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    Body camera video captures first reactions to Baltimore bridge collapse

    (Reuters) – Body camera video captured the shocked reactions of first responders in the aftermath of the collapse of a Baltimore bridge in March in which six men were killed. The recordings, obtained by local media on Friday, offer a snapshot of the incredulity of officers from the Maryland Natural Resources Police as they approached the site where the Francis Scott Key Bridge in Baltimore collapsed. “Dude, this is fucking bad, like there is no bridge,” one person can be heard in the video published by the Baltimore Banner (NASDAQ:BANR) as the boat nears the collapsed bridge. The Francis Scott Key Bridge collapsed into the Patapsco River in the early morning of March 26, killing six men who were working on the span at the time, after a massive container ship lost power and crashed into one of the bridge’s support pylons.The FBI last month opened a criminal probe into the collapse that also halted traffic at the Port of Baltimore, a trade hub that accounted for 28% of U.S. coal exports last year.In video clips, one responder said “we’ve heard various numbers. We’re not sure” about how many people were in the water and in need of rescuing after the incident. Officers trying to ascertain injuries can be heard asking if everybody was okay and, while the response from the ship’s crew can’t be heard on the video, the responder said shortly after “just a one cut to the fingers? Okay, do you need medical attention right now?”. “This is catastrophic,” another responder said in a different clip published by the Baltimore Banner. More

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    ETH/BTC: Tuur Demeester Registers Surprising Pattern

    Demeester stressed that this timeline was chosen to demonstrate the long-term effects of Ethereum’s (ETH) migration to the proof-of-stake (PoS) consensus.He recalled that Ethereum (ETH) managed to replace PoW with PoS 18 months ago, in mid-September 2022. After this game-changing upgrade was activated, Bitcoin (BTC) became the only major cryptocurrency leveraging the proof-of-work (PoW) consensus.As covered by U.Today previously, Ethereum (ETH) founder Vitalik Buterin called its now-deprecated proof-of-work version too vulnerable to centralization.Buterin recalled that PoW always was nothing but a “temporary stage” before migration to proof of stake, which replaced mining with staking as a way to secure blockchain consensus.As of now, Ethereum’s (ETH) proof-of-stake (PoS) ecosystem features more than 1 million active validators, U.Today reported in April.Followers of Demeester indicated that this metric can be different should we zoom out. For instance, on a 10-year time frame, it would demonstrate 76,000% growth instead of a 36.4% decrease.However, veteran trader Peter Brandt noticed that in three years, ETH/BTC might be 57% down, according to Demeester’s model.This article was originally published on U.Today More

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    Bloomberg Strategist Presents Warning for Crypto per Bitcoin/Gold Cross

    In a recent analysis, McGlone highlighted the slumping Bitcoin/gold cross, particularly to the S&P 500 and its broader implications for risk assets. The analysis also reflects on Bitcoin’s rally post-SEC approval of spot Bitcoin ETFs.According to McGlone, the January U.S. ETF launches boosted inflows, strengthening Bitcoin’s status as a leading indicator. It was a near-perfect storm as Bitcoin attained all-time highs in Q1, but it did not make new all-time highs versus gold and S&P 500, failing to surpass peaks set in 2021.Given that the inflows into the Bitcoin ETFs have relatively slowed, the hangover may have implications for risk assets, including cryptocurrencies.McGlone explained that Bitcoin was climbing against gold the last time the S&P 500 e-mini future crossed above its 50-week moving average in November, but now the Bitcoin/gold cross is falling.The slumping Bitcoin/gold cross, in contrast to the S&P 500’s performance, might indicate a potential reversal in risk assets that could have far-reaching consequences.In late April, Bitcoin experienced its halving event, which has historically been a chopping sell-the-news event in the immediate term. The fourth halving was no exception, with the Bitcoin price falling shortly after and trading near $57,000. This is the lowest price in the past two months, and the market has been flat since the halving date.Measured from the above $73,000 all-time high reached in mid-March, Bitcoin prices fell by nearly 20%, which is the deepest correction on a closing basis since the FTX lows in November 2022. Howbeit, Glassnode deduces that this macro uptrend might be one of the most resilient in history, with comparatively shallow corrections thus far.This article was originally published on U.Today More

