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    Can Argentina’s economy chief helm Peronist ‘shipwreck’ to election win?

    BUENOS AIRES (Reuters) – Argentina’s Economy Minister Sergio Massa is an unlikely hero for the embattled ruling Peronist party. Under his watch, inflation surged to 116%, the poverty rate hit 40%, dollar reserves ran dry, debt rose, and the peso sunk to record lows.But the 51-year-old lawyer, a political wheeler-dealer, has pulled off something of a coup, defusing fierce infighting and opposition within the leftist coalition and gaining backing as a unity candidate to lead it into elections in October.The Peronists, down-and-out just months ago as the economy reeled, have an outside shot at victory. Massa, a pragmatic centrist, is the most popular presidential candidate, according to polls, though overall he lags the center-right opposition ahead of primaries on Sunday that will give a snapshot of voter sentiment.”Massa is not the ideal candidate, but a float in the middle of the shipwreck,” said Andres Malamud, a political analyst, adding that the Peronists had been forced to back a centrist presidential candidate over a leftist one to avoid being pushed into third place.Massa, who finished third in the first round of voting when he ran for president in 2015, is the clear favorite to lead the Union por la Patria coalition into the October election after seeing off a bid in June by a more left-leaning rival allied to powerful but divisive Vice President Cristina Fernandez de Kirchner.Since then, the Peronists have rallied around Massa, hoping to boost their chances of avoiding heavy defeat against the Together for Change conservative bloc, currently split between two candidates, and outsider libertarian Javier Milei.”I don’t know if the entire bloc is happy, but the whole space is convinced that we are playing a difficult game and that what’s ahead is very complicated for society. The opposition is always worse,” an official from the so-called “Kirchner” wing of the Peronist movement said, asking not to be named.”It’s important to have Peronism unified and feel it’s a competitive formula. There is a broad agreement to have unity.”Massa, nonetheless, faces a daunting task to win over voters. Argentines have seen their salaries and savings eroded by soaring inflation, while businesses have been hurt by tight capital controls and sky-high interest rates.Even if he wins, Massa would need to tame price rises, rebuild the South American country’s net foreign currency reserves, which many estimate are in negative territory, rework a stuttering $44 billion debt deal with the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and avoid further defaults.’BEING PRAGMATIC, SOLVING PROBLEMS’Agustin Rossi, the current chief of staff and candidate for vice president on Massa’s ticket, told Reuters that the economy minister’s handling of incredibly tough challenges played in his favor, despite many economic metrics continuing to worsen.”He took the Ministry of Economy at a difficult time and he is steering the ship more than adequately. In Peronism, that is highly valued, not running away from difficulties,” he said.Massa, however, is between a rock and a hard place. The left criticizes him for cuts in social spending, while conservatives say he is not doing enough to reduce the fiscal deficit.The son of Italian immigrants, Massa was chief of staff under Fernandez de Kirchner for a year, before falling out with the former two-term president and setting up his own party. He later returned to the Peronism and became a congressman.Despite a mixed relationship with the Peronists’ powerful left wing, Massa used his deal-making skills and wide networks to convince the coalition he was the ruling bloc’s best shot at appealing to moderate voters and avoiding defeat in October.”He is a person who works a lot on building relationships. He does not speak only with his own people, but also with those who think differently, he speaks with practically the entire opposition,” an adviser to Massa for some two decades said on condition of anonymity.”He prides himself on being pragmatic, solving problems.”The current government of centrist President Alberto Fernandez, who opted against seeking reelection as his polling numbers slid, said the coalition had been forced to adapt.”Coexistence is currently very good within Peronism because the politics was put in order when our interests were unified,” a government spokesman told Reuters, asking not to be named.”No sectors were left out of the candidate lists; if we win the elections, I think harmony will continue.” More

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    Sri Lanka central bank cuts statutory reserve ratio by 200 bps

    COLOMBO (Reuters) – The Central Bank of Sri Lanka has cut the statutory reserve ratio for commercial banks by 200 basis points to 2%, effective Aug. 16, it said on Wednesday.The decision was taken to inject liquidity into the banking system and further reduce the market liquidity deficit on a permanent basis, the bank said in a statement.The move is expected to inject about 200 billion rupees ($625 million) into the domestic money market and further reduce interest rates, it said. “This was very unexpected but the central bank has been expressing slowness in the decline of interest rates. This measure will address that,” said Dimantha Mathew, head of research, First Capital. Encouraged by a steep drop in inflation, which hit 6.3% last month, the central bank cut policy rates by 450 basis points in June and July.Yield rates on government securities, currently at 13%-14%, are expected to drop to 11% for one year and 12%-13% for longer term five- and ten-year bonds, analysts said. Cheaper lending rates will also boost sluggish growth.”The central bank was also under pressure with the slowness of economic recovery, so this addresses the growth issue rather than anything else,” Mathew added. Sri Lanka’s economy contracted by 7.8% last year and is expected to shrink 2% in 2023. The monetary authority had earlier warned it would also take administrative steps to push down interest rates if commercial banks were slow to pass on the rate cut to the market but has not given a timeline.The central bank raised rates by a record 950 bps last year to tame surging inflation and by 100 bps on March 3 as the country battled its worst financial crisis in decades. More

