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    ‘Rich Dad Poor Dad’ Author Kiyosaki Finally Explains Why He Owns Bitcoin (BTC)

    In a recent revelation, Kiyosaki asserted that Bitcoin serves as a crucial defense mechanism against the systematic theft of wealth orchestrated by entities like the Federal Reserve, Treasury and Wall Street bankers. The author contends that these institutions exploit the value of traditional currency through inflation, taxation and manipulation of stock prices.Hence, Kiyosaki has chosen to eschew conventional investment vehicles such as stocks, bonds and fiat currency in favor of the decentralized and inflation-resistant qualities of Bitcoin.While Kiyosaki had previously expressed reservations about Bitcoin’s intrinsic value, he now places it alongside gold and silver as indispensable financial tools. Despite acknowledging the cryptocurrency’s volatility, he envisions Bitcoin as not merely a speculative venture but as a genuine store of value.The financial guru’s endorsement of BTC underscores a paradigm shift in his investment strategy, highlighting the growing prominence of cryptocurrencies as a formidable asset class.This article was originally published on U.Today More

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    Regulatory nod for US spot bitcoin ETF options may take months- sources

    (Reuters) – Options on new U.S. spot bitcoin exchange-traded funds (ETFs) could take months to gain regulatory approval, potentially dampening the appeal of the underlying products, multiple industry sources said. The Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) last month approved spot bitcoin ETFs, in a watershed for the crypto industry. Ten products have been trading since Jan. 11. Options are listed derivatives that give the holder the right to buy or sell an asset, such as a stock or exchange-traded product, at a predetermined price by a set date. They offer traders a cheap way to amplify their purchasing power, while institutional investors often use them to hedge risk.Options on the bitcoin ETFs are delayed because there is no established regulatory process for approving them, the people said. The SEC oversees technical rule changes that exchanges must make to list options, and typically approves them days after an ETF starts trading. But because regulators view bitcoin as a commodity, spot bitcoin ETF options may also require approval from the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC), which oversees commodity derivatives, the people said. Products related to the spot bitcoin ETFs could raise questions about jurisdiction and oversight, which the CFTC is still sorting through, said a person familiar with the matter who declined to be identified discussing regulatory matters.”This dual regulatory engagement adds a layer of complexity and potential for what some might call regulatory headaches,” said Martin Leinweber, digital asset product strategist at MarketVector Indexes, which provides the benchmark for VanEck’s spot bitcoin ETF. He expects it could take between two and ten months for the approvals. Without the options, big investors, which analysts have said could help drive as much as $100 billion into the ETFs, face risk management issues. That may lead some “to stay away altogether,” said Yesha Yadav, law professor at Vanderbilt University.The delay is also an obstacle to the crypto industry’s goal to bring more innovative crypto products to market. “The markets really want to go there, but the regulators are the gatekeepers,” said John Roglieri, head of capital markets at FalconX, a market-maker for the ETFs.While it is not unprecedented for options to require dual approval, it is rare. In the case of the first ETF tied to a physical commodity, the SPDR Gold Shares (NYSE:GLD) ETF, it took more than three years for the CFTC to approve the options. Regulators never signed off on a 2010 application to launch options on platinum and palladium ETFs. The SEC did not respond to a request for comment. The CFTC declined to comment.Nasdaq, CBOE and NYSE Arca, which list the ETFs, in January sought SEC approval to launch the options, according to notices on their websites. CBOE said that it expects to list options “later in 2024.”The Options Clearing Corporation (OCC), which clears options for exchanges, has to seek CFTC approval to clear and settle commodity-based products. The OCC has said it is working with its regulators on required approvals, but declined to comment on a possible timeframe. Some exchange executives are due to meet with CFTC officials to discuss the issue soon, according to a second person familiar with the matter.Given it took 10 years for the SEC to approve bitcoin ETFs, a delay in the options would not be surprising, said Adam Sze, head of digital assets product at Global X, which withdrew its own application for a spot bitcoin ETF on Tuesday. “A few more months for listed options probably isn’t that long in the grand scheme of things.” More

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    Canada braces for possible wave of business bankruptcies

