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    FirstFT: Japan set for leadership contest after prime minister announces resignation

    $75 per monthComplete digital access to quality FT journalism with expert analysis from industry leaders. Pay a year upfront and save 20%.What’s included Global news & analysisExpert opinionFT App on Android & iOSFT Edit appFirstFT: the day’s biggest stories20+ curated newslettersFollow topics & set alerts with myFTFT Videos & Podcasts20 monthly gift articles to shareLex: FT’s flagship investment column15+ Premium newsletters by leading expertsFT Digital Edition: our digitised print edition More

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    Rate cuts likely in Sept., Nov., Dec., Macquarie says, as disinflation continues

    The inflation data overall for July are “supportive of a sustained disinflation trend,”  Macquarie said, and when combined with the recent softening in the labor market strengthens the case for near-term Fed rate cuts. “We continue to anticipate a rate reduction of 25 bps in September with cuts also likely in November and December,” the economists added. The bets on a series of rate cuts ahead followed a duo of CPI and PPI reports that underscored progress on slowing the pace inflation. Data on Wednesday showed the consumer price index slowed to a 2.9% pace from a 3.0% pace in June, compared with economists estimates for 3%.Stripping out more volatile items like food and fuel, the “core” number climbed by 3.2% in the twelve months to July, below projections of 3.3%. The CPI and PPI readings are estimates to result in a  0.14% month on month rise in the core PCE, the Fed’s preferred inflation gauge, for the month.Still, while a rate cut is widely expected in September, the size of the cut or futures cuts will hinge on “the data flow, with inflation and employment readings taking on particular importance.” More

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    Hollywood union strikes deal for advertisers to replicate actors’ voices with AI

    (Reuters) – The Hollywood actors’ union SAG-AFTRA announced on Wednesday a deal with online talent marketplace Narrativ that enables actors to sell advertisers rights to replicate their voices with artificial intelligence. As performers fear AI will make theft of their likenesses common, the new agreement seeks to ensure actors derive income from the technology and have control over how and when their voice replicas are used.“Not all members will be interested in taking advantage of the opportunities that licensing their digital voice replicas might offer, and that’s understandable,” SAG-AFTRA official Duncan Crabtree-Ireland said in a statement. “But for those who do, you now have a safe option.” Narrativ connects advertisers and ad agencies with actors to create audio ads using AI. Under the deal, an actor can set the price for an advertiser to digitally replicate their voice, provided it at least equals the SAG-AFTRA minimum pay for audio commercials. Brands must obtain consent from performers for each ad that uses the digital voice replica. The union hailed the pact with Narrativ as setting a standard for the ethical use of AI-generated voice replicas in advertising. Actress Scarlett Johansson drew attention to the perils earlier this year when she accused OpenAI of copying her voice for its conversational AI system. The technology was also a key issue in last year’s Hollywood strike, the first simultaneous strike in 63 years by actors and writers. Video game voice actors and motion-capture performers called a strike last month over failed labor contract negotiations focused on AI-related protections for workers.Legislation called the NO FAKES Act has been introduced in Congress and would give every person a right to their own voice and likeness, making AI copying without permission illegal. SAG-AFTRA, the Motion Picture Association, The Recording Academy and Disney support the bill.Proliferation of so-called deepfakes, which are highly realistic videos generated by AI trained on actual voices and images, and their role in manipulating public opinion have also raised alarm worldwide. More

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    Here’s How Much Bitcoin Coinbase Holds

    “Coinbase holds $52 Billion of Bitcoin. They’re the top holder of BTC with over 4.3% of the supply,” Arkham Intelligence wrote in a tweet.In light of the recent announcement about “cbBTC,” Arkham Intelligence poses an interesting question concerning Coinbase’s significant Bitcoin reserves: “How much of this will be channeled into the decentralized finance (DeFi)?”Coinbase recently released a tweet about “cbBTC.” In the X thread, Coinbase teased the upcoming launch of cbBTC, expected to play a crucial role in the DeFi space on the Base network, Coinbase’s Ethereum layer-2 blockchain.cbBTC is anticipated to build a huge Bitcoin economic system on the Base network and would be a competitor to WBTC.In July, the unadjusted CPI annual rate in the United States was 2.9%, compared to 3.0% expectations and 3.0% the previous month. The annual rate of the unadjusted core CPI in the United States was 3.2%, falling for the fourth consecutive month and the lowest level since April 2021.According to CME, the Federal Reserve’s likelihood of decreasing interest rates by 25 basis points in September is 56.5%, while the probability of cutting rates by 50 basis points is 43.5%.Matt Hougan Bitwise CIO summarizes two takeaways from the recent CPI release: “There are two take-aways that matter from the CPI:1) The Fed will start cutting rates in September2) 3% is the new baseline for inflation, not 2%.Both are bullish for bitcoin.”Bitcoin posted an unexpected reaction to the CPI data, falling below $59,000 at one point in Tuesday’s trading session. At the time of writing, BTC was down 0.43% in the last 24 hours to $59,283 having reached intraday highs of $61,827.This article was originally published on U.Today More

