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    Nigerian court adjourns suspended central bank governor’s fraud hearing

    The matter was adjourned to Aug 23 after a co-defendant on the indictment became ill and was unable to be in court. Nigerian law requires defendants to take their plea in person.Emefiele, who is being charged alongside a central bank employee and a private firm for alleged procurement fraud, was therefore unable to enter a plea.Emefiele was suspended by President Bola Tinubu in June and has already pleaded not guilty to charges of possessing a firearm illegally — charges which were subsequently withdrawn. Government lawyers on Tuesday announced additional graft charges against the governor, including allegedly “conferring unlawful advantages” and “unlawful procurement”. More

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    Google upgrades search engine with AI-powered enhancements

    The recent update extends the foundation of the company’s Search Generative Experience (SGE), which was introduced in beta earlier in 2023. SGE empowers users with AI-driven contextual overviews and suggestions intended to enhance search results.Continue Reading on Coin Telegraph More

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    Sotheby’s and Yuga Labs respond to lawsuit from Bored Ape investors

    On Dec. 10, 2022, BAYC investors filed a class-action lawsuit against over 40 defendants, including Yuga Labs and celebrities like Post Malone, Justin Beiber and Paris Hilton. The lawsuit alleged that Yuga Labs and the celebrities were able to “artificially increase” the prices of the NFTs through celebrity promotions. Continue Reading on Coin Telegraph More

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    Bitcoin slips after Fed minutes flag potential future interest rate hikes

    At 06:53 ET (10:53 GMT), the most popular cryptocurrency had fallen by 2.13% to $28,540. It had earlier slipped below $28,500, but recovered some of the losses to remain above the threshold.Elsewhere, Ether dipped below the $1,800 mark, while smaller altcoins like Dogecoin and Solana also decreased.The record from the Fed’s July gathering showed that policymakers were divided over whether future borrowing cost increases were required to tamp down inflation. Even still, the prospect of more rate hikes by the Fed has lifted yields on United States 10-Year Treasuries to their highest in 10 months, placing pressure on riskier assets like digital tokens and equities.Policymakers are widely tipped to back away from additional rate increases at the Fed’s upcoming meeting in September. According to Investing.com’s Fed Rate Monitor Tool, there is an 88% chance that the U.S. central bank keeps the benchmark fed funds rate steady at a range of 5.25% to 5.50%. More

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    Analysis: Why is China not rushing to fix its ailing economy?

