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    MANTRA’s Hongbai Incentivized Testnet Goes Live

    MANTRA just announced the launch of its Hongbai Incentivized Testnet, a move seen as a significant step towards integrating traditional financial markets with decentralized finance (DeFi). The introduction of the Hongbai Testnet follows the success of MANTRA Chain’s testnet first phase. It now opens the floodgates for nearly 100,000 eagerly awaiting participants, granting them access to explore the latest infrastructure on the leading RWA layer 1 blockchain.The Hongbai Testnet, representing the second phase of MANTRA Chain’s testnet, is part of the project’s broader efforts to facilitate the tokenization of real-world assets (RWA) and to draw in users from outside the traditional crypto space as well as institutional participants. This phase is expected to expand the ecosystem’s user base and to encourage the development of decentralized applications (dApps) on MANTRA Chain.Key Developments in the Hongbai Testnet include:About MANTRAMANTRA is the first RWA L1 blockchain capable of adherence and enforcement of real world regulatory requirements. By accelerating the adoption of tokenized RWAs, MANTRA has the potential to unlock the $16 trillion RWA economy with a regulatory-ready blockchain. Through MANTRA Chain’s compliant framework, TradFi companies can easily switch to and leverage asset tokenization and blockchain solutions, boosting global RWA growth.MANTRA addresses key industry challenges, including liquidity fragmentation and cross-chain interoperability, setting the foundation for a secure, scalable infrastructure. MANTRA will also offer a DEX that provides users with a diversified product suite built around easy access to tokenized real world assets. Website | X | LinkedIn | Telegram | Medium | InstagramContactContact Marketing LeadChristoph [email protected] article was originally published on Chainwire More

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    World faces persistent low growth in absence of productivity reforms, IMF says

    The International Monetary Fund released a chapter of its forthcoming World Economic Outlook (WEO) that showed further declines in the global growth rate, which has slowed steadily since the 2008-2009 global financial crisis.”Without ambitious steps to enhance productivity, global growth is set to fall far below its historical average,” the IMF said, warning that expectations of weak growth could discourage investment, possibly deepening the slowdown.The global lender said the persistent low-growth scenario, combined with high interest rates, could also restrict governments’ ability to counter economic slowdowns and invest in social welfare or environmental initiatives.”All this is exacerbated by strong headwinds from geoeconomic fragmentation, and harmful unilateral trade and industrial policies,” it said in a blog accompanying Chapter 3 of the WEO, to be released in full next Tuesday.A year ago, the IMF said it expected medium-term growth to hover around 3%. The new forecast reflects downward revisions for medium-term growth across all income groups and regions, most significantly in emerging market economies.The IMF urged countries to take urgent action to counter the weakening growth outlook, warning that it worsened prospects for living standards and global poverty reduction.”An entrenched low-growth environment, coupled with high interest rates, would threaten debt sustainability and could fuel social tension and hinder the green transition,” it said. The IMF said a range of policies, including better allocation of capital and labor and tackling labor shortages in major economies with aging populations, could offer hope.It said the growth rate of the global labor supply would reach just 0.3% in 2030, less than a third of its average in the decade before the COVID-19 pandemic.The IMF said its research showed modest gains could be won by increasing labor force participation, integrating more migrant workers into advanced economies, and optimizing talent allocation in emerging markets.But focused policy actions to enhance market competition, trade openness, financial access, and labor market flexibility could lift global growth by about 1.2 percentage points by 2030.Harnessing the potential of AI to boost labor productivity could add up to 0.8 percentage points to global growth, depending on its adoption and impact on the workforce, it said. It said the far-reaching impact of AI was not yet fully understood; it could help boost productivity, while also potentially displacing humans in certain jobs and fundamentally altering the nature of others.Given such concerns, countries should strengthen their regulatory frameworks, ensure intellectual property protections and work to ensure that the benefits of AI were shared fairly and widely, it said. More

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    Pyth Network hits record $7 billion in total value secured

