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    SEABW Turns the Spotlight on Southeast Asia’s Flourishing Web3 Landscape With Over 40 Side Events and an All-encompassing Agenda

    Southeast Asia Blockchain Week (SEABW), a premier blockchain conference exploring the evolving landscape of Web3 in the Southeast Asia region, is proud to announce that there will be over 40 side events, web3 meetups, workshops, and social gatherings. So, attendees can expect a week brimming with engagement, insights and endless networking opportunities.The SEABW will be held on April 22-28 at the True ICON Hall in Bangkok, Thailand. While the main event will take place on April 24-25, there will be major side events throughout the week. Here are some of the key highlights of the industry gathering:AN ALL-ENCOMPASSING AGENDAThe event’s all-encompassing agenda will cover topics and discussions highlighting the potential mass adoption of Web3 in the Southeast Asian region, ideas and products and services from the local Web3 industry.The key narratives of the event are: The SEABW organizers would like to thank the sponsors for their help in making it the most important event in the country for conversations about crypto, blockchain, and Web3. SCBX, the leading entity in a financial technology business group, and zkSync, the ZK-rollup powered scaling and privacy engine for Ethereum, are the top-flight title sponsors while Aptos and Flipster are the platinum sponsors. The roster of gold sponsors includes Polkadot, SCB 10X, and Token X. The silver sponsors are Analog, Jambo, Saison Capital, Factblock, and Serotonin. About SEABWSoutheast Asia Blockchain Week is the flagship conference for web3 developers, investors, and users. It brings together key figures from across the industry for seven days of panel discussions, keynotes, product demonstrations, and networking. From Web3 Games to RWAs, SEABW illuminates Southeast Asia’s most promising startups and web3 companies.Learn more: Website | X | TelegramAbout HashedHashed is a team of blockchain experts and builders based in Seoul, Singapore, Bengaluru, and Silicon Valley. We believe that decentralization can transform not only the global economy but the very fabric of the internet. Our mission is to accelerate the mass adoption of blockchain by investing our resources and empowering a new wave of entrepreneurs and innovators to create this future. We approach this work as builders, not just pickers. We participate as core technical contributors to global infrastructure, and we’ve built a network of projects and people that connect industry pioneers with the knowledge and resources necessary to unlock the potential of blockchain.ContactKim [email protected] article was originally published on Chainwire More

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    Charles Schwab’s profit drops on higher interest payouts

    Rate hikes by the U.S. Federal Reserve have compelled companies like Schwab to increase the interest they pay on deposits – a crucial source of capital that is used to invest in interest-earning assets and give out loans.Schwab has also taken on debt to bolster its funding, which hit interest revenue further. Its shares fell 1.2% in trading before the bell. The Westlake, Texas-based company on average paid 1.35% on deposits in the three months ended March 31, compared with 0.73% last year. The interest rate on its borrowings from the Federal Home Loan Bank was 5.27%, compared with 5.05% a year ago. Net interest revenue – the difference between interest earned on assets and paid out on liabilities – fell 19% to $2.23 billion.Asset management and administration fees, earned from managing mutual funds and exchange-traded funds, jumped 21% to $1.35 billion.Overall, the brokerage reported a profit of $1.36 billion, or 68 cents per share, for the first quarter, compared with $1.6 billion, or 83 cents per share, last year. Trading revenue, which includes commissions for executing trades, fell 8% to $817 million. Schwab had a difficult 2023, the most challenging year for the company since the internet bubble burst in 2000, according to CEO Walter Bettinger. The company had to reduce its headcount by 6%, its stock lost more than 17% and clients moved their funds to other high-yielding alternatives. More

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    US retail sales beat expectations in March

