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    Top US Treasury official to travel to Singapore, Malaysia to discuss sanctions

    WASHINGTON (Reuters) – The U.S. Treasury Department’s top sanctions official will travel to Singapore and Malaysia next week, a source familiar with the matter told Reuters, as Washington seeks to combat funding for Iran and its proxy groups as well as evasion of its sanctions on Russia.The source, speaking on condition of anonymity, said there has been an uptick in money moving to Iran and its proxies, including Hamas, through the Malaysian financial system.During the visit, first reported by Reuters, Treasury’s under secretary for terrorism and financial intelligence, Brian Nelson, is expected to discuss U.S. concerns and the sanctions risk such activity poses, the source said. Treasury’s general counsel, Neil MacBride, will also be on the trip.The visit comes as Treasury has increased its focus on terrorist financing through Southeast Asia, including through fundraising efforts and illicit Iranian oil sales, the source said.The Treasury Department in December imposed sanctions on four Malaysia-based companies it accused of being fronts supporting Iran’s production of drones.Washington has recently imposed further sanctions targeting Iran, including over Iranian drones used by Russian in the war in Ukraine, as the U.S. has sought to ratchet up pressure on Tehran after its attack on Israel.While in Singapore, Nelson will discuss the enforcement of a G7-led price cap on Russian oil as well as cutting off the transshipment of critical dual-use goods, those which have both civilian and military purposes, said the source.The United States and its allies have imposed sanctions on thousands of targets since Russia invaded neighboring Ukraine. The war has seen tens of thousands killed and cities destroyed.Washington has since sought to crack down on evasion of the Western measures, including the shipment of dual-use goods through third countries to Russia.Singapore is a major shipping hub. Insurance and other maritime service providers operating in Singapore have warned of evasion of the price cap on Russian oil, complaining that it is difficult to confirm that paperwork promising oil is bought at or below the $60 cap is accurate.The G7 price cap on Russian crude oil, imposed in December 2022, aims to reduce Russia’s revenues available for its war in Ukraine by allowing Western-supplied insurance and other services only on cargoes priced below $60 a barrel. More

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    Major central banks linger in uneasy calm in April

    LONDON (Reuters) – Interest rates at major central banks remained static in April as the prospect of higher-for-longer U.S. Federal Reserve rates exerted some pressure on policymakers, especially in emerging markets, where Indonesia delivered a surprise hike.All four of the central banks overseeing the 10 most heavily traded currencies that held meetings in April – the Bank of Japan, the Bank of Canada, the European Central Bank and the Reserve Bank of New Zealand – kept benchmark lending rates unchanged. Policy makers in Switzerland, Sweden, Australia, Norway and Britain did not hold rate setting meetings.The Fed, whose rate setting meeting straddled April and May, also left rates unchanged when its decision was published on Wednesday. U.S. data, pointing to strong growth but also worrisome inflation pressures, cemented a divergence between the world’s top central bank and its G10 peers in April. “The inflation downtrend is alive but unstable, persuading central banks to wait longer and cut key rates more slowly,” said Daniel Bergvall, head of forecasting at SEB. “This is now creating different playing fields for major central banks.”Money markets show traders see a high chance that the ECB will start cutting rates in June, but the first full quarter percentage point rate reduction for the Fed is now only priced in for November, according to LSEG data.The prospect of higher-for-longer U.S. rates also shaped policy making in emerging economies – which had been ahead of developed peers in both the recent tightening and the easing cycle. The stand out in April, across the Reuters sample of 18 central banks in developing economies, was a surprise interest rate hike by Indonesia – the first since October – and a bid to shore up the rupiah currency which fell to four-year lows against the dollar.Meanwhile, Hungary, Chile and Colombia delivered a total of 175 bps between them. Nine other central banks in developing markets that held rate setting meetings kept benchmark rates unchanged. “For me, the key driver for EM performance this year is a global one, which is the Fed,” said Sergei Strigo, co-head of emerging markets fixed income at Amundi Asset Management.”The repricing of interest rate cuts has been very significant as the market is now pricing in barely one cut by the end of the year, and very late this year.”The year-to-date tally of rate hikes across emerging markets stood at 775 bps – nearly all of which were delivered by Turkey. This compares to 850 bps of cuts. More

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    Norway keeps rates on hold, may extend tight policy

