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    IMF has reached goal to add $3 billion to trust fund for poorest countries-Georgieva

    Georgieva said in a statement that the contributions completed during IMF and World Bank annual meetings in Morocco “will allow the IMF to continue to support low-income countries with zero-interest rate financing to meet their evolving needs.”She said that PRGT lending has increased five-fold to $30 billion since the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic, with about 30 countries still with loan programs. Demand for the trust’s resources is expected to reach $40 billion through 2024, about five times the historical average.The IMF had urged member countries to fill a $1.2 billion gap in the $3 billion subsidy account endorsed by the membership in 2021. Georgieva said 40 countries had stepped up to contribute, and one-third were emerging-market economies. More

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    Il regolatore francese considera la DeFi “disintermediata” e non “decentralizzata”

    La consultazione pubblica è durata due mesi, da Aprile a Maggio 2023, in risposta al documento iniziale che discuteva le possibili regolamentazioni per la DeFi nel Paese. I contributi esterni hanno spinto l’ACPR a rivelazioni sorprendenti, soprattutto per quanto riguarda la presenza strutturale dei modelli di centralizzazione:Leggi il testo completo su Cointelegraph More

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    Ferrari to accept crypto payments in the US

    According to an Oct. 14 report from Reuters, Ferrari’s chief marketing and commercial officer, Enrico Galliera, confirmed the intentions of the luxury car brand. Ferrari’s choice to accept cryptocurrency payments was driven by market demand and dealer requests, with numerous clients, including crypto-savvy young investors, having invested in digital currencies. Continue Reading on Coin Telegraph More

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    Will Powell join fellow fed members in endorsing a less hawkish stance?

    Investing.com — Federal Reserve chairman Jerome Powell is set to take center stage next week when he speaks at the Economic Club of New York on Thursday, where the focus will be on whether the Fed chief endorses recent remarks from fellow Fed members that an ongoing rise in Treasury yields could reduce the need for a final rate hike this year.“In light of recent comments from other Fed officials, market participants will be watching closely to see if the leadership at the Fed share the same view that higher market rates if sustained will reduce the need for one final hike this year,” MUFG said in a note.Since the Fed’s September meeting, the overarching narrative of ‘higher for longer’ rates has swept through markets, and put the bond market on course correction. A sharp selloff in Treasuries has pushed yields, particularly on the longer maturity 10-and 30-year bonds to 20-year highs.The surge in yields, which San Francisco Fed president Mary Daly recently suggested is equivalent to about one rate hike, would suggest that the risk of lifting rates too high and tipping the economy into recession is growing.At the most recent FOMC press conference in September, Powell flagged the risk of overtightening – or lifting rates too far above “sufficiently restrictive” levels – as an emerging concern.Against this growing two-sided risk, the “commonsense thing to do,” Powell said, is to “move a little more slowly” on rate hikes as you approach sufficiently restrictive. With many at the Fed still arguing that the impact of the 11-rate hikes seen so far are yet to fully filter through the economy, the need to move more slowly on tightening appears to be on the up and up.A caution approach toward monetary policy has been echoed in recent weeks by several Federal Open Market Committee participants.“There appears to have been a coordinated attempt by Fed officials to signal more concern over the sharp move higher in U.S. yields which has contributed to a significant tightening in US financial conditions that is equivalent to one or two 25bps rate hikes by the Fed,” MUFG added.This apparent shift in tone from Fed members to a less hawkish bias was more evident following release of the FOMC September meeting minutes, when a “majority of participants judged that one more increase in the target federal funds rate at a future meeting would likely be appropriate.”Markets appear to be betting that the Fed is done, with interest-rate futures pricing now implying a less than 30% chance of another rate hike this year.But endorsing the view of his Fed colleagues, isn’t without risk for Powell. It may cement bets that the Fed rate-hike cycle is over, muddying the Fed’s higher for longer narrative, potentially undoing some of recent tightening in financial conditions.”If those higher long-term yields are higher because their expectations about what we’re going to do has changed, then we might actually need to follow through in their expectations in order to maintain those yields,” Minneapolis Fed President Neel Kashkari said earlier this week. Kashkari remarks serve as reminder about the Fed’s prior reservations about “unwarranted” easing in financial conditions, especially if driven by misperception about its reaction function.  Powell may, however, also opt to pour cold water on the significance of the move higher in Treasury yields, Scotiabank says, attributing it to a litany of “temporary forces” including the larger-than-expected issuance, or supply, of Treasuries with “bigger and more frequent auction sizes.”The U.S. Treasury has issued a wave of U.S. government bonds amid plans to borrow a near-record $1.859 trillion of debt in the second half of 2023, to refill its coffers that were depleted – after running down reserves to fund government operations – following the debt ceiling debacle earlier this year.While the potential risk of mid-November government shutdown could spark a fresh need for the Treasury to raise more cash, Powell could argue that the pace at which the Treasury is filling its confers will eventually slow, easing the supply pressures on U.S. government bonds that have pushed yields higher.Recent history would suggest that Powell isn’t likely to imply that the Fed could be done with rate hikes. Keeping the projection for a final quarter-point hike this year has not only allowed the Fed to maintain flexibility on policy, but also help manage market expectations, which had been, up until recently, fighting the Fed’s ‘higher for longer’ narrative at every turn.Powell may lean into the recent mix of economic data to reiterate the need for the Fed to maintain the status quo data dependent policy.Recent data showed that core CPI is on the move higher, again. The September payrolls report surprised to the upside. And economic growth, which Powell said in September was a factor behind FOMC members reducing their rate-cut forecasts to two from four next year, remains resilient.  “This is the fifth consecutive quarter in which GDP growth has been blowing the barn doors off of consensus expectations with the median tracking for Q3 at 3% q/q SAAR,” Scotiabank Economics said in a note.With the Nov. 1 Fed meeting just weeks away, and pause on rate hikes largely baked into markets, Powell may likely opt for a balance in his remarks by acknowledging the recent rise in yields, but suggest more time is needed to assess whether they’re likely to persist, while reiterating the Fed’s data dependence stance.This may appease the monetary policy hawks, the number of which continue to dwindle, and the doves, allowing the Fed to maintain the status quo, rather than shifting communication at a time when many agree that the last mile toward 2% inflation will be challenging.Ultimately, the extent to which Powell endorses a less hawkish stance, or not, may well depend on the extent to which the recent tightening in financial conditions has raised the risk of a hard landing, or something breaking in the economy. Powell is set to deliver his speech on Oct. 19 at 12pm ET.  More