    The upswing is linked to substantial inflows across networks protected by Pyth, featuring key players such as Kamino Lend, Marginfi Lending, Orbit Protocol, Synthetix, and Jupiter Perpetual.From March 2023 to March 2024, the Pyth Network saw some impressive growth. The number of active users shot up from 111 to 330, a whopping 197% increase. The network also expanded its blockchain support from 17 to 56, reflecting a 230% growth. The volume of transactions secured by the network also saw a massive leap with a 1700% growth, from $4.8 billion a year ago to $87.1 billion in March 2024. Moreover, the cumulative volume secured over Pyth’s lifetime increased from 37,723 million to 299,441 million, which translates to a 694% increase.The network also reported growth in its data provider base and the number of price feeds it offers. From March 2023 to March 2024, the count of data providers grew from 76 to 100, an increase of roughly 132%, with the current count reaching 102. The number of price feeds available through Pyth increased from 232 to 506, indicating a growth of about 118%.Enhancing its data coverage, Pyth Network has recently welcomed Portofino Technologies to its community of data providers. Portofino Technologies is Swiss crypto-native technology startup specializing in market making, token services, and Web3 investmentsThese metrics highlight Pyth Network’s health as a DeFi oracle service. The network’s sustained growth in users, supported blockchains, and volume secured cements its position in the burgeoning DeFi sector. Earlier in March, Pyth Network’s token surged to a record high as the Total Value Secured (TVS) within the ecosystem continues to rise. This surge propelled the token’s total market capitalization to over $1.2 billion, though it later settled back to $1.2 billion as of the latest update.The Pyth Network’s growth is particularly noteworthy, given the platform’s role as a competitor to established oracle networks like Chainlink and Band Protocol. Pyth distinguishes itself by providing low-latency market data crucial for the operation of smart contracts and DeFi applications. More

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    Texas HODL Reveals: Transforming Poker with TEX Tokens and Lightning Speed

    Texas HODL is set to redefine the online poker arena by integrating the Bitcoin Lightning Network, marking a new era of fast, secure, and user-centric gaming experiences. Texas HODL offers poker enthusiasts a seamless way to play and transact, backed by the TEX token economy.Embracing the Lightning NetworkThe integration of the Lightning Network into Texas HODL’s platform aims to ensure instant transactions with minimal fees and looking to grant players unprecedented access to their funds and the ability to play and withdraw with ease. The team’s forward-thinking move places Texas HODL at what looks to be the forefront of technological innovation in online gaming, a strategy validated by Coinbase (NASDAQ:COIN)’s recent adoption of Lightning payments.TEX Tokens JUST LAUNCHED: A Game-Changer in Online PokerThe introduction of TEX tokens is not merely a functional aspect of Texas HODL’s ecosystem; it represents a unique opportunity for players to become stakeholders in the platform’s success. With a total supply of 1 billion tokens, TEX tokens are potentially set to drive the platform’s growth and foster a community directly invested in its prosperity.Invest in the Future of Poker with TEX TokensTEX tokens are now available for purchase, allowing participants to contribute to the platform’s liquidity and, in return, receive a portion of the platform’s rake in staking rewards. The Texas HODL team believes that this innovative approach will ensure that, as Texas HODL expands, its community of token holders will directly benefit from the platform’s success.TEX Token Roadmap: Phases of OpportunityTexas HODL’s exciting TEX token roadmap is per the team “a bold vision set to soar as the platform expands”.Phase one started with 130 million tokens available at $0.01 each, with an additional 20 million earmarked for airdrops. The funds will enhance the platform with new game modes and robust marketing campaigns.Phase two offers 250 million tokens at market value, focusing on completing the staking protocol, creating a transparent user dashboard, and aiming at building partnerships to drive Texas HODL’s presence in the poker world.Phase three introduces 100 million tokens at fair value, targeting significant platform advancements, a global tournament series, and state-of-the-art AI customer support.The TEX Token Community JourneyAs Texas HODL continues to chart a course for success, they invite players to become part of this groundbreaking journey. Holding TEX tokens is more than gameplay; it’s an entry into a community-driven platform where success is shared, making every HODLER a winner.About TEXAS HODL Texas HODL is revolutionizing online poker for the cryptocurrency era, offering the excitement of poker enhanced by Bitcoin’s Lightning Network for fast, secure transactions. This platform blends the thrill of poker with the freedom of Bitcoin, fostering a community passionate about crypto and strategic play, alongside a rewarding affiliate system to encourage community growth.Users can visit texasHODL.net for more informationTexas HODL is the source of this content. This Press Release is for informational purposes only. The information does not constitute investment advice or an offer to invest.ContactCEOAlex Von KanelLightcache [email protected] article was originally published on Chainwire More

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    HFT crypto platform Portofino Technologies joins Pyth Network