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    BoJ could hike rates again in December even if inflation trends sideways: Nomura

    “[W]e still see the December monetary policy meeting as the most likely date for the next interest rate increase,” Nomura said. A December hike, which would mark the third July, could come even if inflation doesn’t pick up pace as the BoJ’s July summary of opinions signaled a shift among the central bank’s policymakers. The policymakers still view the monetary policy conditions even after the 0.25% hike in July, and despite expectations for core inflation to trend sideways at a rate of more or less 2% year over year, Nomura said.  “[T]his suggests to us a change in its policy response function such that it is likely to raise interest rates even if inflation trends sideways without rising,” it added. While the recent market volatility forced BoJ Deputy governor Shinichi Uchida in a speech on Aug. 7, to underline that rate hikes aren’t on a pre-determined path and would depend on economic and inflation data, the deputy BoJ chief remarks doesn’t “rule out the possibility that the BOJ could raise interest rates if stability returns to financial markets,” Nomura added. Others, however, aren’t so sure that policymakers are eager to increase rates and would need to wait for further evidence of price pressures likely driven by wage hikes.  Looking at the summary of opinions from the July monetary policy meeting, there was “only one view” that could be categorized as hawkish, Barclays said in a Wednesday note. “Otherwise, there were some opinions biased against rate hikes, and even among the comments supporting them, cautious remarks stood out,” it added. The BoJ would likely need to wait until at least the December meeting to confirm “that the next wave of service price markups is reflected on the nationwide CPI data,” Barclays said, though now expects the next BoJ rate hike in January rather than April on expectations that wage pressure will move the inflation needle.The new year will deliver a clearer a outlook on the annually negotiated wage hikes, or “shunto,” which will likely be reflected on macro wage data, Barclays added.   More

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    Industry and shippers brace for Canada rail stoppage, fear ‘catastrophe’

    OTTAWA (Reuters) -North American industry groups and shippers are bracing for an unprecedented simultaneous stoppage at both of Canada’s main railway companies that could inflict billions of dollars’ worth of economic damage.Canada is the world’s second-largest country by area and relies heavily on trains to transport grain, beans, automobiles, potash, coal and other goods.”It’s a catastrophe. Literally nothing would move,” said Greg Northey, vice president of public affairs at Pulse Canada.Talks between Canadian National Railway (TSX:CNR) and Canadian Pacific (NYSE:CP) Kansas City on one hand and the Teamsters union on the other have deadlocked, with each side accusing the other of bad faith.The rail companies say they will start locking out workers on Aug. 22 if they cannot reach a labor deal, while the union says it is ready to call a strike for that date.Industry groups want the Liberal government of Prime Minister Justin Trudeau to prevent a stoppage, noting Canada’s railways transport around C$380 billion ($277 billion) worth of goods annually.”Factoring in the millions of Canadian jobs that would be impacted, the magnitude of the disruption is daunting,” the Business Council of Canada lobby organization said in an open letter to Trudeau and Labour Minister Steven MacKinnon.U.S. FREIGHT TRAFFIC IMPACTEDA stoppage would also hit the United States, given the degree of integration between the two economies. Canada sends around 75% of all goods exports south of the border. The networks of the two Canadian rail operators, CN and CPKC, connect with several key U.S. rail and shipping hubs such as Chicago, New Orleans, Minneapolis and Memphis. CPKC’s network also extends further south connecting with ports on both the east and west coast of Mexico.CN said on Tuesday it was putting in place an embargo on any new reservations for movement of hazardous materials, security-sensitive cargoes or refrigerated containers originating in Canada, starting on Thursday. It also announced it was embargoing all intermodal traffic originating from over half a dozen U.S. hubs with which its network connects, starting on Friday. Separately, U.S. rail operator Norfolk Southern (NYSE:NSC) on Tuesday advised customers that it was embargoing all hazardous and security-sensitive cargoes to or from CN and CPKC’s networks effective immediately. It said additional embargoes may come in case of any work stoppages at the Canadian rail operators.Some U.S. companies find it more efficient to use Montreal or Vancouver for imports and exports.U.S. logistics firm C.H. Robinson, which manages more than 650,000 loads across the border a year, said it was lining up extra trucking capacity on both sides of the border. “When all trains serving the entire country could literally be stopped on their tracks, that’s another whole level of disruption,” said Scott Shannon, a senior executive at C.H. Robinson.PRESSURE MOUNTSIndustry groups say MacKinnon has the power to refer the dispute to the country’s labor relations board and thereby head off a stoppage.MacKinnon has so far said he wants the two sides to strike a deal at the negotiating table.Pressure on Ottawa looks set to mount in the coming days as industry groups hammer home the potential costs of a stoppage.Earlier this week, Morgan Stanley in a note to clients said that each week of shipment disruptions could dent the earnings before taxes of mining giant Glencore (OTC:GLNCY) by an estimated $100 million, or more, as a rail shutdown would disrupt coal shipments from its majority-owned unit, Elk Valley Resources. The Chemistry Industry Association of Canada said chlorine shipments would soon become unavailable, hitting the quality of drinking water within two weeks.”There are very large municipalities that – if the strike goes on – are going to be under boil water advisories,” CEO Bob Masterson said by phone, noting that the industry moved more than 500 rail cars a day.”There is no plan B … to transport this kind of volume you will need 2,000 trucks, roughly. There aren’t 2,000 trucks, and there aren’t 2,000 drivers,” he said.($1 = 1.3721 Canadian dollars) More