    The central bank said in March that it could start cutting rates in September from the current 16-year high.The Norwegian crown strengthened to 11.74 against the euro at 0901 GMT, from 11.77 just before the announcement.There was no new forecast released on Friday. The next policy prediction is due on June 20.Weakness in the Norwegian currency, coupled with signs of renewed inflation abroad, had led some analysts in recent weeks to predict Norges Bank may eventually postpone its planned cut.”The data so far could suggest that a tight monetary policy stance may be needed for somewhat longer than previously envisaged,” Norges Bank said in a statement.The policy committee reiterated that the current policy rate of 4.5% was sufficiently high to return inflation to target within a reasonable time horizon.The central bank statement pointed to a stronger economy, high wage growth and currency weakness, Sparebank 1 Chief Economist Elisabeth Holvik said.”In other words, there probably won’t be any rate cut this year,” Holvik said in a note to clients.Since its previous policy announcement in March, inflation has been slightly lower than projected while economic activity and wage growth appear to be slightly higher, Norges Bank said.”At the same time, interest rate expectations abroad have risen and the crown is somewhat weaker than assumed,” it added.Norway’s core inflation rate stood at 4.5% year-on-year in March, a 20-month low, down from a record 7.0% last June but still exceeding the central bank’s goal of 2.0%.The U.S. Federal Reserve said on Thursday it would take longer than expected to drive down inflation, which in turn could delay its planned rate cuts.The European Central Bank is expected to cut rates in June, according to a recent Reuters poll, and then twice more later this year, but this was less than analysts had earlier forecast. More

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    Chronicle Oracles Arrive on zkSync

