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Tether says it will launch ‘official’ stablecoin in Georgia, with government support

By Thomson Reuters May 25, 2026 | 3:39 AM

By Elizabeth Howcroft and Lucy Papachristou

May 25 (Reuters) – Tether, the world’s biggest stablecoin issuer, plans to launch a crypto token representing the Georgian lari with the support of Georgia’s government, the ​company said on Monday, in the latest sign of the ‌country’s pro-crypto approach.

Tether’s new token is unusual in being launched by a private company in partnership with a government, although Tether did not detail the nature of the partnership, or whether what it called the “official” stablecoin amounted to a central bank digital ‌currency.

Georgia’s ​Prime Minister Irakli Kobakhidze, head of the central ⁠bank, Natia Turnava, and ⁠a member of parliament, Vakhtang Turnava, were quoted in Tether’s statement expressing support for Tether and financial innovation more broadly, but did not refer to the token directly.

A government spokesperson directed Reuters to the ​member of parliament, who did not immediately respond to written questions about the government’s involvement in the stablecoin. Georgia’s central bank did not ⁠immediately respond to an emailed request for ⁠comment.

Tether said the token will be a “digital representation of ​the Georgian lari,” called GELT, with details on its structure, rollout and implementation ​to be announced later. It aims to support cross-border commerce, ‌the development of fintech and digital payments, Tether said.

Georgia, a South Caucasus country of 3.7 million, is among the world’s top miners of cryptocurrency. Tether said the launch is a result of the National Bank of ⁠Georgia’s stablecoin rules making the country attractive to digital asset businesses.

Stablecoins are a type of cryptocurrency pegged to a fiat currency. They are mostly used in crypto ⁠trading, and not widely ‌accepted as a means of payment.

The Bank for International ⁠Settlements has warned that privately-issued stablecoins pose a threat to financial ​stability ‌and monetary sovereignty.

El Salvador-based Tether says it has nearly $190 ​billion of ⁠its dollar-pegged token in circulation. Its token pegged to the Mexican peso has less than $20 million worth in circulation and Tether announced it would wind down a token pegged to the offshore Chinese yuan due to low demand.

(Reporting by by Elizabeth Howcroft in Paris, additional reporting by Lucy Papachristou; Editing ​by Bernadette Baum)