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    XRP Is Surprisingly Stable, Here’s Why

    In recent days, XRP’s price action has been characterized by its struggle to overcome a series of local resistance levels. A notable rejection was faced around the $0.63 mark, which has added to the narrative of an asset under pressure. Despite these rejections, the asset’s ability to stay afloat above the 200-day EMA suggests underlying strength and potential for growth.XRP/USDT Chart by TradingViewThe market’s oppressiveness toward XRP can be attributed to various factors, including lack of usecase for XRP and a poor performance throughout the 2023. However, the past has shown that XRP can swiftly shift from oppressed states to strong bullish rallies, often catching many off-guard.For a scenario where XRP’s growth continues, it is essential for the token to maintain its stand above the 200-day EMA. If this level holds, it can serve as a springboard for future bullish attempts. A decisive close above this moving average could stimulate investor confidence, potentially leading to a challenge of the recent resistance at $0.63. A break and hold above this level could signal a trend reversal and may pave the way for XRP to target higher resistances, possibly around the $0.70 to $0.75 regions.After dipping to a support level around $88 on December 20, 2023, Solana has rebounded, forming a higher low near the $90 mark. This movement suggests accumulating strength and a possible change in direction from the previous downward trend. The local trendline resistance, which Solana is currently testing, is evident at approximately $97.50. Two pivotal price levels stand out on Solana’s chart. The first resistance level after the trendline sits near the $100 psychological mark. This round number has historically been a challenging point for Solana to breach decisively. Beyond that, the $104 level looms as the next significant barrier, which was a previous local high around January 3, 2024.Conversely, on the support side, the level to watch is around $88, as mentioned earlier. This price has proven to be a firm foundation, with buyers stepping in to uphold Solana’s valuation. A secondary support level is present near $85, just below the 50-day moving average, acting as a safety net for any potential retracements.The rapid growth witnessed in the past few days has been nothing short of impressive. Ethereum, which lingered around the $2,400 mark in the early days of February, has seen a significant influx of buying pressure, leading to a breakthrough past key resistance levels. This positive price action posits two potential scenarios for the smart contract giant.In one scenario, Ethereum could continue its aggressive push, riding the wave of current market optimism towards the $3,000 target. If this momentum is maintained, and with the additional fuel from the recent high volume of trades, ETH could test $3,000 in the coming days. A consolidation above $2,600 would be crucial for this scenario to unfold, as it would establish a new support level, reinforcing investor confidence.Alternatively, given the volatile nature of the crypto markets, a retracement could occur before Ethereum reaches $3,000. This would likely see the asset retesting support at the $2,500 level, which if held, could serve as a springboard for a second wave towards and beyond $3,000.This article was originally published on U.Today More

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    IMF, Egypt agree on ‘main policy elements’ of economic reform programme

    Ivanna Vladkova Hollar, the IMF mission chief for Egypt, said both sides had made “excellent progress” on the discussions of a comprehensive policy package that could kickstart long-delayed reviews of the country’s economic reform programme.”To this end, the IMF team and the Egyptian authorities have agreed on the main policy elements of the program. The authorities expressed a strong commitment to act promptly on all critical aspects of Egypt’s economic reform program,” Hollar said in a statement.Earlier on Thursday, IMF Managing Director Kristalina Georgieva said the fund and Egypt were in the “very last stretch” of negotiations to increase the country’s $3 billion programme.Egypt has been in talks for the last two weeks with the IMF to revive and expand the loan agreement, which was signed in December 2022.IMF disbursements on the loan were put on hold last year after Egypt did not follow through on a pledge to let the Egyptian pound respond to market forces, and instead fixed it against the dollar in March. The Egyptian pound, fixed at 30.85 to the dollar since then, has been trading on the black market as low as 71 pounds.Hollar, who concluded a two-week visit to Cairo on Thursday, said discussions will continue virtually in the coming days to “identify the magnitude of additional support from the IMF and other bilateral and multilateral development partners needed to help close Egypt’s increased financing gaps in the context of recent shocks.” More

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    Dollar poised for weekly decline; US jobs data up next