    Chronicle Protocol is proud to announce the launch of support for zkSync. Scribe, blockchain’s first fully verifiable and cost-efficient Oracle (NYSE:ORCL), is live now on zkSync Era. Chronicle Protocol’s integration of zkSync unlocks decentralized, secure, and resilient price feeds for over 100 dApps already in the ecosystem.Chronicle has launched on zkSync Era with its core Oracles, BTC/USD and ETH/USD, with more price feeds such as USDT/USD, USDC/USD, and WSTETH to follow.With Scribe’s arrival on zkSync Era, builders will immediately gain access to these huge cost-saving benefits without compromising on the security, resilience, or decentralization of the Oracle network. Values alignedChronicle was the first Oracle on Ethereum back in 2017. It has long been a proponent of the “Ethereum approach”. Therefore, preserving its foundational values—freedom, self-sovereignty, and decentralization—values that both Chronicle and zkSync are built on—makes this integration a perfect fit in more ways than one. Chronicle is delighted to build together with those on the zkSync ecosystem.If users are interested in bolstering their protocol, DeFi Dapp, or anything else with a custom Oracle designed by Chronicle, or would like to integrate any of its existing real-time price feeds, they are encouraged to reach out directly via Discord or email to [email protected] TL;DR on ScribeChoosing an Oracle to secure a protocol and its TVL is the most important consideration of them all. With that in mind, Chronicle Protocol has prepared a short rundown of the questions every Oracle user should have definitive, verifiable answers to and how Scribe stacks up:Where does the data come from?Chronicle Scribe displays every data source in real-time and historically via The Chronicle, its on-chain dashboard. Users can pick an Oracle, choose a time and date on the graph, and click the drop-down arrow on any validator to see which exchanges were queried for the price data.Caption: wstETH/USD Oracle sources & valuesOracle providers that use low volume and low liquidity exchanges or liquidity pools for data sources are the reason behind most DeFi protocol attacks. Every Oracle protocol should provide complete data source transparency to their users, and in a cryptographically verifiable way – not merely through words and images. Users are encouraged to seek verification rather than relyingsolely on trust.How many validators or signers does the protocol have?At Chronicle, protocol actors are referred to as validators. Other providers might call them signers or Oracles. These actors operate the nodes within the protocol that attest to the integrity of the reported data, such as the price of BTC/USD at a specific time.This is how to establish truth in an Oracle network. Enough of these nodes must report back with the requested data to develop a consensus. However, if a bad actor can gain control of the majority of these nodes, they can manipulate the reported data. Therefore, the more validators or nodes an Oracle protocol has and the more distributed (or decentralized) they are, the more secure it is from being hacked. Using The Chronicle, anyone can see who Chronicle Protocol’s validators are, which cryptocurrency pairs or Oracles they are sourcing data for, and when their reported data was last updated.Scribe is the first Oracle design to pioneer the use of Schnorr signatures. This allows Chronicle Protocol to scale to an unlimited number of validators. No other Oracle protocol can achieve this as they all use an implementation of ECDSA that has a linear relationship between the number of validators and the cost of operating the Oracle. Oracle networks constructed in this way must keep validator or signer numbers low to maintain a lower operating cost, sacrificing better security and decentralization.Caption: A real-time view of the protocol validators from The Chronicle dashboardWho are the protocol validators or signersKnowing the identity of the validators is just as important as the total number. This is because an actor running a node can report any data they please. For example, they could have the node report that BTC is worth $10,000 when the market value is $40,000, creating an attack vector and draining the DeFi protocol the Oracle ‘secures.’Therefore, decentralized and distributed nodes should be at the top of your Oracle provider shopping list unless you want your Oracle provider to have the power to drain your project. Right now, more than one Oracle provider runs all or the majority of its protocol’s nodes themselves, securing millions of dollars of TVL. Nothing stops them from draining your project if they get compromised. This is the risk of using a centralized Oracle.At Chronicle, all of our validators are distributed and identifiable, and many are operated by well-known brands with a good reputation and track record—projects such as MakerDAO, Infura, Gnosis, Gitcoin, Etherscan, and DeFi Saver. Our goal is to create a validator community of some of the most used protocols in the space, creating a positive feedback loop of increasing security and decentralization. What does it cost to operate the Oracles?Oracles are very gas-hungry. For example, every time the BTC/USD Oracle (or Feed) updates to the latest price, this has a gas cost as it is required to post the result on-chain. Regardless of L1 or L2, the more updates, the more cost, and the Oracle provider shoulders that cost. Therefore, many Oracle providers look to update the data less frequently. This creates stale data and opens up opportunities for arbitrage, with both the Dapp and the user of the Dapp losing out.With Scribe, we have tackled the underlying engineering problem behind the high cost of operating Oracles. The result is an Oracle that costs up to 6x less than Chainlink to update and 3.5x less than Pyth (on L1 and L2). This was achieved using Schnorr signatures – to read more about that, check out this research report by Token Terminal. About Chronicle ProtocolChronicle Protocol is a novel Oracle solution that has exclusively secured over $10B in assets for MakerDAO and its ecosystem since 2017. With a history of innovation, including the invention of the first Oracle on Ethereum, Chronicle Protocol continues to redefine Oracle networks. A blockchain-agnostic protocol, Chronicle overcomes the current limitations of transferring data on-chain by developing the first truly scalable, cost-efficient, decentralized, and verifiable Oracles, rewriting the rulebook on data transparency and accessibility.Website | Community | X | LinkedIn ContactPeter [email protected] article was originally published on Chainwire More

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    Agustín Carstens: ‘the Basel regime has been very good for the banks’

