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    Bitcoin (BTC) Halving Might Bring Suffering in Short Term, Analyst Charles Edwards Says

    In particular, the fourth Bitcoin (BTC) halving looks dangerous for miners with old-gen hardware. Some of them will “go bust” as soon as this year, Edwards admits.The fourth Bitcoin (BTC) halving is expected to happen April 19, 2024, at about 1:53 p.m. UTC once the largest cryptocurrency reaches 840,000 block height.The mining rewards will drop from 6.25 BTC per block to 3.125 BTC per block. As such, some miners with less energy-efficient hardware might go underwater in the next cycle.For instance, Bitmain Antminer S19, one of the most popular generations of ASIC miners for SHA-256 coins — BTC, LTC and others — will only be profitable post-halving when the BTC price is over $80,000, some estimations reveal.Thus, Bitcoin (BTC) becomes a scarcer asset, which, combined with the limited net supply, makes it more valuable economically.Tether and Bitfinex CTO Paolo Ardoino is excited by the role of the BTC halving in the tokenomics of the orange coin:After the previous halving that took place May 10, 2020, Bitcoin’s (BTC) price rallied by almost 600% in just 18 months.This article was originally published on U.Today More

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    Bitcoin Price Alert: Two Crucial Indicators Forewarned BTC Drop to $65,000

    Bitcoin’s recent price crash from $71,000 to $65,000 surprised the cryptocurrency market, but based on on-chain data, this downturn was not entirely unexpected.Crypto research firm Kaiko tweeted on April 11 that expectations for near-term volatility were increasing. This is because implied volatility for expiries in the following two weeks jumped from 59% to 71% in just two days.Aside from that, two key indicators had been flashing warning signs, hinting at the impending correction before it unfolded.According to on-chain analytics firm CryptoQuant, these indicators have signaled weakness since late March but might have been disregarded because of market exuberance.The key metrics, traders’ unrealized profit margins and the realized price, have signaled weakness since late March. In this light, CryptoQuant urges the crypto community to keep an eye on these metrics if the current market correction persists.As Bitcoin saw its first drop below $66,000 since April 4, liquidations since the past day have reached a whopping $920 million. According to Santiment, S&P 500 and gold prices have also retraced alongside cryptocurrencies, suggesting CPI and inflation concerns are being revealed across sectors.Compared to previous cycles’ ATH breaks, it might be argued that the current euphoria phase (market in price discovery) is still relatively early. Previous euphoria stages have seen multiple price drops of more than -10%, with the majority being significantly deeper, with 25% being the norm.At current pricing, Bitcoin is down 8.32% from its all-time high of $73,750 set in mid-March.This article was originally published on U.Today More

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    ECB’s confidence in fight against inflation growing, Villeroy says

    The ECB held rates at a record high last week but signalled it could start cutting them as soon as June, even though stubbornly high U.S. inflation could stop the Federal Reserve from following close behind.”Barring surprises, we should decide a first rate cut during our June meeting. We are indeed growing more and more confident in the disinflation path,” Villeroy told the French JDD magazine.”The interest rate tool has been an effective weapon against inflation. We had to lift that rate to 4% but it is less than in the United States, where it stands at 5.5%,” he added.Villeroy, who is also governor of the French central bank, is among a growing number of ECB policymakers that have supported rate reductions.He said last month that if inflation undershot the ECB’s 2% target for a sustained period then the ECB risked having to cut rates even more aggressively.He told JDD: “The June rate cut should be followed by more rate cuts by the end of the year; I call for a pragmatic and yet adequately nimble gradualism, based on economic data.””That being said, we will not go back to ultra low, even negative rates: the ones that we have seen during the 2015-2022 period were the exception.” More

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    XRP vs BTC: Legendary Trader Peter Brandt’s Cryptic Comment Sparks Intrigue

