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    American Eagle misses quarterly sales estimates on cautious consumer spending

    (Reuters) -American Eagle Outfitters on Wednesday missed Wall Street estimates for quarterly revenue as sticky inflation hurt demand for its apparel and accessories often sold at full price.Shares of American Eagle (NYSE:AEO) fell more than 8% in trading after the bell as the company also maintained its fiscal 2024 forecasts.Despite a 240 basis point jump in quarterly gross margin from lower product and transportation costs, the company is facing choppy demand as shoppers stretch their wallets to accommodate higher cost of living.Meanwhile, its total ending inventory increased 9% from last year to $681 million, owing to higher end-of-season merchandise as the company works out a more profitable stock clearance strategy.”The company’s revenue miss is an indication that economic pressures are driving consumers to spend more carefully, particularly in discretionary categories like apparel,” said Rachel Wolff, an analyst at Emarketer.American Eagle’s results lagged those of peers Abercrombie & Fitch and Dick’s Sporting Goods (NYSE:DKS), both of which hiked their annual sales forecast earlier in the day on resilient demand for trendy clothing and footwear.American Eagle said it continues to expect fiscal 2024 revenue to rise 2% to 4% from last year.”It’s really more of a cautious guide for the back half of the year as we lap some of the better results that started with back to school last year,” the company’s executives said on a post-earnings call. Still, an uptick in spring season shopping helped a 4% rise in store revenue during the quarter, with digital revenue growing 12%.The company’s net revenue for the quarter ended May 4 rose 6% to $1.14 billion, a touch below analysts’ average estimate of a 6.4% rise to $1.15 billion, according to LSEG data.First-quarter profit per share came in at 34 cents, compared to 28 cents analysts had expected. More

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    Gemini customers get back over $2 billion in crypto from Genesis bankruptcy

    NEW YORK (Reuters) -Bankrupt crypto lender Genesis and crypto exchange Gemini have returned over $2 billion in crypto to 232,000 retail customers in their jointly managed Gemini Earn program, giving customers a 242% return on assets locked up since January 2023, Gemini said on Wednesday. Unlike other crypto companies that went bankrupt after a 2022 market crash, Genesis was able to return customers’ crypto to them rather than liquidating a limited pool of assets and paying them back in cash. Customers who loaned one bitcoin to Genesis will get one bitcoin back, benefiting from the coin’s dramatic price increase since the date the company went bankrupt, Gemini said. The price of Bitcoin has more than tripled since January 2023, rising to over $67,000.”We are thrilled to have been able to achieve this recovery for our customers,” Gemini co-founder Cameron Winklevoss said in a statement. “We recognize the hardship caused by this lengthy process and appreciate our customers’ continued support and patience throughout.”Gemini customers will receive about 97% of the repayment immediately and the remainder within 12 months.Genesis had previously estimated that its customers, including larger investors that were not part of the Earn program, would receive a 77% recovery in the bankruptcy.”We didn’t cap their claims at the petition date value,” Genesis attorney Sean O’Neal said Wednesday. “Now we need to focus on making distributions to Genesis’s remaining creditors.”Gemini customers who participated in the Gemini Earn program loaned their crypto to Genesis and were paid interest on their loaned assets. The total value of the Gemini Earn assets was $940 million when Genesis froze customer accounts in November 2022, Gemini said. New York Attorney General Letitia James has alleged that the Gemini Earn program was a “scam” that misled investors, and she has sued Genesis, Gemini and Genesis’s parent company Digital Currency Group over the program. James reached a settlement with Genesis in February that required Genesis to repay Earn customers before other creditors, including New York state and Digital Currency Group. “When investors suffer losses because of fraud and manipulation, they deserve to be made whole,” James said in a statement. DCG had argued that Genesis’s customers should be repaid based on what the crypto assets were worth in January 2023. Under that argument, which a judge overruled on May 17, DCG could have taken the “excess” value from the rise in crypto prices, rather than returning it to Genesis customers. James’ lawsuit disrupted Genesis’s efforts to re-start its business, pushing the company to pivot instead to a bankruptcy liquidation. More

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    US Republicans seek documents on California high-speed rail project