    OTTAWA (Reuters) – Thousands of Canadian small businesses face the risk of bankruptcy after the government ended pandemic-era support last month with the economy slowing at a time of high interest rates.Small firms that employ fewer than 100 people are critical to the Canadian economy as they give jobs to almost two-thirds of the country’s 12 million private workers. A spike in bankruptcies, which jumped 38% in the first 11 months of 2023, would weigh on economic growth, lobby groups and economists warn.Last month, small businesses faced a deadline to repay interest-free loans of C$60,000 ($44,676) made available to each of them during the pandemic. Of the 900,000 who had taken the government support, a fifth have not yet repaid their loans, Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland said on Monday. The Canadian Federation of Independent Businesses (CFIB), a small-business lobby group, estimates a quarter missed the deadline.Katherine Cuplinskas, a spokesperson for the finance minister said in an emailed response to a Reuters question that the Department of Finance did not expect there will be a negative impact on the economy on account of repayment of the loans given as support during the pandemic. Katherine Cuplinskas, a spokesperson for the Finance Minister said in an emailed response that the Department of Finance did not expect there will be a negative impact on the economy on account of repayment of the loans given as support during the pandemic. She said loan recipients have long had full information on timelines and have been able to plan accordingly.There were about 1.2 million small businesses with employees in Canada in 2021 and contributing over a third to the country’s gross domestic product, according to the latest official data. “There are tens of thousands, if not hundreds of thousands, of businesses that remain viable, but will not be able to outrun their debt,” Dan Kelly, CFIB president, told Reuters, adding many debts could only be repaid by borrowing at a higher interest rate from banks.Of those who repaid, CFIB estimates that about 225,000 took out a bank loan to do so, at a time when interest rates in the country are at 22-year high. Those who did not get a loan but missed the deadline must make regular payments for two years at 5% annual interest.”We do anticipate… a rise in insolvencies over the next six months or so,” Stephen Tapp, chief economist at the Chamber of Commerce, said in an interview.The Conference Board of Canada (CBC), an independent think tank, forecasts that consumer spending in 2024 on a per capita basis is expected to slump further from what was already seen last year.CBC estimates first quarter corporate profits to nearly half to C$104.5 billion from a year ago, and the rest of the year will also be weaker than 2023 with companies hit by higher costs and drop in sales.”Warren Buffett says when the tide goes out you see who is swimming naked,” CBC’s chief economist Pedro Antunes said. With the government support receding, the small businesses will be the ones exposed, he added.($1 = 1.3430 Canadian dollars) More

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    Eurozone inflation slows to 2.8% in January

    Unlock the Editor’s Digest for freeRoula Khalaf, Editor of the FT, selects her favourite stories in this weekly newsletter.Eurozone inflation slowed to 2.8 per cent in January, but the decline in underlying price measures was less than economists expected after stripping out more volatile energy and food costs.The renewed decline in the headline rate of eurozone inflation, after it briefly ticked up to 2.9 per cent in December, will support investors’ expectations that the European Central Bank could cut interest rates as early as this spring.However, the unchanged rate of growth for labour-intensive services prices could encourage the cautious approach of some ECB rate-setters who have said they want to see signs that wage growth is moderating before lowering borrowing costs.Eurostat, the EU’s statistics arm, said on Thursday that services prices rose at an annual rate of 4 per cent for the third consecutive month in January.Core inflation, excluding more volatile energy and food costs to give a better idea of underlying price pressures, remained slightly higher than economists expected despite slowing from 3.4 per cent in December to 3.3 per cent in January. Economists had forecast a core rate of 3.2 per cent in a Reuters poll. “While the eurozone’s headline and core inflation rates both edged down, policymakers are likely to be concerned that disinflation in the services sector has stalled,” said Jack Allen-Reynolds, an economist at consultants Capital Economics.European government bond yields held on to their earlier gains on Thursday as investors judged the data reduced the odds of an early rate cut by the ECB.Yields on rate-sensitive two-year German Bunds were up 0.06 percentage points on the day at 2.47 per cent. German 10-year Bund yields, a benchmark for the eurozone, rose 0.05 percentage points to 2.21 per cent. Yields move inversely to prices.Western central banks are weighing the risk of a resurgence in price pressures if they lower borrowing costs too early against the danger of doing unnecessary damage to growth and jobs by waiting longer than needed.Jay Powell, chair of the US Federal Reserve, pushed back against investors’ bets it could cut rates as early as March, saying on Wednesday this was not its “base case”. On Thursday, Bank of England governor Andrew Bailey said it needed “more evidence” of disinflation before it would cut rates.ECB president Christine Lagarde said last week it was “premature to discuss rate cuts” even though inflation was expected to “ease further over the course of the year”.After the eurozone economy stagnated for much of last year, investors have bet the ECB will respond to the rapid cooling of price pressures by cutting its benchmark deposit rate from its current record high of 4 per cent as early as April.While annual inflation remains above the ECB’s 2 per cent target, monthly price growth has been trending below that level since last autumn. Between December and January, eurozone prices fell 0.4 per cent.Annual inflation fell in half of the 20 countries that share the euro and ranged from 0.7 per cent in Finland to 5 per cent in Estonia. However, several rate-setters have said they want to see more evidence that labour costs are moderating from collective wage agreements in the first quarter of this year after wage growth reached 5.3 per cent last year.The resilience of Europe’s job market, despite higher borrowing costs and weak growth, was underlined by data published on Thursday showing eurozone unemployment remained at a record low of 6.4 per cent in December. There were 10.9mn jobless people in the region, down 17,000 from a month earlier and 369,000 from a year ago.Kamil Kovar, an economist at Moody’s Analytics, said the “hot reading” on services inflation “makes a March rate cut [by the ECB] a pipe dream, and raises the bar for a cut in April. A cut in June remains our baseline forecast.”Additional reporting by George Steer in London More

