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    Centaline says mainland China unit has ‘huge’ unpaid developers’ commissions

    Centaline’s statement comes as a deepening housing market crisis, rising risk of default and a faltering economy are dragging property developers and agents into commission arrears.The Hong Kong property agency’s mainland arm, Centaline Property Agency (Shenzhen), has not recovered some commission fees as property developers grapple with the debt crisis and liquidity crunch, Centaline said in a statement on Friday.”The current amount of unpaid commissions from developers and agents is huge and Centaline Property is not in a position to advance them to its employees,” the company said.It did not give a figure for the unpaid commissions but the Securities Times state news outlet reported on Aug. 21 that commission owed to the Shenzhen subsidiary had reached more than 1 billion yuan ($137.19 million).The Shenzhen unit has paid fixed salaries up to July, Centaline said, adding that all of units were operating normally and it would not withdraw from the mainland China market.Centaline said it had set up a team to handle overdue payments and it would prioritise the settlement of corresponding commissions with employees once funds are recovered.Liu Tianyang, who is leading the team, earlier told the Securities Times that some developers had used housing to offset commissions, but that often resulted in a loss of revenue for the Shenzhen property agency.He said the company was operating under major pressure and the payment of commissions due to employees would lead to more difficulties for it.($1 = 7.2890 Chinese yuan renminbi) More

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    Multichain $1.5B hack investigation, Shibarium eyes relaunch, Base, Optimism join hands: Finance Redefined

    The past week in DeFi saw developers behind Base and Optimism protocols join hands to develop a revenue and governance sharing framework. The $1.5-billion Multichain hack has seen some new evidence — read our detailed investigation to learn about every aspect of the exploit and the plight of the victims thereafter.Continue Reading on Coin Telegraph More

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    Sam Bankman-Fried’s lawyers push for temporary release, object to prosecutors’ proposed deal

    In an Aug. 25 filing in United States District Court for the Southern District of New York, SBF’s legal team said the plan proposed by prosecutors to allow the former FTX CEO access to discovery materials before trial were inadequate. Lawyers said the U.S. Justice Department produced roughly 4 million pages worth of discovery materials on Aug. 24 and there were “millions of pages of documents and terabytes of data” left for SBF to review for his criminal trial.Continue Reading on Coin Telegraph More

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    Powell’s steady hand steers dollar higher: McGeever

    ORLANDO, Florida (Reuters) – Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell’s speech in Jackson Hole is likely to maintain the ‘higher for longer’ outlook for U.S. interest rates and bond yields – good news for dollar bulls, especially given the contrasting picture elsewhere in the world.While the U.S. economy appears to be humming along quite nicely – at a near-6% annualized rate, according to the latest Atlanta Fed tracking estimate – the same cannot be said for its main rivals, most notably the euro zone and China.The dollar had already clocked a two-month high against a basket of major currencies before Powell’s keynote address at the Kansas City Fed’s annual gathering of U.S. and global policymakers on Friday. Short-dated yield spreads, typically a key driver of exchange rates, have been widening in recent weeks in favor of the dollar over most major currencies including the euro, sterling, yen and yuan. While it’s always dangerous to infer too much from market moves on any given day, especially days prone to knee-jerk reactions to major data or policy events, it is noteworthy that there was no pullback on Friday. The two-year U.S. yield remained more than 200 basis points higher than its German equivalent, around the widest gap in favor of the dollar this year, and the U.S.-UK 2-year spread hit its widest in two and a half months.The two-year U.S.-Japanese yield spread, meanwhile, spiked up towards the peaks from July and March that marked levels not seen since the year 2000. “Yield spreads relative to other developed markets are likely to provide support for the dollar to move into a higher trading range,” said Yung-Yu Ma, chief investment officer at BMO Wealth Management.MIND THE GAPIf Powell’s speech can be boiled down to a sentence or two, it is probably this: “…we will proceed carefully as we decide whether to tighten further or, instead, to hold the policy rate constant and await further data.”It is a ‘win-win’ for the dollar, at least in the coming weeks and possibly into year end. Further tightening is not yet priced into U.S. rates markets, so another quarter point hike will likely give the buck a boost. Even if the Fed doesn’t raise rates again, it is in no rush to cut them. That may change if the data suddenly deteriorates, but right now euro zone and UK rate curves are more vulnerable to a darkening growth outlook than the U.S. curve.Money markets are still anticipating an almost one quarter-point rate hike from the European Central Bank this year and 65 bps from the Bank of England by next May. If the latest purchasing managers index reports are any guide, that pricing could be too optimistic – euro zone and UK activity are contracting at a rapid clip, according to the PMIs.The bullish U.S. rate outlook relative to China and Japan is perhaps even more justified. Facing deflation, an imploding property sector and deepening economic malaise, the People’s Bank of China is reluctantly being forced to cut rates and loosen monetary policy. The U.S.-China yield gap, now the widest since 2007 when comparing 10-year yields, is unlikely to narrow much in the coming weeks.The U.S.-Japan yield spread of more than 500 bps may be most vulnerable, given how wide it is. But the Bank of Japan has shown no inclination to follow its tentative ‘yield curve control’ tweaks with actual rate hikes, and Tokyo inflation data this week suggests national price pressures continue to ease. The dollar is up 5% in the last six weeks, so a pause or profit-taking dip would come as little surprise. But as long as U.S. yields offer such a cushion, it shouldn’t be long before the dollar is bouncing higher again. (The opinions expressed here are those of the author, a columnist for Reuters.)(This story has been refiled to fix a typo in paragraph 2) (By Jamie McGeever; Editing by Andrea Ricci) More

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    Binance P2P removes sanctioned Russian banks from payments list

    Binance’s peer-to-peer exchange service is a message board allowing users to offer to buy or sell cryptocurrency. It also functions as a crypto escrow service. However, unlike Binance’s main exchange platform, it leaves fiat payments to be handled by users, and no fiat money passes through Binance’s servers.Continue Reading on Coin Telegraph More

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    Robinhood accumulated $3B in Bitcoin in 3 months — What does this mean for markets?

    While its identity has now been attributed to Robinhood (NASDAQ:HOOD), questions still linger, as the financial giant has neither confirmed nor denied these allegations. Some on-chain analysts posit that the stash actually belongs to MicroStrategy, the U.S. business intelligence and analytics software firm, which holds 152,800 BTC, as per their recent submission to the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission.Continue Reading on Coin Telegraph More