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Tether trades at 7% to 10% premium in India. Exchanges say its just supply and demand

coindesk.com · Jun 30, 2026 at 04:59

Tether trades at 7% to 10% premium in India. Exchanges say its just supply and demand
coindesk.com Jun 30, 2026

USDT, the world's largest dollar-pegged stablecoin, is trading well above face value on Indian crypto platforms. While local reports attribute the premium to a recent enforcement action, exchanges explain it as a simple demand-supply dynamic.

The stablecoin's premium rose to 7–10% above its dollar value on Indian platforms over the weekend. At one point, USDT traded around ₹102.88 against an official dollar-rupee rate of about 94.65 per USD. USDT's market cap stood at $184.68 billion as of this writing, making it the world's largest dollar-pegged stablecoin.

That gap, known as the USDT premium, normally runs between 3% and 4%. Put simply, it's the extra rupees buyers pay for dollar exposure via USDT instead of through a bank. The premium widens whenever local demand outpaces the supply of tokens actually available to trade.

The spike followed action by India's Enforcement Directorate related to USDT payments, the country's financial-crime agency said, CoinDesk reported Monday.

Now, exchanges are responding to the premium spike, and their explanations line up closely with that supply-side account.

Minal Thukral, executive vice president of the Mumbai-based CoinDCX, called the premium as a function of local order-book depth relative to the global dollar reference price.

"The premium then becomes a signal of the local arbitrage band: how expensive or slow it is for liquidity providers to replenish supply and close the gap," he added.

In plain terms, India has more people wanting to buy USDT than there are sellers willing to part with it near the global price. When that imbalance grows, the price Indian buyers pay rises until the market finds a new equilibrium.

CoinSwitch co-founder and CEO Ashish Singhal gave a more detailed account, stressing that the premium isn't something exchanges are setting themselves.

"As with any actively traded asset, when demand outpaces available supply, prices adjust accordingly. The [USDT] premium is therefore not unique to any single platform; it reflects broader market dynamics, including liquidity conditions and the availability of dollar-backed digital assets.

This phenomenon is not unique to India. Stablecoins have traded at premiums in several markets during periods of elevated demand or liquidity constraints.

It is important to note that exchanges do not manually set the price of USDT. Prices are determined by buyers and sellers trading on the platform.

Source

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