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    Lessons from our past inflationary episode

    Unlock the Editor’s Digest for freeRoula Khalaf, Editor of the FT, selects her favourite stories in this weekly newsletter.This article is an on-site version of Martin Sandbu’s Free Lunch newsletter. Sign up here to get the newsletter sent straight to your inbox every ThursdayGreetings. Central banks are all holding fire: the European Central Bank last week, the Federal Reserve yesterday and, in all likelihood, the Bank of England today. The policy question has become not whether to cut rates but when. And I observe that my colleagues, too, think it is appropriate to cut rates this year. As readers know, I always thought it was wrong to tighten into what I saw as supply-driven inflation. So if “team transitory” and “team persistent” are finally on the same page about what to do next, how should we today judge their earlier disagreement? On the one hand, I could say “we told you so”, where “so” refers to inflation coming down faster than people thought without any need for unemployment going up, and that we wouldn’t need to loosen now if we had tightened less in the first place. On the other hand, they could say “when the facts change, sir” and make references to stopped clocks. Rather than point-scoring, below are some lessons, observations and self-criticism I propose to draw from the inflationary episode — and I tease out some puzzles that remain unresolved.First lesson: The inflationary episode is over and has been behind us for a few months. As I pointed out last week (and see Numbers News below), prices stopped rising as last summer turned to autumn. We should not misinterpret the gradual slowdown in year-on-year measures as saying there is still some way to go.Second lesson: Does this vindicate team transitory? If it really is all over, the period of prices rising faster than central banks’ target rate will have lasted about two years. That is not long. It is entirely consistent with a couple of big supply shocks cascading through the economy as different sectors are affected in different ways. It is also entirely consistent with “excess demand” never having been a problem. In other words, the price behaviour we have observed is supremely unsurprising from the perspective of my argument in 2021 that price pressures were supply-driven, not demand-driven and would go away by themselves as the ketchup-bottle economy asserted itself. So I think I pass the tests I set for myself back then and renewed in June 2023, when I gave each supply shock 14 to 16 months to work its way through the system through temporarily higher inflation. There were, of course, several supply shocks that could not have been predicted in advance (Russian President Vladimir Putin’s first throttling of gas in late 2021, then his energy war in 2022, and his invasion’s effect on food commodity prices). What we have seen fits nicely with the latest Geneva Reports’ modelling of price shocks that cascade from one sector to another. If anything, two years is surprisingly short for all these shocks to be processed.Third lesson: Nevertheless, I was wrong in thinking that by now, central bank monetary tightening would have had an effect on demand and employment. (For those who think it’s thanks to central bank tightening that inflation is over, read on to the next point.) But note that both sides of the debate were wrong about this. I (and others on team transitory) thought raising interest rates would unnecessarily sacrifice income growth and jobs, since inflation would go away by itself. Team persistent thought it would sacrifice them as the unavoidable price for getting excess demand and, therefore, price pressures down. We were all blindsided by how well real activity has weathered the rate rises, especially in the US. Admittedly, growth has stagnated in Europe — but it’s hard to identify whether that is because of rates, energy prices (which rose particularly strongly in Europe), general