    BEIJING (Reuters) – With China at risk of tipping into prolonged stagnation and a spiralling property crisis threatening financial stability, there is growing unease over why its leaders are not rushing to revive the world’s second-largest economy.Even in a country known for opaque and drawn-out decision making, investors, analysts and diplomats are pointing to signs that Beijing seems hesitant to deliver the bold policies needed to prop up an ailing post-COVID recovery.This is not just an economic problem but a geopolitical one.U.S. President Joe Biden – at loggerheads with China over hot-button issues like Taiwan, the democratic island Beijing claims as its own – last week called China a “ticking time bomb” due to its economic ills. “That’s not good because when bad folks have problems, they do bad things,” Biden said.So why has China’s response been so tepid? The view of several China watchers is that President Xi Jinping’s focus on national security is restricting and working counter to the economic effort, scaring off the money Beijing says it is seeking to attract.”The core problem this year is that the leadership has given vague, high-level instructions for officials to balance economic development against national security,” said Christopher Beddor, deputy director of China research at Gavekal Dragonomics.”If officials are unsure what the leadership wants them to do, they’re likely to put off any action until they receive more information. The result is policy paralysis, even if that comes at a substantial cost.”Others say the Communist Party’s ingrained hesitancy towards measures that could shift power from the state to the private sector, and a government stacked with Xi’s loyalists, may be stifling the policy debate and stymieing the response. To be sure, change in China can take time, as demonstrated by its insistence on maintaining economically damaging COVID-19 restrictions through most of last year, even as the rest of the world opened up. China has shown timely resolve in the past, responding comprehensively to stem growth worries during the 2008-2009 global financial crisis and a capital outflow scare in 2015.Major policy change is often also heavily choreographed, with a December economic meeting usually the venue to formulate such resolutions. Economists say China needs measures to boost consumption and business confidence, such as tax cuts or government-funded consumption vouchers, but add that unlike previous slowdowns, there is no quick fix.China has hit back at criticism of its response.”A small number of Western politicians and media amplify and hype up the temporary problems existing in China’s economic recovery,” foreign ministry spokesman Wang Wenbin told media on Wednesday. “They will eventually be slapped in the face by reality,” he said.Wang’s comments came after weak economic activity data on Tuesday fuelled concern that China is heading for a deeper, longer slowdown.’PERCEPTION GAP’ The government has also suspended publishing data on youth unemployment, which has hit record highs in what analysts say is partly a symptom of regulatory crackdowns on big employers in the technology, education, real estate and finance sectors.Without giving details, the State Council on Thursday said it would “optimise” the environment for private firms and make greater effort to attract foreign investment. The private sector accounts for 60% of gross domestic product and 80% of urban employment, officials say.But there is a growing disconnect between officials calling for investment and a sweeping national security crackdown that is denting business confidence, diplomats in China say.One example was a recent anti-espionage law, accompanied by raids on some foreign consultancy firms, that sent waves of anxiety through the foreign business community.The commerce ministry met foreign businesses in July to say the law provided assurances for firms operating in China and that it should not be of concern, according to a diplomat and another source briefed on the meeting. Both declined to be identified.But the assurance only underlined a “significant perception gap” between the government and foreign businesses, the diplomat said. The ministry did not immediately respond to a request for comment.”What people are really hearing is ‘we’re open for business, but only on our terms’,” said Lee Smith, a trade attorney at Baker Donelson who previously worked at the U.S. Department of Commerce on trade policies affecting business with China.There may be more deep-seated reasons leaders are not rushing with measures to bolster confidence in the private sector, said Xu Chenggang, a scholar at Stanford University’s Center on China’s Economy and Institutions.”A perennial fear of the Chinese Communist Party is that it could be overthrown if capitalism and the private economy grow strong enough,” said Xu.Xu said such thinking had been conspicuous under Xi, who has snuffed out dissent during his decade in power and stacked his government with loyalists after securing a precedent-breaking third term last year. A day after this week’s dire data, the Party’s official journal published a speech from Xi in which he warned against Western capitalist economic models. The speech, delivered in February, made no mention of structural imbalances or how to solve them.”We may all have to live with a less vibrant economy for a long time,” said Xu. More

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    Norway central bank raises rate to 4.0%, eyes September hike

    ARENDAL, Norway (Reuters) -Norway’s central bank raised its benchmark interest rate by 25 basis points to 4.0% on Thursday to try to curb inflation, as widely forecast, and said it would likely hike again in September.Thursday’s hike had been expected by all 31 economists polled by Reuters, and a majority of poll participants predicted the rate would hit a peak of 4.25% by the end of the third quarter, in line with the central bank’s projection.”What we are signalling at today’s meeting is that most likely, if the economy evolves as projected, we will raise the policy rate in September,” Norges Bank Governor Ida Wolden Bache told Reuters.The crown briefly rose following the news but later weakened to 11.54 against the euro at 0951 GMT, from 11.52 just before the announcement.Norway’s annual core inflation, which excludes energy costs, stood at 6.4% in July, down from a record 7.0% in June, and has remained above the bank’s 2% target since February last year.”It has turned out more or less as Norges Bank predicted – inflation has been a bit higher which could have encouraged a slightly more aggressive rate increase but then the crown has strengthened a bit,” Nordea economist Kjetil Olsen told broadcaster TV2.If the currency proves to be weaker than projected or pressures in the economy persist, the policy rate may have to rise to more than 4.25%, Norges Bank said.”If there is a more pronounced slowdown in the Norwegian economy or inflation declines more rapidly, the policy rate may be lower than envisaged,” the central bank added.Asked whether Norway was approaching a peak in rates, Bache said that Norges Bank had raised rates significantly over the past two years.”We have come a long way, but our assessment at this time is that there is need for some more tightening going forward to bring inflation back to target,” she said in an interview.”At the same time, we do of course stress the uncertainty and the data dependency of our decisions going forward.” The Norwegian currency, which strengthened against the euro during the early parts of summer, has weakened following the release of milder July inflation data.The European Central Bank last month raised its key policy rate to 3.75%, but a narrow majority of economists polled by Reuters expect the ECB to temporarily pause its rate-hiking campaign at its September meeting. More