    Portofino Technologies is known for its market making technologies and services in the cryptocurrency domain. The participation will contribute its in-depth market insights to the Pyth Network, which provides real-time price data to blockchain developers and counts over 80 market participants, including names like Jane Street, CBOE, Binance, and OKX.Leo Lancia, CEO and Co-Founder of Portofino Technologies, comments “We are excited to collaborate with Pyth Network and its team on this journey as a decentralized data provider. We look forward to leveraging our proprietary technology and market making experience to support the growth of the Pyth ecosystem.”Portofino Technologies operates from its offices in London and Zug, employing over 25 specialists in the field. The firm’s expertise in crypto trading covers centralized, decentralized, and over-the-counter digital asset markets. Beyond trading infrastructure, Portofino also offers token services and invests in Web3 companies.Established in 2021 by former Citadel Securities executives, the Switzerland-based technology startup has secured $50 million in funding to power digital asset adoption for institutional investors.Shane O’Callaghan, Global Head of Business Development at Portofino Technologies, added “Pyth’s low-latency oracle and innovative data technology will be foundational for the growth of DeFi. We are extremely excited to partner with Pyth contributors and look forward to enabling our proprietary technology to help contribute to the overall Pyth ecosystem.”In less than a year, the Pyth Network has secured over $2.0 billion in value, now offering more than 400 real-time price feeds across various asset classes like commodities, stocks, FX, cryptocurrencies, and recently ETFs. The network’s infrastructure supports over 50 blockchains and handles trade volumes of more than $100 billion.Pyth steps in to fill a crucial gap by providing high-frequency financial market data, catering to the demand for precise and up-to-the-minute information among DeFi applications. It bridges the divide between on-chain and off-chain events with smart contracts applicable across any blockchain platform. The accuracy and immediacy of the network’s data feeds are vital for the functioning of crypto desks and trading exchanges, which depend on Pyth for reliable, real-time data. More

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    Transatlantic rate rift opening up at midyear: Mike Dolan

    LONDON (Reuters) -A June jamboree in central banking is being scratched from diaries as markets now suspect the Federal Reserve will drag its heels on a first interest rate cut by then and leave the European Central Bank to go solo. And persistent stability in the transatlantic exchange rate despite that shift in policy thinking may well give the ECB heart to push ahead regardless – with euro/dollar still stuck bang in the middle of an 18-month-long eight cent range.One of the most remarkable aspects of the global rates market during the first quarter was lock-step pricing on both the timing and extent of Fed and ECB credit easing this year despite vastly different underlying economic conditions.While impressive disinflation over the past year in both the United States and euro zone has given both central banks an amber light to start rolling back the highest borrowing costs in over two decades, near recession in the euro zone contrasts with still-brisk U.S. expansion and a super-tight jobs market there.A combination of another booming U.S payroll gain last month and stubborn new year inflation readings has seen many Fed officials dampen market hopes for a cut as soon as June – with some even suggesting any rate cuts this year may soon be off the agenda without more significant inflation improvement. Wednesday’s consumer price update may bolster that view.But as the ECB meets this Thursday, all the stars are still aligning for it to signal easing by midyear – with core inflation continuing to ebb there last month and a dour bank lending readout for the first quarter showing tight credit conditions biting hard.”We will know a little more in April, but we will know a lot more in June,” ECB boss Christine Lagarde said after the last meeting just over a month ago.’PLAUSIBILITY RANGE’AXA Group Chief Economist Gilles Moec reckons staggered rate moves are now a distinct possibility and the relatively nonchalant euro may be the key to encouraging that.”That the ECB cuts before the Fed is absolutely within our ‘plausibility range’,” he wrote. “The euro exchange rate has barely softened despite a reversal in market expectations on policy rate differentials (and) this should embolden the ECB to take the right decisions for the euro area irrespective of what the Fed ultimately does.” Moec argues that the only channel by which Fed hesitation would have a bearing on the ECB going solo in June is via the exchange rate – where a dollar surge might see renewed pressure on dollar-priced imports and commodity prices for the bloc.The fact that the euro/dollar rate barely budged over the past month puts that to one side.At the start of this month, futures markets had fully priced in a quarter point rate cut by the Fed in June, but that’s now been cut to just a 50-50 chance since. The ECB remains fully priced for a June move.Chris Williamson at S&P Global Market Intelligence reckons talk of an earlier ECB move is justified by underlying momentum in both euro zone consumer price trends and price readings from regional purchasing managers surveys.”The CPI and PMI data … hint at the ECB being the first to see inflation hitting – and remaining below – target, with the U.S. lagging behind in the inflation battle.” SHUFFLING THE DECKTo be fair, juggling the dates of a first move may seem slightly academic. After all, even if money market traders have got cold feet about June, they still see a full quarter point easing by the end of July.But it’s shifts in the extent of the easing cycle ahead that are perhaps more significant. Only 63 basis points of Fed cuts are now penciled in for the remainder of this year but 85bps of ECB cuts are still nailed on. Push it out further and the Fed’s so-called ‘terminal rate’ captured by money market futures has crept back up close to 4.0% for early 2027 – almost a full percentage point higher than it was at the start of the year and implying the entire easing cycle may be just 150bps in total.The equivalent ECB reading has 175bps already priced by the end of next year.Further out still and the outperforming euro zone government bond market has seen the five-year Transatlantic yield gap widen by more than a quarter point since the beginning of last month to give the U.S. a nominal yield premium of more than 200bps for the first time this year.In fact, that five-year yield premium has now more than doubled in just 12 months and euro/dollar is exactly where it was on April 10, 2023.A green light for the ECB? The opinions expressed here are those of the author, a columnist for Reuters. More

