Tether and digital banking platform Fasset have rolled out what they’re calling the world’s first gold-backed neobanking Visa card. The product lets users spend fiat converted from digital assets like USDT while earning up to 6% cashback in Tether Gold (XAUT), a token backed 1:1 by physical gold bars sitting in Swiss vaults.
Tether is putting $1 million in XAUT behind the rewards program at launch. That’s a meaningful commitment to prove the concept works, though it’s a rounding error relative to USDT’s circulation, which now exceeds $186 billion.
How the card actually works
The Visa card integrates directly with Fasset’s wallet infrastructure. When a user makes a purchase anywhere Visa is accepted, the card converts their digital assets to fiat at the point of sale in real time. The cashback component pays out in XAUT, and the card also features an automatic round-up function that invests spare change from transactions into XAUT, promoting what Tether describes as passive accumulation of gold assets.
XAUT itself is backed by LBMA-certified physical gold bars. LBMA stands for the London Bullion Market Association, which sets the standard for gold bar quality and chain of custody. Each token represents one troy ounce of gold stored in Swiss vaults, giving users a claim on actual metal rather than a derivative or synthetic exposure.
Fasset’s role and the emerging market play
Fasset focuses on emerging economies across Asia and Africa, regions where traditional banking infrastructure remains patchy and gold already holds deep cultural significance as a store of value.
The company reports an annualized volume of $32 billion, with 95% of that coming from real-world assets. The partnership also includes plans for co-branded gold ATMs in major cities, with Dubai mentioned as an early target.
Fasset CEO Mohammad Raafi Hossain has emphasized the opportunity to scale digital gold adoption in markets where financial inclusion is still an active challenge.
From store of value to spending money
Tether CEO Paolo Ardoino framed the launch as gold’s evolution from a store of value to a medium of exchange. The card doesn’t actually require users to spend their gold. They spend fiat converted from digital assets and earn gold as a reward. The XAUT accumulates passively, functioning more like a savings mechanism bolted onto a payments product than a true gold-as-currency play.
The 6% cashback rate on eligible transactions is aggressive by any standard. Traditional credit cards in the US rarely exceed 2-3% on category spending. How sustainable Tether’s rate will be once the initial $1 million rewards pool is depleted remains an open question.
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