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    Fed minutes fallout, Walmart on deck – what’s moving markets

    1. Fed minutes hint at division over rate policyFederal Reserve policymakers may have been united in their decision to hike interest rates to their highest level in 22 years at their last meeting in July, but minutes from that gathering point to internal doubts over the decision.The central goal for the Fed remains unchanged: Bring inflation back down to its stated 2% target, preferably without causing a meltdown in the broader economy.How officials choose to achieve this objective is still a subject of deep debate within the U.S. central bank. According to the minutes, “most participants” were fretting over ongoing “upside” pressures to price growth. “Some participants,” however, were wary about the wider impact of more policy tightening — indeed, a “couple” of officials even backed keeping borrowing costs steady last month.Ultimately, the Fed decided unanimously to lift rates by 25 basis points. Yet, the discussions behind the move suggest that the Fed may now take a more cautious approach to its inflation dilemma, and, by extension, future rate hikes.Officials warned that further tightening could be required, although they stressed that much will depend on the “totality” of economic data in the “coming months.”2. Futures edge higherU.S. stock futures ticked up on Thursday, hinting at a recovery on Wall Street after a second consecutive losing day, as investors considered the implications of the Fed’s commentary.At 05:25 ET (09:25 GMT), the S&P 500 futures contract added 7 points or 0.14%, Dow futures climbed by 39 points or 0.11%, and Nasdaq 100 futures rose by 28 points or 0.19%.The main indices all fell in the prior session, with some traders fretting that the Fed’s minutes as a sign that the bank may not yet be finished with its long-standing policy-tightening campaign. The benchmark S&P 500 slipped by 0.76% and the 30-stock Dow Jones Industrial Average dropped by 0.52%, while the tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite slumped by 1.15%.Meanwhile, worries over continued elevation in interest rates drove the yield on U.S. 10-year Treasury up to its highest close in 15 years in New York. They inched even higher in Asian trading Thursday.3. Walmart to reportWalmart (NYSE:WMT) is projected to improve its annual earnings guidance for the second time this year when it reports quarterly results on Thursday, while analysts will also be looking for any comments around the big-box giant’s back-to-school sales.Unlike peers, Target (NYSE:TGT) and Home Depot (NYSE:HD), the world’s biggest retailer has been a beneficiary of a recent pullback in consumer spending on nonessential items.Much of this is due to Walmart’s large grocery offerings, which have enticed inflation-hit shoppers and supported demand for more profitable products. Food inflation, which the company had flagged earlier this year as a potential drag on second-half performance, has also shown signs of easing.Analysts expect markets to react to any glimpses into Walmart’s back-to-school sales, which have historically proved to be a bellwether for the crucial holiday shopping season. A survey from brokerage Stifel this month found that more people plan to buy backpacks, pens, and pencils at Walmart than at Target or rival Costco (NASDAQ:COST), although overall expenditures on back-to-school items are seen decreasing by 16%.4. Fitch warns of possible China rating rethinkRatings agency Fitch hinted that it may reconsider China’s A+ sovereign credit grade, in the latest sign of worries in financial markets over the outlook for the world’s second largest economy.Speaking to Bloomberg TV on Wednesday, Fitch’s James McCormack said that it may “think again” about the rating if China’s government introduces more stimulus measures, adding that the country’s debt-to-GDP ratio is a “little bit on the high side for a single ‘A’ credit.”Although McCormack noted that Fitch is not “expecting” to make such a move, it suggests some uncertainty around the stability of a rating that the group has held in place since 2007. Beijing has struggled to revive what has been a sputtering post-pandemic recovery, while fears persist over the health of China’s property sector.It is not the first time Fitch has rattled financial markets in August. This month, Fitch downgraded the U.S. long-term credit rating to AA+ from AAA and warned that it may slash its ratings on dozens of American banks.5. Oil prices volatile amid U.S. inventory draw, China fearsOil prices were choppy on Thursday amid a bigger-than-expected draw in U.S. crude inventories and lingering concerns over China’s economic status.Sentiment remains weak given worries that slowing growth in China, as well as a potential hawkish stance from the Fed, will weaken fuel demand in the world’s two biggest economies.Additionally, data from the Energy Information Administration showed that U.S. production hit a new three-year high last week, close to the record-high levels produced before the COVID-19 outbreak in 2020.By 05:25 ET, the U.S. crude futures traded 0.34% higher at $79.65 a barrel, while the Brent contract climbed 0.34% to $83.73. Both contracts earlier hit their weakest level in two weeks. More