    Retail sales rose 0.7% last month, the Commerce Department’s Census Bureau said on Monday. Data for February was revised higher to show sales rebounding 0.9% instead 0.6% as previously reported. Economists polled by Reuters had forecast retail sales, which are mostly goods and are not adjusted for inflation, rising 0.3% in March.The report followed news this month of strong employment gains in March, and reinforced expectations that the Federal Reserve could delay cutting interest rates this year.Despite higher inflation and borrowing costs, spending continues to hold up, confounding predictions of distress among lower-income households, thanks to the resilient labor market.Latest Bank of America Credit card data showed lower-income spending continues to outpace higher-income spending.”An important reason is that, although lower-income consumers have been disproportionately affected by inflation, they have also been the biggest beneficiaries of the robust labor market,” economists at Bank of America Securities wrote in a note. “Lower-income workers have seen the largest cumulative wage gains since the start of the pandemic.”Job gains averaged 276,000 per month in the first quarter, compared to 212,000 in the October-December quarter. Though wage growth is slowing, it remains above 4.0% on a year-on-year basis.Retail sales excluding automobiles, gasoline, building materials and food services increased 1.1% in March. Data for February was revised higher to show these so-called retail sales gaining 0.3% instead of being unchanged as previously reported. Core retail sales correspond most closely with the consumer spending component of gross domestic product. Though spending probably slowed from the fourth quarter’s brisk pace, it likely remained sufficient to support the economy in the January-March quarter. Growth estimated for the first quarter are currently as high as a 2.4% annualized rate. The economy grew at a 3.4% pace in the October-December quarter. More

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    Bitcoin halving performance: Does price always rise? Citi analyzes past trends

    The Bitcoin halving, an event that reduces the reward for mining new blocks by half, is a mechanism intended to control the Bitcoin supply and historically has been associated with price increases. However, Citi Research points out that, unlike Ethereum, Bitcoin has not shown consistent performance post-halving events. With the reward dropping from 6.25 BTC to 3.125 BTC per block this year, the market may not see those big price jumps like we used to.According to Citi Research, one of the primary drivers of Bitcoin’s price has been the inflow into spot Bitcoin ETFs. The report notes that as of April 12th, there have been $12.6 billion in net inflows into these novel vehicles, which play a role in weekly price rises. Despite these inflows, the broader cryptocurrency market shows signs of decreased engagement, as reflected in trading volumes and open interest metrics.The research also highlights a contrasting scenario in network activity between Bitcoin and Ethereum. The latter’s network activity has seen an uptick, which is not mirrored by Bitcoin, where activity remains relatively subdued. In terms of economic influence, the report indicates that macroeconomic factors that previously aligned with cryptocurrency movements are now showing less correlation. This decoupling suggests that investors might need to adjust their strategies when considering cryptocurrency investments.Furthermore, public interest as measured by search trends has not peaked, indicating muted anticipation for the upcoming halving compared to previous events. This lack of heightened public interest could translate into less dramatic market movements post-halving.Citi Research concludes that while the Bitcoin halving remains a major event, its impact on Bitcoin’s price and market dynamics may be less pronounced this year.  More

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    Ghana’s debt restructuring deal falters after IMF rebuff