uncertainty because of war in the region, or something else. And in any case, there are no job losses: on the contrary, some economies have record employment.Fourth lesson: That means monetary policy cannot have brought inflation down through its effect on the labour market, because there was no such effect. So what do you have to believe if you think “monetary policy did it”? Many of those who called strongly for central bank tightening earlier suggest that the fall in inflation vindicates their earlier analysis. But it can’t do so if the causal mechanism they predicted didn’t materialise. The cleanest account of how central bank policy produced “immaculate disinflation” — disinflation without a recession or even much of a slowdown — would say that central bankers were such convincing communicators of their intentions that people just started expecting inflation to be lower, and lower expectations automatically discouraged businesses and workers from bidding up prices and wages. In other words, central banks worked straight on people’s minds. The problem with this view is that medium-term inflation expectations never moved that much in the first place, and that, like all things immaculate, it seems just a little too miraculous. Call it the Jedi central bankers theory: “These are not the price pressures you are looking for.” It is also an (in)conveniently unprovable explanation.Fifth lesson: The US and the eurozone have had remarkably similar inflation processes. Paul Krugman points out that comparing like-for-like, the rise in the price level since the start of 2020 has been exactly the same in the eurozone and the US, except that the former lagged behind the latter by a few months. The same can be said about their monetary policy. What differs is that Europe has had a bigger negative energy price shock, and the US has had bigger fiscal stimulus. I have argued that the fiscal policy difference has played the biggest part in the US’s huge growth outperformance relative to Europe; at the very least, we should conclude that it was always wrong to deem the US’s pandemic fiscal response excessive. Sixth lesson: Given that contemporaneous price growth is now below the 2 per cent target rate of central banks, and on some measures is negative, we shouldn’t be too sure yet that central banks didn’t go too far and are still about to inflict delayed damage, regardless of how exactly their monetary policy affects real economic activity.Seventh lesson: The upshot is that we don’t understand how monetary policy works in today’s economy. At least we should hope we don’t, for if it does turn out to work like we used to think it does, we should soon see things get a lot worse as higher rates finally start biting and throwing people out of jobs.Putting it all together, I think it remains plausible to argue that central banks never needed to tighten as much as they did. Conversely, it was wrong to think economies needed to slam on the growth brakes to safeguard price stability (although the growth brake itself seems not to be working). What do Free Lunch readers think? Let us know!Other readablesNumbers newsThe eurozone economy flatlined in the fourth quarter, with a contraction in Germany offsetting growth in Italy and Spain.The single currency’s inflation keeps falling — France yesterday reported year-on-year inflation falling to a two-year low of 3.4 per cent. In Germany, the year-on-year measure fell to 3.1 per cent. But heed my advice from last week and look at the actual price levels for France and Germany, and you will see that in both countries prices stopped rising altogether in September and remain lower today than in August or July respectively. Inflation isn’t slowing, it has been dead for half a year.Recommended newsletters for youChris Giles on Central Banks — Your essential guide to money, interest rates, inflation and what central banks are thinking. Sign up hereTrade Secrets — A must-read on the changing face of international trade and globalisation. Sign up here More