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    Debt overhang economics with Chinese characteristics

    Greetings. For the rest of August, my wonderful colleagues Claire Jones and Chris Cook will keep Free Lunch going — I will be back in the saddle in September. Today, one last set of reflections around my economics-y summer readings.China’s reversal of fortune has generated a host of writing in the past few weeks. On our own pages, check out recent commentary by my colleagues Robin Harding, James Kynge, and Leo Lewis, as well as all the great reporting on the (bad) economic news from China. Other contributions that have caught my eye include the essay by Adam Posen I mentioned in my column last week, Michael Pettis’s Twitter thread on his argument, and my former colleague Matthew Klein’s good dive into the recent dismal economic data. And Adam Tooze has been prompted to devote his newsletter to a long series on China.The underlying theme of all these pieces is “how much things have changed!” Only at the start of the year, expectations were that ending the draconian zero-Covid policy would lead to a boom. Instead, China is seeing slowing growth (Klein judges its economy is now expanding more slowly than the US’s), deflationary pressures, vanishing foreign investment, tumbling house prices, falling exports, and a youth unemployment rate that is getting so bad the government has decided to stop publishing it.As the many contributions listed above indicate, there is no shortage of explanations. But sometimes it pays to keep things simple. There are tell-tale signs of one phenomenon in particular, including how Beijing is sending in crack financial teams to inspect local government finances, and that bank lending is plummeting. Complex as China’s economy is, and without denying deep, long-term forces, we can get a long way towards explaining the current malaise with the simple framework of a debt overhang or balance sheet recession.Of course there is a lot else going on. Chinese manufacturing — the main export driver — is suffering also because of the slowdown in advanced economies. (A slowdown, let alone a recession, tends to hit industrial goods hardest because they are the most traded, and the industrial sector faces the additional headwind of US consumers recalibrating their huge shift during the pandemic towards goods and away from services.)Another issue is that Xi Jinping has been changing his country from a developmental state to a “security state”. Strengthening autocracy comes with more arbitrary governance, which comes at an economic cost. My colleague James Kynge’s story of his friend Wang Ning — who is well paid but now severely disciplines his spending “to prepare for black swan events like an invasion of Taiwan” — perfectly encapsulates this phenomenon.But it seems to me that so much of the current troubles in the Chinese economy can be explained by the debt overhang, that there is much to learn by focusing on that even while putting other issues momentarily aside. For readers in advanced economies in particular — especially those who followed those countries’ debt-driven crises in past decades — the exercise that the flurry of China-pessimistic readings should prompt is this: ask how much of China’s current predicament we can make sense of by comparing it with the US in 2008, the eurozone in 2010, or for that matter Japan in the 1990s?I think quite a lot. A huge increase in debt fuelled a globally unprecedented economic share of construction during China’s pre-Covid decade, as I wrote about two years ago (see chart). As balance sheets expand — with more people both owning and owing ever more property-related debt, the risk that the value of the assets is no longer thought to cover the value of the liabilities increases. And like in those other places, at some point it becomes clear not all investments were worthwhile, the economy as a whole, and many people and business in particular, are in fact less wealthy than it seemed, and behaviour changes from making sure not to miss out on ways of getting rich to trying to avoid being the one holding the bag for losses.All the signs are that this is what China’s economy is in the throes of. Here is my potted description of what is going on: local governments, which borrowed (often in obscure ways) to drive growth through local construction, are at the crux of the balance sheet mismatch between assets and liabilities. That means they stop financing new projects, which in turn kills the business model of the construction sector as well as a principal engine of growth. On the creditor side, doubt spreads whether those who financed local governments will get the return they expect — or even their money back at all. This largely means the household sector, whether directly or through banks (with private sector deposits funding banks’ loans to local governments and property developers). In the former case, you will get a direct effect of lost wealth. In the latter case, you will get a banking crisis thrown in.If this diagnosis is right, what follows for policy prescription? There are four ways to confront a debt overhang. One is to do nothing, and hope things work themselves out, which is tantamount to accepting slow growth at best, and risk