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    Bitcoin and XRP Attract Investors: Millions in Inflows Signal Positive Trends

    Thus, Bitcoin-focused ETPs attracted $16 million, bringing year-to-date inflows to $260 million. On the other hand, however, short Bitcoin investment products saw inflows of $1.7 million, indicating that there are still bearish-minded investors on the market.For their part, XRP-oriented investment products demonstrated remarkable resilience, receiving $0.42 million last week, marking the 25th consecutive week of positive fund flows. Despite legal challenges throughout the year, consistent investor support of was and is still evident.Source: The crypto market’s main altcoin has also found itself in the mud as , despite the launch of a futures ETF, has faced investor reluctance, with outflows totaling $7.5 million last week. These outflows, which partially offset significant inflows the previous week, can be attributed to concerns about the design of the Ethereum protocol.In summary, and XRP continue to attract investor interest, as reflected in the report’s data. While challenges persist for certain altcoins and Ethereum faces investor hesitance, the sustained inflows into and XRP indicate positive trends at least for these two popular digital assets.This article was originally published on U.Today More

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    Bitcoin Extends Gain Amid Ongoing Reports of ETF Approval from SEC

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    US government among largest Bitcoin hodlers with over $5B in BTC: Report

    According to a data analysis based on public filings, crypto firm 21.co estimated that the U.S. government still holds 194,188 BTC, estimated to be worth $5.3 billion. The firm noted in its analysis that these are “lower-bound estimations of the U.S. government holdings based on publicly available information.”Continue Reading on Cointelegraph More

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    Italy unveils tax-cutting 2024 budget amid debt worries

    ROME (Reuters) -Italy’s government on Monday approved a budget for next year with measures worth around 24 billion euros ($25.3 billion) in tax cuts and increased spending, despite market concerns over the country’s strained public finances.Under the scheme, Italy will drive up next year’s budget deficit to 4.3% of gross domestic product from 3.6% under current trends, due to 15.7 billion euros ($16.5 billion) of extra borrowing mainly devoted to funding tax cuts. An additional 8 billion euros will go to finance a raft of other spending including pensions, the health service and public sector contracts, to be largely funded by savings elsewhere in the budget and higher excise duties on tobacco products.”It is a budget that I consider very serious, very realistic,” Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni said during a press conference. Economy Minister Giancarlo Giorgetti said he was confident it would be well received by markets and European Union authorities.Investors have been demanding a higher premium to hold Italian government bonds since Rome last month raised its budget deficit targets for the 2023-2025 period, setting it up for a possible clash with the European Commission.The gap between yields on Italian 10-year bonds and the German equivalent was stable after the budget’s approval, hovering slightly above 2 percentage points (200 basis points).The challenging market environment may continue over coming weeks, when the budget faces scrutiny from credit ratings agencies, with S&P Global, DBRS, Fitch and Moody’s (NYSE:MCO) all reviewing the euro zone’s third largest economy.Giorgetti said Italy’s fiscal stance was justified by the need to support activity in the face of international headwinds stemming from the conflicts in Ukraine and, more recently, the Middle East.The budget will extend to 2024 existing temporary cuts to social contributions, in an effort to help middle and low-income workers cope with high consumer prices.The total fiscal package is worth 28 billion euros including a separate decree, approved along with the budget, that sets the rate of income tax (IRPEF) at 23% for people earning up to 28,000 euros per year.This temporarily replaces the current regime in which four IRPEF rates run from 23% on income up to 15,000 euros, to a top rate of 43% on income above 50,000 euros.AGEING POPULATIONThe budget also earmarks around 1 billion euros for several measures aimed at addressing Italy’s demographic crisis. One of these removes social contributions paid by working mothers with at least two children.At the same time, however, Meloni said the government was withdrawing next year a cut in sales tax on baby products which is currently in place. Births last year saw a 14th consecutive annual drop and were the lowest since the country’s unification in 1861.The rapidly ageing population means additional budget resources will go on pensions.Giorgetti said that due to difficult budget and economic conditions a temporary regime allowing people to retire if the sum of their age and their years of work totals 103, would be toughened slightly next year.The government had hiked the age requirement but the sum of the age and years of contributions paid was “not 104 in full,” Giorgetti said, without providing further details.Italy’s state pension bill, already among the highest in the world, is seen reaching 17% of GDP in 2042, from 15.3% in 2022.The government also said on Monday it will implement from next year a 2021 international agreement to introduce a minimum global corporate tax rate of at least 15%, to be applied to multinational groups with annual revenues of more than 750 million euros.This could increase tax revenues in Italy by between 2 and 3 billion euros, a government official said.In addition, from next year companies that locate production in Italy from abroad will have their income tax halved for five years, the Treasury said.($1 = 0.9492 euros) More

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    As global debt worries mount, is another crisis brewing?