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    In the Market: Financiers fret over ‘leverage on leverage’ in private credit

    (Reuters) – To some elite financiers who gathered in Los Angeles for the Milken Institute conference, a debt binge in private markets is reminding them of the go-go days of risk-taking before the 2008 financial crisis. In the halls of the Beverly Hilton and at meetings around town last week, I spoke with more than a dozen investors, bankers and fund managers involved in the booming $1.7 trillion private credit market, where investment funds lend private equity portfolio businesses and other companies money. Many of the financiers worried about the consequences of debt piling up in that market, which operates mostly out of sight of regulators.Of particular concern to them were loans to private equity funds against portfolio companies that are already leveraged, lending that’s grown rapidly as a higher-for-longer interest rate environment stymies the ability of such firms to sell assets.In many cases, the money is being raised to pay investors in these funds, such as pensions and endowments, dividends to meet demands for payouts, the financiers said. That also enables the fund managers to ask investors for new money, generating more fee income. In some cases, the money is being used to prop up struggling portfolio companies or to invest in them for growth, and to fund new acquisitions. “Now that we’ve had a real hiatus in their ability to exit a lot of these (portfolio companies), they’ve had cash flow difficulties,” said David Hunt, CEO of Prudential Financial (NYSE:PRU)’s $1.3 trillion asset manager PGIM, referring to private equity firms. “And in order to deal with that, they have now been adding leverage to the fund level. So, they’ve got leverage on leverage.””They’re trying to get liquidity everywhere they can, and we’re not participating,” Hunt said, pointing to the market for loans to private equity funds as the place to look for “something to go creak in the night.” Private credit has grown exponentially over the past few years, as banks pulled back their balance sheets due to tighter regulations. Major fund managers such as Oaktree Capital Management, Apollo Global Management (NYSE:APO) and Ares Management (NYSE:ARES) as well as Wall Street banks such as Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley are active in the market. In the United States, private credit’s size is now comparable to leveraged loans and high yield bond markets. The massive size of the market means excessive debt and financial engineering are causes for concern, as losses stemming from an economic slowdown or other shocks can threaten broader financial stability. Further, the opacity of the market can undermine confidence in the system and complicate regulatory response in case of problems, as has been evident with shadow banking debt issues elsewhere, like China. One of the financiers said they attended a recent forum where regulators from some of the major agencies were asking about the linkages between banks and private credit markets in a bid to understand what was going on, both for the health of the banking system and for their ability to intervene if they ever needed to. DOWNSIDE PROTECTIONTo be sure, some financiers said while a downturn might lead to losses and depress returns for investors, the likelihood that problems in the private credit market would lead to a broader financial crisis is low. One said while their firm would write large checks running into hundreds of millions of dollars, they spent time properly underwriting the loan and wrote in protections. For example, in their dealings with the most sophisticated private equity firms they would build in protections that prevent the borrower from removing assets from the pool of collateral for the loan or stop them from incurring more debt. But that person and other financiers said that may not hold true across the market. Tony Yoseloff, managing partner at Davidson Kempner Capital Management, during a panel discussion cited Bank of America data to say that 22% of direct lending borrowers generated negative operating cash flow, and of them 8% had only enough cash to last two years or less. LOWER RETURNSRapid growth has meant increased competition, with both more money and players flooding into the private credit market. There is also renewed competition from public markets. As a result, interest that lenders can charge on these loans has shrunk in recent months and some said there could be a race to the bottom. Many expect the rate of defaults would rise in an economic slowdown and lead to lower recoveries for lenders. While several financiers said their investors were pressing private equity firms to take on loans to pay them dividends, leaving them with no choice, Christopher Ailman, the outgoing chief investment officer of the $336 billion California State Teachers’ Retirement System, said he “would rather see them not add leverage.” “The GPs are doing this to themselves,” Ailman said, referring to general partners, or the fund managers. “They’re used to that 2% management fee and that market is just frozen.”Once they have paid the dividend to investors with the loan, he added, “they come right in and ask you back to recommit for that next fund.” More

