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    Bitcoin’s bullish trend anticipates significant growth by 2025

    As of Thursday, Bitcoin’s current price stands at $31,067, demonstrating an increase of 1.09% on the day, 3.15% across the week, and 14.62% on its monthly chart. This data aligns with historical trends that suggest Bitcoin’s strongest quarterly performance typically occurs in the final quarter, boasting an average return of over 35% in the past nine years.The self-learning machine algorithm deployed by crypto tracking platform CoinCodex set the price of Bitcoin at $38,183 on December 31, 2023. This suggests that its value would increase by close to 23% from its figures on June 30. Furthermore, if Bitcoin’s price follows the same growth pattern as that of the internet, mobile technologies, and large tech companies such as Google (NASDAQ: NASDAQ:GOOGL) and Facebook (NASDAQ: NASDAQ:META), its average price by the end of 2024 could reach $62,193.More specifically, if Bitcoin followed exclusively the internet’s growth path, it could reach $38,887 by the end of 2024. Mimicking Google’s expansion could see it end up at $56,838, while following Facebook’s path could lead to a price of $114,812.Looking further ahead to 2025, predictions suggest that Bitcoin could reach an average price of $110,636. This is based on potential prices of $50,202 if following the internet’s growth pattern; $48,942 with mobile tech as a model; $88,713 if mirroring Google; or a staggering $254,687 if it follows the same trajectory as Facebook.Adding to the optimism surrounding Bitcoin’s future is the upcoming decision by the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) regarding Bitcoin spot exchange-traded-fund (ETF) filings. This verdict, especially if favorable, could act as a significant catalyst, potentially propelling Bitcoin’s price further. The SEC deferred its decision on these spot Bitcoin ETF applications earlier in August, and the new deadline is set for October.This article was generated with the support of AI and reviewed by an editor. For more information see our T&C. More

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    Tether resumes secured lending, raising concerns over market stability

    On Thursday, Tether announced it had recommenced lending its stablecoin to long-standing customers, following a surge in short-term loan inquiries during Q2 2023. The move is aimed at protecting these customers from liquidity shortages and preventing them from having to sell assets at unfavorable rates.In its most recent quarterly financial update, Tether reported $5.5 billion of loans, up from $5.35 billion in the previous quarter. This increase comes despite the company’s commitment to reduce its secured loans to zero and improve the health of its reserves throughout 2023. This promise was made following criticism from the crypto industry accusing Tether of concealing details about reserves held in risky financial instruments such as Chinese securities.The company’s decision to resume secured lending has raised concerns among market observers, as there is no guarantee that borrowers will repay their loans or that Tether will be able to liquidate these loans promptly. Furthermore, Tether has not provided adequate transparency about the type of collateral provided by borrowers.Despite this, Tether spokeswoman Alex Welch stated that these loans would be reduced to zero by 2024. She claimed that the lending has helped customers avoid defaulting on existing loans and increased liquidity.However, the dominance of USDT, Tether’s stablecoin, which currently boasts a market cap exceeding $83 billion, poses a risk to the crypto market and existing loans. This figure represents a significant increase from its $68 billion market cap in March, largely due to Tether’s foray into mining and Bitcoin investments.The second-largest stablecoin, USDC, has a market cap of $26 billion, highlighting USDT’s dominance. Any unforeseen event impacting Tether and USDT could significantly affect crypto prices, raising further concerns about the company’s decision to resume secured lending.This article was generated with the support of AI and reviewed by an editor. For more information see our T&C. More

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    Bank of England pauses interest rate hikes, providing relief to millions

    In August, the BoE had raised the base rate by 0.25 percentage points from 5% to 5.25%. Some economists had anticipated a 15th consecutive rise to 5.5%, which would have been the highest rate since 2008. However, recent inflation figures are believed to have eased the pressure enough to pause rates this month.The Consumer Price Index level of inflation decreased from 6.8% in July to 6.7% in August, according to the Office for National Statistics (ONS). The decline in inflation rates led to a significant shift in expectations. Prior to the release of these figures, there was an 80% expectation of rates rising, which fell to around 50% after the figures were released, as reported by AJ Bell.Suren Thiru, the economics director for chartered accountant group ICAEW, has said that raising interest rates would be a “misstep” following the surprise fall in inflation. Similarly, the Federation of Small Businesses (FSB) stated that this decision should mark a peak for UK interest rates “one way or another”.Chancellor Jeremy Hunt claimed that the fall in the CPI rate shows that “the plan to deal with inflation is working – plain and simple”. He also stressed on the importance of sticking to their plan to halve inflation from 10.7% to around 5.3% by year end.The decision by the BoE will be welcomed by homeowners and borrowers who won’t see their current rates rise. Savers, however, are likely to see no change as banks won’t be as pressed to battle it out for market-leading interest rates.The impact of the rate pause on mortgages, credit card and loan rates, and savings rates will vary. For instance, homeowners on variable-rate mortgages may not see their repayments increase immediately, but they could rise shortly after if interest rates were to be hiked. However, with the BoE’s decision to freeze current rates, lenders may opt to do nothing at all. This is a significant relief for those who have faced 14 consecutive increases to their mortgage bill.For loans, credit cards and overdrafts, the cost of borrowing can go up if the base rate is hiked, as banks are likely to pass on the increased rate. However, due to the rate pause, no changes are expected for now. Savers, who have been the main beneficiaries after the last 14 rate rises, are unlikely to see any change as banks won’t be as pressed to battle it out for market-leading interest rates. However, anyone currently getting a low rate on easy access savings could find it’s worth looking around for a better rate and moving their money.This article was generated with the support of AI and reviewed by an editor. For more information see our T&C. More

