More stories

  • in

    Peter Schiff’s Unexpected Bitcoin ETF Prediction Ridiculed by Cardano Founder

    Schiff’s original post cautioned against the hype surrounding the anticipated Bitcoin ETFs. He argued that these ETFs, long supported by speculative demand and the hope of attracting institutional investors, might not deliver the expected new wave of investment.Schiff suggested that the actual launch of these ETFs could lead to a disappointing outcome for Bitcoin’s price, as the much-anticipated investor demand might fail to materialize. He further questioned the utility of Bitcoin ETFs, pointing out that individuals can directly buy and store without incurring ETF-related costs, drawing a parallel to owning gold ETFs.In response, Hoskinson, known for his witty and often direct social media presence, made light of Schiff’s early start this year in expressing skepticism toward Bitcoin. This reflects broader sentiment within the crypto community, where Schiff’s long-standing criticism of Bitcoin has become a recurring theme.Critically examining thesis, several points emerge for consideration. Firstly, Schiff’s skepticism about the demand for Bitcoin ETFs potentially overlooks market dynamics. Institutional investors often seek regulated, traditional investment vehicles like ETFs for exposure to new asset classes, including cryptocurrencies. The introduction of a Bitcoin ETF could provide a more accessible and familiar entry point for these investors.Moreover, Schiff’s comparison between Bitcoin and gold ETFs oversimplifies the unique value propositions of each asset. Bitcoin’s digital nature and decentralized infrastructure offer a different set of benefits and risks compared to gold. Owning Bitcoin directly, as Schiff suggests, is not devoid of challenges like security risks and technical complexities.This article was originally published on U.Today More

  • in

    Argentina govt sees monthly inflation in December around 30%

    “We still don’t have the official data, but we understand that the figure was around the one you are referring to,” Adorni told the reporter during a press conference.If confirmed, that would take annual inflation in the South American country to over 200% in 2023, the highest in more than three decades.The official figure will only be released on Jan. 11, but local newspaper Clarin reported earlier this week that consultancies were estimating the monthly data to come in around 29%. More

  • in

    South Korea sees slower economic recovery, inflation cooldown

    SEOUL (Reuters) – South Korea’s government will put its focus on supporting people’s livelihoods and managing risk factors, as it cut the country’s 2024 GDP forecast and raised its inflation projection.In its biannual economic policy plan released on Thursday, the finance ministry expected the economy to grow 2.2% in 2024, down from 2.4% seen in July, after expanding 1.4% in 2023 which was a three-year low.The ministry expected consumer prices to rise 2.6% this year, up from its previous forecast of 2.3%. In 2023, prices rose 3.6%. “The economic recovery will be stronger (than last year) amid improvements in global trade and demand for semiconductors, but there will be difficulties in domestic demand and people’s livelihoods due to persistently high inflation and interest rates,” the ministry said.The government will primarily focus on economic recovery for the common people, while managing potential risk factors, it said. South Korea’s exports rose for a third straight month in December as demand for chips started to pick up, raising hopes for an economic recovery driven by semiconductor exports. The country’s central bank has maintained its policy interest rate at 3.5%, the highest since late 2008, since the last hike in January 2023, in its continued fight against slowly easing, but still high inflation. The finance ministry said it aims to bring down inflation, which stood at 3.2% in December, to the 2% level within the first half of 2024, with more policy measures, such as tax and tariff cuts, and freezing public utility costs.To boost consumption, the government plans to raise tax exemptions on credit card spending and continue efforts to attract more foreign tourists, including the exemption of visa issuance fees for group tourists from China and other Asian countries. For companies, the ministry said it will introduce new temporary tax cuts on investments in research and development and extend existing tax breaks on facility investments until end-2024.The ministry said it will expand liquidity support measures if needed to prevent a credit crunch in builders and real estate projects. Last month, a mid-sized builder applied for a debt restructuring, raising concerns over the construction sector. More

