking to protect savings.
As more bolivars chase scarce hard currency, residents are turning to stablecoins as digital dollars to preserve value.
The rate climbed steadily through mid-June before slipping back from its peak.
Banks Ration Dollars as Demand Climbs
Official channels cannot keep up with the jump in demand. Central bank interventions and commercial bank exchange desks have proved insufficient, analysts say.
Banks often shut down their automated dollar systems once their assigned quotas are exhausted, leaving businesses and citizens unable to buy at traditional desks.
Tighter access through formal channels leaves households and firms with few options.
Excluded from official desks, users migrate to P2P platforms, where USDT now trades as the world’s retail stablecoin.
That shift mirrors a broader crypto adoption trend across high-inflation economies.
USDT Sets the Street Price
Analyst Hever Castro points out that the gap now shapes everyday commerce. Merchants in Caracas markets such as La Hoyada, El Cementerio, and Catia use the USDT rate to restock inventory, with some quoting up to 1,200 bolivars per dollar.
“What’s happening today is a typical déjà vu of Chavismo, the parallel rate (USDT) skyrocketing to 810 Bs with no brakes, the monetary liquidity out of control at 2.11 trillion bolivars. The BCV’s intervention was a joke, many couldn’t buy and ended up on Binance,” the analyst stated.
The token has served as a de facto dollar in Venezuela for years amid chronic inflation.
The token itself stays pegged near parity, and its steady USDT market cap growth reinforces its role as a dollar proxy.
Globally, USDT trades near $1, with a market cap above $186 billion, ranking it third among all crypto assets.
Only on Binance, the country’s dominant P2P venue, did the rate briefly clear 810 before easing to about 794, according to tracker data.
The spread between official and P2P rates rarely closes while the money supply keeps growing. Fresh central bank interventions slowing the climb may become clearer in the weeks ahead.
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