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    Bitcoin to $2.3 Million? ARK Invest Doesn’t Exclude This

    The report posits that allocating just 1% of the $250 trillion global investable asset base to Bitcoin could potentially drive its price to $120,000. However, the more noteworthy projection arises with a 19.4% allocation, forecasting a potential price of $2.3 million. While these figures may raise eyebrows, they underscore the evolving perception of Bitcoin as a legitimate asset class.Highlighting key catalysts for Bitcoin in 2024, the report places a spotlight on the upcoming halving, expected in April. This event, occurring approximately every four years, historically coincides with the initiation of a bull market. The forthcoming halving will reduce Bitcoin’s inflation rate from ~1.8% to ~0.9%, potentially influencing its value.Institutional acceptance also emerges as a crucial factor, with ARK anticipating a shift in perception from viewing BTC as a speculative instrument to recognizing it as a strategic investment in diversified portfolios. Notably, influential figures such as Larry Fink, CEO of BlackRock (NYSE:BLK), have signaled a change in stance toward Bitcoin’s potential as a “flight to quality.”This article was originally published on U.Today More

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    Powell’s rate comments, tech giants to report – what’s moving markets

    1. Fed’s Powell tempers hopes for imminent rate cutsFederal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell has poured yet another bucket of cold water on recent hopes that the central bank would soon start to cut interest rates.In a press conference on Wednesday, Powell noted that a reduction as soon as March were not his “base case” despite growing signs of cooling inflation. Instead, Powell and other Fed officials said they want to gain “greater confidence” that price growth is indeed easing before they consider slashing borrowing costs.The official statement from the Fed also said risks from full employment and low inflation were “moving into better balance,” while any mention of “additional policy firming” was removed completely. The language was translated by many to mean that the world’s most influential central bank had finally called time on an aggressive tightening cycle that bumped rates up to more than two-decade highs.However, analysts at ING flagged that the Fed recognizes its credibility was damaged after it asserted that “inflation is transitory” in 2021 only to reverse course with significant rate increases over the next two years. “The last thing the Fed wants to do is get it wrong again at a key turning point, loosen too soon, too quickly and reignite inflation pressures,” the ING analysts said.Markets have subsequently dialed down prior bets for an early spring cut of 25 basis points, with the CME Group’s closely-monitored Fed Watch Tool now showing a 35% possibility of such a scenario. In late December, when traders were buoyed by surprisingly dovish Fed commentary following its previous meeting, that chance stood at 73%.2. Futures edge higher post Fed decisionU.S. stock futures pointed into the green on Thursday, as traders digested Powell’s comments and looked ahead to a slate of megacap earnings (see below).By 05:03 ET (10:03 GMT), the Dow futures contract had inched up by 47 points or 0.1%, S&P 500 futures had gained 16 points or 0.3%, and Nasdaq 100 futures had risen by 95 points or 0.6%.The main averages ended the prior session lower, as sentiment was dented by the diminishing expectations for a March interest rate cut and Powell’s cautious statements. The benchmark S&P 500 shed 1.6% and the tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite dipped by 2.2%, while the blue-chip Dow Jones Industrial Average fell by 0.8%.Weighing on equities was a slide in shares in Microsoft (NASDAQ:MSFT) and Google-parent Alphabet (NASDAQ:GOOGL). Both of the rival tech giants warned of rising costs needed to build out their artificial intelligence capabilities, offsetting what were otherwise solid quarterly returns.3. Tech giants to reportMega-cap tech stocks Amazon, Apple and Facebook-owner Meta Platforms all set to unveil their latest quarterly figures after the closing bell on Thursday.The health of Amazon’s AWS cloud computing division will likely be in focus, while analysts will be keeping an eye on Apple’s iPhone sales and the advertising revenue Meta has generated with its Reels short-form video offering. The AI arms race could also be a major focus for analysts, as they attempt to gauge how much each firm expects to spend on developing the nascent technology.Along with Microsoft and Alphabet, these companies make up five of the so-called Magnificent Seven stocks which have largely driven a rally in equity markets this year.Elsewhere, Qualcomm (NASDAQ:QCOM) reported a fiscal second-quarter profit that topped Wall Street estimates, although investors were concerned that the San Diego-based AI chipmaker is losing crucial market share in China. Shares were lower in premarket U.S. trading after they seesawed in after-hours dealmaking.4. Musk says Tesla to hold investor vote on Texas incorporationElon Musk has said that Tesla (NASDAQ:TSLA) will hold a shareholder vote on shifting its corporate registration to the U.S. state of Texas, after a judge in Delaware invalidated his massive $56 billion compensation package.Judge Kathaleen McCormick voided the pay package on Tuesday, arguing that it was an “unfathomable sum” that was ultimately unfair to investors and negotiated by a directors of board who appeared to be overawed by a “Superstar CEO.”Musk wrote on his X social media platform shortly after the ruling: “Never incorporate your company in […] Delaware.” He later held a poll on X asking users if Tesla should incorporate in Texas, and more than 87% of over 1.1 million respondents were in favor of the shift.Citing the poll, Musk said on X that the electric carmaking giant Tesla will “move immediately” to put the decision to investors. Tesla already has a significant interest in Texas: the company switched its corporate headquarters from California to the southern U.S. state in 2021.5. Crude higher with OPEC+ meeting in focusCrude prices inched up on Thursday, as traders awaited the latest meeting of the OPEC+ oil group.By 05:04 ET, U.S. crude futures traded 0.8% higher at $76.44 a barrel, while the Brent contract climbed by 0.7% to $81.12 per barrel.The Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries and allies, known as OPEC+, is set to hold a meeting of the Joint Ministerial Monitoring Committee later in the day — its first major gathering of 2024.The meeting is not expected to result in any changes to production, particularly after the difficulties the group had in agreeing output cuts late in 2023. More