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    Fed’s rate-cut confidence wobbles as inflation data misbehaves

    WASHINGTON (Reuters) – As Federal Reserve officials last year started steering the world towards possible interest rate cuts in 2024, they took heart in data showing inflation over many months had collapsed to the U.S. central bank’s 2% target, evidence their policies were curbing a still too-hot economy.Since then, those downward sloping lines have reversed in an economy that continues to grow above trend, produce enough jobs to keep unemployment at what many think is an unsustainably low level, and have pushed a core of at least four of the 12 Fed officials voting on monetary policy into a skeptical stance.If the data doesn’t soon resume the trend that appeared to be developing last year, that group could grow and further undermine already weakening rate-cut expectations.”When you start to see month after month of inflation not falling, and tipping up if you look at the six-month changes, I think that has given the Fed pause … There has been a change in sentiment,” said Karen Dynan, a Harvard University economics professor and a non-resident senior fellow at the Peterson Institute for International Economics.While Fed officials might sketch out arguments for continued inflation declines based on “special stories” about housing or other parts of the economy, “when you rely on a whole bunch of special stories breaking your way, it is not a comfortable place,” said Dynan, who sees the central bank remaining largely on the sidelines this year, perhaps approving only a single quarter-percentage-point cut in rates.That’s well short of the three quarter-percentage-point cuts Fed officials projected last month, an outlook largely shared by investors. But if the year began with rate cuts expected sooner than later, the burden of proof appears to have shifted.Since the March 19-20 policy meeting, members of the Fed’s rate-setting committee, including two governors and two regional reserve bank presidents, have detailed concerns about the inflation path, a sizeable group in a consensus-minded organization that realizes the symbolic weight the start of policy easing will have on markets and, in a presidential election year, the broader public.’NO RUSH’The release on Wednesday of the consumer price index (CPI) for March looms large in that regard. Richmond Fed President Thomas Barkin told Reuters last week that another month of disappointing data after higher-than-expected readings in January and February could change things significantly. The minutes of the March meeting will also be released the same day, possibly detailing emerging policy divisions.”I don’t think any one month should make that much of a difference,” said Barkin, one of the five regional bank presidents with a vote this year on rates policy. But “if you get another month that looks like January or February, that takes you in a very different direction in terms of how forward-leaning you are.”The fact that half of the items in the CPI are still seeing price increases of greater than 3% is “hard to reconcile … with the kind of progress you’d want to make” towards the 2% target.The annualized six-month change in CPI excluding food and energy prices – considered a reliable guide to underlying inflation – has risen steadily from 3.08% last November to 3.85% in February.That upturn – seen also in the measure the Fed uses for its inflation target – interrupted a benign run of readings through much of last year that prompted policymakers to start laying the groundwork to cut the benchmark overnight interest rate from the current 5.25%-5.50% range, where it has been since last July.”Something appears to be giving, and it’s the pace of the economy,” Fed Governor Christopher Waller said in a speech in November in which he said the central bank was potentially just a few months from being able to cut rates to account for falling inflation.The economy, however, has continued to grow above trend since Waller’s remarks, and what appeared to be ebbing job growth has turned higher. Neither are inflationary developments on their own, but neither do they show an economy necessarily in need of lower interest rates, and the countdown to rate cuts that Waller helped touch off is effectively on hold.”There is no rush to cut the policy rate” Waller said in a speech last month, arguing “it is prudent to hold this rate at its current restrictive stance perhaps for longer than previously thought to help keep inflation on a sustainable trajectory toward 2%.”‘ELEVATED’ DATA-DEPENDENCEFed Governor Michelle Bowman, perhaps the most ardent inflation hawk, has gone even further, saying last week that rate hikes could not be ruled out, although they are not her base case.Atlanta Fed President Raphael Bostic, meanwhile, said after the March policy meeting that he had cut his outlook from two rate cuts over the second half of 2024 to a single move late in the year.The views of those voting policymakers is consistent with a general tempering of officials’ rate-cut expectations. Fed policymaker projections released in March did not change the median outlook for three rate cuts this year, but the full range of estimates and the “central tendency” – excluding the three highest and lowest projections – narrowed as the most dovish policymakers all raised their outlooks for the policy rate.Even the more skeptical Fed officials say their baseline remains that inflation will slow and rates will fall if it does. But it has also given the next month or two of data “an outsized role” in determining if the Fed gains the confidence it needs to cut rates, or loses faith that inflation is contained, said Krishna Guha, vice chairman at Evercore ISI.”The hurdle is not crazy severe and the odds are the data will come in good enough” for the Fed to cut rates in June, he wrote, but “the Fed has slipped into a phase of elevated data-point dependence.” More