    Unlock the Editor’s Digest for freeRoula Khalaf, Editor of the FT, selects her favourite stories in this weekly newsletter.Ghana’s bid to resolve its sovereign debt default has hit a major stumbling block after the IMF said a proposed restructuring deal with holders of $13bn of international bonds does not go far enough in reducing Accra’s borrowing to a sustainable level.The IMF advised that an outline deal reached with bondholders “would lead to breaches to the debt sustainability thresholds” of the fund’s $3bn bailout agreed in December 2022 and approved last year, President Nana Akufo-Addo’s government said on Monday.Some private creditors, particularly African banks, owning a portion of the defaulted bonds also had reservations about current terms for replacing their debt, the government said.The hurdle is a setback for Ghana more than a year after the country defaulted on most of its $30bn external debt, and shows how debt talks for poor countries under a flagship G20 process still face problems even after a landmark deal by Zambia last month.Mohammed Amin Adam, Ghana’s finance minister, said on Saturday that he was confident of an eventual bondholder deal. Ghana had initially said it hoped to conclude the talks by the end of March.The Ghanaian government added that it is “actively working on solutions” that would satisfy the IMF’s debt reduction demands.Representatives of international bondholders who own about 40 per cent of the debt, including BlackRock and Amundi, did not immediately respond to a request for comment. The IMF confirmed that Ghana’s proposal would breach its bailout terms, adding that it “will continue to support the ongoing restructuring negotiations between the authorities and their external commercial creditors with the view to reach an agreement that is consistent with programme parameters”.Ghana defaulted on its debt in December 2022 after an economic crisis triggered by rising global interest rates, soaring inflation in the wake of the pandemic and government overspending.The country asked to restructure its external debt through a G20-approved “common framework” soon after it received an IMF bailout that was conditioned on a restructuring. It dealt with defaulted domestic debts separately and relatively quickly, and reached a deal to restructure over $5bn owed to official bilateral lenders in January. Bondholder talks are the next stage but Ghana also needs to formalise the deal with official creditors, IMF staff said last week as they gave the green light for the bailout to continue. Ghana is set to unlock $360mn in financing pending approval by the IMF board, after receiving $600mn in January.Despite being intended to speed up sovereign restructuring processes, the G20 common framework has been beset by delays and rancour between creditors.In Zambia, tensions between China, the country’s single biggest lender, and other creditors held up resolution of a 2020 default for more than three years until a breakthrough allowed the southern African nation to announce a deal with bondholders last month.Ghana has been different because it owes less than a tenth of its external debt to China, but it has still been a complex debt restructuring with an array of creditor groups. Ghana proposed to most bondholders that they take a one-third cut to the face value of their debt alongside restructured coupon payments of 5 per cent during the next three years, and 7.5 per cent thereafter, until the new debt matures in the 2030s.The bank bondholders were asked to accept a coupon of 1.5 per cent and longer maturities in return for retaining the par value of their original debt. They “rejected the financial parameters of the par option as it currently stands,” the Ghanaian government said. More

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    Peter Schiff Reveals Key Support Level for Bitcoin (BTC)

    However, Schiff’s dire prognosis of a fall to $20,000 is not only strange but somewhat disconnected from current market trends and the institutional support Bitcoin has gained after the approval of the first Bitcoin ETF. Since Schiff’s track record on Bitcoin predictions has been pretty inaccurate, his assessment should not be considered a standard among analysts.MicroStrategy’s Bitcoin holdings have indeed faced unrealized losses when the market dips. Yet, the company’s strategy is typically long-term, with its CEO Michael Saylor consistently advocating for Bitcoin as a revolutionary asset class. It is clear that while Bitcoin has experienced volatility, its price remains in a relatively strong position. The chart does show a descent toward the $60,000 level that Schiff identifies as critical. However, the narrative does not necessarily point toward a catastrophic drop to $20,000. The support levels at the 50-day EMA (around $58,000) and the 200-day EMA (around $49,900) offer substantial support for the price.If Bitcoin sustains above these EMAs, it could invalidate Schiff’s triple top doom scenario. A recovery above $60,000 can easily revive bullish sentiments, while a breakthrough past recent highs near $67,500 will be a clear signal about the market recovery and the potential return of bullish sentiment to the cryptocurrency market.This article was originally published on U.Today More

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    Leading Bitcoin mining CEOs upbeat as halving countdown begins

