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    EU launches probe into Chinese wind turbine companies

    Unlock the Editor’s Digest for freeRoula Khalaf, Editor of the FT, selects her favourite stories in this weekly newsletter.Brussels has launched a subsidy investigation into Chinese wind turbine companies as it steps up efforts to protect its domestic industry from cheap competition.Margrethe Vestager, the EU’s top competition enforcer, said the probe would examine whether Chinese companies participating in wind parks across Europe may have benefited from state support from Beijing. The investigation will use the European Commission’s new powers designed to clamp down on market-distorting subsidies from foreign governments as Brussels seeks to defend itself from unfair competition from abroad, including Beijing.Investigators will examine “the conditions for the development of wind parks in Spain, Greece, France, Romania and Bulgaria”, Vestager said.The probe comes days after the commission launched investigations into two consortiums bidding for the development of a solar park in Romania, which include Chinese solar panel manufacturers.In February the commission launched a similar probe into Chinese state-owned company CRRC’s bid to supply trains in Bulgaria, which was half the price of a European competitor. CRRC later withdrew from the process.In a speech at Princeton University, Vestager said Brussels should move away from playing “whack-a-mole” with individual cases and instead use its full powers to defend its interest against unfair trade practices by China.“We saw the playbook for how China came to dominate the solar panel industry,” she said. “First, attracting foreign investment into its large domestic market, usually requiring joint ventures.” “Second, acquiring the technology, and not always above board,” she added. “Third, granting massive subsidies for domestic suppliers, while simultaneously and progressively closing the domestic market to foreign businesses. And fourth, exporting excess capacity to the rest of the world at low prices.”Vestager said that as a result, less than 3 per cent of the solar panels installed in the EU were produced in the continent. Several manufacturing plants have closed in recent months, saying they cannot compete with Chinese imports.China’s exports of green technology have ballooned in recent months as it opens factories. A surge in imports of electric vehicles prompted the commission to open an anti-subsidy investigation last year, which should conclude in July and could lead to tariffs.Chinese officials claim their products are simply better.Peng Gang, minister for economic and trade affairs at the Chinese embassy in Brussels, wrote on Monday that EU-China collaboration was a “win-win”.He noted that some in Europe had attributed the success of Chinese companies to subsidies — while the EU was at the same time offering large subsidies to companies that were struggling to be competitive. “The secrets behind Chinese products going global have never been the so-called subsidies, but diligence, innovation and competitive awareness of generations of Chinese entrepreneurs,” he said.Video: Green energy providers face cable shortage | FT Rethink More

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    The tree of debt must stop growing

