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    Bitcoiner Max Keiser Offers Gold Bugs Only Solution to Save Their Money

    As the world’s pioneer cryptocurrency, BTC, has recovered the $100,000 price level, Keiser has sent gold lovers a message via his official account on the X network (formerly popular as Twitter).That warning came after El Salvador’s political leader, Nayib Bukele, found out that the country’s unearthed deposits contain $3 trillion worth of gold.However, the total potential gold deposits promise to surpass $3 trillion, which would exceed the country’s GDP by more than 8,800%.According to the president, they have also come across gallium, tantalum, tin and “and many other materials needed for the 4th and 5th industrial revolution.”Metal mining has been prohibited for many years in the country due to heavy pollution of the local rivers. However, Bukele is considering lifting that ban and cleaning them rather than preventing the pollution from spreading further by not mining the metals.Keiser quoted that tweet, saying that be believes selling gold (“at a suitable discount”) for Bitcoin is the only way for gold investors to stay profitable. Bitcoin, Keiser believes, is demonetizing gold and is going to take it down to zero in the end. Therefore, he said, “The pool of potential future buyers of Gold is rapidly shrinking and without buyers, the mined Gold would have no value.”Currently, Bitcoin is trading at $101,240 per coin after showing a 7.22% increase over the past two days.This article was originally published on U.Today More

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    ‘Bitcoin Is Better Money,’ Michael Saylor Claims

    This stone circle likely symbolizes coins and all the early forms of money known by humanity. The tweet itself says: “Bitcoin is better money,” meaning that Saylor believes Bitcoin surpasses all seashells, stones, skins and so on that have been used as money since humans invented this means of exchange.As of this writing, Bitcoin is trading at $101,365 per coin after demonstrating a 7.33% increase over the last two days and recovering from the $94,500 zone.Rasmussen shared an outlook that in 2025, Bitcoin would surge to hit $200,000 after it finally broke above the $100,000 level in December this year. He shared a list of the catalysts they expect to fuel that price surge. That list included corporations buying BTC, the creation of the U.S. Strategic Bitcoin Reserve, the improvement of the regulatory and political climate, the tightening of the Bitcoin supply as a result of the 2024 halving and much bigger spot ETF inflows.There were also hurdles he shared: governments selling Bitcoin, leverage blowout, disappointing rate cuts.As for Michael Saylor, he believes that 10 years from now, Bitcoin will easily be worth $13 million per coin, as it will have taken away part of gold’s market share by then.This article was originally published on U.Today More

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    Bitcoin (BTC) Retests $100,000 on Fed Rate Cut Expectations: Details

    Bitcoin rebounded to a high of $101,201 in Wednesday’s session after two days of falls, as firming expectations of a Federal Reserve interest rate cut boosted investor sentiment. Speculators increased their bets on a decrease after U.S. consumer-price inflation met expectations.The consumer price index report for November published by the Bureau of Labor Statistics on Wednesday showed a 12-month inflation rate of 2.7% and an increase of 0.3% on a monthly basis.Core inflation, excluding food and energy prices, was 3.3% annually and 0.3% monthly. These figures were consistent with the Dow Jones consensus estimates.The report comes ahead of the Federal Reserve’s final policy meeting next week, where rate cuts will be announced. There is a strong expectation that the Fed might cut rates further in the meeting with traders, pricing in a nearly 99% chance of a quarter-point rate cut, but that the Fed might skip a January cut as it measures the impact previous cuts have had on the economy.Investors are expecting more economic data, with the November producer price index report due out on Thursday.Bitcoin changed hands at $100,839 as of press time, holding half of a nearly 5% gain from the day before, the largest in two weeks.Following a retest of the $100,000 mark, with Bitcoin reaching highs of $101,984 on Wednesday and $101, 953 today, all eyes are on where Bitcoin will go next.The year 2024 was a landmark year for crypto, and expectations are in place for 2025 which Bitcoin ETF issuer Bitwise predicts might mark the beginning of a golden era for crypto. Bitwise recently released 10 predictions for the year ahead, among which it predicts higher inflows for Bitcoin ETFs and a BTC price above $200,000.This article was originally published on U.Today More

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    China leaders pledge ‘vigorous’ promotion of domestic consumption

    $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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    Trump has invited China’s President Xi Jinping to his inauguration

    $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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    IMF faces internal attack over flaws in biggest bailouts

