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    Chainlink leads the market with 61% weekly gain — What’s driving LINK price?

    It’s worth noting that this surge coincided with Bitcoin’s (BTC) 23% gain during the same period. However, LINK’s performance stands out compared with Ether’s (ETH) 14% increase and SOL’s (SOL) 28% rally, suggesting increased bullish sentiment toward Chainlink’s leading oracle and decentralized computing solutions.Continue Reading on Cointelegraph More

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    SNB vice-chairman says further rate hikes may be needed

    SNB last month held its policy interest rate unchanged at 1.75%, noting that inflation – at 1.6% in August and within the central bank’s target range of 0-2% – had eased.”It cannot be ruled out that further tightening of monetary policy may be necessary,” Schlegel was quoted as saying. “This depends on how inflation develops.”The vast majority of economists polled by Reuters last month, however, said that the SNB was done with interest rate hikes. Schlegel said growth would probably be subdued next year and that unemployment was expected to rise slightly. The Swiss franc hit its strongest level since 2015 against the euro last Friday, on the back of investor risk aversion due to the war in the Middle East, as well as broad weakness in the euro.”Our country is perceived as so stable that our currency appreciates in times of crisis,” Schlegel said. “But of course this also has consequences that are less desirable. This makes it even more difficult for export companies to be successful in economically uncertain times.”Schlegel added that the central bank was drawing lessons from the government’s move to back a rescue deal for Credit Suisse in March, which rattled the Swiss banking sector and caused wider market panic. “One lesson is certainly that Credit Suisse’s liquidity flowed out significantly faster than the regulators in Switzerland and abroad had expected,” he said. He also said that AT1 bonds, which were written off as part of UBS’ takeover of Credit Suisse, should have been loss-making at an earlier stage. “Despite ongoing losses, Credit Suisse did not suspend interest payments on these instruments,” Schlegel said. “This would have meant immediate financial relief for the bank.” More

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    Ancient DOGE Whale Awakens, Moving 5.3 Million Dogecoin

    Last time this wallet was active, according to the crypto tracking platform, was 9.8 years ago – 2013. This is the year when DOGE was launched to the market by and Jackson Palmer, who made this meme coin as a side project and as a parody of the flagship cryptocurrency Bitcoin. BTC had been launched four years prior to that.Billy Markus, when he registered on Twitter, also took an alias that mocks the mysterious Bitcoin creator Satoshi Nakamoto. The DOGE co-founder started calling himself on Twitter Shibetoshi Nakamoto.According to Whale Alert, slightly more than three hours ago, this awakened wallet transferred 392,000 DOGE to another blockchain address – that was a brand new wallet. This looks like his millions of Dogecoin to different wallets.Earlier this week, between October 25 and October 26, the original meme coin DOGE experienced a substantial rise of 16.11%, jumping from $0.0649 to the $0.0753 level. DOGE, as well as other altcoins, followed the extensive 13% rise of Bitcoin as it regained the $34,100 level on October 24.However, this momentum did not last long for Dogecoin. At the time of this writing, the meme coin is , having lost 9.35% since that jump on Thursday.Earlier today, it was reported that an anonymous whale transferred a staggering 350,000,000 DOGE to the popular trading platform Robinhood (NASDAQ:HOOD), apparently, to sell this massive chunk of meme cryptocurrency.This article was originally published on U.Today More

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    Analysis-As baby boomers retire, German businesses turn to robots