  • in

    China targets better integration of EVs, grids to manage power demand

    BEIJING (Reuters) – China’s state planner has issued new rules on strengthening the integration of new energy vehicles with the electric grid, as the world’s biggest market for electric vehicles (EVs) aims to manage its power demand amid a transition to renewable energy.The notice, published on Thursday by China’s National Development and Reform Commission, calls for the creation of initial technical standards governing new energy vehicle integration into the grid by 2025. New energy vehicles will become an important part of the country’s energy storage system by 2030, it said.As electricity demand surges due to the increasing popularity of new energy vehicles, solutions are being sought by governments and other stakeholders to prevent power networks from being overwhelmed.Charging during off-peak hours as well as ‘vehicle-to-grid’ charging – where millions of EV owners could sell their EV batteries’ juice back to grid operators during peak hours – have been seen as potential solutions.China is seeking to use those strategies to manage peak power demand through the integration of electric vehicles into the power system, according to the NDRC.By 2025, NDRC said it would set up over 50 pilot programs in regions where conditions for vehicle-grid integration are relatively mature, including in the Yangtze River Delta, Pearl River Delta, Beijing, Sichuan and Chongqing. More

  • in

    UK borrowers increase demand for loans despite rate hikes

    Consumer borrowing grew by a net 2.0 billion pounds ($2.5 billion), the most since March 2017 and more than any forecast in a Reuters poll of economists, after an increase of 1.4 billion pounds in October.Official data published last month showed much stronger-than-expected sales by retailers in November, boosted by Black Friday seasonal discounts. The BoE data showed loans for home purchases totalled 50,067 in the month, higher than a median forecast of 48,500 in the Reuters poll.The British central bank raised interest rates to a 15-year high of 5.25% in August and has said it expects to keep them elevated for “an extended period of time” to ensure that the risks posed by the surge in inflation in 2022 are snuffed out.A separate survey published at the same time as the BoE data showed Britain’s services firms grew more strongly in December than initially thought and optimism hit a seven-month high.Sterling was strengthened to be up about 0.5% against the U.S. dollar after the BoE data and the survey were published.  The surge in borrowing costs caused a slowdown in the housing market over much of 2023. Thursday’s data showed the annual growth rate for net mortgage lending slowed to 0.3% in November, the lowest since the monthly series began in March 1994.But changes in the total value of mortgage lending typically lag the more forward-looking approvals numbers.Ashley Webb, an economist with Capital Economics, said the resilience of the approvals data suggested that falls in recent weeks in mortgage interest rates would encourage new borrowing to buy a home.But the creeping impact of higher borrowing costs – which will push up the cost of around 1.5 million existing fixed-rate mortgages that are due to expire in 2024 – would take its toll on consumer spending, Webb said.The BoE data showed households were continuing to move savings into higher interest, fixed-term accounts.($1 = 0.7868 pounds) More