    WASHINGTON (Reuters) -Two senior congressional Republicans asked the U.S. Department of Transportation on Wednesday to disclose documents detailing a decision by President Joe Biden’s administration to award billions of dollars to a California high-speed rail project that they doubted would ever be completed.Sam Graves, who chairs the House of Representatives Transportation and Infrastructure Committee, and Ted Cruz, the Senate Commerce Committee’s top Republican, requested documents by June 12 about the department’s December decision to award the project another $3.07 billion. California voters approved $10 billion in 2008 for the ambitious project, which aims to move passengers from San Francisco to Los Angeles in under three hours. The lawmakers said the project has experienced numerous delays and rising costs, and that the California High-Speed Rail Authority, the state agency in charge of it, has not identified key funding needed for it.The full project was initially estimated to cost around $40 billion but has now jumped to $89 billion to $128 billion.A spokesperson for the state agency said it takes the issues raised by the two lawmakers seriously and is ready to respond to the Department of Transportation and the Federal Railroad Administration, which is part of the department.Graves and Cruz cited a 2023 review by an independent body that concluded that the project faced an “unfunded gap of $92.6 billion to $103.1 billion between estimated costs and known state and federal funding” for completion of the full system.”Despite evidence that continues to show that the California High-Speed Rail project has critical issues indicating there is no reasonable path forward for successful completion of the project … the Biden administration continues to allocate substantial federal taxpayer dollars on this highly questionable endeavor,” the lawmakers wrote.The Department of Transportation did not immediately respond to a request for comment.Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg said in December the California project “is facing a lot of the challenges that come with being the very first at anything,” and added that rail project awards face an “extraordinary level of scrutiny.”The state agency estimated that costs for an initial 171-mile (275-km) segment connecting Merced to Bakersfield have risen from $25.7 billion to $33 billion, and it will be operational by 2033.It is a major project in California, the Democratic-governed and most populous U.S. state. It eventually is envisioned as connecting Sacramento to San Diego. The project, which has spent $18 billion since 2006, has received funding from two Democratic presidential administrations amid opposition by Republicans. President Barack Obama’s administration awarded California $3.5 billion in 2010 and the state has dedicated $4.2 billion to the project. The Biden administration in 2021 restored $929 million for the project after President Donald Trump’s administration pulled funding.California wants $8 billion in total from the Biden administration for the project and last year won another $202 million in federal funds for grade separation projects. On Tuesday, the state said it was seeking another $450 million in federal funding. More

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    Cleveland Fed taps former Goldman executive Hammack for president’s job