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    Nvidia drops new AI chip expected to cut development costs

    The company said its next-generation GH200 Grace Hopper Superchip is one of the first to be equipped with an HBM3e processor, and is designed to process “ the world’s most complex generative AI workloads, spanning large language models, recommender systems and vector databases.”Continue Reading on Coin Telegraph More

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    Bitstamp to suspend trading of major altcoins for US users

    According to the Aug. 8 announcement, trading of the seven aforementioned cryptocurrencies will soon become unavailable for trading for U.S. customers due to “recent developments.” While the firm did not specify the reason for their suspension, all seven tokens are alleged by the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) to be unregistered securities in its complaints against cryptocurrency exchanges Binance and Coinbase (NASDAQ:COIN). Bitstamp wrote: Continue Reading on Coin Telegraph More

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    Costs from supply chain disruptions drop by over 50% but headwinds remain -survey

    Disruptions led to an average $82 million in annual losses per company last year in key industries like aerospace, compared with $182 million in 2021, and $184 million in 2020, supply- chain risk management company Interos told Reuters ahead of publication. In the latest report, Interos surveyed 750 companies with annual revenues between $500 million and $50 billion from energy, financial services, oil and gas, healthcare, government and aerospace. “The key takeaway is that people recognize it’s better than it was, but it will not go back to the way that it was in 2019,” said Interos industry analyst Tim White. Labor and raw material constraints, as well as unforeseen disruptions remain supply chain headwinds, White said. Executives were surveyed in the U.S., Canada and the UK and Ireland. More

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    Struggling Chinese graduates return to hometowns as job market sags

    BEIJING (Reuters) -A growing number of Chinese graduates are abandoning the bright lights of the country’s mega-cities, with state media reporting almost half are returning to their hometowns within six months of graduation amid a sagging job market.Feeling the pinch of rising housing costs and a slowing economy, the jobless graduates are forfeiting cities that have traditionally provided a stepping stone to middle-class wealth. To save money, some have even resorted to sharing a bed with a stranger.China’s youth jobless rate jumped to a record 21.3% in June as offers during the traditional job-hunting season proved limited as the economy struggled and regulatory clamp-downs left the property, tech and education sectors bruised.In June, a statistics bureau official said that more than 6 million young people were unemployed.Some 47% of graduates returned home within six months of graduation in 2022, up from 43% in 2018, state-run China News Service reported on Tuesday, citing a private sector survey.The numbers varied by region, with 59% of graduates in the well-developed east heading home. That compared to 44% in the west and just 24% in the northeast rust belt.Also pushing the young to return home were soaring rents. Among China’s biggest first-tier cities, rents in Beijing climbed 5% from December to June followed by 2.8% gains in Guangzhou and Shenzhen, according to state-run Xinhua news agency.’SEEKING BEDMATES’Not everyone is giving up.After sending 10 copies of her resume to financial companies each month, Joyce Zhang, a 2022 graduate with a masters degree in financial engineering, said she had still not found a job in Beijing but was not going home yet.”I’ve considered going back to Inner Mongolia to work, as the financial sector is not doing good recently. But I guess I still want to give it a try,” Zhang told Reuters.Zhang’s parents are paying her monthly rent of 2,600 yuan ($361) for a 12-square-metre (129-square-foot) room with a shared kitchen and bathroom.Policymakers have rolled out measures to support youth seeking work and rental housing, with some more creative than others.A district in Hangzhou in eastern Zhejiang province offers free rent for eligible people in a nursing home, as long as they spend 10 hours or more a month with the elderly and pay a 300 yuan management fee.To keep costs down as they stay longer in hope of finding a job, some young mega-city drifters even share their beds with strangers. On China’s Instagram-like Xiaohongshu and WeChat groups, “seeking bedmates” posts have become more common.One such post was looking for a roommate to share one bed in a room “with a huge balcony” in Beijing. The rental fee: 750 yuan ($104) per month.($1 = 7.2004 Chinese yuan renminbi) More