    Despite a recent 15% drop in Bitcoin prices triggered by geopolitical tensions, the industry remains optimistic about the upcoming halving event, which will cut the block reward for miners in half.According to the report, the downturn in Bitcoin’s price over the weekend saw a recovery to $65,000, with analysts viewing these levels as attractive for investors awaiting entry points, assuming geopolitical stability. CleanSpark ‘s (NASDAQ:CLSK) CEO revealed that they acquired three sites in Mississippi for roughly $20 million, while Marathon Digital Holdings Inc (NASDAQ:MARA) secured sites equivalent to 590 MW at a cost of around $265 million. Both companies have active acquisition strategies, with MARA transitioning from an asset-light model to a self-mining approach to enhance operational efficiency and cost-effectiveness.Riot Platforms (NASDAQ:RIOT) CEO said that the firm is concentrating on organic expansion, with plans to execute a 1 GW acquisition site in Corsicana, bringing its capacity to target levels for 2024 and 2025. Meanwhile, CLSK CEO plans to address a capacity gap of 5 EH/s by actively seeking further acquisitions.The industry anticipates doubling capacity by the end of 2024 to mitigate the impact of BTC rewards halving. Pre-contracted mining equipment at attractive prices and strong negotiation positions with manufacturers support RIOT and CLSK’s expansion efforts, CEOs reveal.A big change in the Bitcoin network lately has been all the new apps and layer 2 solutions coming online, which has pushed up network fees. CEOs in the Bitcoin mining world see this as a steady income source after the halving, helping to smooth out the ups and downs in the market.Financially speaking, the top mining companies are doing well because they keep their debt low and avoid over-leveraging their equipment. Furthermore, heightened activity on the blockchain is introducing additional revenue avenues for miners, helping to offset the decline in block rewards following the halving.However, Bitcoin mining stocks have not fared as well, underperforming compared to Bitcoin itself. Over the last month, mining stocks have dropped between 15-22%, with analysts attributing this to the diversion of retail liquidity from mining stocks to spot Bitcoin and ETFs.The report also highlights a consolidation in the mining industry post-halving, as larger miners with robust balance sheets and low debt levels may look to acquire smaller players struggling to adjust to the new economic realities of reduced block rewards.Key players like RIOT and CLSK are noted for their proactive strategies, focusing on acquisitions and capacity expansion to mitigate the impact of the halving. Bernstein points out that these companies are well-positioned to leverage technological advancements, including the integration of artificial intelligence, to improve their operational efficiencies.Despite the challenges brought on by the halving, the report highlights that leading miners are well-prepared to handle these changes. They have diversified revenue streams and are strategically positioned to take advantage of the industry consolidation that may follow the halving event. Meanwhile, Bitcoin miners are ramping up their computing power to record levels as they prepare for the code adjustment that will seriously slash their earnings. The measure of computing power needed to mint new tokens, known as mining difficulty, hit a record high on Wednesday. This latest bi-weekly update is the final one before the “halving” event, scheduled for around April 20. Since the last halving in 2020, this difficulty metric has surged by nearly 600%, while the rate of energy consumption by miners has also seen a steep increase during this period.  More

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    Ajay Banga tries to build a better World Bank