    In a surprising and cryptic prediction, Brandt stated that the XRP/BTC chart was “headed to Antarctica,” leaving investors and analysts puzzled about the implications of his statement.The statement “headed to Antarctica” could be interpreted in several ways. On the one hand, it might imply a cold, bearish outlook for the XRP versus BTC chart, suggesting that prices could plummet to new lows, much like the frigid temperatures of the Earth’s southernmost continent. On the other hand, it could symbolize a journey into uncharted territory, exploring depths previously unseen by the crypto market.The second scenario seems likely given Brand’s response to an X user who asked, “Or to rephrase. To a level where XRP begins to out perform BTC historically.”Brandt responded in the affirmative, saying, “Or, to put it another way, to a level where not a single buyer has a profit.”Cryptocurrencies tumbled on Friday as risk-off sentiment in traditional markets spread over to digital assets. Bitcoin (BTC) plunged to lows of $65,110 in Friday’s trading session before slightly rebounding to above $67,000. It is currently down 5% in the last 24 hours.XRP sharply dipped, reaching lows of $0.507 from highs of $0.616 in Friday’s trading session. At the time of writing, XRP remains higher than its prior day lows, albeit down 11.56% in the last 24 hours to $0.54.The XRP versus BTC chart has long been a subject of scrutiny and speculation within the cryptocurrency community, with XRP reaching almost a seven-year low against Bitcoin.Thus, Brandt’s commentary on the XRP versus BTC chart has garnered attention, with many eager to decipher the meaning behind his cryptic forecast. Without providing further details, Brandt’s statement remains open to interpretation.Investors and enthusiasts will be watching closely to see if Brandt’s chilly forecast comes to pass or if the market will defy expectations and chart a course to warmer waters.This article was originally published on U.Today More

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    Dogecoin Founder’s Comment on Crypto Market Crash Stirs DOGE Community

    On Friday, when the crypto market turned red with DOGE falling by over 19%, Markus offered his audience another peculiar comment on the state of things. His statement triggered a supportive response from the DOGE community.The cryptocurrency influencer Markus’ tweet is full of sarcasm, and it says, “oh no everything died we are dead.” In his manifold previous tweets over the past years, the DOGE creator has made his attitude toward crypto trading clear — he believes it to be a sort of gambling where nobody really knows why prices go up or down and cannot really predict rises and falls, since in most cases they come totally out of the blue.On Friday, the world’s leading cryptocurrency Bitcoin suddenly entered a massive correction as it plunged from slightly above $70,000 to the $67,490 zone, losing 7% of its value worth $2,500. Later on, BTC pared some of its losses, recovering to $67,472, where it is changing hands as of this writing.Ethereum followed suit, plunging by over 10% from $3,525 to the $3,161 level but later recovering a little and now trading at $3,259. Overall, approximately $735 million worth of cryptocurrencies has been liquidated within the last 24 hours across the market.DOGE crashed by slightly over 19%, hitting $0.1610 briefly. Two attempts to recover undertaken by Dogecoin have led it to $0.1712.This event that happens once in every four years will again cut the newly minted amount of Bitcoin per block in half, this time taking it down to 3.125 BTC per newly generated block. Many are expecting BTC to skyrocket after that with altcoins to follow suit.This article was originally published on U.Today More

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    Pakistan repays $1 billion in Eurobonds, says central bank

    ISLAMABAD (Reuters) – Pakistan’s central bank has repaid $1 billion in Eurobonds, it said on Saturday, a scheduled payment ahead of the South Asian nation seeking a long-term bailout from the International Monetary Fund.The bond, launched in 2014 and repaid on Friday, was maturing this month. “The payment was made to the agent bank for onward distribution to the bond holders,” the central bank said in a statement. Islamabad has been struggling with a balance of payments crisis, record inflation and steep currency devaluation since an IMF standby arrangement averted a sovereign default. Finance Minister Muhammad Aurangzeb is due to leave on Sunday for Washington to attend the IMF-World Bank spring meeting, where he will start negotiations for Pakistan’s 24th long-term IMF bailout.Aurangzeb briefed Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif about the new IMF programme on Friday, the government said in a statement.The IMF standby arrangement of $3 billion Islamabad secured last summer expired on Thursday. Its final tranche of $1.1 billion is expected to be released after the multilateral lender’s board meets later this month.The two sides have spoken in recent weeks about negotiating the longer-term bailout to continue with necessary policy reforms to rein in deficits, build up reserves and manage soaring debt servicing.Pakistan is in discussions with the IMF for a potential follow-up programme, the IMF chief Kristalina Georgieva said on Thursday. More

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    Philippine deals with US, Japan will not affect China’s investments, Marcos says

    WASHINGTON (Reuters) – Business deals that the Philippines secured at a summit with Japan and the United States will not affect China’s investments in the Philippines, President Ferdinand Marcos Jr said on Friday.”This (trilateral agreement) is separate from any proposed or potential Chinese investments in the Philippines. How do I see it, how will it affect? I don’t see that it will affect, one way or the other,” Marcos told a press conference in Washington after the summit. More