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    What next for Europe’s sanctions on Russia?

    This article is an on-site version of Martin Sandbu’s Free Lunch newsletter. Sign up here to get the newsletter sent straight to your inbox every ThursdayWelcome to Free Lunch. Russian president Vladimir Putin’s war against Ukraine rages on. While Kyiv grinds on with its counteroffensive, there has not been a similar redoubling of efforts on the financial side of this conflict. In today’s piece, I highlight some recent contributions on how to move forward on sanctions, and ask why the €300bn question of Russia’s central bank assets does not seem to be getting anywhere. Further down, I give my reflections on the change in tone over the EU in the British Labour party.The UN General Assembly should be a good opportunity to advance Ukraine’s cause. And both the US and Ukrainian presidents used the occasion to emphasise how Russia must pay a price for its war of aggression, both to weaken its ability to wage war and to deter other would-be aggressors in future.But what I found the most instructive event this week was far from New York; it was this hybrid seminar hosted by the Kyiv School of Economics and the European Policy Centre in Brussels. With wonderful clarity and concreteness, the Ukrainian and other European sanctions experts explained three things. First, that sanctions are working. Second, what needs to be done next (to pick two things: lower the oil price cap and enforce it much better, and move from “black lists” of banned trades to a universal ban with only a “white list” of exceptions). And third, why: the goal must be to maximally isolate the Russian economy, so as to exact the highest possible literal price for Putin’s crimes so long as he keeps trying to colonise Ukraine.The participants also briefly called for two measures we pay particular attention to here in Free Lunch: immobilising the non-sanctions-hit export surpluses Russia has accumulated since February 2022 (I wrote about this here), and confiscating and transferring to Ukraine the €300bn or so of Russian central bank reserves already immobilised in the countries imposing sanctions. The former has received no attention at all among policymakers. The latter has — and they have recoiled from going ahead.Understanding why is crucial for finding a way forward. There have been valiant efforts to disarm worries about international law constraints on confiscation, specifically “sovereign immunity”. Two recent ones include a paper by a group of American lawyers and a new briefing paper by the International Working Group on Russian Sanctions, in turn based on arguments by Philip Zelikow, which we have covered here before. They all advocate a legal strategy of not seeing confiscation as based on sanctions law but on the doctrine of “countermeasures” — “[long-recognised] extrajudicial means of self-help in the international system”, the briefing paper quotes legal scholars as explaining. In lay language: western countries should just go ahead and confiscate by executive or legislative action, as the permitted proportional response to counteract Russia’s much worse law-breaking. They also emphasise that US domestic law gives ample authority to confiscate the limited reserves Russia has there.But here is the thing with these US-originating and sometimes US-focused arguments. This is one issue that lies almost entirely in the EU’s hands — because the bulk of the Russian reserves sits in a handful of EU countries. And even if the argument about countermeasures is correct and the courts would uphold it if tested, it seems highly unlikely that European governments would try. (Not that the countermeasures doctrine has found any favour with the US government yet, either. But even if they did, I doubt the US could sway an otherwise unwilling EU.) A report from the EU’s working group on Russian assets from last June states that it “sees no credible legal avenue allowing for the confiscation of frozen or immobilized assets on the sole basis of these assets being under EU restrictive measures [ie sanctions]”. It does not even mention the countermeasures doctrine.Legal expert Tom Ruys told me “there is certainly some support for the countermeasures route, both in government and academic circles” in Europe. But compared with the US, it may be that “the EU is more concerned with possible precedential effects for the future, more reluctant to depart from established law (also due to its nature as a collection of individual [member states]), and somewhat more sensitive to different views in other countries”. My understanding from insiders in the political process is that Berlin and Paris have been important brakes on a more muscular approach — and that the European Central Bank is surprisingly vehement in its opposition.Why is the EU so quick to give up on confiscation? For this looks less like genuine political willingness frustrated by legal constraints than legal objection providing a welcome reason not to do too much. At the same time, all of the G7 have politically committed to not returning Russia’s assets until it has compensated Ukraine for the damage it has wrought. But Ukraine needs money to rebuild now.Some reasons for European half-heartedness are economic. One is self-interested and misguided, namely the fear that confiscating Russia’s assets would ruin confidence in the euro. Another I have heard is altruistic but still misguided: that the consequences of the Versailles treaty show the folly of exacting reparations after a war. But I will address economic arguments such as these in a separate piece another time.The more