    This article is an onsite version of our Trade Secrets newsletter. Premium subscribers can sign up here to get the newsletter delivered every Monday. Standard subscribers can upgrade to Premium here, or explore all FT newslettersHello from Washington where I am making my brief return to write Trade Secrets while Alan is away. It’s the calm before the storm here, as various ministers and bigwigs will descend on the US capital today for the annual IMF and World Bank Spring meetings. Today’s newsletter harks back to the time when all climate types hated the World Bank, and looks briefly at what new leader Ajay Banga has done that might persuade them otherwise. (Spoiler: it won’t persuade them otherwise.)What is Banga’s World Bank doing for us?It has been almost a year since Wall Street veteran Ajay Banga first stepped into his new life as the head of the World Bank, following the early resignation of his Trump-appointed predecessor, David Malpass, who became something of a hate figure for climate types. Fans of the World Bank will remember that Banga was himself a surprise appointment. Although he was beloved by his former Wall Street colleagues, development officials — who move in a different world — were puzzled why Banga, the former chief executive of Mastercard, was to be the US government’s choice to revamp the bank.But here we are. A year ago the World Bank was under heavy fire for not being fit for purpose — it was slow, clunky and not doing enough on the big global issues of the day, especially climate. Wealthier countries, led by the US and Germany, were pushing it to offer more concessional finance and cheap loans for climate projects, to take on more risk to free up more of its existing cash (but without losing the triple A rating) and do better at mobilising private money.Banga has got to work. The World Bank, which has traditionally tackled the twin goals of eradicating poverty and boosting shared prosperity, has now expanded its mission to ending poverty “on a liveable planet”. It also talks more about “global public goods” — basically things that are good for the whole world, not just one particular country.According to a G20-commissioned report published in late 2022 multilateral lenders such as the World Bank have plenty of room to take on more risk while maintaining the triple A credit rating that gives them low-cost access to the bond markets.The World Bank has pushed through some of these suggestions. It has lowered its equity-to-loan ratio from 20 per cent to 19 per cent, allowing it to take on more risk and freeing up about $4bn a year. It has launched a portfolio guarantee programme, with shareholders able to step in and repay loans, and hybrid capital, which it can leverage. It hopes to combine these two things into a single “platform” — basically a pot of money devoted to global public goods. There are still some big-ticket items outstanding from the G20’s report. One is to deal with the way so-called callable capital — money that can be summoned by the World Bank from shareholders in the case of an emergency — is treated by the rating agencies. Part of this involves knocking heads together at the three major rating agencies (no small task) and part involves scrutinising the terms and conditions under which the capital can actually be called. But none of this, and Banga himself is the first to admit it, comes close to generating the trillions of dollars that people estimate are needed to pay for the energy transition in the so-called global south.World Bank officials feel they are pushing things along as quickly as such an unwieldy bureaucracy can allow. But anyone paying attention to the pace of global warming — and this includes the senior officials of the UN’s climate change branch — wants more money, better deployed, and faster.Lurking behind these changes at the World Bank is a cloud of resentment from many borrowing countries, who don’t want to be told what to borrow money for and see rich-world lecturing on climate change as hypocritical. Wealthy countries, including the World Bank’s biggest shareholders, have collectively pumped far more carbon into the atmosphere than the so-called global south.In this sense, the World Bank and the debates and negotiations that happen there are a microcosm of the much broader conversations happening among climate diplomats as part of the UN’s long-running COP process.Some smaller countries, notably the island nations, argue that high levels of debt and high borrowing costs leave them unable to cope with extreme weather events fuelled by global warming. They’re pushing for more favourable lending terms and pauses in repayment when natural disasters strike, among other things. Mia Mottley, the eloquent prime minister of Barbados, is one of their greatest assets and champions.Other borrowing governments, notably in Africa and Latin America, argue that they need to develop their oil and gas industries to boost their economic growth. It’s difficult to ask them not to do this when US oil and gas production is currently at record highs.What these two broad groupings of countries have in common is an argument that climate ambitions — or even dealing with the effects of rising temperatures — cost money that they do not have.These conversations will be happening on the sidelines of the World Bank and IMF gatherings this week. Looking ahead to COP29 in Azerbaijan this November, countries will be asked to agree on a new finance goal to help low- and middle-income countries become greener. With that looming over these Spring meetings, it’s hard to imagine that pressure on the World Bank would abate any time soon. Charted watersThe gold price has risen 15 per cent this year. Quite a few people in the markets reckon this is a response to global inflation falling less quickly than hoped. But the cost of bullion largely flatlined during the big surge in inflation in 2021 and 2022 and historically it’s not a good inflation hedge.Trade linksDespite surging shipments, lower prices for Chinese goods have driven down the dollar value of China’s exports, even as the country’s return to an export-led growth model raises the hackles of trading partners worldwide.Apple’s shift in iPhone manufacturing from China to India is happening faster than many sceptics (Trade Secrets included) thought. A new report from the Carnegie Endowment t for International Peace think-tank argues that the US has limited ability to influence the geopolitical trajectories of emerging powers including India, Brazil, Indonesia, South Africa and Turkey.Seven years after the first edition, the EU has published a monster 700-page update on state-induced distortions in the Chinese economy (dubbed a “grievance handbook” by Trade Secrets in 2017) to help European companies bring trade complaints.A Labour government in the UK would seek to move closer to alignment with the EU while maintaining its post-Brexit red lines of not actually rejoining the customs union or single market.Trade Secrets is edited by Jonathan MoulesRecommended newsletters for youBritain after Brexit — Keep up to date with the latest developments as the UK economy adjusts to life outside the EU. Sign up hereFree Lunch — Your guide to the global economic policy debate. Sign up here More