    SINGAPORE (Reuters) – The dollar fell broadly on Friday in a bout of positive risk sentiment following upbeat big tech earnings on Wall Street, while traders awaited U.S. jobs data due later in the day to gauge how soon the Federal Reserve could begin easing rates.The closely watched nonfarm payrolls report later on Friday comes on the heels of the Fed’s latest policy meeting where rates were kept steady as expected, though Chair Jerome Powell pushed back against market expectations of rate cuts in March.Ahead of the release, the greenback dipped against a basket of currencies, extending a 0.5% fall in the previous session.The dollar index was last at 103.02 and on track for its first weekly decline for the year.The risk-on mood helped the Aussie tack on 0.17% to last trade at $0.6583, though it was on track to end the week only about 0.2% higher, as its gains were capped by a sharp slowdown in domestic inflation.The New Zealand dollar rose 0.07% to $0.6149 and was on track for a weekly rise of nearly 1%, its best performance in over a month.”If we have a relatively soft payrolls number… then I think you’d probably see the needle move a little bit further back, closer to 50-50″ for March rate cut expectations, Ray Attrill, head of FX strategy at National Australia Bank (OTC:NABZY), said of Friday’s U.S. jobs report.”I think the dollar will be quite sensitive to that.”Market pricing now shows a 38% chance of a Fed cut in March, as compared to an over 70% chance a month ago, according to the CME FedWatch tool. A cut in May is almost fully priced in.”We continue to expect three rate cuts to take place in 2024, with the first cut taking place mid-2024, (followed) by subsequent cuts each quarter,” said Raf Choudhury, investment director of multi-asset at Abrdn.”We do think the market pricing in five or more cuts as soon as March seems ambitious and have more confidence in the dot plots which signal three cuts this year.”Still, the prospect of lower U.S. rates have sent Treasury yields sliding, with the two-year yield, which typically reflects near-term interest rate expectations, last at 4.2086%. It has fallen roughly 15 basis points this week.The benchmark 10-year yield, which has meanwhile tumbled nearly 30 bps for the week, last stood at 3.8840%.Analysts said renewed jitters over regional U.S. banks this week also sparked a flight into the safe-haven Treasuries. Bond yields move inversely to prices. [US/]In other currencies, the yen gained 0.1% to last stand at 146.29 per dollar. It was poised for a weekly gain of nearly 1.3%, its best week in over a month.A summary of opinions from the Bank of Japan’s (BOJ) January meeting out this week showed policymakers discussed the likelihood of a near-term exit from negative interest rates and possible scenarios for phasing out the bank’s massive stimulus programme.That highlighted a growing view within the board that conditions were falling in place to soon pull short-term interest rates out of negative territory, which would be Japan’s first interest rate hike since 2007.Elsewhere, sterling rose 0.09% to $1.2754.The Bank of England (BoE) kept interest rates at a nearly 16-year high on Thursday but opened up the possibility of cutting them as inflation falls.”The (Monetary Policy Committee) – following the Fed – kept the Bank Rate target at 5.25% and dropped the ‘tightening’ bias in favour of a neutral bias,” said Thierry Wizman, Macquarie’s global FX and rates strategist.”But, also like the Fed’s tone… there was a decidedly cautious aspect to the MPC’s communications to counter the switch in the policy bias.”The euro edged 0.07% higher to $1.0879 and was eyeing a weekly gain of more than 0.25%.Data on Thursday showed euro zone inflation eased as expected last month but underlying price pressures fell less than forecast, likely boosting the European Central Bank’s argument that rate cuts should not be rushed. More

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    IMF chief confident in ‘pragmatic’ Milei despite setbacks

    Unlock the Editor’s Digest for freeRoula Khalaf, Editor of the FT, selects her favourite stories in this weekly newsletter.IMF managing director Kristalina Georgieva has praised Argentina’s “very pragmatic” president Javier Milei and emphasised the fund’s confidence in his efforts to overhaul the crisis-stricken economy despite a series of political setbacks.“So far, we have seen a good economic team in place, a very pragmatic president — not ideologically confined, but looking at ways in which the country can move out of this difficulty,” Georgieva told a press briefing in Washington on Thursday, referring to Argentina’s worst economic crisis in two decades.Milei, a libertarian economist who took office in December, has pledged to slash spending and rebuild central bank reserves to get Argentina’s troubled $44bn loan programme back on track. But local analysts have warned that the political outsider, whose party controls less than 15 per cent of congressional seats, may struggle to enact his plans.Milei last week withdrew a set of fiscal measures worth about 1.4 per cent of gross domestic product from a reform bill he is trying to push through Argentina’s congress amid stalled negotiations with opposition lawmakers. The measures were considered crucial to the spending cuts and tax increases equivalent to 5 per cent of GDP that are needed to meet the target of a fiscal surplus of 2 per cent Milei has agreed with the IMF for 2024.A judge ruled earlier this week that a critical section of a presidential decree issued by Milei in December deregulating Argentina’s labour market was unconstitutional.Milei’s withdrawal of the fiscal package was “a pragmatic decision”, Georgieva said. “You move where you have more consensus. We also looked at the consequences of this decision on the appropriate targets and we were satisfied that there is a contingency plan in place.”The stakes of Argentina’s recovery are high for the IMF. Argentina is the fund’s largest debtor, and its package, first agreed in 2018 and refinanced in 2022, had gone “significantly off-track”, Georgieva said in a statement on Wednesday, citing “inconsistent policies” from the previous left-leaning Peronist government. The IMF’s board approved a $4.7bn disbursement of the loan on Wednesday, granting waivers for a series of targets missed under the previous government.The fund also agreed to extend the program by three months from its original September 24 end date, delaying reviews to allow Milei more time to meet targets.The country’s crisis is expected to intensify in the coming months as Argentines feel the impact of Milei’s early reforms, which include a 54 per cent official devaluation of the peso, cuts to energy and transport subsidies, and the removal of price-fixing agreements for food and fuel. Annual inflation in December stood at 211 per cent — the highest in three decades. On Tuesday the IMF downgraded its 2024 economic growth prediction for Argentina to a contraction of 2.8 per cent, citing the likely impact of “a significant policy adjustment to restore macroeconomic stability”.Georgieva, who met Milei in Davos last month, said he had recognised the need for “more social protection” for poorer Argentines. “We have been backing up the Argentine people. We will continue to do so,” she said. “I’m impressed by how open the president and the government is to advice [and] good policy discussions.” More