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    Chinese companies win licensing bids to explore Iraq oil and gas fields

    BAGHDAD (Reuters) -Chinese companies won bids to explore five Iraqi oil and gas fields on Saturday in a licensing round for hydrocarbon exploration that was primarily aimed at ramping up gas production for domestic use.An Iraqi Kurdish company also took two of the 29 projects up for grabs in the three-day licensing round across central, southern and western Iraq, which for the first time includes an offshore exploration block in the country’s Arab Gulf waters.Iraq aims to lure billions of dollars of investments to develop its oil and gas sector as it looks to ramp up local petrochemicals production and end imports of gas from neighbouring Iran that are currently key to producing power.More than 20 companies pre-qualified for the licensing round, including European, Chinese, Arab and Iraqi groups. There were notably no U.S. oil majors involved, even after Iraqi Prime Minister Mohammed Shia met with representatives of U.S. oil firms during an official visit to the United States last month. Five bids were won on Saturday by Chinese companies.Zhongman Petroleum and Natural Gas Group (ZPEC) took the northern extension of the Eastern Baghdad field, in Baghdad, and the Middle Euphrates field that straddles the southern Najaf and Karbala provinces, the oil ministry said. China’s United Energy Group Ltd won a bid to develop the Al-Faw field in southern Basra, while ZhenHua won a bid to develop Iraq’s Qurnain field in the Iraqi-Saudi border region and Geo-Jade won a bid to develop Iraq’s Zurbatiya field in the Wasit.Two oil and gas fields were taken by Iraq’s KAR Group – the Dimah field in eastern Maysan province, and the Sasan & Alan fields in Iraq’s northwestern Nineveh province – the ministry said. Around 20 more projects are open for bidding on Sunday and Monday. Falah Al-amri, the Iraqi prime minister’s advisor for oil and gas issues, said the government hoped the new projects would raise oil production to 6 million barrels per day by 2030 from around 5 million now. The government also wants the projects to produce enough natural gas so that, along with plans to all-but eliminate gas flaring by 2030, Iraq could end imports. “Its too early to talk about (gas) exports. We want to get self-sufficient,” Al-amri told Reuters. Iraq, OPEC’s second-largest oil producer after Saudi Arabia, at one time had targeted becoming a rival to the Gulf Arab kingdom with output of over a tenth of global demand.But its oil sector development has been hampered by contract terms viewed as unfavourable by many major oil companies as well as recurring conflict and political paralysis.Growing investor focus in recent years on environmental, social and governance criteria have also had an effect. Western oil giants such as Exxon Mobil Corp (NYSE:XOM) and Royal Dutch Shell (LON:SHEL) Plc have departed from a number of projects in Iraq while Chinese companies have steadily expanded their footprint. More

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    Billionaire investor Ken Griffin calls on Harvard to embrace ‘Western values’

    Griffin, founder of U.S. hedge fund Citadel, told the Financial Times in an interview that the U.S. had “lost sight of education as the means of pursuing truth and acquiring knowledge” over the past decade. “Harvard should put front and centre (that it) stands for meritocracy in America…,” Griffin said, adding that schools should “embrace Western values that have built one of the greatest nations in the world.”Griffin who has donated more than half a billion dollars to Harvard University said in January that he has halted donations to the school over how it handled antisemitism on campus. “What you’re seeing now is the end-product of this cultural revolution in American education playing out on American campuses, in particular, using the paradigm of the oppressor and the oppressed,” Griffin told the FT. “The protests on college campuses are almost like performative art..,” he said. “Freedom of speech does not give you the right to storm a building or vandalise it,” he added.”That’s not freedom of speech. That’s just anarchy.” Griffin’s remarks come amid arrests of dozens of pro-Palestinian activists at universities across America in the latest crackdowns on demonstrations roiling U.S. campuses. The protesting students are demanding a cease-fire in Israel’s incursion into Gaza and have demanded their schools divest from companies with ties to Israel. Since the first mass arrests at Columbia University on April 18, at least 2,600 demonstrators have been detained at more than 100 protests in 39 states and Washington, D.C., according to The Appeal, a nonprofit news organization. Griffin, who started trading in his Harvard dormitory, spoke at the Managed Funds Association conference in Miami in January about America’s elite universities and criticized the education at the universities blaming the “DEI (diversity, equity and inclusion) agenda.” More