    Unlock the Editor’s Digest for freeRoula Khalaf, Editor of the FT, selects her favourite stories in this weekly newsletter.“If something cannot go on forever, it will stop.” This is known as “Stein’s law”, after the late Herbert Stein, former chair of Richard Nixon’s Council of Economic Advisers. Stein published this in June 1989, in reference to US trade and budget deficits. They have still not stopped! But, as a German adage of similar import says, “trees don’t grow to the sky”. At some point the tree’s weight becomes unsupportable. This is also true of fiscal debt. Limits on debt exist for every economy, even one as mighty as that of the US.In a recent blog on “The Fiscal and Financial Risks of a High-Debt, Slow-Growth World”, Tobias Adrian, Vitor Gaspar and Pierre-Olivier Gourinchas elucidate the dynamics of today’s global situation. Overall, they note, debt sustainability depends upon four elements: primary balances, economic growth, real interest rates and debt: “Higher primary balances — the excess of government revenues over expenditures, excluding interest payments — and growth help to achieve debt sustainability, whereas higher interest rates and debt levels make it more challenging.”The global financial crisis that hit in 2007 and then the pandemic of 2020 and its aftermath caused huge jumps in ratios of public debt to GDP in high-income and emerging economies. By 2028, these are forecast to reach 120 and 80 per cent respectively. In the former case, these are the highest ratios since the second world war. In the latter case, these are the highest ever. You are seeing a snapshot of an interactive graphic. This is most likely due to being offline or JavaScript being disabled in your browser.Debt dynamics were extremely favourable for a long time, partly due to ultra-low real rates of interest. But everything has now become more difficult. “Medium-term growth rates are”, argue the authors, “projected to continue declining on the back of mediocre productivity growth, weaker demographics, feeble investment and continued scarring from the pandemic.” Ageing directly raises public spending pressures, too. Moreover, even if, as seems likely, equilibrium short-term real interest rates — the so-called “natural rate” — fall back to low levels again, long-term real interest rates may not do so, partly because of recent jumps in the perception of risk. This “term-risk premium” has recently substantially risen.You are seeing a snapshot of an interactive graphic. This is most likely due to being offline or JavaScript being disabled in your browser.Thus, long-term real interest rates might remain high persistently, partly because of perceptions of inflation risk, partly because of quantitative tightening and partly because the fiscal deficits of many countries are expected to remain large. All this threatens to create a vicious circle in which high perceptions of risk raise interest rates above likely growth rates, thereby making fiscal positions less sustainable and keeping risk premia high. Elevated fiscal debt also worsens the threat of a “bank-sovereign nexus”, in which weak banks cause concern about the ability of sovereigns to rescue them and vice versa.You are seeing a snapshot of an interactive graphic. This is most likely due to being offline or JavaScript being disabled in your browser.Arguably, the situation of the US is the most significant of all. In The Budget and Economic Outlook: 2024 to 2034, the non-partisan Congressional Budget Office notes that “debt held by the public rises each year in relation to the size of the economy, reaching 116 per cent of GDP in 2034 — an amount greater than at any point in the nation’s history. From 2024 to 2034, increases in mandatory spending and interest costs outpace declines in discretionary spending and growth in revenues and the economy, driving up debt. That trend persists, pushing federal debt to 172 per cent of GDP in 2054.”You are seeing a snapshot of an interactive graphic. This is most likely due to being offline or JavaScript being disabled in your browser.Only a brave economist could insist that this can continue forever. At some point, surely, Stein’s law would bite: investor resistance to further rises in debt would jump and then monetisation, inflation, financial repression and a global monetary mess would ensue.Here are three relevant facts for the US: first, by 2034, mandatory federal spending is forecast to reach 15.1 per cent of GDP against total federal revenue of a mere 17.9 per cent; second, federal revenue was just 73 per cent of outlays in 2023; and, third, the primary balance has been in consistent deficit since the early 2000s. All this shows how immensely difficult it will be to bring overall deficits under control.You are seeing a snapshot of an interactive graphic. This is most likely due to being offline or JavaScript being disabled in your browser.Crucially, politics are strongly against it. Since Ronald Reagan, the Republicans have become indifferent to balancing the budget. Their aim, instead, is lower taxes. Bill Clinton and Barack Obama made serious attempts at fiscal prudence. But this allowed George W Bush and Donald Trump to slash taxes. Democrats have now decided that scorched earth is a better strategy. Thus, both parties will happily run huge deficits — and let the future take care of itself. How long can this go on? Not forever. As the late Rudiger Dornbusch warned: “In economics, things take longer to happen than you think they will, and then they happen faster than you thought they could.”You are seeing a snapshot of an interactive graphic. This is most likely due to being offline or JavaScript being disabled in your browser.Some economists seem to believe that the demand for a sovereign’s money is infinite: so long as there is some slack in the economy, the government can keep printing. But flight from a sovereign’s money can easily occur before then. Others argue that if the borrowing goes into profitable investment, it will pay for itself. What borrowing is used for does matter. But the link between illiquid assets and debt service capacity is imperfect.Prudent sovereigns, even mighty ones able to borrow in their own currencies, cannot get away with an explosive path for fiscal debt forever. The IMF blog argues that “first and foremost, countries should start to gradually and credibly rebuild fiscal buffers and ensure the long-term sustainability of their sovereign debt”. All this is wise. But the fiscal squeeze will also demand increased spending elsewhere, some of it abroad. The best approach would be to start soon, adjust slowly and co-ordinate globally. What are the chances of anything so sensible? Close to zero, [email protected] Martin Wolf with myFT and on Twitter More