    BERLIN (Reuters) – At machine parts producer S&D Blech, the head of the grinding unit is retiring. With Germany’s acute labour shortage leaving few candidates to take on the skilled but dirty and hazardous manual work, the company will replace him with a robot.Other small and medium-sized companies are also turning to automation as the gradual exit from the workplace of Germany’s post-war “baby boom” generation tightens the labour squeeze. Some 1.7 million German jobs were unfilled in June, official data shows. The German Chambers of Commerce and Industry (DIHK) says more than half of companies are struggling to fill vacancies, at an estimated cost to growth in Europe’s largest economy of nearly 100 billion euros ($109 billion) per year. Managing director Henning Schloeder cited that trend to explain S&D Blech’s push over several years towards automation and digitalisation, saying: “This will further aggravate the already difficult skilled labour situation, particularly in production and crafts.” Finding a new head of the grinding unit was hard “not only because of all the experience he has, but also because it’s a back-breaking job that no one wants to do any more”, Schloeder told Reuters. Machine-grinding involves high heat and continuous noise, while the sparks it throws out can be dangerous. More women working and a surge in immigration have helped compensate for demographic changes in recent years in Germany. But with baby boomers retiring and a new cohort – much smaller, due to low birth rates – joining the labour force, the Federal Employment Agency expects the pool of workers to shrink by 7 million people by 2035. With similar shifts affecting other developed economies, the impact of advanced automation technologies from robotics to AI will be widely felt, said Nela Richardson, chief economist at global payrolls and HR services provider ADP. “Long term, all those innovations are a game-changer for the world of work. Everybody will do their job differently,” she told Reuters. Heavy investment in automation by car makers and other industrial giants means Germany is already the world’s fourth-biggest market for robots, and the largest in Europe. But as robots become cheaper and easier to operate, the often family-run Mittelstand companies that are the country’s economic backbone are also using them, from manufacturers like S&D Blech to bakeries, laundries and supermarkets.According to the International Federation of Robotics around 26,000 units were installed in Germany last year – a figure surpassed only in 2018, before the COVID-19 pandemic slowed what had been an average of 4% annual growth.”Robots enable the survival of companies that see their future at risk due to staff shortages,” said Ralf Winkelmann, managing director of FANUC Germany, which sells about half its Japanese-made robots to small and medium-sized enterprises.Ralf Hartdegen, whose consulting firm guides firms through this type of transition, said companies keen to automate but reluctant to fire people were increasingly basing their plans around the shedding of workers through retirement. Family-run ROLEC, which produces systems to protect industrial electronics and control equipment, bought its first robot last year, to allow production to continue at night. The company has already acquired a second machine and plans to continue investing in automation. “It is great when you turn on the light in the morning and the parts are in the storage container and have been processed,” CEO Matthias Rose told Reuters. Increasing automation also reflects the fact that robots have become easier to use, with no programming skills required. Most now come with a Human Machine Interface (NASDAQ:TILE), a touchscreen similar to a smartphone, said Florian Andre, a co-founder of SHERPA Robotics, a start-up that focuses on companies with between 20 and 100 employees.Even workers and trade unions, once fearful of job losses, take an increasingly positive view. A survey published by robots marketplace automatica in June found nearly half of German employees see robots as helping to address labour shortages.ROLEC’s Rose said its initial venture into automation in 2022 had come as a big backlog of orders meant employees had to work overtime and on Saturdays. “It was a good starting situation for our first robot, as it was seen as a helper instead of as competition,” he added.A spokesperson for Germany’s powerful IG Metall trade union said robots adopted as part of a long-term corporate strategy, rather than to cut costs quickly, can help make work “healthier, more interesting and safer”.Lorry and bus manufacturer Daimler (OTC:MBGAF) Truck makes extensive use of robotics, particularly to help with heavy lifting and other challenges to workers’ physical health. “But there is nothing more flexible than a human,” said Matthias Krust, head of the company’s works council.”The more complex the production, the more differentiated, the harder it becomes to use robots.” More

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    Italy to raise taxes for flat owners doing multiple short-term rentals

    The move comes in the wake of criticism of Airbnb and other short-term rental platforms for contributing to a shortage of affordable housing for residents in the most popular tourist destinations.Italian legislation allows owners to rent out their apartments and pay a tax rate of 21% on earnings. Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni intends to raise that band to 26% “in the case of the short-term rental of more than one apartment in each tax period,” the draft showed.However, the government has scaled back its initial plans as previous drafts reported by Reuters envisaged increased taxation also applying to short-term rentals of single apartments.Meloni told reporters on Saturday that the budget bill for 2024 agreed by her cabinet would be put before parliament on Monday. The approval process is expected to take until December. More