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    Bitcoin Price Action Explained: Here’s Real Reason Why BTC Dipped After ETF Approval

    In reaction, BTC prices rose to a new multi-year high, reaching $49,102. The market then fell 18% over the weekend, reaching fresh year-to-date lows of $40,236.As with any important event, holders of Bitcoins enjoy debating whether it was priced in or not.In this regard, Julio Moreno, the head of research at CryptoQuant, debunks the widely circulated narrative that the Bitcoin price drop was caused by Grayscale’s GBTC selling Bitcoin.Before being converted to an ETF from a trust, Grayscale Bitcoin Trust (GBTC) was one of the only options for stock traders in the United States to obtain exposure to Bitcoin price swings without having to purchase the actual cryptocurrency.While GBTC has seen remarkable outflows after its uplisting into an ETF, a chunk of these have been from investors moving to lower-fee ETFs.Moreno highlighted that, while GBTC sold approximately 60,000 Bitcoins, other Bitcoin ETFs net purchased roughly 72,000 Bitcoins, thus offsetting the sales of BTC from Grayscale’s GBTC.He attributes the volatility in Bitcoin’s price to selling by Bitcoin holders (short-term traders and whales) who took profits following last year’s surge, noting that the ETF approval might just be the “sell-the-news” event.However, several metrics in both the on-chain and derivatives domains suggest that a non-trivial portion of Bitcoin investors did treat the ETF approval as a sell-the-news event.While there are other key driving factors behind the interim volatility, both futures and options markets have seen a meaningful uptick in open interest (OI) since mid-October, according to Glassnode.Open interest in both markets remains around multi-year highs, showing that leverage is rising and becoming a more dominant force in markets.At the time of writing, BTC was up 0.58% in the last 24 hours to $41,543, per CoinMarketCap data.This article was originally published on U.Today More

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    Raymond James’ Q1 profit rises on capital markets, asset management strength

    M&A activity in the U.S. has shown signs of improvement after a prolonged slump on hopes of a soft landing for the economy – a scenario where inflation eases without a sharp rise in unemployment. Revenue from capital markets jumped 15% to $338 million in the quarter, driven by a rebound in investment banking, while asset management revenue rose 14% to $235 million. Investment banking revenue surged 28% to $181 million. Wall Street heavyweight Morgan Stanley also reported a rise in investment banking earlier this month, helped by fixed-income underwriting.”Investment banking activity industry-wide appears to be on a gradual recovery and our pipeline and new business activity remain healthy,” said CEO Paul Reilly.Total net revenue rose 8% to $3.01 billion compared with a year earlier.Adjusted net income available to common shareholders was $514 million, or $2.40 per diluted share, in the three months ended Dec. 31, compared with $505 million, or $2.29 per diluted share, a year earlier. More

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    Most of Approved Spot Bitcoin ETFs Will Not Make It: Grayscale CEO

    He elaborated on why the company has been offering 1.5% fees, while the other issuers of spot-based Bitcoin exchange-traded products are keeping their fees under 0.5%.When the Securities and Exchange Commission issued approval to 11 spot Bitcoin ETFs coming from different issuers, many of them, including BlackRock (NYSE:BLK), Fidelity and VanEck, started charging zero or close to zero fees for a certain amount of time after the product’s launch.The majority of Bitcoin ETF1issuing firms keep the fees at 0.2%-0.4%. But not Grayscale – for their Bitcoin ETF Trust the company charges a massive 1.5% management fee.Sonnenshein stated that Grayscale has a massive track record of 10 years and is the largest Bitcoin fund. Since the other issuers did not manage Bitcoin ETFs before, they are trying to attract new customers by lowering their fees significantly. As for Grayscale, per Sonnenshein, their long track record proves their long-term commitment to Bitcoin.card Still, over the past week, Grayscale’s Bitcoin Trust has seen an astounding outflow of approximately $2.2 billion as investors have been withdrawing their Bitcoin using the “window,” while the time for which they had locked their BTC in the Trust is over now.As for overall inflows into spot Bitcoin ETFs over these past five days, they have surpassed $1.2 billion, according to Bloomberg data shared today.This article was originally published on U.Today More