    LONDON (Reuters) – Record debts, high interest rates, the costs of climate change, health and pension spending as populations age and fractious politics are stoking fears of a financial market crisis in big developed economies. A surge in government borrowing costs has put high debt in the spotlight, with investors demanding increased compensation to hold long-term bonds and policymakers urging caution on public finances. Over 80% of the $10 trillion rise in global debt in the first half to a record $307 trillion came from developed economies, the Institute of International Finance says. The United States, where brinkmanship around a debt limit brought it close to a default, Italy and Britain are of most concern, more than 20 prominent economists, former policymakers and big investors told Reuters. They do not expect a developed economy to struggle paying debt, but say governments must deliver credible fiscal plans, raise taxes and boost growth to keep finances manageable. Heightened geopolitical tensions add to costs. A fragile environment with higher rates and shrinking central bank support raises the risk of a policy misstep sparking a market rout, as shown by Britain’s 2022 “mini budget” crisis.Peter Praet, former chief economist at the European Central Bank, said that while debt still appears sustainable, the outlook is worrying given longer-term spending needs.”You can take many, many countries today, and you will see that we are not far away from a public finances crisis,” said Praet, who joined the ECB during 2011’s debt crisis. “If you have an accident, or a combination of events, then you go into an adverse non-linear dynamic sort of process. That is something which is a real possibility.”High funding needs and central banks removing support are increasing pricing uncertainty for investors, Sophia Drossos, hedge fund Point72 Asset Management economist and strategist, said. “Deficit and debt levels make us uncomfortable,” said Daniel Ivascyn, chief investment officer at bond giant PIMCO, which is a little bit reluctant to own a longer-term bond. Spending plans lacking credibility were seen as most likely to spark market turmoil. Longer term, “government debt trajectories pose the biggest threat to macroeconomic and financial stability”, said Claudio Borio, head of the Bank for International Settlements monetary and economic department. TIPPING POINTSBudget wrangling has hurt U.S. credibility, costing it a top-notch AAA rating. Olivier Blanchard, senior fellow at the Peterson Institute for International Economics, was most worried about the United States given a “broken political budget process” and large primary deficits. “How does it end? I suspect not by default, but when markets start reflecting their worries in Treasury prices, by a political crisis and a potentially ugly adjustment,” the former IMF chief economist said. Hedge fund Bridgewater Associates’ Ray Dalio expects a U.S. debt crisis. A U.S. Treasury spokesperson highlighted Secretary Janet Yellen’s recent comments on the budget deficit and rising rates.Yellen told the Wall Street Journal last week the government was committed to a “sustainable fiscal policy” and the budget could be adjusted to ensure that.Italy’s 2.4 trillion-euro debt pile is the focus in Europe, where the IMF has said high debt leaves governments vulnerable to crisis. Its debt risk premium jumped this month as it cut growth and hiked budget deficit forecasts. Scope Ratings warned Italy could be ineligible for a crucial ECB bond-buying scheme.A tipping point is Italy’s potential to lose investment-grade ratings. Moody’s (NYSE:MCO) rates it one notch above junk with a negative outlook. Rome’s debt ratio rising again would make a downgrade more likely. That risks “significant ramifications” for southern Europe, said M&G Investments’s Jim Leaviss.Economy Minister Giancarlo Giorgetti said he did not fear a downgrade but could not rule it out. The ministry declined to comment for this story.Moody’s reviews Italy in November. Low growth has kept Italian debt high, a risk across Europe and Britain, where belt-tightening plans will depress public investments. “If we don’t have a brighter growth outlook in Europe, then the math of debt sustainability looks quite poor,” said PGIM fixed income chief global economist Daleep Singh, former adviser to U.S. President Joe Biden. Britain’s Treasury said it was on track to reduce debt and growing the economy with major reforms. Debt is near or higher than 100% of output in Britain, the United States and Italy. Ageing populations, climate change and geopolitical risks such as wars in Ukraine and the Middle East mean significant spending pressures ahead.Interest payments surging with high rates add to the pressure.U.S. net interest payments will rise from 2.5% to 3.6% of GDP by 2033 and 6.7% by 2053, the Congressional Budget Office estimates. But Yellen’s preferred measure, adjusting for inflation, suggests payments below 1% of GDP for the rest of this decade. Britain’s Office for Budget Responsibility expects interest costs to rise to 7.8% of revenues by 2027-28, from 3.1% in 2020-21, exacerbated by inflation-linked debt. Even Germany’s interest spending is up 10-fold since 2021 to nearly 40 billion euros. A crisis is unlikely but budget planning would face “major challenges”, the Supreme Audit Institution said. ACT NOWEfficient spending, reforms and growth plans are key. “We need more investment, not less,” said King’s College London professor Jonathan Portes, Britain’s cabinet office chief economist during the financial crisis. Borrowing is a harder sell at higher rates, so governments need credible plans. The EU is revising its fiscal rules, Britain’s opposition Labour Party promises to legally require OBR reviews of tax-and-spending plans.While unpalatable, taxes need to rise, particularly in the United States and Britain, and some spending cuts are inevitable, economists stressed. Not enough reforms are being implemented, OECD chief economist Clare Lombardelli warned. Delays will hurt governments’ ability to address future shocks. “If we just trundle along as we have right now, we will see a crisis in the next decade,” said LBBW chief economist Moritz Kraemer, who oversaw S&P’s European sovereign downgrades in 2011.($1 = 0.9507 euros) (This story has been corrected to fix the title of Sophia Drossos to economist and strategist at Point72 Asset Management, from chief economist, in paragraph 10) More