  • in

    China’s local governments face opposition to early debt redemptions

    SHANGHAI/SINGAPORE (Reuters) – China’s local government financing vehicles (LGFVs) are repaying their bonds early at the fastest pace since 2018, taking advantage of a Beijing-backed debt swap programme aimed at slashing localities’ borrowing costs.The redemptions have jumped since October, when Beijing allowed local governments to issue special refinancing bonds, estimated to be worth over 1 trillion yuan ($139.85 billion), which could replace their higher-yielding LGFV debt.However, investors are opposing the redemptions for fear of losing out on their gains from the higher-yielding LGFV bonds and a lack of alternative products with equal returns. The objections are adding to the fiscal struggles of the local governments, who face a wall of maturing bonds in 2024 amid a sluggish economy and wobbly property market. LGFVs, set up by local governments to fund infrastructure projects such as bridges and roads, made early redemptions worth 37.8 billion yuan in December, the biggest monthly amount in five years, according to data from Financial China Information & Technology Co. But bond holders are unwilling to concede to the early redemptions as “re-investing the money would generate lower returns,” said Huang Xuefeng, credit research director at Shanghai Anfang Private Fund.Only 59% of such early redemption proposals were backed by investors at bondholder meetings in 2023, data from Caitong Securities shows. Some LGFVs have been trying to incentivize the redemptions with extra monetary benefits. Analysts said the investors approving these redemptions were primarily state-owned banks or entities.The low approval ratio “reflects the tussle between LGFVs and bondholders, and restricts the progress of early redemptions,” said Caitong analyst Fang Duo.Hengyang Urban Construction Investment, Yingkou New Area City Development and Construction Investment and Nanchong Liniang Oriental Investment Group are among the LGFVs whose early bond redemption proposals were rejected by investors, according to filings. Still, 128 LGFV bonds have been redeemed since October, as local governments, laden with nearly $9 trillion of debt, scramble to replace the LGFV bonds, yielding 6%-8% in most cases, with the new refinancing bonds that bear a coupon of roughly 3%. As a result, LGFV net financing slumped to a negative 12 billion yuan in December, following a deficit of 2 billion yuan the previous month.”This means the existing pool of LGFV bonds may trend lower,” said Yao Yu, founder of credit analysis firm Ratingdog.It’s not yet clear exactly how much support local governments will continue to get from Beijing to avoid defaulting, as a record 4.2 trillion yuan of LGFV bonds are due to mature this year, according to data from Financial China.UBS forecasts another 2-3 trillion yuan of local government bonds will be issued to replace the LGFV debt, while the central bank may continue providing emergency liquidity support to heavily-indebted regions. U.S. consultancy Rhodium Group forecast that China’s economy will grow just 3%-3.5% in 2024, more slowly than the mainstream forecast.”Beijing could choose to boost growth by selling additional central government debt and giving money to the provinces to spend on infrastructure” rather than letting provinces finance this spending with their own bond issuance, Rhodium analysts led by Daniel Rosen wrote.($1 = 7.1506 Chinese yuan renminbi) More

  • in

    Fed minutes, SpaceX faces complaint from U.S. labor agency – what’s moving markets