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    Nel 2023 il gaming su blockchain ha registrato investimenti per 2,3 miliardi di dollari

    Secondo un report pubblicato da DappRadar, piattaforma di monitoraggio per applicazioni decentralizzate (DApp), il primo trimestre del 2023 ha registrato investimenti per 739 milioni di dollari, mentre il secondo e il terzo trimestre hanno visto rispettivamente 973 e 600 milioni di dollari. Ciò significa che il settore dei giochi su blockchain ha attirato un totale di 2,3 miliardi di dollari di investimenti nei primi tre trimestri del 2023.Investimenti in progetti di gaming su blockchain per trimestre. Fonte: DappRadarTra gli investimenti del terzo trimestre 2023, 213 milioni di dollari sono stati destinati allo sviluppo di giochi e tecnologie legate al metaverso, nonostante alcuni lo abbiano dichiarato morto. Secondo DappRadar, il resto degli investimenti del trimestre è andato alle infrastrutture di gioco e alle società di investimento Web3.Leggi il testo completo su Cointelegraph More

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    Borrell calls on China to treat EU as a ‘geopolitical power’ in its own right

    Unlock the Editor’s Digest for freeRoula Khalaf, Editor of the FT, selects her favourite stories in this weekly newsletter.The EU has called on China to take it seriously as a geopolitical power in its own right rather than look at the bloc “through the lens” of its ties with third powers, in a veiled reference to accusations from Beijing officials that Brussels follows the US on security issues. Speaking during his first visit to Beijing since the pandemic, the EU’s chief diplomat Josep Borrell also warned his Chinese counterparts on the growing trade surplus between China and the EU, saying that it could lead to demands for “more drastic protectionist measures” from European voters.“The war in Ukraine has converted us into a geopolitical power, not just an economic one,” Borrell told reporters in Beijing on Saturday at the end of the visit, during which he met China’s foreign minister Wang Yi. “And we want to talk with China from this approach: don’t look at European Union relations through the lens of relations with others.”Borrell’s trip comes as Beijing seeks to place its relations with Europe on a firmer footing to offset growing rivalry with the US, which has introduced measures to crackdown on the sale of advanced technology to China. But Beijing is furious that Europe is also placing restrictions on the export of some advanced semiconductor technology, which will hit China, after pressure from the US, Wu Hongbo, Beijing’s special representative on European affairs, last month told a meeting of ambassadors from the bloc that it should be up to European countries and companies “to decide what to sell to China — it should not be a decision made by someone else across the Atlantic Ocean”.“Europe takes China very, very seriously,” Borrell said, adding it expected the same from Beijing.Borrell said China’s trade surplus with Europe, which reached nearly €396bn last year, could not be justified based purely on productivity issues or a greater competitive advantage. It probably had more to do with poor market access for the bloc’s countries to the world’s second-largest economy.In a speech on Friday at Beijing’s prestigious Peking University, he said with EU elections next year, the trade imbalance threatened to become an important issue.“If the public concludes that the trade imbalance with China is so great as to endanger key sectors, or place our transition towards climate neutrality at risk, it will demand more drastic protectionist measures,” he said.“Since our leaders are elected, they are naturally sensitive to what their voters want.”In other remarks, he said he also called on China to use its influence with Moscow to persuade Russia to rejoin the Black Sea grain deal with Ukraine to avoid another food crisis.Russia pulled out of the deal in July after complaining that, since the UN and Turkey first brokered the deal last year, western sanctions had held up a parallel agreement to allow payments, insurance and shipping for Moscow’s own agricultural exports. More

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    Yellen, UK’s Hunt discussed ‘joint actions to deny Russia revenue’ -US State Dept

    (Reuters) – U.S. Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen met with U.K Chancellor of the Exchequer Jeremy Hunt on the sidelines of the annual meetings of the International Monetary Fund and World Bank in Marrakech, Morocco on Friday, the U.S. State Department said. Yellen and Hunt discussed “joint actions to deny Russia revenue to fund its brutal war and highlighted the importance of collectively supporting Ukraine’s economic assistance needs,” the State Department said. More

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    US authorities monitor China-linked Bitcoin miners amid national security concerns: Report

    According to an Oct. 13 report from The New York Times, many Bitcoin (BTC) data centers based in the U.S. can be traced directly to the Chinese government, raising concerns over operations in close proximity to military bases and other areas connected to national security. One of the sites reportedly being monitored by authorities was a mining operation in Wyoming near a Microsoft (NASDAQ:MSFT) data center that supported some of the Pentagon’s operations.Continue Reading on Coin Telegraph More