    This article is an onsite version of our Unhedged newsletter. Premium subscribers can sign up here to get the newsletter delivered every weekday. Standard subscribers can upgrade to Premium here, or explore all FT newslettersGood morning. It was interesting that so much of the Wall Street commentary on Wednesday’s Fed meeting declared it to have been “dovish”. And it is true that Jay Powell pushed back on the possibility of a rate rise. But he also emphasised that he is prepared to be extremely patient about cutting. What’s really going to be dovish or hawkish is the data. Email me: [email protected] interview: Agustín CarstensAgustín Carstens has been the general manager of the Bank for International Settlements since 2017. Previously, he was governor of the Bank of Mexico, and on the board of the IMF. The BIS serves as the “central bank for central banks”, providing a forum for co-operation and assisting national central banks in managing their foreign exchange reserves. It is also the host of the Basel Committee on Banking Supervision, the pre-eminent global standard setter for the banking industry. Unhedged visited him in his office in Basel last week, where the conversation ranged across bank failures, capital requirements, private credit and the “Finternet”. Unhedged: The Basel committee is an international advisory body with no treaty power. Its recommendations are just that — recommendations. A bunch of people come together in a room in a mid-sized city in Switzerland and decide what global banking rules should be, and to some degree, the world does what the committee recommends. How is this possible? It looks a little like magic.Carstens: Whatever happens here at the BIS and whatever happens in the Basel committee, there is a lot of hands-on involvement by [central bank] governors. Compare, for example, the IMF. It has an in-house executive board, and board members — I have been a board member — always have to consult with their capital before they make a decision. Here, governors come, they discuss, they get their hands dirty, and at the end of the day most of the time the important decisions are made by the top leadership in the room. There is a lot of ownership. The other thing is the mechanics of how decisions are struck. The fact that governors are very aware of the state of their banking system allows them to know, is this going to fly or is this not going to fly? Finally, I think that the Basel principles are a very useful construct for the banking industry. I mean, you hear a lot of complaints about Basel III. But it has become a tremendously effective mechanism to provide signals about how strong an institution is. The fact that you are able to say, ‘I’m Basel III compliant,’ or ‘I am above the minimum standard by so much,’ that provides a lot of information. That has helped a lot of institutions. It has helped the whole system. There is always some stress and friction, but I think that friction has led to a reasonable balance, where we as authorities have a sense of how strong an institution is, and the banks have some measure of where they are, and the market takes that into account. Fundamentally, the Basel principles address the right issues. They ring the bells of common sense about what central bankers think about: liquidity, leverage, capital.Unhedged: You mention friction. Bankers have complained there are 14 different Basel endgames and there is fragmentation at the implementation level. Do you think this is an unsolvable problem, given the many countries and interests involved?Carstens: Fragmentation is a very strong word. Differentiation is a more accurate description. In a fragmented system, you cannot talk to each other, or there is no engagement between systems. Fragmentation would mean that you could not operate as an integrated entity in different countries. Yes, there is deep differentiation, and the differentiation is there by design because the basic principles establish minimums. The rule is not that you have to comply with this particular figure; you have to at least observe the minimum.Unhedged: UBS had its annual meeting this week. The headline in the Financial Times was the bank is concerned about high Swiss capital requirements. And we have heard similar complaints from American bankers. How does the BIS respond to the idea that capital requirements have gone too far?Carstens: I go back to what I said. The Basel regime has been very good for the banks, for the system overall. Today the Gsifis (Global Systemically Important Financial Institutions) are strong, and part of that is because they have observed the standards very well. Since the global financial crisis, they have made tremendous progress. Unhedged: A more general question about central banking. When central bankers are asked a hard question — about the effect of zero rates, or it’s about the climate, or some other global issue — they tend to reply, “I’ve got a simple mandate, price stability and full employment.” The consequences of following that mandate are not the banker’s problem. But one might look at the long period of very low rates and the consequences that has had for the economy, for example, and wonder if such a tight mandate is optimal.Carstens: For me, the question has a relatively simple answer most of the time, if not all the time. A mandate by law is accompanied and by a set of instruments designed to allow the compliance of that mandate. If you want autonomy to work, you need to give the central bank a clear mandate and the instruments to comply with it. And you have to have an accountability regime, where they can explain what they are doing towards the mandate. There is the perception that if you command money, you can do many things, and there is always an endless list of things being suggested that the central bank should do. Once you start deviating from the mandate, you enter into territory where you might have to do a trade-off against your mandate, for the simple reason that you might not have been granted the right instrument. And of course no central banker wants to be put in that position.Unhedged: I’m trying to ask a higher-level question about institutional design, from the point of view of good government. There is a way that central bank autonomy might be too effective. Because the mandate is clear and the bank is autonomous, and the rest of government is kind of messy, central bank policy gets priority, in a way, and maybe it shouldn’t. Carstens: Well, let me say the following. I think the whole issue of the mandate needs to echo society’s preferences. Now, one thing that has happened is that once inflation came down in the 1970s, to some extent we forgot about it. That’s the state of nature. But the cost of that is that people started not appreciating the value of keeping inflation low and stable. Why should you be concerned about something that doesn’t exist? And suddenly inflation pops up and now you see it’s a huge issue. I think if you ask people now, do you think it’s important to have an institution within the state whose primary task is to keep inflation under control? I would say that there would be a lot of political and social support, because people have seen the impact of inflation very recently. And that’s what grounds central banks.Unhedged: Is there a danger that we are not back to a low inflation world? We’re much closer to target than we were, but is it possible that central banks have not done what’s necessary?Carstens: I think so far things are working quite well. We had a unique inflationary shock. It had the combination of tremendous supply shocks with a very important aggregate demand push, through monetary instruments and fiscal instruments. To bring that inflation under control required very forceful and decisive action. And I think central banks have acted [appropriately]. Now, we warned about the last mile many, many months ago. This is not new. The fact that the last mile will be bumpy is not necessarily news; even more so given that we have had tremendously traumatic events as part of the origin of this inflationary shock. We have never had a situation where the world economy was put under suspended animation to solve a health crisis. That is huge, and 100 per cent new. Did we think that it was going to work like when you turn the lights on and off? The economy doesn’t work that way. If you turn off the economy, different sectors respond in different ways. Supply chains get completely distorted, the labour market gets completely distorted. The government had to respond in a very aggressive way. So for the economy to find its way again will take time. We are in that process; we have to be patient. At the end of the day, the last mile is about allowing for the needed relative price adjustments, and there are still many relative price adjustments to be made, and there are still doubts about whether some relative prices will not come back and bite. We know very well that monetary policy acts with a lag. But I see a strong commitment from central banks, and I think they should continue to be persistent. I think we are very close, and I think it is very important to go back to the 2 per cent inflation target.Unhedged: Last year we had some major banking incidents, one here in