a downward spiral at worst (since slow growth can aggravate the debt problems). Another is fiscal stimulus in combination with structural reforms, as advocated by my colleague Robin Harding, as a way to break out of the funk. The hope is to boost growth fast enough that the debt overhang becomes more manageable and no longer drags the economy down.If debts are large enough, however — if the shortfall between how wealthy people thought they were before and now realise they are is too big — then the first two approaches will not work. That leaves the last two: restructuring the debts — either through bailouts or writedowns. Bailouts mean all creditors receive what they are due, because someone — the central government in this case — in one way or another gives the debtors the money they need to ensure that this happens. Writedowns mean some creditors have to realise losses on their claims. But economically speaking, both achieve a reshuffle of the national economy’s balance sheet — that is to say, it rearranges the liabilities and assets of various economic actors vis-à-vis one another. That means they both fulfil the same crucial goals, which are to strengthen the finances of debtors and remove the uncertainty about how much financial assets (especially credit claims) are worth.Japan, the US, and the eurozone all made the same mistake of waiting for too long to bite the bullet on the need to restructure balance sheets. Even those that finally did, for too long opted to manage balance sheets by means of bailouts rather than writedowns. That led to a severe, sometimes fatal, increase in public debt — hence the need for rescue funds for several eurozone sovereigns and the toxic political stand-off between creditor and debtor economies within Europe’s monetary union.As a veteran observer of the transatlantic debt crises of 10-15 years ago, I hope Beijing at minimum does not repeat the west’s mistakes. So far, the signs are not good — but there are glimpses of hope, such as the inspection of local government balance sheets. And importantly, the central government is in a much better fiscal position than western governments have been: it has huge net wealth abroad, which could be transferred to whomever has a balance sheet hole it wants to fill. The bailout route is open to it.But should Beijing take it? While it would clear the decks and free people up to lend, invest, and plan long-term projects again — which would boost growth — it would encourage them to go about things just as they did before. We could then expect the same results, namely a new period of property-fuelled growth before ending up in the same predicament as today, but without the huge central government war chest to repeat the trick.My view is, therefore, that the sooner you restructure balance sheets through writedowns, the better. The difficult policy and political choice you then have to make is who you force to bear the losses: local governments, banks, investors, or households. In each case you need to have a plan for how to move on. You need to organise what happens to a bankrupt local administration (and its officials). You need new, well-capitalised banks to populate the banking system. You need to compensate innocent victims among households, at least those too poor to bear the losses they face. But if you do, it will be a lot cheaper than a bailout, and unlike the other policy paths it will set China up for renewed growth, perhaps of a higher quality. Investors, lenders, developers and local administrators will have learned they need to choose projects that really create economic value. What that requires is probably to start building things that benefit those at the bottom and not the top of the income distribution — in a nutshell dwellings and infrastructure to benefit those still in poverty rather than luxury apartments. And that would come on top of balance sheet restructurings that would have cut more into the wealth of the richest than bailouts would do.Two thought-provoking things follow. One is that the politics of debt are strikingly similar in an autocracy such as China and in rich democracies. The other is that the tolerance of inequality, and the political willingness to reduce it, matters in both cases. That the polity which has brought more of humanity out of poverty than ever in history also seems committed so far to maintaining huge levels of inequality is perhaps the most striking observation one can make of China’s current economic travails.Other readablesIt is time for a global anti-corruption court, and lawyers are working on how one should look.Those who complain about a “democratic deficit” in the EU don’t seem to pay much attention to how the EU actually works, I argue in my latest column. I take a look at the electoral contests coming up and conclude they should sweep away any thought that voters’ choices don’t make a difference. How under-investment killed the punctuality of Germany’s trains.Argentina’s economic policy is in disarray.Are heat batteries the solution to industrial carbon emissions?Numbers newsGood returns for steely nerves: Ukrainian government bond prices have climbed by 50 per cent in two months.France’s second-quarter growth surprise wasn’t down to a single cruise ship, after all. More