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    dWallet Network brings multi-chain DeFi to Sui, featuring native Bitcoin and Ethereum

    dWallet Network, a trailblazer in decentralized, native multi-chain technology, and Mysten Labs, a Web3 infrastructure company and the original contributor to Sui, announced their strategic partnership, focusing on the introduction of multi-chain interoperability into the DeFi ecosystem on Sui, the groundbreaking Layer 1 and smart contract platform. With the integration of the dWallet primitive, applications built on Sui can sign transactions on Bitcoin and Ethereum, opening up new cross-chain experiences on Sui. Sui is renowned for its secure, high-throughput, and low-latency blockchain capabilities, utilizing the Move smart contract language to offer developers a robust and secure platform for building sophisticated applications, all while maintaining extremely low and consistent gas fees. Through the partnership with dWallet Network, Sui is now poised to harness native, non-collusive, and decentralized dWallet technology, enabling seamless cross-chain interactions within its ecosystem. This collaboration is particularly significant for DeFi initiatives on Sui, providing them with the unprecedented ability to include native BTC and ETH transactions, a milestone in blockchain interoperability and functionality.To implement the dWallet primitive, the dWallet Network utilizes 2PC-MPC, the state-of-the-art protocol invented by its team. This industry-first multiparty protocol enables the generation of an ECDSA signature in a non-collusive way, requiring participation from both the end-user and a significant number of nodes, the number of which could potentially reach hundreds or thousands.Furthermore, the collaboration extends beyond technical integration, with dWallet Network and the Sui Foundation co-hosting the Overflow hackathon. This event underscores the commitment of both projects to foster innovation, community engagement, and the development of cutting-edge applications within the Sui ecosystem.For press inquiries, users can contact:[email protected]@dwalletlabs.comAbout Mysten LabsMysten Labs is a team of leading distributed systems, programming languages, and cryptography experts whose founders were senior executives and lead architects of pioneering blockchain projects. The mission of Mysten Labs is to create foundational infrastructure for web3.Users Can Learn more here.About SuiSui is a first-of-its-kind Layer 1 blockchain and smart contract platform designed from the bottom up to make digital asset ownership fast, private, secure, and accessible to everyone. Its object-centric model, based on the Move programming language, enables parallel execution, sub-second finality, and rich on-chain assets. With horizontally scalable processing and storage, Sui supports a wide range of applications with unrivaled speed at low cost. Sui is a step-function advancement in blockchain and a platform on which creators and developers can build amazing, user-friendly experiences.Users Can Learn more here.About dWallet NetworkdWallet Network is the home of dWallets – programmable and transferable signing mechanisms that live on-chain. dWallet Network empowers builders on L1s and L2s to utilize dWallets as a building block for managing assets & enforcing logic across all of Web3 in a decentralized and noncollusive way.ContactMarketing LeadSiva SagirajudWallet [email protected] article was originally published on Chainwire More

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    JST Digital & Stablecoin Standard Partner on Creation of Liquidity & Regulatory Compliance Standards for Stablecoins

    JST Digital (“the Company” or “JST”), a global financial services firm specializing in digital assets, today announced that it has joined the Stablecoin Standard, the industry body for stablecoin issuers globally, to help establish international standards for high-quality liquid stablecoins.Stablecoin standard the industry body for stablecoin issuers globally, focused on real world applications for stablecoins. We share international best practices, business development use cases, industry led working groups, define what a high-quality liquid stablecoin should look like, and engage with policymakers domestically & internationally.To learn more, users can visit: https://stablecoinstandard.com/About JST DigitalJST Digital is a crypto-native financial services firm specializing in market making, quantitative trading and digital asset management. The partners of JST have all spent over twenty years in traditional financial services. They entered the crypto markets as early as 2014, when they began to make markets for one of the early blockchain projects. Leveraging that experience, JST was launched in 2018 to provide a full suite of traditional financial services to institutions in the digital asset market.For more information about JST Digital, users can visit: https://jstdigital.io/Stablecoin Standard Media Contact: [email protected] ContactKevin McGrathM [email protected] article was originally published on Chainwire More