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    Nigeria’s September inflation rate at highest in two decades

    ABUJA (Reuters) -Nigeria’s annual inflation rose in September to its highest level in about two decades at 26.72%, amid a worsening cost-of-living crisis in Africa’s largest economy. The September inflation rate rose for a ninth straight month from August’s 25.8%, the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) said on Monday, with millions of Nigerians impoverished due to the impact of President Bola Tinubu’s reforms. Food inflation, making up the bulk of Nigeria’s inflation basket, rose to 30.64% in September from 29.34% in August.Tinubu has been under pressure to ease economic hardship after scrapping a decades-old petrol subsidy that tripled prices and allowed the naira to depreciate more than 50%, sending prices surging in Africa’s top oil producer and most populous nation.The central bank “has an unenviable inflation task and will need to respond with aggressive monetary tightening,” said David Omojomolo, Africa economist at research firm Capital Economics. “Our expectation is that the inflation picture will continue to worsen. The impact of the removal of fuel subsidies will continue to push up on inflation while the naira’s devaluation will also continue to feed through,” he said.Inflation in Nigeria has risen to double-digits since 2016, eroding incomes and savings, and may prompt the central bank to raise interest rates, which are already at their highest in nearly two decades, at its next meeting. Annual inflation is at its highest now since 2005.”The rise in food inflation on a year-on-year basis was caused by increases in prices of oil and fat, bread and cereals, potatoes, yam and other tubers, fish, fruit, meat, vegetables and milk, cheese, and eggs,” the NBS said. Economic analysts said naira depreciation, higher food and energy prices and logistical costs were some of the key drivers of Nigeria’s inflation.Last week the central bank, under new Governor Olayemi Cardoso, pledged to intervene in the country’s foreign exchange market occasionally to boost liquidity, after ending an eight-year restriction on 43 items, including rice, poultry and cement, from accessing foreign exchange on the official window.The central bank hiked rates by a smaller-than-expected margin at its last meeting in July, contrary to analysts’ forecast. Some analysts expect a more hawkish stance under Cardoso at the bank’s next rate-setting meeting.Tinubu has defended his policy reforms and vowed not to go backwards despite strong opposition from labour unions who say they have hurt the poor and should be reversed. More