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    XRP to Crash to Virtual Zero Against Bitcoin, Predicts Max Keiser

    In a recent X post he captioned “XRP Crash Update,” Keiser calls XRP “a centralized garbage that is mathematically guaranteed to trade at virtual zero against Bitcoin.”Keiser posted a screenshot of the XRP chart showing its price decline. At the time of writing, XRP was down 5.68% in the last 24 hours to $0.498. Bitcoin fell 5.25% in the same time frame, trading at $38,750, mirroring the market’s poor performance.Bitcoin (BTC) fell below $39,000 in Tuesday’s market crash, wiping out virtually all of the previous two months’ gains ahead of spot exchange-traded fund (ETF) approvals in the United States.XRP began to surge against Bitcoin on Jan. 9 after hitting a bottom that marked multiyear lows in its pairing. This trend sustained for a while until XRP began mirroring the BTC price trend, subsequently entering into range-trading in its BTC pairing.However, Keiser’s predictions have not always been correct, as Ripple won a significant victory in the SEC litigation after the judge ruled that XRP was not a security. The SEC also dropped its accusations against Ripple executives Brad Garlinghouse and Chris Larsen.XRP has also demonstrated resilience, maintaining its position among the top 10 cryptocurrencies by market capitalization despite legal woes and market uncertainty. XRP is now the sixth-largest cryptocurrency by market capitalization, valued at more than $27 billion.That said, whether XRP will crash to virtual zero in its Bitcoin pairing or rise to new heights remains yet to be seen.This article was originally published on U.Today More

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    Testing times for nuclear power