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    iAgent Protocol Unveils Revolutionary Human-Trained AI-Agent from Visual Data

    iAgent protocol introduced an innovative AI-agent as digital asset class at Malaysia Blockchain Week in Kuala Lumpur and Asia Blockchain Summit in Taiwan this month, allowing gamers around the world to create, train, trade, and monetize personalized game AI-agents that take the NPCs of the past to a whole new level. iAgent protocol has developed the world’s first AI-agent trained from pro-players’ gameplay footage in Counter-Strike. This new AI asset class has the potential to spur a renaissance of innovation and growth within the gaming industry.At both MBW and ABS, attendees received a first look at the revolutionary new class of digital gaming assets. iAgent Protocol presented new technology on August 1st and 6th, which uses AI Modules to train gaming characters based on gameplay footage. Their presentation featured an iAgent trained from the video footage of Flaxciz, a professional CS player from Team Secret. iAgents are here to not only rehaul the outdated NPCs of the gaming world, but also to empower all gamers within the ecosystem. Any user can train an AI-agent with the gameplay footage and then trade, rent, and monetize their personal game agents. Whether it’s a casual gamer playing with friends, or an entire studio wanting to add world-class human-trained AI characters to their game, iAgent offers new solutions and possibilities. In collaboration with Alliance, a global esports powerhouse competing at the forefront of the world’s most popular games, and Team Secret, a professional esports organization, iAgent was able to train a character based on the gameplay footage of Flaxciz.Jamie Batzorig, CEO of iAgent and keynote speaker, unveiled the human-trained iAgent for the first time. The development team worked with AethirCloud, the project building scalable decentralized cloud infrastructure for Gaming and AI. Powered by DePIN, iAgent protocol leverages underutilized GPU resources from around the world and transforms them into a distributed GPU network dedicated to training AI-agents. iAgent is supported by GEDA, a web3 esports ecosystem that is onboarding esports enthusiasts, and Emerge group, gaming marketing agency who have worked with well-known names like Valorant, Mobile Legends, and Riot Games. The team at iAgent aims to democratize gaming by creating AI-agents as digital assets and providing all gamers with the tools and infrastructure to train their own Agents. These human trained AI-Agents represent players’ gaming strategies, styles, and creativity turning them into a digital representation of their gaming persona. By creating the world’s first AI-agent trained on a pro esports player footage, iAgent is aiming to alter the landscape and future of gaming. The tools used to create this groundbreaking digital asset and gaming character will soon be available to everyone in the gaming ecosystem. A player only needs gameplay footage to develop their own AI-agent. With the first-of-its-kind AI_NFT standard (OFT), the creators will have full ownership over their AI-agents running on multiple chains using innovative technology developed by LayerZero Labs. About iAgentThe iAgent protocol allows the world gamers to train their own AI agents to mimic the players behavior from gameplay footage, powered by DePIN, decentralized computing, thereby creating a new digital asset class on the blockchain.Users can follow iAgent on X, notifications on.Press contact: [email protected]: iAgent ProtocolLos Angeles, CADisclaimer:This press release may contain forward-looking statements. Forward-looking statements describe future expectations, plans, results, or strategies (including product offerings, regulatory plans and business plans) and may change without notice. You are cautioned that such statements are subject to a multitude of risks and uncertainties that could cause future circumstances, events, or results to differ materially from those projected in the forward-looking statements, including the risks that actual results may differ materially from those projected in the forward-looking statements.ContactCEOJamie BalzorigiAgent [email protected] article was originally published on Chainwire More