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    Rep. Tom Emmer: Digital assets will be a ‘sleeper issue’ for 2024 elections

    Speaking to Cointelegraph at the Permissionless II conference in Austin, Texas on Sept. 11, Emmer said certain candidates running for office in 2024 may underestimate the impact of issues surrounding crypto and blockchain. He pointed to financial privacy concerns, specifically mentioning government oversight of central bank digital currencies, or CBDCs.Continue Reading on Coin Telegraph More

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    SEC accuses Binance of noncooperation, court unseals case documents: Law Decoded

    Meanwhile, Magistrate Judge Zia Faruqui of the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia issued an order granting the SEC’s motion to unseal or remove the redaction from 18 sealed documents and another nine partially sealed or redacted documents. The partially sealed documents total 117 pages. Among them are internal Binance.US documents, emails and SEC court filings, including the memorandum on Binance.US’s compliance with SEC discovery efforts. Continue Reading on Coin Telegraph More

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    Binance.US Trading Volume Plummets Amid Regulatory Disputes

    In the first half of September, the exchange registered a trading volume of merely $115.7 million, a sharp decline compared to $286 million in August. The bulk of this reduction happened after March, when Changpeng Zhao, the founder of Binance, was charged with violations by the US Commodity Futures Trading Commission.The legal issues for Binance.US and Zhao escalated in June when both were sued by the US Securities And Exchange Commission (SEC) for multiple violations. These included misrepresentation of trading controls and oversight on the Binance.US platform. The company is currently defending these charges in court.The SEC’s allegations have had a profound impact on Binance.US’s operations. Following the SEC complaint in June, the exchange lost its banking support and suspended US dollar deposits. It also initiated a series of layoffs, culminating last week with the departure of CEO Brian Shroder and the dismissal of a third of the remaining staff.As of Monday, Binance.US recorded a daily trading volume of approximately $10.5 million according to data from CoinGecko. This is in stark contrast to Coinbase (NASDAQ:COIN) Global Inc., the largest US-based cryptocurrency exchange, which reported a daily trading volume of $948 million.Binance.US, headquartered in Miami, has yet to comment on these developments.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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    Bitcoin and Ether Show Tepid Growth Amid Anticipation of Interest-Rate Decisions

    Bitcoin traded slightly below $26,700 while ether exchanged hands at $1,630 during Asian afternoon hours on Monday. Both cryptocurrencies showed marginal gains of 0.5% in the past 24 hours. The CoinDesk Market Index (CMI) mirrored this sluggish trend, rising by a mere 0.3%.Crypto futures liquidations were recorded at their lowest since mid-August, amounting to only $48 million. Meanwhile, open interest, which refers to the number of futures contracts, grew by 4%, indicating a subdued market sentiment.Among the major tokens, Toncoin (TON) experienced a drop of 1% over the past day. This decrease is likely due to traders cashing in on the 40% surge last week following Telegram’s announcement that it would integrate a TON-based app on its platform.However, the crypto environment could face some turbulence in the coming days with key decisions looming in traditional markets. “Markets could move nervously in the next few days as we await major data prints from the U.K. and U.S., with both countries’ central banks due to announce new rate decisions later this week,” said Simon Peters, a market analyst at investing platform eToro, in a note to CoinDesk.Peters further noted that despite falling inflation rates in both economies, there are signs that this retreat might not be fully felt yet. He added that like other risk assets, crypto assets are sensitive to rate expectations and any hardening in tone could leave investor sentiment bearish.Analysts at the on-chain analytics platform CryptoQuant highlighted that recent price moves have not impacted the estimated leverage ratio on bitcoin and ether. This ratio, which measures an exchange’s open interest divided by their coins reserve, indicates how much leverage is used by users on average. A flat value suggests low trading interest from futures traders.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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    Bitbuy enters partnership with Canada’s largest Bitcoin ATM Provider

    Under this partnership, Bitbuy’s digital asset services will now cover up to half of the Bitcoin ATMs in the country.According to WonderFi, Canada continues to hold prominence in the crypto ATM arena, boasting a total of 2,747 ATMs, second only to the U.S. Through its subsidiaries, WonderFi Technologies currently provides 1.6 million Canadians with access to regulated crypto trading and staking through subsidiaries including Bitbuy, Coinsquare and CoinSmart. The exchange became the second to relist XRP after Binance.With the completion of the Localcoin partnership, Bitbuy’s digital asset services are poised to extend their coverage to some of the firm’s ATMs.Localcoin is a prominent player in Canada’s cryptocurrency ATM sector, offering a network of easily accessible and user-friendly ATMs across the nation for buying or selling Bitcoin, Ethereum, Litecoin. Localcoin’s reach encompasses 920 ATMs, securing a substantial 33% share of the cryptocurrency ATM market in Canada.Despite uncertain regulations to the South and across the pond, the announcement of the new partnership, coupled with Coinbase (NASDAQ:COIN) entering the country in August of this year, highlight Canada’s continued interest in digital assets.Therefore, despite Binance announcing its leave from the country earlier this year, more recent announcements suggest that Canada could be a leader in the global crypto economy.This article was originally published on Crypto.news More

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    Ukraine war and the west’s relations with China reshape global trade