    This article is an on-site version of our Disrupted Times newsletter. Sign up here to get the newsletter sent straight to your inbox three times a weekToday’s top storiesDonald Trump won the New Hampshire primary in the fight to become the Republican candidate for US president, but last-rival-standing Nikki Haley vowed to fight on. US managing editor Peter Spiegel says incumbent Joe Biden’s zest for a rematch with Trump is “morally ambiguous and strategically short-sighted”.There was welcome news for the UK and eurozone economies in the shape of better than expected PMI surveys. In the UK, the data showed business activity increased at the fastest pace in seven months in January, while in the eurozone it showed the economic downturn appeared to be easing as manufacturing activity picked up, although price pressures appear to be increasing.The FT revealed that the EU was readying more sanctions against Russia and financial support for Kyiv. The package includes a 13th set of restrictions on businesses and individuals connected to the 2022 full-scale invasion of Ukraine, as well as a long-delayed agreement on €50bn for Kyiv over the next four years.For up-to-the-minute news updates, visit our live blogGood evening.Nuclear power generation will reach an all-time high next year, according to the International Energy Agency, but cost overruns in the UK and Russia’s grip on nuclear fuel highlight some of the challenges facing governments as they seek to maximise its role in their energy mix.The IEA says output from nuclear plants will rise 3 per cent this year and next, boosted by new reactors in China and India and the return of plants in France that were shut down last year for maintenance. The growth in nuclear, alongside wind and solar, means the share of electricity supply from fossil fuel generators will fall to a record low of 54 per cent by 2026, the IEA predicts.Nuclear power has staged a remarkable revival since the Fukushima disaster in Japan in 2011, boosted not only by the drive to net zero but also concerns about energy security following Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine.It’s not all plain sailing. As we report today, Britain’s flagship Hinkley Point C plant is facing delays until 2029 and cost overruns rocketing to as much as £46bn. The French state-owned operator and constructor EDF has also experienced long delays on parallel projects in Finland and France. (The UK received a separate blow to its net zero ambitions today when the National Audit Office raised doubts over the carbon footprint of heavily subsidised biomass power plants, which supply about 11 per cent of the country’s electricity.)Another headache for the global nuclear industry is Russia’s dominance of supplies of enriched uranium, the fuel needed for nuclear power. As our Big Read explains, the US is making huge efforts to combat this by rebuilding its nuclear supply chain, ravaged by the collapse in demand after Fukushima and years of neglect. Uranium prices meanwhile have more than tripled since the start of 2021 to a 16-year high. In addition, Kazatomprom, the world’s largest producer of the radioactive material, has warned that its production could be hit by shortfalls of sulphuric acid, used to extract uranium from ore.Despite the challenges, also including the problem of hazardous waste, more than 20 countries at the UN’s COP28 climate summit in Dubai last month agreed to try to triple global nuclear capacity by 2050. Some are sceptical, arguing the target is unrealistic. The foreword to December’s World Nuclear Industry report goes even further: “Nuclear energy is riding a new wave of popularity, and is seen by many policy planners and energy experts as part of the solution to reducing carbon emissions . . . However, given its long lead times and exorbitant costs the prospect of this happening is virtually zero.”Need to know: UK and Europe economyThe UK borrowed much less than expected in December, boosting Chancellor Jeremy Hunt’s plans to cut taxes ahead of the forthcoming general election. Cash-strapped English councils are to get an extra £500mn for social care as they struggle against the threat of insolvency.Also under financial pressure is Royal Mail, the UK postal provider. The Ofcom regulator outlined plans to relax current legal requirements and allow deliveries just three days a week.The EU scaled back plans for tighter controls on outbound investment and sensitive technology exports to avoid a “turf war” with member states. Competition commissioner Margrethe Vestager said Brussels would improve co-ordination with governments to help protect the bloc from authoritarian states such as China.The showpiece €800bn EU recovery fund, intended to finance the digital and green transitions, is being held back by red tape, according to leading industrialists, with less than a third of the resources so far disbursed. Need to know: global economyThe G7-backed mission to boost preparations for future health crises said governments and industry should invest as much on preparing for pandemics as they have on Covid-19 research to avoid costly lockdowns.Artificial-intelligence powered audio deepfakes are emerging as powerful tools in a year of big elections around the world. The latest example this week is a fake robocall in New Hampshire of Joe Biden apparently telling people not to vote. Workers in Argentina are striking today against libertarian President Javier Milei’s economic reforms, which unions say “break the social contract” and renege on deals. Around 40 per cent of the country’s 13mn registered workers belong to unions, many of which are closely allied with the Peronist movement that led the country’s previous government.Investors in Indonesia, south-east Asia’s biggest economy and an emerging powerhouse in green industries, are closely monitoring who will succeed Joko Widodo when he steps down after the general election on February 14. Need to know: businessProcter & Gamble reported strengthening consumer demand in the third quarter even as it raised prices, lifting its share price as well as those of its rivals. Investors were awaiting the results for clues as to whether inflation-wearied consumers may have reached the limits of what they will pay for household brands, such as Tide and Pampers.Novo Nordisk and Eli Lilly have a new challenger in weight-loss drugs: Danish biotech Zealand Pharma. Goldman Sachs says the market could grow from $6bn to as much as $100bn by the end of the decade.Apple has been quietly preparing to bring artificial intelligence to its next generation of iPhones. The company has been more active than its Big Tech rivals in buying AI start-ups, acquiring 21 since the beginning of 2017. The FT editorial board said Tata Steel’s plan to close its UK blast furnaces marked a step into the unknown for the country’s steel industry, leaving it unable to produce “virgin” steel and relying on melting down scrap.EasyJet said strong demand for summer flights meant it was likely to narrow its losses, despite a £40mn hit from the conflict in the Middle East.War’s good for one thing, of course: arms sales. US aerospace and defence group Lockheed Martin forecast a larger than expected increase in 2024. The World of WorkUS banks are toughening up requests for employees to return to the office. Bank of America has sent “letters of education” to workers who have not been showing up, warning them of disciplinary action. Nearly four years since companies sent workers home at the start of the pandemic, 82 per cent of large financial companies still have hybrid arrangements in place.As for those remote workers, should bosses have the right to monitor their computers? Listen to the new Working It podcast.The UK government is being urged by unions and recruiters to scrap a fresh attempt to bring in legislation that would allow employers to break strikes by hiring agency workers to fill in for employees taking industrial action. The annual FT-Vitality survey on Britain’s workplaces suggests different generations have wildly different ways of reacting to stress: the middle aged numb themselves with alcohol while the young succumb to depression. Some good newsDoctors at London’s Great Ormond Street Hospital are testing a “game changing” leukaemia treatment for children who can’t have chemotherapy.Recommended newslettersWorking it — Discover the big ideas shaping today’s workplaces with a weekly newsletter from work & careers editor Isabel Berwick. Sign up hereThe Climate Graphic: Explained — Understanding the most important climate data of the week. Sign up hereThanks for reading Disrupted Times. If this newsletter has been forwarded to you, please sign up here to receive future issues. And please share your feedback with us at [email protected]. Thank you More