Switzerland, several in the United States. What did we learn?Carstens: In the case of Credit Suisse, it was clear that business plans really make a difference, and business plans are very difficult to assess from a supervisory point of view. Probably the supervisory authorities should have had more strength in being able to influence Credit Suisse, because if you talk to the relevant authorities, the dialogue between them and Credit Suisse was there. But that dialogue didn’t carry enough strength to make Credit Suisse react in time. So I think that giving more [power of] persuasion to the supervisors/regulators would have helped, including sanctions and so on. Coming from Latin America, the Credit Suisse saga was like García Márquez’s A Chronicle of a Death Foretold. You could see it coming. I think authorities saw the risks, and they pushed and they pushed and they pushed, but they didn’t get to where they wanted to go, and it took a huge world shock to accelerate the process. So reflecting on the events in the US banks and here in Switzerland last year, I think we authorities should focus more on governance, risk management and business models. Authorities need to have a way to have a more direct impact on the institution. This is not so much in the field of Basel principles, but about how relationships between regulated entities and authorities work, and how at some point, you have to be able to call the bank, have a discussion, and try to steer the bank in the right direction. Unhedged: Some observers have expressed the concern that, in the case of Credit Suisse, there is not enough clarity about how the resolution process was supposed to work, and that therefore the resolution couldn’t go as expected or got stuck, leading to the UBS takeover. Do you agree?Carstens: No, I think the resolution work was there. I think it could have been done. But resolution is an option, not the only option. As an authority, you have to evaluate how it will be less painful. And the way it was engineered, they used many of the principles of resolution. They stabilised the situation effectively. The Swiss taxpayer didn’t lose money. The world economy, the world financial market, did not get traumatised.Now, going to the US regional banks, there the issue was really very elementary banking mistakes. I think it is important to mention that many of the Basel III principles did not apply to those banks. With the benefit of hindsight, if they were subject to those principles, probably accidents could have been mitigated. And that is being remedied now.Unhedged: That’s because they would have had more capital and higher liquidity?Carstens: Yes, and in the case of a Silicon Valley Bank, the marking to market of their positions would have been passed to equity early on. And when you have to do that constantly, the market takes notice early on. Here, once they went out and said to the market that they needed capital, the market said, why do you need capital? Well, we have all these losses that you don’t know about. That is when everything exploded. Unhedged: Changing topics, I agree with many of the goals you articulated in your paper about the Finternet — using unified ledgers and tokenisation to reduce the frictions that persist in the global financial system. But I wonder if a more interconnected, frictionless system might increase cyber security risks — if the current patchwork has some security advantages. Carstens: With the Finternet, we’re not talking about a monolithic network or a monolithic ledger. We talk about a network of networks. An advantage of this rethinking of the financial system is that you can incorporate these security concerns into the design. One problem we have today is that many systems, not all of them, were not necessarily designed with cyber security in mind, and I think it makes a huge difference if you can incorporate everything from the outset. Cyber security will be an endless battle. But I think that security would be enhanced when you have it in the design from the beginning.Unhedged: What’s the next step in realising your vision?Carstens: One of our projects, Agorá, is an effort that is being put together by the BIS and the IFF [the Institute of International Finance]. The BIS are coordinating with seven very important central banks — the Fed, the Bank of England, the ECB, Swiss National Bank, the Bank of Korea, Bank of Japan and the Banco de México. And then the IFF is putting together a group of financial institutions. If you think about the Finternet, a key component would be the circulatory system — the payment links. The payment links will depend on wholesale CBDC [central bank digital currencies] and tokenised deposits. Tokenised deposits is a very unfortunate name. It is better to talk about digital commercial bank money. So, in the Finternet, the payment system would rely on wholesale CBDC, which is very similar to the reserve system we have today, but empowered by programmability and so on; and on commercial bank money, which is exactly what we have today in two-tier systems. So Agorá is going to study all of the consequences of having tokenised central bank money and tokenised commercial bank money, with a very specific application to correspondent banking. Even if we don’t [progress all the way] to the Finternet, this has a lot of value. Because correspondent banking is a system that, by and large, needs huge amounts of fixing. Unhedged: Does it concern you — and I don’t want to sound too cynical here — that a lot of banks involved in correspondent banking are, as it were, in the friction business? What we think of as inefficiency, they think of as fee income.Carstens: A lot of the reasons why correspondent banking is a pain is because it’s very complex, and it’s based on very old technology. A lot of the costs have to do with compliance, have to do with AML-CFT [anti money laundering, combating financing of terrorism] requirements. It has to do with different rules in different places and all that can be streamlined. Many banks have left correspondent banking because it was perceived as a low-margin, high-risk enterprise. And I think with the Finternet you can improve that balance. You can dramatically reduce the risk for the institution. Unhedged: There’s been two big changes in the banking world recently. One is we went from a zero rate world to what we might call normal rates. Another big change is that sovereign debt levels are much higher. How will those two big changes affect the work that you do and the work that central bankers do?Carstens: If — and this is a big if — we settle at a rate that is higher than what we had last decade, I think that’s good for central banks, because it creates some distance with the zero lower bound, and gives more flexibility to monetary policy. And I think having rates back to normal shouldn’t be such a detriment to growth. So I think that’s fine. I am concerned about debt over GDP in many countries. And it’s not only not only high debt, it’s also high deficits. It is not very good to have fiscal and monetary policy at cross-currents. And to some extent that is happening. So the work of bringing down inflation becomes more difficult at the margin. And with high debt over GDP, you know the markets will have to carry a larger stock of the “safe asset” [sovereign bonds]. But by how much can you increase the stock of safe assets before their quality, safety, is questioned? If you come from an emerging market, you know that can happen. Unhedged: Assets have been rushing to private credit. How do you assess those risks associated with non-bank lending?Carstens: The Basel committee and the FSB [Financial Stability Board] are looking primarily into the connection of non-bank financial activities with banking activities. Because at this stage, that could the transmission mechanism. There are two important aspects there. One is whenever you make a rule, there will be efforts to try to avoid it. If a lot of the activity is that going on [in non-bank lending] is regulatory arbitrage, that probably is not good for the system overall. And the other important consideration is that we haven’t seen how [new activities in the non-bank financial world] will perform in the full interest rate cycle. We don’t have enough information to say if they are handling the cycle well or not. The banking system, we know how it is going. We don’t know exactly what the exposures are for different sectors, what the interest rate sensitivities are, and so on in non-banking activities. There will be casualties. And we don’t know how high they will be. At least we as authorities should try to have much better information. I’m sure that there are many non-bank activities that are worthwhile and that are safe. But there might be many others that are not. One good readBrittney Griner talks about her imprisonment in Russia.FT Unhedged podcastCan’t get enough of Unhedged? Listen to our podcast for a 15-minute dive into the latest markets news and financial headlines, twice a week. Catch up on past editions of the newsletter here.Recommended newsletters for youSwamp Notes — Expert insight on the intersection of money and power in US politics. Sign up hereDue Diligence — Top stories from the world of corporate finance. Sign up here More

