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    Web3 más allá de las expectativas: principios y oportunidades

    Roberta Isfer, directora de Innovación Visa (NYSE:V) para América Latina y el Caribe, considera importante abordar el tema sin sensacionalismo, explorando el contexto actual y cómo se pueden aprovechar las oportunidades que están por venir antes de que la Web 3.0 se convierta en algo común o popular en la práctica. Ella afirma que es necesario comprender la tecnología, los conceptos y los casos de uso que tienen el potencial de dar forma a la próxima década.Lea el artículo completo en Cointelegraph More

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    Los brasileños adoptan las criptomonedas y Brasil ocupa el noveno lugar en el ranking mundial, revela un informe

    Pero ¿por qué Brasil ocupa un lugar tan destacado? ¿Cuál es la razón principal por la que los brasileños adoptaron las criptomonedas? ¿Cuál es la adopción proyectada de criptomonedas para el próximo año en Brasil?Denise Cinelli, ejecutiva de CryptoMarket, comenta que es realmente impresionante que, a pesar de los desafíos relacionados con la seguridad y la confianza en las criptomonedas, debido al fraude y los esquemas Ponzi – pirámides – que dañan la reputación del mercado, cada vez hay más brasileños que invierten en criptoactivos como Bitcoin y Ethereum, que son el contrapunto para ser vistos como seguros y confiables. Además, la regulación de las criptomonedas está evolucionando en el país.Lea el artículo completo en Cointelegraph More

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    Empresa latinoamericana de energía solar anuncia su ingreso al mundo cripto

    El comunicado destaca que aunque las tarifas de transacción del token Light DeFi se utilizarán en diferentes etapas del proyecto, los primeros kWh generados por la primera planta fotovoltaica se convertirán en recompensas para los poseedores del activo Light DeFi. El valor se distribuirá a los poseedores de tokens en función de las proporciones de sus billeteras.Lea el artículo completo en Cointelegraph More

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    BIS’ Carstens: too early to say how new war will impact global outlook

    DALLAS (Reuters) – Bank for International Settlements General Manager Agustin Carstens on Sunday said it’s “too early to say” how the newly erupted conflict in Israel will affect the global economy still struggling with post-pandemic high inflation.”Traditionally this affects the price of oil and can affect the stock market, but it’s too early to say,” Carstens told the National Association for Business Economics in answer to a question after a talk in which he emphasized the need for central banks to keep interest rates relatively high “for a while” to beat inflation. “We need to continue being very firm.” More

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    IMF closely monitoring situation in Israel, Gaza

    MARRAKECH, Morocco (Reuters) – The International Monetary Fund on Sunday said it was closely monitoring developments in Israel and Gaza, and it was too early to assess any economic impact.“We are deeply saddened by the loss of life. We are monitoring this concerning situation closely,” an IMF spokesperson said, adding that it was too early to say anything about the economic consequences. More

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    US Treasury pushing development banks for progress on next phase of reforms by April

    MARRAKECH, Morocco (Reuters) – The U.S. Treasury Department is pushing the World Bank and regional multilateral development banks to complete work on new rules for leveraging shareholder capital commitments to boost lending capacity by April 2024, a senior Treasury official said.Giving more value to callable capital — commitments by shareholders to supply additional resources in the event of severe financial problems — in the bank’s balance sheets could unlock “significantly more financing” for developing countries, said the official, who was not authorized to speak publicly.U.S. Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen has been pushing for reforms to expand the World Bank’s lending for a year, after an expert panel review concluded that the institutions, government shareholders and credit rating agencies were too timid about financial risks.Some experts argue that developing and emerging economies need $2.4 trillion per year to meet global climate challenges – a number that far exceeds the amount of financing now available.The World Bank last month released proposals that would boost its lending to developing countries by an additional $100 billion over a decade as part of ongoing changes aimed at expanding the bank’s mission to include climate change.The Treasury official said World Bank governors were expected to sign off on the new measures this week and mapped out previously unreported details on the callable capital issue, including the timetable for action.The official said Treasury has already drafted terms of reference on callable capital for the World Bank and regional MDBs, and is asking the institutions to set up working groups and carry out stress tests to tee up decisions on the issue in spring 2024, the official told Reuters in an interview.”That’s what we’re driving very hard toward,” the official said.The official declined to estimate how much extra funding could be freed up, noting that further discussions were also needed with the credit ratings agencies, but said the amount would be likely considerable.Treasury is also working on a template for major MDB shareholders on how to assess the impact of callable capital commitments in their budgets in the event that a call on the capital were to happen, the official said.”We want to allow for the specificities of each bank, but make sure there’s a commonality, so we actually then can have discussions with other stakeholders and very importantly, the ratings agencies,” the official said. “That could unlock significantly more financing.”Any new proposal on treatment of callable capital will require approval by the shareholders of each of the respective multilateral development banks, bank officials have said. An independent assessment commissioned by the Rockefeller Foundation last month concluded that the World Bank’s main lending arms could boost lending to nearly $900 billion if the rating agencies modified their procedures on callable capital.The official said the World Bank’s governing body would endorse a new vision statement – “to create a world free of poverty on a livable planet” – and a slew of other reforms when they meet in Marrakech, Morocco, this week during the annual meetings of the International Monetary Fund and World Bank. “You’ve got to work on global challenges like climate fragility and pandemics and poverty and boosting shared prosperity all at once because they are all mutually reinforcing and intertwined,” the Treasury official said. More