    This article is an on-site version of our Disrupted Times newsletter. Sign up here to get the newsletter sent straight to your inbox three times a weekToday’s top storiesFor up-to-the-minute news updates, visit our live blogGood evening.Our story today revealing how billions of dollars in western profits are trapped in Russia as the Kremlin increases the pressure on “unfriendly” nations is the latest example of how war in Europe and other geopolitical tensions are roiling global business and trade.Local earnings of companies from BP to Citigroup have been locked in Russia since Moscow announced a dividend payout ban on businesses from the US, the UK and the EU. Many have tried to sell their local subsidiaries but any deal requires the Kremlin’s approval and is subject to steep price discounts. More significantly for global trade, Russia’s attempts to stop Ukraine exporting its grain continue to threaten global food supplies, rattling markets and increasing prices for developing countries. Kyiv has stepped up efforts to break Moscow’s Black Sea blockade, but has not been helped by Hungary, Slovakia and Poland banning Ukrainian grain imports over the weekend, a move condemned by Germany and others as potentially illegal and “incompatible” with EU unity. The EU had asked Kyiv to voluntarily prevent surges of produce into neighbouring countries. The other continuing disrupter to world trade is friction between the west and China. The World Trade Organization last week warned of the impact of friendshoring as countries switched supply chains to allies, rather than the most efficient exporter, to reduce their dependence on China. Talk of deglobalisation was premature but friendshoring would ultimately lead to higher costs and more global conflict, the WTO argued. The UK’s outgoing trade chief warned separately that the race to net zero as well as rising animosity towards Beijing were providing the pretext for a damaging trend towards protectionism.As chief foreign affairs commentator Gideon Rachman points out today, although many in Europe were dismayed by this turn towards protectionism in the US, last week’s announcement of an EU investigation into subsidies for China’s electric car industry suggests that Europe is starting down a similar path. The Bundesbank added to the debate today, arguing that excessive dependence on trade with China was one of the main reasons why Germany’s “business model is in danger”. The faltering trade with China, Berlin’s biggest trading partner, is one of the reasons its economy has contracted or stagnated over the past nine months.Attempts to get round China’s influence have also led to talk of a new India-Middle East trade corridor, backed by the US and EU at the recent G20 summit. Turkey, which would be bypassed by the new route, is negotiating with regional partners over an alternative, the Iraq Development Road, highlighting its traditional role as a bridge between Asia and Europe, a history that dates back centuries to the silk roads.Need to know: UK and Europe economyThe Bank of England is widely expected to raise interest rates by another quarter point on Thursday, taking the cost of borrowing to 5.5 per cent, its highest level since early 2008. But, as economics editor Chris Giles points out, data showing persistent inflation jars with signals from the BoE in recent weeks.British politicians need to be more honest on tax, writes chief economics commentator Martin Wolf, rather than fantasise about cuts that pay for themselves or magically engender growth.UK opposition leader Sir Keir Starmer told the Financial Times he would put a closer trading relationship with the EU at the heart of his growth plans if his Labour party won the general election. Read our interview with Starmer.The UK’s failure to attract offshore wind developers in its latest renewable energy auction must be a “wake-up call” for the country, warned the head of RWE, one of the world’s biggest renewable energy companies.A sharp economic slowdown in Italy is testing investors’ patience with the government after recent interventionist moves had raised serious doubts about the direction of policy.Tobacco smuggling from Gibraltar into Spain is becoming a major irritant in UK-Spain relations. Cigarettes are cheaper in Gibraltar because the British territory does not apply sales tax or other levies, enabling gangs to hop across to Spain and sell them at a mark-up. Need to know: Global economyChina lifted temporary curbs on gold imports that were imposed on some lenders in a bid to defend the renminbi. Stand-offs with residents of older neighbourhoods resisting redevelopment are hampering Beijing’s plans to revitalise its property sector.Register here for the FT subscriber event on China’s economic slowdown this Thursday at 11am BST.California is suing some of the world’s biggest oil companies, claiming they deceived the public about how fossil fuels were destroying the planet. The state says the deception resulted in billions of dollars in damage from drought, wildfires and historic storms.The World Health Organization urged Beijing to offer more information on the origins of Covid-19 and said it was ready to send a second team to look into the matter, nearly four years after the first cases emerged in the city of Wuhan. Need to know: businessA new Big Read examines the Biden administration’s efforts to take on the US drugs industry. New rules will make medicines cheaper for older Americans but companies warn innovation will suffer.The UK’s public broadcasters are launching a digital service that will finally end the need for an aerial for freely available TV channels. The new service — called Freely — will be built into the next generation of smart TVs, in effect taking the Freeview TV platform on to the internet.Apple is facing new competitive pressures in China, its largest manufacturing hub and biggest international market due to a ban on its products and a resurgent rival in Huawei.A UK pub group thrust the idea of surge pricing into the spotlight last week after its decision to charge more for pints at peak times. The strategy is becoming more attractive in leisure and retail but the penalties for getting it wrong are significant, as our Big Read explains. Share buybacks in the US are falling as high interest rates undermine the incentive for companies to purchase their own stocks. Analysts say the slowdown is likely to mark the beginning of a longer-term trend that could put downward pressure on stock markets.Pressure is growing for tougher financial regulation of European football clubs as transfer fees and wages for star players accelerate. A Big Read explains.You are seeing a snapshot of an interactive graphic. This is most likely due to being offline or JavaScript being disabled in your browser.The World of WorkProfessional women have become more likely to work full-time since the pandemic in sectors where hybrid and remote working are now standard practice, according to research based on official UK data which offers some of the strongest evidence yet of benefits from homeworking for individuals and the wider economy.An FT survey highlights problems facing workers in the global consulting industry as the rush of demand fostered by the pandemic comes to an end. Industry professionals are getting used to job cuts, new routines and fresh insecurities.US banks are gradually doing more on diversity, equity and inclusion in the workforce, including unconscious bias training for staff and sponsorship programmes for employees from under-represented groups. Read more in our special report: The Future of Banking.Some good newsEuropean Commission president Ursula von der Leyen launched what some have called the world’s first green container ship, a Maersk vessel powered by green methanol.European Commission president Ursula von der Leyen launches the Laura Maersk More