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    Jonnathan Saborio Announces Smart Profit Global’s Mission to Democratize Blockchain Technology

    In the often confusing and jargon-heavy world of blockchain and decentralized finance, one company is on a mission to lower the barriers to entry. Smart Profit Global, led by visionary entrepreneur Jonnathan Saborio, has built a comprehensive ecosystem designed to help anyone confidently navigate and benefit from the burgeoning decentralized economy.What sets Smart Profit Global apart in the crowded blockchain space is their focus on accessibility and education. Initiatives like their proprietary CHEF Method aim to demystify complex topics and empower users with the knowledge they need to make informed decisions. By breaking down key concepts into engaging, easy-to-understand content, Smart Profit Global is working to take blockchain technology from an insider’s niche to a mainstream financial tool.Their platform offers a diverse range of blockchain-based applications and services, including Smart Profit Global’s blockchain infrastructure solutions, Smart CryptoLottery’s innovative gaming platform, Smart Real Estate’s tokenized property marketplace, and Smart Future Income’s unique approach to rewards programs. By leveraging the power of decentralized technologies across these verticals, the company aims to demonstrate the transformative potential of the blockchain economy and make it more accessible to a wider audience. While the blockchain space is known for its volatility and risks, Saborio and his team are committed to building trust through transparency, security, and a focus on real-world utility.Of course, in an industry known for its volatility and risk, trust is paramount. That’s why Smart Profit Global prioritizes transparency and security across their ecosystem. And with a growing community of satisfied users sharing their success stories, it’s clear that Saborio and his team are winning over converts.As blockchain technology continues to evolve at a breakneck pace, having a trusted guide is more valuable than ever. With their commitment to accessibility, education, and wealth-building potential, Jonnathan Saborio and Smart Profit Global are positioning themselves as that essential partner – and opening up a new financial frontier for pioneers ready to seize the opportunity.About Smart Profit GlobalSmart Profit Global is a holding company that owns and operates Smart CryptoLottery, Smart Real Estate, and Smart Future Income. These blockchain-focused businesses offer a range of innovative solutions across finance, gaming, real estate, and rewards programs.ContactCEOJonnathan SaboríoSmart Profit [email protected] article was originally published on Chainwire More