immediate issue, I think, is the peculiar legalism of the EU and EU countries. The EU itself is at heart just a network of laws, but whose existence makes extraordinary levels of trust between sovereign nations possible (no border controls, anyone?). So it was never going to be likely for the EU to self-consciously reach for “extrajudicial means of self-help”. The more prosaic way to describe this is that it really, really matters to have a good case when something is challenged at the European Court of Justice. (The sorry fate of past “misappropriation sanctions” against corrupt officials in other countries is instructive.) And I don’t think even the most eminent US legal scholars can guess with certainty how the ECJ would rule. That is not an excuse for dismissing the countermeasures route; at the very least, it is shocking that EU authorities have not published a full legal analysis of the argument and debated it politically. By all means, we should push for this. But politically, it is imperative to find other routes too. And I think what would get more politicians on board would be an EU-based court ordering Russia to pay reparations to Ukraine, after which confiscation could be pursued as a much simpler matter of enforcing compliance with the court ruling. That would seem all the more appropriate as the process of setting up a register of damages has been started. I defer to lawyers on the legal process that could produce such a ruling. But politically, what matters is to get the ball rolling on the process and stand ready to confiscate as soon as legal conditions permit. That means preparing any required legislation and a special court if necessary, completing the register of damages, and starting the associated work of setting up an institution that would actually manage the reparations money. The test for Europe’s leaders is whether they will put political energy into this sort of work — and not just twiddle with windfall taxes on the small profits made by the custodians of Russian reserves.This is not something the US can do nor really force the EU to do if it does not want to. Yet the moral case for transferring Russian reserve assets to Ukraine is unanswerable, and the urgency of doing so could not be greater. So far, European leaders do not show that they see it this way. That has to change.Labour’s pro-European turnBack in little Britain, the most excited talk has been about Labour party leader and presumptive next prime minister Sir Keir Starmer vowing (in an exclusive interview with the FT) to create a better relationship with the EU. There is nothing substantially new, of course, beyond the intention to use a scheduled future review of the UK-EU trade deal to remove some barriers to trade. But the tone is a change — a promise of more ambition, and even more importantly, a willingness to say that closer links are better for the UK. The contrast is with the speech Starmer gave last year with a list of goals so modest that it rather put an end to real pro-European temptations, which was no doubt its goal. If the form promises more yet the content is unchanged, how should we interpret the new Labour message? I can think of three ways. One is that Starmer has no intention to go any further than the marginal tweaks to the EU-UK relationship he had already set out, but that the more EU-positive shift in the polls means it behoves him to now make it sound bigger than it is. The second is that he and his team really believe that the upcoming review of the current deal will actually unlock significantly bigger changes. In the first case, we will not get much; in the second case, we will also not get much because it is wrong to think that the review is an opportunity for much at all. (It’s unlikely to come to very much, as I suggested last week. Read my colleagues’ explainer or if you have more time, a new report from the UK in a Changing Europe think-tank, for reasons why the EU has little more to offer.)The third possibility is, however, much more intriguing. It is that Starmer judges the time is ripe to begin preparing public opinion for a much bigger pro-European shift after the election. The rhetorical move would draw on the fact that he simultaneously promises substantially small measures but imaginatively big improvements. “You elected me to get a better Brexit,” you can hear him saying, “and I have tried through the review of our existing deal. But Boris Johnson’s legacy was so poor that it still holds us back. To get the change you elected me for, we need to unshackle us from it and aim higher.”Highly speculative and even more highly unlikely, I know (though some may say it’s what Starmer has done with his erstwhile leftwing promises to win the Labour leadership). But perhaps it would be the best outcome of the three?Other readablesMore tea leaves for those trying to peer into the EU’s future: the Franco-German working group on treaty reform has just published its report. You will get my reflections on it soon!Finally some focus on the opportunities artificial intelligence brings: tailoring education to each learner is within our grasp, says Andy Haldane. My FT colleagues explain why the supposed Chinese threat to Europe’s carmakers is not all it’s cracked up to be.Numbers newsRecommended newsletters for youBritain after Brexit — Keep up to date with the latest developments as the UK economy adjusts to life outside the EU. Sign up hereTrade Secrets — A must-read on the changing face of international trade and globalisation. Sign up here More

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    Humble Jay gets it right

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