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    POKT Network Welcomes Three New Gateways & Brings Open Data Access to Millions of End Users

    Developer DAO, Raid Guild, and Chainstack will bring their respective networks and distribution to POKT Network, providing more developers with read/write access to 60+ blockchains’ by building on top of POKT Network’s decentralized infrastructure POKT Network, the user-governed platform building a Universal RPC (NYSE:RES) Base Layer, announced today the launch of three new Gateways: Developer DAO, Porters (backed by Raid Guild), and Chainstack. The new Gateways are a key part of POKT Network’s growth strategy to scale API access to every open data source on the internet.Gateways serve as independent access points to the POKT Network, enhancing data accessibility and network performance. Each Gateway is built directly on POKT Network’s universal RPC base layer infrastructure and removes the need to build and maintain any of the underlying infrastructure, helping players like Developer DAO, Porters and Chainstack to operate as an independent RPC business. The innovation of Gateways lies in the ability for businesses of every kind – centralized or decentralized – to resell access to infrastructure by leveraging a blockchain protocol as the central coordinating party. This system adopts a unique business model that delivers the benefits of vertical integration through a decentralized network rather than a single centralized entity, meaning that more of the benefits are shared amongst more businesses. The protocol wins from more demand for the core service, while Gateways benefit from massively decreased time to market, lower operating expenditure and more time and resources to focus on the front-end of their businesses. The launch of these Gateways is a major step forward in POKT Network’s mission to provide developers and enterprises with the most reliable, performance, and cost-effective data, so they can focus on building the best applications with optimal user experience. The Future of Decentralized Data Access with the Shannon Upgrade POKT Network’s Shannon Upgrade, scheduled for a summer 2024 release, will simplify integration for RPC providers and projects by removing current limitations and introducing permissionless gateway creation, making censorship resistance fully attainable. This update, currently in private testnet, aims to reduce costs, ease data access across blockchains and AI, and promote collaboration over competition. It marks a critical advancement in decentralized data infrastructure, broadening the range of supported use cases and fueling innovation.About POKT NetworkPOKT Network is a leading decentralized blockchain infrastructure provider that empowers developers to build scalable, secure, and efficient blockchain applications with industry-leading data access. Leveraging cutting-edge technology, POKT Network offers a robust, decentralized infrastructure layer that facilitates seamless interaction between decentralized applications (dApps) and multiple blockchain networks. With a commitment to fostering innovation and accessibility in the blockchain space, POKT Network provides developers with the tools and resources they need to unlock the full potential of decentralized technologies.For media inquiry, [email protected] ManagerAna [email protected] article was originally published on Chainwire More

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    NeuroMesh: Spearheading the New Era of AI with a Distributed Training Protocol

