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    Global equity funds face fourth week of outflows amid dampened Fed rate cut hopes

    Investors pulled out $2.7 billion worth of global equity funds during the week, which was much less than the outflow of $23 billion in the previous week. U.S. equity funds experienced outflows of $1.2 billion, while European equity funds saw $6.3 billion leave during the week. Conversely, Asian markets, primarily driven by Japanese equity funds, recorded inflows of $5.1 billion.Recent inflation reports surpassed forecasts and tempered market expectations for Federal Reserve rate cuts. The markets now see a 70% likelihood of a cut in September — down from earlier projections of six cuts this year.Global stocks were heading towards their worst month since September on Friday, with investors cautious ahead of the release of March’s core PCE price index data later in the day for further clues on the U.S. rate outlook.Among equity sector funds, tech sector funds experienced outflows of approximately $770 million during the week, while consumer staples and healthcare funds saw outflows of $339 million and $275 million, respectively. Conversely, energy and industrial sector funds recorded inflows of about $544 million and $588 million, respectively.Meanwhile, global bond funds secured inflows of $2.17 billion, significantly higher than the $820 million recorded in the previous week.Government bond funds drew $781 million, high-yield bond funds received $647 million, and corporate bond funds attracted $2.3 billion.Among commodities, precious metal funds attracted an inflow of $205 million, reversing outflows from the previous two weeks, while energy funds experienced a modest outflow of $35 million.Data covering 29,598 emerging market funds (EM) showed a netoutflow of $782 million from bond funds, which was their second consecutive weekly outflow. EM equity funds saw an outflow of $1.6 billion during the week. More

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    ‘Rich Dad Poor Dad’ Author Says ‘No Soft Landing’ for Economy, Crypto Army Reacts

    While things are not looking too good, there still may be hope, he hinted.The cryptocurrency community rushed to respond to Kiyosaki’s tweet.This means that the U.S. economy might just be continuing to grow, he said, although below its true potential. Kiyosaki reminded his readers on X/Twitter that in the last quarter of last year, the economy grew by 3.4%. In the first quarter of this year, it has grown by less than half of that – 1.6%.There is not going to be a soft landing for the U.S. economy, Kiyosaki believes, but he seems to remain optimistic since the economy continues to grow no matter what. He also urged his readers not to believe fake news.Besides, according to his earlier tweets, the financial expert has made and continues to make a huge financial bet on the world’s leading cryptocurrency Bitcoin.Some began to criticize the author, and others reminded him about one of his favorite assets – Bitcoin. The majority left positive comments, praising Bitcoin and thanking Kiyosaki for his tweets that they find useful and inspiring.The “Rich Dad Poor Dad” author also said that he planned to buy 10 more Bitcoins before the halving occurs since he expected a major price rise.This article was originally published on U.Today More

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    Trader earns $23M flipping Solana memecoins: Here’s how

    On April 26, blockchain analysis firm Lookonchain flagged the movements of a trader with the Solana Name Service account called “paulo.sol.” The crypto wallet realized profits on meme tokens like Dogwifhat (WIF), Jeo Boden (BODEN) and Bonk (BONK). Continue Reading on Cointelegraph More

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    Chinese ‘Crypto Dad’ faces government investigation

    According to an April 26 report by the Shanghai Securities News, Yao is currently under investigation by the Central Committee of the Communist Party of China on suspicion of “serious violations” of discipline and law. The specific reasons for the investigation are not disclosed.Continue Reading on Cointelegraph More

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    Latin American developer outsourcers capitalise on remote work boom

    Unlock the Editor’s Digest for freeRoula Khalaf, Editor of the FT, selects her favourite stories in this weekly newsletter.After two engineers from Buenos Aires founded the BairesDev software outsourcing company in 2009, they relied on word of mouth to gain clients and their business grew steadily.Then, the Covid-19 pandemic hit and revenue shot up — from $36mn in 2019 to $314mn in 2022. Companies, everywhere, had begun to realise that they did not need to have all their staff on site.“[It] was completely insane, and then we kept growing and growing,” says co-founder Nacho De Marco. As one of his spokespeople puts it: “Geography wasn’t a barrier any more — it didn’t matter if talent was located in the US or Latin America, as everyone was working remotely.”BairesDev now has 4,000 workers across Latin America, based in places ranging from small towns to big cities, working on projects for about 500 active clients, mostly in the US.The pandemic transformed the software outsourcing industry, with companies and employees suddenly becoming much more open to remote work. It also helped to push three software outsourcing companies — BairesDev, Zipdev and Adeva — into the FT-Statista list of the fastest-growing companies in the Americas, based on revenue growth between 2019 and 2022.BairesDev co-founder Nacho De Marco More