    NEW YORK (Reuters) -Former high-ranking Goldman Sachs executive Beth Hammack will become the next president of the Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland, the regional bank said on Wednesday.Hammack, 52, was until earlier this year co-head of global financing at the investment bank, where she also served on its management committee. She will take up her new role on Aug. 21, replacing Loretta Mester, who is leaving at the end of June due to central bank retirement rules. The incoming Cleveland Fed president has extensive experience in markets and in how they interface with government activity. The regional Fed bank noted that Hammack had served as chair of the Treasury Borrowing Advisory Committee among other activities. Hammack “has a deep understanding of financial markets and the monetary policy transmission process, expertise in leading complex business lines, and a proven commitment to mission-focused work,” Heidi Gartland, a member of the Cleveland Fed’s board of directors who served as chair of the bank’s presidential search committee, said in a statement.The Cleveland Fed holds a vote on the U.S. central bank’s rate-setting Federal Open Market Committee this year, and the regional bank noted that Hammack will be a voter as soon as she takes office. According to the Fed’s most recent annual report, the Cleveland Fed’s bank president was paid $454,600 in 2022. Hammack joins the Cleveland Fed as the central bank faces a pivotal policy choice in its effort to bring high inflation to heel.The Fed hiked interest rates aggressively between the spring of 2022 and last July in an attempt to bring inflation back down to its 2% target. Easing price pressures last year opened the door to the prospect of rate cuts this year, but sturdier-than-expected inflation data in the first months of 2024 pushed back the timing of any easing, with markets now eyeing a cut sometime in the fall. Hammack’s experience leaves her well positioned to be a strong voice on issues core to the central bank’s work, said Tim Duy, chief U.S. economist with SGH Macro Advisors. “There’s an interest in people that are able to be part of the conversation, an active part of the policymaking conversation,” he said. That said, Fed watchers were unsure of Hammack’s views on the economy. In replacing Mester, she will take over for a policymaker who was known for her often hawkish views on monetary policy that at times left her at odds with her colleagues. Mester, who served the bulk of her career at the Fed, made waves when she dissented against aspects of the Fed’s emergency policy response to the onset of the coronavirus pandemic in March 2020. Mester will attend the Fed’s June 11-12 policy meeting, where officials will release new economic and interest rate forecasts and will almost certainly hold rates steady. Regional Fed bank presidents lead quasi-private institutions that are technically owned by member banks, operating under the oversight of the Fed’s Board of Governors in Washington. Each of the 12 regional banks is overseen by boards of directors drawn from their respective communities. Board members who do not work for financial firms regulated by the Fed manage the process to find new leadership, subject to the approval of the central bank. The regional Fed bank presidents help set monetary policy and collect local economic information. Their banks also house financial regulators and provide a range of services to local banks.MARKET OPERATORHammack comes to the Fed as the landscape to serve has changed. Following revelations in 2021 that some central bank officials had traded in markets extensively while helping set monetary policy, the Fed has sharply tightened rules governing how policymakers and top staff can invest. People involved in the search to replace Mester have acknowledged the new rules might deter candidates, while noting that restrictions could also focus candidates on the public mission of the regional Fed bank. Hammack, who was once considered a candidate for the role of chief financial officer at Goldman, is not the first person from the firm to helm a Fed regional bank.Between 2015 and 2021, Robert Kaplan, who rose to the top ranks of the investment bank, led the Dallas Fed before retiring amid questions about his personal trading activity. An investigation by the U.S. central bank’s internal watchdog said Kaplan and former Boston Fed President Eric Rosengren had not broken the law but created the appearance of a conflict in interest in how they invested and reported their financial activity from 2019 to 2021.Kaplan is returning to Goldman to be its vice chairman.Hammack will join the Cleveland Fed as some regional Fed banks have bolstered the market experience of their leadership teams. The Dallas Fed is now helmed by Lorie Logan, who once led monetary policy implementation at the New York Fed, while the St. Louis Fed saw Alberto Musalem, who worked at several investment funds as well as at the New York Fed, take over as its president in April. Hammack is “an especially great pick for this particular moment for the Fed,” said Steven Kelly, associate director of research at the Yale School of Management. He pointed to the Fed’s ongoing effort to shrink the size of its balance sheet and avoid market volatility as an area of importance, saying “it can’t hurt that the FOMC is beefing up its monetary policy plumbing bench.” More

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    Credbull Marks the Latest Asset Manager to Tokenize, Structure and Distribute a Fund Fully Onchain