    NeuroMesh (nmesh.io), a trailblazer in artificial intelligence, announces the rollout of its distributed AI training protocol, poised to revolutionize global access and collaboration in AI development. Embracing DePIN’s decentralized framework, NeuroMesh bridges the gaps between the demand for training large AI models and distributed GPUs. This initiative aims to foster inclusivity in AI development, facilitating participation across diverse sectors and geographies.Visionaries in AI: The Team’s Global AmbitionThe team behind NeuroMesh, composed of researchers and engineers from Oxford, NTU, PKU, THU, HKU, Google (NASDAQ:GOOGL), and Meta (NASDAQ:META), pioneers a democratic AI training process. This visionary approach addresses the limitations of centralized AI development by enabling GPU owners worldwide to contribute to a vast training network, empowering entities of all sizes to leverage this service for their training needs.NeuroMesh transcends traditional AI by fostering collaboration. Their vision is to equip every developer and organization, regardless of location or resources, with the ability to train and utilize cutting-edge AI models. This aligns perfectly with the vision of AI pioneers like Yann LeCun, who advocate for a future powered by crowdsourced and distributed AI training.A Revolutionary Design Based on PCNAt the heart of NeuroMesh’s distributed training protocol lies the groundbreaking PCN (Predictive Coding Network) training algorithm – a true game-changer in this field. This approach empowers GPU owners worldwide to contribute their power, fostering a vast collaborative effort.The PCN Training Algorithm: The magic behind NeuroMesh lies in the PCN training algorithm. Unlike traditional backpropagation (BP (NYSE:BP)) methods, PCN enables fully local, parallel, and autonomous training. The team aims to create a vast network, where each node—representing a participating GPU—learns independently. PCN minimizes inter-layer communication, reducing data traffic and facilitating asynchronous training. Think of it as a symphony where each musician plays their part independently, yet contributes to a harmonious whole.This cutting-edge model, inspired by recent advancements in neuroscience research pioneered by Oxford University, mimics the human brain’s localized learning approach. By storing error values and optimizing for a local target in each layer, it replicates the behavior of brain neurons. This allows NeuroMesh to define models that are much larger, with individual components that contribute to the same ultimate optimization objective for the whole network, just like the human brain where different stimuli are handled by different groups of neurons.This biologically-inspired approach, combined with its inherent distribution capabilities, unlocks a new era of AI development.A Call to Forge Global PartnershipsNeuroMesh invites partnerships globally, aiming to forge an AI future that everyone can participate in. Its protocol is the bedrock upon which a diverse ecosystem is being built. The ecosystem is designed to be dynamic, collaborative, and adaptable, ensuring that it can serve the AI model training needs of any size, from any industry. Individuals, projects with GPU resources, and entities with training needs are all welcome to join this transformative initiative. For comprehensive details on NeuroMesh and to participate in this leading-edge endeavor, users can visit nmesh.io.About NeuroMeshNeuroMesh comprises researchers and engineers from esteemed institutions such as Oxford, NTU, PKU, THU, HKU, Google and Meta. By empowering developers and organizations to deploy robust AI models, NeuroMesh is cultivating an inclusive AI ecosystem, bridging the gaps between the demand of training large AI models and distributed GPUs worldwide.For more information, users can visit NeuroMesh’s Twitter | TelegramContactCMOKenchia [email protected] article was originally published on Chainwire More

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    Italy commits to cut deficit despite soaring cost of tax credits

    Unlock the Editor’s Digest for freeRoula Khalaf, Editor of the FT, selects her favourite stories in this weekly newsletter.The Italian government has outlined plans to bring its budget deficit in line with EU limits by 2026, despite raising the estimated cost of tax credit schemes to €219bn and cutting its growth forecast.The “devastating impact” on public finances of the so-called Superbonus scheme was the main reason Italy’s debt-to-GDP ratio was set to rise in the next three years instead of falling as previously planned, finance minister Giancarlo Giorgetti said on Tuesday.Giorgetti predicted that the cost of tax credits and other home improvement incentives would reach €219bn, more than 10 per cent of gross domestic product. This marks a sharp increase compared with Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni’s €140bn estimate she announced last autumn. Launched in 2020 with cross-party support in the depths of the Covid-19 pandemic, the Superbonus offered Italian homeowners tradable tax credits of 110 per cent for undertaking improvements to enhance the energy efficiency of their homes.The programme sparked a construction boom that has supported growth, but it has also been blighted by fraud and ballooning costs, as homeowners had little incentive to economise in their projects.“We did not expect or rather did not wish for the disaster of the Superbonus,” Giorgetti said.Despite ballooning Superbonus costs that have previously caused the government to overshoot its deficit targets, Rome stuck to its prediction for the fiscal deficit to fall to 4.3 per cent of GDP this year before reaching 3 per cent in 2026 and 2.2 per cent the following year.However, the government announced last month that the 2023 deficit reached 7.2 per cent of GDP, well above the official target of 5.3 per cent.On Tuesday, Italy’s finance ministry also cut its growth forecast for this year to 1 per cent, down from its 1.2 per cent forecast in September, but still above the 0.6 per cent foreseen by the Bank of Italy and 0.7 per cent by the IMF. The ministry estimated the country’s debt-to-GDP ratio would tick up from 137.8 per cent this year to 139.8 per cent in 2026. While that is down from its recent peak above 140 per cent, it is still the second-highest public debt level in the EU behind Greece.Given Italy’s high budget deficit and relatively weak growth expected in the next few years, some economists are sceptical about the country’s ability to bring its public finances into line with new EU fiscal rules that come into force this year.Italy is expected to be one of more than 10 EU countries that would breach the bloc’s new fiscal rules that aim to limit annual deficits to 3 per cent and total debt to 60 per cent of GDP, which could result in sanctions by the European Commission.“Some of the biggest risks lie in countries where interest rates have been pulled up by global or regional factors without a corresponding increase in growth,” said Neil Shearing, chief economist at Capital Economics. “Italy continues to be a cause for concern in this regard.”Investors have seemed relatively unperturbed about Rome’s debt issues, helped by the European Central Bank buying the bonds of Italy and other governments until the end of this year and its scheme to buy more if borrowing costs surge in an unjustified way.The closely watched spread between Italy’s 10-year bond yield and that of Germany fell to a two-year low of under 1.2 percentage points last month. However, it has since increased above 1.3 points.Shearing said Italy had so far “flown under the radar” thanks in part to the Meloni government’s “more conciliatory approach to the EU”. But given Italy’s “grim” long-term debt dynamics, he said “it would be remarkable if it managed to stay out of the firing line forever”.Economists have raised similar concerns about France, which said last month its budget deficit would be 5.5 per cent of GDP last year, significantly wider than its forecast of 4.9 per cent, lifting its public debt to 111 per cent of GDP.However, Italy has both a weaker growth outlook and higher borrowing costs than France, making it harder to cut its debt. Shearing forecast that Italy would grow 0.5 per cent this year, below French growth of 1.2 per cent, meaning “there is less room for things to go wrong in Italy”. More