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    Cash-strapped English councils to get extra £600mn

    Unlock the Editor’s Digest for freeRoula Khalaf, Editor of the FT, selects her favourite stories in this weekly newsletter.The UK government has pledged £600mn in extra funding for local government in the next financial year after a string of warnings about the financial pressures facing councils in England.Some £500mn of the additional funds will be earmarked for social care, the Department for Levelling up, Housing and Communities announced on Wednesday, an increase that mostly benefits county and unitary councils. A further £100mn will be made available to boost the core spending power of all councils, the department said. The announcement comes after more than 40 Tory MPs this week threatened to vote against the local government financial settlement for 2024-25, warning of looming insolvencies, reduced services and higher taxes. The government had been resisting calls to improve its offer.Levelling up secretary Michael Gove said: “We have listened to councils across England about the pressures they’re facing . . . We are in their corner.”A Whitehall official credited Gove with extracting the extra funding, arguing he had “made the case forcefully to No 10 and the Treasury that councils need a lifeline”. But the additional £500mn will only go some of the way towards plugging the £4bn deficit facing councils over the next two years forecast by the Local Government Association representative body.Welcoming the announcement, Tim Oliver, chair of the County Councils Network representing England’s largest local authorities, said: “Whilst this extra funding will undoubtedly help us protect valued frontline services, councils, of course, still face difficult decisions when setting their budgets for 2024-25.“Service reductions will still be necessary for councils in some areas to balance their books, while the majority of councils will still have little choice but to propose maximum council tax rises,” he added. The additional funds bring the government’s total 2024-25 financial settlement for local government to £64.7bn, an increase of 7.5 per cent on 2023-24, according to the levelling up department.The main representative bodies for local authorities had been warning of the risk that many more councils would be forced to issue “section 114” notices, declaring their inability to meet a legal requirement to balance the books.The County Councils Network, which co-ordinated pressure on the government from MPs this week, said that without an improved offer councils would be forced to implement severe reductions to services and levy higher council taxes.  The additional funds will benefit just under half of England’s 317 councils, which are responsible for social care. Spread across the county council and unitary council network according to a relative needs formula, the social care funds will on average add £2mn-£3mn per council, according to Jack Shaw, an expert in local government and fellow at the Bennett Institute think-tank, potentially reducing some of the most severe cuts to frontline services.  “All councils are going to be cutting some social care. Southend for example is cutting dementia care support. This may just mean they have to make fewer savings,” said Shaw.The additional £100mn includes funds targeted at rural areas and those susceptible to flooding, as well as a boost for district councils, which “will help mitigate potentially extensive reductions to valued local services”, said Sam Chapman-Allen, chair of the District Councils’ Network.Bonus season – are you headed for a payout or a doughnut?© Charlie Bibby/FTFor the third year in a row, the Financial Times is asking readers to confidentially share their 2024 bonus expectations, and whether you intend to invest, save or spend the cash. Tell us via a short survey More