    Unlock the Editor’s Digest for freeRoula Khalaf, Editor of the FT, selects her favourite stories in this weekly newsletter.The IMF’s in-house watchdog has criticised the fund over a lack of consistency in some of its biggest bailouts of the past two decades, calling on officials to address claims they succumb to political pressures to back big, risky repeat borrowers.Rules for outsized loans to countries such as Argentina, Ukraine and Egypt needed an overhaul as “perceptions of a lack of even-handedness” were affecting the fund’s credibility, the IMF’s independent evaluation office said in a report on Thursday.The report casts light on one of the thorniest issues facing the IMF, as the Washington-based institution comes under pressure to balance mounting debt problems in more and more developing economies with the taxing of its resources by a small group of countries that it is struggling to wean off its support. The fund’s biggest lending commitment is to Argentina, where President Javier Milei is seeking a new $10bn loan, on top of $44bn the country tapped since 2018 under the exceptional access rules. The country’s obligations to the IMF are so large that last year it tapped a renminbi swap line with the Chinese central bank to help repayments.Ongoing IMF support for Ukraine is also a linchpin of Kyiv’s financing of its war effort against Russia’s invasion, while a fund loan to Egypt this year was seen as stabilising a key economy on the frontline of fallout from the Gaza war.Kristalina Georgieva, the IMF managing director, said in response to the assessment that a fund review of the rules governing its biggest bailouts was “needed to ensure that the policy remains fit for purpose in an evolving global context”.But she cautioned that the IMF still needs space for flexibility and that too many sweeping reservations about its commitments to countries such as Argentina and Ukraine could backfire, and weaken countries’ ability to return to markets. The fund introduced a so-called “exceptional access policy” in 2002 to better regulate large bailouts that put bigger risks on IMF resources.While the watchdog acknowledged the fund’s policy for so-called “exceptional access” cases, where a country borrows many times more than usual limits, has worked better than previous use of discretion, it “has not provided a substantively higher standard” compared to normal bailouts, the office said.“The use of the [policy] at times may have led to delaying debt resolution problems and it has not catalysed private financing to the extent the fund envisaged when it was adopted,” it added.Under a long-standing policy, countries have had to pay surcharges, or extra interest, on IMF lending above a set quota, in order to discourage large repeat borrowings. The fund reformed the surcharges this year, including a cut to the rate.“Outside the fund, there is a strong perception of political pressures in some high-profile cases affecting the assessment” of bailouts under the exceptional access rules, the IEO said.The IMF often faces criticism that it bows to big shareholders that often are also large lenders to countries in trouble. In October, Brent Neiman, the US Treasury Assistant Secretary for International Finance, said the fund needed to be firmer in assessing bailouts where China was a big creditor.The IEO report said its evaluation “confirms that pressures on staff and management, exerted directly or indirectly, were strong in high-stakes cases”.The review did not find evidence that confirmed concerns that economic assumptions behind bailouts were “reverse-engineered” in order to get loans approved.But it identified weaknesses in processes, such as when the IMF relied on political assurances ahead of elections that bailout conditions such as big spending cuts will be delivered.It added that the fund also tended to wrongly assume that big bailouts would boost investor confidence in countries. “The expected confidence effects relied more on assumption than on analytical explanation,” the report said. The assessment reviewed cases from 2002 up to the middle of last year, such as the IMF’s bailout of Greece at the start of the Eurozone crisis in 2010, and a 2015 loan to Ukraine after Russia annexed Crimea. It also looked at so-called “grey zone” cases where the fund judges that a country’s debts are sustainable before it lends but cannot say so with high probability.For grey zone cases in particular, Georgieva said “further reflection and review based on more recent data” was useful. “We do not want to increase the risk of inadvertently raising prospects of deeper debt restructurings and increased losses,” Georgieva said. More

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    ECB cuts interest rates for fourth time this year

    The central bank for the 20 countries that share the euro reduced the rate it pays on bank deposits, which drives financing conditions in the bloc, to 3.0% from 3.25%. It was at a record 4.0% only in June.It also signalled that further cuts are possible by removing a reference to keeping rates “sufficiently restrictive”, economic jargon for a level of borrowing costs that curbs economic growth.”Financing conditions are easing, as the Governing Council’s recent interest rate cuts gradually make new borrowing less expensive for firms and households,” the ECB said. “But they continue to be tight because monetary policy remains restrictive and past interest rate hikes are still transmitting to the outstanding stock of credit.”There is no universal definition of what constitutes a restrictive rate but economists generally see neutral territory, which neither fuels nor cools growth, at between 2% and 2.5%.With Thursday’s decision, the ECB also cut the rate at which it lends to banks for one week – to 3.15% – and for one day, to 3.40%. These facilities have barely been used in recent years as the ECB has supplied the banking system with more reserves than it needs via massive bond purchases and long-term loans.But they may become more relevant in the future as those programmes end. The ECB confirmed on Thursday it would stop buying bonds under its Pandemic Emergency Purchase Programme this month. More

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    ECB cuts interest rates by 25 bps, as expected

    The ECB cut its benchmark deposit rate by 25 basis points to 3.0%, while the interest rate on its main refinancing operations fell to 3.15%.The ECB has already cut rates at three of its last four meetings. Nevertheless the debate has shifted to whether it is easing policy fast enough to support an economy that is at risk of recession, facing political instability at home and the prospect of a fresh trade war with the United States.Eurozone inflation came in at 2.3% in November, marginally above the ECB’s 2.0% target, but the central bank’s fresh projections are likely to show inflation back at target in a few months’ time. At the same time, economies within the region are barely growing, with gross domestic product rising 0.4% in the third quarter, according to data released earlier this month, while political turmoil in France and Germany’s upcoming election add to the uncertainty.Additionally, the election of Donald Trump as the incoming US president raised the possibility of a trade war, as he has previously threatened the bloc with high tariffs, particularly on the auto industry.  With this all in mind, investors see a cut at every meeting in 2025 until June, followed by at least one more move in the second half of 2025, taking the deposit rate to at least 1.75% by year-end.The Swiss National Bank cut its key interest rate by 50 basis points earlier Thursday, as it attempted to tackle a strong Swiss franc as well as depressed inflation. More