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    Solana is leading the battle for blockchain payments – analysts

    A recent report from Bernstein Research shows that stablecoins have hit a global settlement value of over $7 trillion, with total circulation increasing and major payment platforms adopting digital currencies for cross-border transactions. This figure is also huge when compared against the combined $14 trillion settled by giants like Visa (NYSE:V) and Mastercard (NYSE:MA).Analysts Gautam Chhugani and Mahika Sapra argue that stablecoins, digital coins designed to maintain a stable value relative to traditional currencies, are not only bridging the gap between fiat and crypto but are also increasingly being used in international settlements.”The total stablecoin supply, which had peaked at $180 billion in 2021 before dipping to $120 billion in 2022, is on an upward trajectory once again, currently standing at $150 billion,” the report stated. Leading the market are USDT (Tether) with a 75% market share and USDC (Circle) with 22%.Despite the so-called “crypto winter,” the value transferred using stablecoins has remained robust. In the first quarter of 2024, the annualized value transferred is expected to match the 2022 high of roughly $7 trillion.Solana has emerged as a major player in blockchain payments, challenging Ethereum’s dominance by securing a 43% market share in stablecoin transfers. This shift was attributed to Solana’s higher throughput and lower transaction costs, coupled with strong interest from major payment processors like Visa and Shopify (NYSE:SHOP).The report also highlighted innovative use cases outside the cryptocurrency trading sphere. “We are witnessing a shift as stablecoins evolve from purely speculative assets to becoming integral to payment processes,” said Chhugani. Notable developments include PayPal’s (NASDAQ:PYPL) launch of PY-USD on Ethereum and Visa’s pilot of USDC on Solana for cross-border settlements.Despite these advances, the report cautions that scalability remains a challenge for broader consumer payment applications, with current blockchain transaction speeds needing major improvement to match those of traditional payment networks.Stablecoins try to keep their value steady, but how well they stick to their peg depends on what’s backing them up, or sometimes, what’s not. The report notes that market swings, how much people trust and use them, tech developments, demand and supply, and how easy they are to buy and sell—all these factors play a role.One big worry with stablecoins is when they slip from their supposed value. Looking at five different stablecoins, it turns out moments when they drop below a buck happen more often and last longer compared to times they bump up above that dollar mark. More