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    Brazil tightens rules for issuing private debt securities

    These financial instruments, including the so-called CRAs, CRIs, LCAs, LCIs, and LIGs, provide income tax exemptions for investors and have experienced significant growth in Brazil over the past few years.Real estate-linked securities LCI and LIG represent a market of 460 billion reais ($93.57 billion), said Felipe Derzi, deputy head of regulation of the financial system at the central bank in a press conference.The government’s assessment indicated that only 15-20% of these securities were initiating new credit operations in line with the original goal intended for the instruments he said, adding that “a reduction in the issuance volume is expected.”LCAs, which are linked to agribusiness, also account for 460 billion reais, said Claudio Filgueiras, head of rural credit regulation, supervision and control at the bank.The changes encompass stricter rules for eligible underlying assets in issuances and will apply exclusively to new operations, said the finance ministry and the central bank in a joint statement, adding that the adjustments “aim to enhance the efficiency of public policy in supporting” the sectors.They added that the alterations seek to ensure that the “aforementioned instruments are backed by operations consistent with the purposes that justified their creation and contributing to a more robust credit market.”($1 = 4.9163 reais) More

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    US Senate nears release of bipartisan border deal Trump rejects

    WASHINGTON (Reuters) -Bipartisan negotiators in the U.S. Senate will release as early as Friday a long-sought – and politically charged – agreement to stem the flow of migrants across the U.S.-Mexico border, setting up a vote next week on a bill that would also provide fresh aid to Ukraine and Israel.But the legislation already faces substantial opposition from Republicans in the Senate and the House of Representatives who are aligned with Donald Trump, the frontrunner for the Republican presidential nomination.Senator Kyrsten Sinema, one of three bipartisan negotiators who have been working toward a border deal for months, said the emerging agreement will end the practice of releasing migrants caught crossing the border illegally, provide emergency authority to shut the border down and revamp the U.S. asylum system.”We are changing the policy dramatically,” the U.S. senator from Arizona, an independent, told reporters.Trump has called on lawmakers to reject any deal ahead of the November elections that will determine control of the White House and Congress. But Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, the top Democrat in Congress, announced that an initial Senate vote on the supplemental aid package will take place no later than next Wednesday.”We cannot simply shirk from our responsibilities just because the task is difficult,” Schumer said on the Senate floor. “These challenges at the border and Ukraine and the Middle East are just too great.”Schumer said the text of the bill would be released no later than Sunday.President Joe Biden asked Congress in October to approve a $106 billion emergency spending bill, including $61 billion for Ukraine as it battles Russian invaders and $14 billion for Israel in the aftermath of the Oct. 7 raids by Hamas. That request has been stalled by Republicans’ insistence that it be tied to an unrelated shift in immigration policy.The U.S.-Mexico border is a top issue for Republicans, with record numbers of migrants caught illegally crossing into the United States since Biden, a Democrat, took office in 2021. The U.S. Border Patrol arrested about 2 million migrants at the border in fiscal-year 2023, similar to record-breaking totals during Biden’s first two years in office.Immigration also ranks as the second-greatest worry for Americans, according a Reuters/Ipsos poll published on Wednesday. Some 17% of respondents said it was their top concern, a sharp increase from December. Schumer’s announcement came a day after House Speaker Mike Johnson, the top Republican in Congress, cast doubt the future of any Senate border agreement, saying Biden does not need new laws to tackle the problem.”From what we’ve heard, this so-called deal does not include transformational policy changes that are needed to actually stop the border catastrophe,” Johnson said. But some Republicans take issue with fellow party members who have attacked the legislation without knowing what is in it.”There are some in the Senate and in the House who are desperately trying to sabotage it,” Representative Dan Crenshaw, a Republican from Texas, told reporters, suggesting that blind Republican opposition was mainly about not helping Biden escape the issue in the November election. “They’re making it seem like the rest of us are against the bill. But that’s just not true,” Crenshaw added. “I want to secure the border. That’s what I told my voters I would do.” More