    Centrifuge, the platform for tokenized real-world assets onchain, today announced Credbull as the latest asset manager to tokenize and launch a private credit fund on Centrifuge. Credbull will be available to investors in the Plume ecosystem.Plume announced an initial allocation of $10M in the private credit fund. The investment comes from Plume’s network of offchain institutional investors. In a time when tokenized treasuries are capturing crypto investor mindshare and wallets, this development creates important momentum in enabling new investors to embrace the rapidly evolving real world asset class. Credbull provides a unique investment avenue with uncorrelated and yields, allocating capital to established SME originators in an overall capital preservation strategy. Operated within a licensed framework, Credbull prioritizes investor protection and transparency, ensuring clear oversight of capital deployment and fund performance as part of its commitment to decentralization.“We’re excited to collaborate with Plume and Centrifuge to realize our collective vision of advancing the evolution of real-world assets. By providing investors with a broader set of non-correlated and diversified DeFi solutions, we will drive greater access to private credit yield products, real-time transparency and broader market liquidity,” said Jason Dehni, co-founder & CEO of Credbull.Plume is a liquidity provider and modular layer 2 blockchain that facilitates the investment and trading of high-quality real-world assets. Plume creates a cost-effective and secure ecosystem for RWAs, composable tokens, and increased liquidity for all tokenized RWAs. “Plume was purpose-built to support institutional adoption of the real-world asset industry. We’re focused on creating a seamless onboarding process for users to onramp into the ecosystem and boost liquidity for all RWAs. Centrifuge streamlines the process of launching onchain funds and Credbull brings a high-quality, high-demand new asset class to the ecosystem,” said Chris Yin, CEO of Plume Network.After launching its onchain fund management platform in March, Centrifuge continues to onboard credit funds to public blockchains. Centrifuge serves as a gateway to onchain liquidity, while creating a first-class experience thanks to its comprehensive and intuitive fund management platform.”We’re excited to welcome Credbull as the latest asset manager to tokenize their fund on Centrifuge; streamlining back-office operations, increasing transparency and accessing liquidity directly on Plume,” said Centrifuge Co-founder, Lucas Vogelsang.This news follows consistent TVL growth by Anemoy, a web3 native asset manager, in their funds launched on Centrifuge.About CentrifugeFounded in 2017, Centrifuge, creates better technology for financial products. Centrifuge provides asset managers a way to tokenize, manage and distribute their funds onchain and investors better access to a diversified portfolio of high-quality tokenized assets.About CredbullFounded by a strong team of DeFi and TradFi veterans, Credbull recently launched DeFi’s first licensed on-chain private credit fund, offering unprecedented, chain-agnostic access to real world assets. The decentralized fund structure offers real-time transparency, risk management and all off-chain capital allocation. In addition, Credbull provides other diversified solutions such as Credbull Pro and Credbull Earn, helping institutional asset managers, crypto platforms and DAO treasuries enter the rapidly evolving RWA space.About Plume NetworkPlume is the first modular L2 blockchain dedicated for all real-world assets (RWAs) that integrates asset tokenization and compliance providers directly into the chain. Our mission is to simplify the convoluted processes of RWA project deployment and offer investors a blockchain ecosystem to cross-pollinate and invest in various RWAs. In addition, Plume enables RWA composability through its thriving DeFi applications and provides access to high-quality buyers to increase liquidity for all tokenized RWAs.For media inquiries, users can contact Tiffany Lung at tiffany(at)plumenetwork(dot)xyz.ContactsCEOChris YinPlume [email protected] LungPlume [email protected] article was originally published on Chainwire More

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    US Treasury says regulators should consider NFT guidance, given fraud risks

    WHY IT’S IMPORTANTNFTs, blockchain-based images, videos, music or text, surged in popularity during the coronavirus pandemic. The assets are highly susceptible to scammers and can be used to launder illicit funds, the Treasury Department said in a report published on Wednesday.Still, other sectors – including other digital assets – pose greater risks for illicit finance, so regulating NFTs should not supersede other priorities, it said.THE CONTEXTU.S. regulators have been looking to better police markets for digital assets.KEY QUOTE”The NFT market is particularly vulnerable to fraud and scams,” the Treasury Department said. More

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    $1 Million Bitcoin (BTC) Is Matter of Time, Believes Samson Mow

    Mow, the CEO of JAN3, a company dedicated to accelerating Bitcoin adoption through infrastructure development and financial services, has consistently shared positive predictions about its future. He bases his predictions on the current Bitcoin supply and demand dynamics, emphasizing that the demand for cryptocurrency far exceeds its available supply.One of the key factors Mow emphasizes is the role of spot bitcoin ETFs. These financial instruments, which allow investors to access BTC without directly owning the asset through the traditional markets. According to the latest data, Bitcoin ETFs currently hold more than one million Bitcoin, which is approximately 5% of the total amount of the circulating supply. In addition to ETFs, Mow also highlighted the substantial inflow of Bitcoin into exchanges as another indicator of robust demand.Even if his main theory does not prove to be accurate, Mow notes the importance of the “Veblen effect” in the case of Bitcoin. The Veblen effect is a phenomenon whereby the demand for a commodity increases as its price increases, which is contrary to standard economic theory. This effect suggests that rising prices can spark interest and investment in BTC.Currently, the price of Bitcoin is hovering around $68,000, a decline of slightly more than 0.6% since the beginning of the day. Despite this decline, the cryptocurrency is still close to its all-time high of $74,000.This article was originally published on U.Today More