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    Investors wrongfooted as ‘higher for longer’ rates return to haunt markets

    Wrongfooted investors and analysts have been forced to tear up their optimistic predictions of sweeping interest rate cuts this year as rising oil and metals prices add to inflationary pressures, reigniting fears that borrowing costs will have to stay ‘higher for longer’. In a dramatic shift in sentiment, markets are now betting that the Federal Reserve will deliver only one or two quarter point interest rate cuts this year. That compares with the six or more cuts expected back in January and the three that the more conservative Federal Reserve had projected. But after US inflation this week beat forecasts for the third month in a row, traders and fund managers are being forced to look hard at their assumptions.The rosy forecasts have “just been tossed out the window,” said Greg Peters, co-chief investment officer at PGIM Fixed Income.“The markets have just been way too optimistic around the prospect for rate cuts,” he added, noting that investors are “behaving a little more rationally now than they were at the beginning of the year”.The soul-searching stands in stark contrast to December, when the Fed gave its strongest signal yet that it would not raise borrowing costs again and its official so-called “dot plot” projections suggested three quarter-point cuts this year.That triggered a rally in stocks and bonds and, after investors had been braced for an extended period of elevated borrowing costs that could hurt both assets, prompted talk that the notion of ‘higher for longer’ was finally dead.But a string of blockbuster jobs data and an acceleration in inflation since then have all but killed off hopes that the Fed and other global central banks will rapidly loosen monetary policy.“The majority of analysts have been wrongfooted,” said Anthony Todd, chief executive of quantitative hedge fund firm Aspect Capital, referring to expectations of falling inflation and interest rates.The firm, which manages around $9.4bn in assets and whose main fund is up 21.8 per cent this year, has profited from bets against Treasuries, which have sold off this year as investors have scaled back their bets on rate cuts.Market pricing for rate cuts this year is now even less than the Fed itself had indicated in December. Some Fed officials have cast doubt on policymakers’ ability to cut rates more than once this year, with Atlanta Fed president Raphael Bostic saying it is even possible rate cuts may have to be moved into next year.Complicating the outlook on inflation are surging prices for industrial metals and oil — with Brent crude topping $92 a barrel for the first time since October. The rethink on US rates has also spilled over to European markets, with investors now pricing in three cuts for the European Central Bank and two for the Bank of England in 2024, down from more than six priced for each at the start of the year. “It is very clear the narrative is changing,” said Torsten Slok, chief economist at investment firm Apollo. “Uncertainty about the narrative of where we’re going in rates is the source of why things are so turbulent at the moment.”The global economy has also proved more resilient than many had expected, with JPMorgan’s global manufacturing purchasing managers’ index rising into growth territory in January for the first time since 2022, and it continued to grow in February and March. “I still think the Fed wants to cut once at least this year — but they’re in no rush to do it and they’ll wait for more data to come in to give them more visibility into inflation,” said Ken Shinoda, portfolio manager at DoubleLine. Despite a rally on Friday as tensions in the Middle East pushed investors into safe assets, expectations for rates to remain high for some time have triggered a global bond sell off, pushing up government borrowing costs on both sides of the Atlantic. Benchmark US and UK government bond yields are up 0.6 percentage points since the start of the year. Equivalent German Bund yields — the benchmark for the eurozone — are up 0.3 percentage points. However, credit spreads — or the premiums paid by corporate borrowers to issue debt over the US Treasury — are still hovering around multiyear lows, fuelled by intense demand for new bonds and scorching fund inflows.The average investment-grade US bond spread is now hovering around its tightest, or lowest, level since September 2021, six months before the Fed started raising interest rates. The high-yield, or “junk” spread, widened following the latest CPI release, but is still near its narrowest levels since January 2022, according to Ice BofA data.For Pgim’s Peters, “a stronger economy with a little inflation isn’t such a bad backdrop for corporate America . . . if you just forget everything else and focus on the fundamentals, I think the fundamental piece is quite good.” So far the rethink on rates has done little to cool stock markets, with the S&P 500 index of blue-chip stocks up 7.4 per cent this year — helped by the strength of the US economy and excitement about the prospects of artificial intelligence.But some investors have started to warn that, as the reality of rates staying higher sinks in, stock market exuberance could be running out of steam. “It feels like we’ve had an easy run up but the landscape is turning more challenging,” said Mark Dowding, chief investment officer at RBC BlueBay Asset Management.Additional reporting by Laurence Fletcher More