    1. Futures inch higherU.S. stock futures pointed into the green on Thursday, with investors looking ahead to fresh labor market data this week and digesting minutes from the Federal Reserve’s latest policy meeting.By 04:57 ET (09:57 GMT), the Dow futures contract had added 37 points or 0.1%, S&P 500 futures had climbed by 5 points or 0.1%, and Nasdaq 100 futures had risen by 31 points or 0.2%.The main averages on Wall Street all closed lower in the prior session, as a dismal start to the new year for equities extended into a second day. The benchmark S&P 500 and 30-stock Dow Jones Industrial Average both slipped by 0.8%, while the tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite dropped by 1.2% — its fourth straight negative session.Stocks are coming off a solid 2023 performance, including a late-year rally that was driven in part by hopes that signs of easing inflation in the U.S. may persuade the Fed to soon begin stepping away from an aggressive series of rate hikes. The central bank’s December meeting, at which officials at the central bank unveiled a more dovish outlook than previous projections, helped feed this enthusiasm.2. Fed minutes appear to temper early rate cut enthusiasmMinutes from the Fed’s gathering last month has seemingly poured cold water on much of the optimism, although analysts noted that the release on Wednesday did not have a major impact on markets.The account showed that while policymakers believed rates were “as likely at or near [their] peak,” there was still an “unusually elevated” amount of uncertainty lingering around the U.S. economy heading into 2024.Officials at the rate-setting Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) also suggested that more evidence would likely be necessary to confirm that inflation was sustainably moving down towards their stated 2% target. Quelling sticky price pressures has been the central focus of a long-standing tightening cycle by the Fed that has pushed borrowing costs up to more than two-decade highs.”[T]here is a broad consensus that inflation will decline, but also that the FOMC will keep rates high in case of more persistent price pressures,” analysts at ING said in a note.On Thursday, monthly private payrolls data may provide fresh insight into the U.S. jobs picture, which the Fed has identified as a possible fuel source for inflation. The figures will serve as a precursor to the publication of the all-important December non-farm payrolls report on Friday.3. SpaceX illegally fired workers critical of Musk, U.S. labor agency saysSpaceX illegally fired eight workers for distributing a letter calling founder Elon Musk a “frequent source of distraction and embarrassment,” according to a complaint issued by a U.S. labor agency.A regional official with the National Labor Relations Board said that the rocket and satellite company violated federal labor law protecting employees’ rights to call for better working conditions.The letter, which was sent to SpaceX executives in 2022, argued that a series of tweets by Musk did not align with the firm’s diversity and workplace misconduct policies. They also encouraged SpaceX to speak out against the social media posts.The employees were subsequently interrogated over the letter, the complaint claimed, while other workers were threatened with dismissals if they voiced similar concerns. The NLRB, which is tasked with protecting collective bargaining rights, said it would seek a settlement prior to a scheduled court hearing on March 5.SpaceX did not immediately respond to a request for comment from Reuters, the news agency reported.4. Fitch downgrades four Chinese national asset managersFitch said on Thursday it had downgraded the issuer default ratings (IDRs) of four Chinese national asset management companies and flagged more potential downgrades on expectations of weaker government support and headwinds from a property market slump.The ratings agency lowered the IDRs of China Cinda Asset Management and China Orient Asset Management to ‘A-’ from ‘A’, and the ratings of China Huarong Asset Management and China Great Wall Asset Management were cut to ‘BBB’ from ‘BBB+’.Fitch also left China Cinda’s outlook at ‘stable’, while the other three asset managers were placed on Rating Watch Negative, a move that potentially heralds a further downgrade to their IDRs. The ratings agency said it was awaiting financial results for end-2023 to gauge whether there was any further deterioration.Fitch noted that the downgrade was driven by increased uncertainty over possible government support for China’s major national asset managers, along with a change in the criteria under which it viewed their standalone credit profiles.5. Oil rises amid Middle East supply worriesOil prices rose Thursday, adding to the previous session’s sharp gains on continued concerns over supply from the Middle East.By 09:58 ET, the U.S. crude futures traded 1.0% higher at $73.44 per barrel, while the Brent contract climbed 0.8% to $78.85 a barrel.Both contracts surged around 3% on Wednesday after protests over high fuel prices caused Libya’s El Sahara oil field to halt production, with the field producing about 300,000 barrels per day. The news came as worries persist over Yemen’s Iran-backed Houthis targeting shipping in the Red Sea.The market was also supported by data from the American Petroleum Institute, which showed that U.S. crude stocks fell by a bigger-than-expected 7.4 million barrels last week. Official numbers from the Energy Information Administration are due later Thursday. More

  • in

    Crypto Bloodbath: $730 Million Destroyed Amid Volatility Surge

    The liquidation heat map reveals that Bitcoin and Ethereum were at the epicenter of this unrest. BTC accounted for the majority, with $169 million in liquidations, while followed with $113 million. This mass liquidation might potentially become the worst day for the derivatives market in the new year.The Bitcoin chart analysis indicates a significant level of resistance at approximately $43,300, with local support found near the $37,580 mark. For Ethereum, the support level to watch is around $1,929, with resistance near the $2,250 level. Both assets showed signs of consolidation before the drop, with the subsequent sell-off piercing through multiple layers of technical support.The asset that saw the most liquidation was , which is not surprising given its status as the biggest asset on the market. The sheer value of BTC liquidations shows that risk tolerance among crypto investors is still on an extremely high level.This liquidation cascade is an important reminder of the high risks involved in trading cryptocurrencies, particularly when using leverage. The swift and severe price actions often shake out investors who use poor risk management strategies.In the aftermath of such an event, the market may take time to find its footing as investors and traders assess the new landscape. Whether this liquidation event marks the start of a deeper correction or simply a temporary setback remains to be seen, but what is clear is that volatility will go up from here with more unexpected moves occurring on the market.This article was originally published on U.Today More