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    How economists could make themselves more useful

    Unlock the Editor’s Digest for freeRoula Khalaf, Editor of the FT, selects her favourite stories in this weekly newsletter.I’m not about to argue that economists are useless. Nor will I argue that they should all be obviously useful. If some want to do research that might seem like “mathturbation” but that is actually pushing forward the frontier of knowledge, good on them. But I do think that there is a gap between the supposedly policy-relevant research supplied by academia and what decision makers actually want. And that it could be smaller.The fullest complaint is that too often researchers ask the wrong questions, then communicate the answers badly. Some of this isn’t their fault. Academia rewards novelty rather than usefulness. It also can encourage precision (“did the dog tax affect spending on dog food over its first three months?”) rather than breadth (“is taxing pets barking mad?”). And it offers the freedom to think about fixing a single problem with a perfect instrument. Meanwhile, policy is more often tasked with fighting multiple distortions with limited legal tools.To take an example, economists have spent years trying to estimate the social cost of carbon, arguing that a carbon tax is the best way to fight climate change and criticising industrial policy as misguided. But when the Biden administration started asking how to deploy subsidies, the evidence base was lacking. “Economists don’t know what to do when they just think something is a bad idea,” says Betsey Stevenson of the University of Michigan, adding that on carbon taxes they “should figure out why they haven’t sold the public.”What to do? The government itself could improve access to timely data. If economists themselves are keen to have more impact, a recent post by Jed Kolko, a former official at the US Department of Commerce, gave examples of work he found handy while in government. New data, like rental prices from Zillow, can aid real-time analysis. Literature reviews save policymakers from wading through oodles of papers. Quantifying the effects of policy changes can be useful too, such as the estimate of labour demand from investments in semiconductor manufacturing that informed workforce policy.One challenge is that the path to tenure isn’t exactly littered with literature reviews. Academics are not rewarded if their work is cited by a government department or a regulator. But a group including Gopi Shah Goda of Stanford University is working on a metric that captures that kind of reference, which could eventually sit alongside academic citations as a sign of success. “If you can’t measure it, then you can’t even begin to reward it,” she says.Other initiatives include work by scholars such as that by Eva Vivalt of the University of Toronto to develop reporting standards for published research and make results easier to compare across studies. Gathering more than 600 studies in development economics, she found less than 10 per cent mentioned a policy’s costs. (Policymakers care about prices.) Researchers might also better appreciate the constraints policymakers face if there were easier routes from academia to government and back again. In Britain, it can be tricky to return to academia after a more practical gig. In the US, Martha Gimbel, who recently worked for the White House’s Council of Economic Advisers, rightly calls it “insane” that in some cases a stint there seemed to hurt academics’ promotion prospects.My final plea is for economists to write more clearly. I’m not asking for titles like “10 Amazing Consequences of Higher Interest Rates You Won’t Believe Exist.” I am asking for titles that reveal the question or the result. Too many have the format “thing, thing and thing”. Unless one of those things is “sex”, “drugs” or “rock ‘n’ roll”, try again. Less than 15 per cent of National Bureau of Economic Research working paper titles include a question mark. Aim higher.As for the rest of the paper, please note that impenetrability is a poor signal of quality. Papers with abstracts that have higher readability scores — functions of word and sentence length — get more citations. Admittedly, a comparison of abstracts published in the American Economic Review and two other top journals in sociology and political science suggest that other subjects are worse. But given how many abstracts of NBER working paper abstracts hover around the “difficult” mark, believe me when I say there is room for improvement.I do not intend to do myself out of a job. Specialisation is important. Comparative advantage is real. Some work is for think-tanks, some is for journalists. But of all people, economists should appreciate that consumers of their research face [email protected] Soumaya Keynes with myFT and on X More