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    Japan used $59bn to prop up the yen but consumers may still cut back

    When Japanese authorities deployed tens of billions of dollars to try to prop up the weakening yen this week, it was partly with an eye on the growing grumbles from people such as Keiko Shimoharaguchi.The 60-year-old retired in March looking forward to a foreign trip. But Japan’s tumbling currency is pushing her dream trip out of reach.“I would like to go to Europe if I could, but I see on TV that even noodles and dumplings cost as much as ¥5,000 [$32.70] in places like Hawaii, so I don’t feel like I can enjoy the trip. All the costs seem idiotic,” said the Kawasaki resident.“I can’t imagine seeing the kind of strong yen we saw in the past,” she said, even in the face of massive currency interventions seen this week.Over the course of four days, Japan is suspected of carrying out two market interventions, which the authorities have not officially acknowledged but traders estimated at a combined value of roughly ¥9tn ($59bn).Economists, traders and companies said the size and urgency of the interventions, pointed to the unprecedented challenges confronting an ageing, shrinking economy that is only just emerging from decades of deflation.You are seeing a snapshot of an interactive graphic. This is most likely due to being offline or JavaScript being disabled in your browser.A cheap yen helped drive the inflation, wage increases and corporate profits Japan badly needed to spur the economy. But the pace of the currency’s depreciation and dim prospects of reversing the trend have alarmed consumers, prompting them to cut spending and undermining the Bank of Japan’s efforts to normalise policy after years of keeping rates below zero.Across the country, households are looking for ways to moderate spending in areas such as long-distance overseas travel. Others are cutting corners on meals, transportation and hobbies as the exchange rate pushes up the cost of imported energy and food.In Tokyo’s swish Ginza district, a newly opened discount grocery store with the slogan “Everyday Low Price” is selling bento lunch boxes for less than ¥300.“When I come to Ginza, I always stop at this shop,” said Kumiko, a company executive in her 60s. “With living costs rising, anyone would be happy if prices are lower, and here, most of the things I buy are about 30 per cent cheaper than elsewhere.”Analysts said the Bank of Japan would struggle to justify raising interest rates from near-zero levels as long as domestic consumption remained tepid More