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    Why Solana was hit hard by the collapse of FTX? UBS explains

    Analysts at UBS say that central banks’ aggressive measures to combat inflation with higher interest rates severely dented growth expectations and investment appetites, particularly affecting sectors like cryptocurrencies, which are closely tied to high-beta technology stocks. They also noted “a significant increase in the correlation between Bitcoin and these stocks throughout the year.”The report highlights how the crypto industry faced additional turmoil from specific events, such as the collapse of the Terra Luna stablecoin, which triggered a chain reaction of bankruptcies within the sector. This included major platforms like Celsius and hedge funds such as Three Arrows Capital. Moreover, November 2022 saw the dramatic failure of FTX, once the world’s second largest crypto exchange, along with its sister trading firm Alameda. “FTX’s bankruptcy was particularly damaging, given its widespread influence across the crypto ecosystem and previous role in aiding other struggling firms,” it added.FTX and Alameda’s downfall not only impacted their direct operations but also sent shockwaves through related companies and investment vehicles, including a $175 million exposure by Genesis.The UBS research report also provides a detailed analysis of the dramatic downturn following the FTX collapse, focusing particularly on the severe impact on Solana (SOL) and the broader venture capital landscape.According to the report, “Through Alameda, Bankman-Fried invested directly in selected crypto projects, one being Solana. At the beginning of November, Alameda revealed a SOL position valued at more than USD 1bn, representing an estimated 10% of total SOL market capitalization.” This investment became problematic as FTX/Alameda’s downfall unfolded, severely affecting Solana’s market position and investor confidence.The report also touches on concerns related to “wrapped” Bitcoin and Ether within the Solana ecosystem, highlighting the complexities and risks of cryptocurrencies backed by other tokens, especially when the custodian faces solvency issues.On the venture capital side, the analysis by UBS points out that while the crypto market downturn caused disruptions, the overall exposure of the venture capital industry to digital assets remains relatively low. However, the report notes, “Select venture capitalists (VCs) and growth-focused private equity managers have been prominent investors in digital assets, and the collapse of Terra Luna and FTX raised questions about potential losses and manager survival.”Finally, the report advises that each crypto boom-and-bust cycle, while challenging, is a necessary step toward the industry’s maturation. UBS concludes that “with less competition for capital, more realistic valuations, and greater transparency and regulation, we think digital assets will offer a better, investable environment in the future.” More

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    Michael Saylor Issues ‘Indiana Jones Warning’ on Bitcoin (BTC)

    Saylor is a vocal Bitcoin evangelist who stood behind the idea of MicroStrategy implementing regular BTC purchases over the past four years. Now, he is promoting the world’s paramount cryptocurrency daily on the X platform.Being a Bitcoin maximalist, Saylor hints that he believes BTC to be the only crypto in the market. Unlike Max Keiser, he does not openly (and not so frequently) criticize altcoins and does not use the “s-coin” word when talking about them. However, in a recent public statement, Saylor said outright that he believes XRP, SOL, ADA, ETH and other altcoins to be unregistered securities, thus agreeing with the SEC stance.Saylor said that he expects quite soon all altcoins to become officially labeled as securities, and then only those holding Bitcoin will win. BTC so far is the only cryptocurrency that has been qualified by the SEC and the CFTC as a commodity. Ethereum has this status as well, however, recently it seems to have become questioned by the SEC leader Gary Gensler. The latter has initiated a real witch-hunt on altcoins and U.S. cryptocurrency exchanges recently for trading them.By now, the price has made a marginal rebound of over 1%, and BTC is changing hands near the $60,920 level.Prominent crypto analyst and trader Michael van de Poppe tweeted yesterday that he expects Bitcoin to follow a scenario that may take BTC to a low of $55,000-$52,000. This is likely to happen, he specified, if Bitcoin loses the range where it is trading at the moment — $61,000-$60,000.This article was originally published on U.Today More