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    Prosecutors will still consider Sam Bankman-Fried’s alleged campaign finance scheme at trial

    In an Aug. 8 letter to Judge Lewis Kaplan, U.S. Attorney Damian Williams said the Department of Justice (DoJ) plans to pursue seven charges against SBF in its trial scheduled to begin in October. Though the DoJ said it was “prevented by its treaty obligations to the Bahamas” from adding an eighth count to SBF’s indictment on violations of campaign finance law, prosecutors would consider evidence of the alleged scheme as part of an existing wire fraud charge. Continue Reading on Coin Telegraph More

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    CPI report may show uptick in US inflation — How will Bitcoin price react?

    For Bitcoin (BTC) and cryptocurrency investors, inflation has typically been viewed as a positive factor influencing the price, as evidenced by the previous all-time highs of $65,000 and $69,000 that occurred during a period of monetary expansion and increasing inflation in 2021. However, the current situation is different because inflation is making a comeback while the Federal Reserve has been effectively reducing liquidity in the system. As a result, the impact of inflation on cryptocurrencies remains uncertain.Continue Reading on Coin Telegraph More

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    US credit card debt tops $1 trillion, overall consumer debt little changed

    (Reuters) -Americans borrowed more than ever on their credit cards in the last quarter, the New York Federal Reserve Bank said on Tuesday, with balances surpassing $1 trillion for the first time even as overall household debt loads were largely unchanged.Credit card balances rose by $45 billion to $1.03 trillion in the second quarter, the regional Fed bank said in its latest quarterly household debt and credit report, reflecting robust consumer spending as well as higher prices due to inflation, researchers said. Household debt ticked up 0.1% to $17.06 trillion, as mortgage balances – the biggest portion, and typically the biggest driver, of overall household debt – were largely unchanged. Meanwhile, credit card delinquencies are at an 11-year high, as measured using a four-quarter average, the data showed. But the quarter-to-quarter trend appeared less alarming, with New York Fed researchers noting a leveling out near pre-pandemic levels in the most recent two quarters.”Despite the many headwinds American consumers have faced over the last year – higher interest rates, post-pandemic inflationary pressures, and the recent banking failures – there is little evidence of widespread financial distress for consumers,” New York Fed researchers wrote in a blog accompanying the data release. Though rising balances will challenge some borrowers, and student loan borrowers may be squeezed as student loan repayments resume this fall, they wrote, “household credit shows some early signs of stabilizing at pre-pandemic health, albeit with higher nominal balances.” Student loan balances declined by $35 billion to $1.57 trillion in the second quarter, the data showed. New York Fed researchers attributed the decline to the timing of the academic year, as well as to some small forgiveness programs kicking in. Mortgage originations increased to $393 billion in the April-June period, from a nine-year low of about $324 billion last quarter, the data showed. They remain much lower than the average in the first two years of the COVID-19 pandemic, reflecting the impact of the U.S. central bank’s aggressive interest rate hikes over the past 15 months. Overall mortgage balances ticked down to $12.01 trillion, from $12.04 trillion in the prior quarter, reflecting some changes in credit reporting that are expected to reverse next quarter, New York Fed researchers said. Auto loan balances continued their long-term increase, rising by $20 billion to $1.58 trillion in the second quarter, the data showed. Originations rose about 11% to $179 billion, reflecting the sharp rise in car prices; the number of newly opened loans remains below pre-pandemic levels, the report said. More

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    Futurama’s latest reboot takes aim at Bitcoin miners

    In the episode “How the West Was 1010001,” which was released on Hulu on Aug. 6, the main characters find themselves in debt to the Robot Mafia and are forced to journey west to “Crypto Country” — a parody on mining the materials needed to create Bitcoin in the literal Wild West. According to Futurama, not only is the price of BTC still volatile in the year 3023, but people travel in search of “cheap, filthy electricity” to continue to mine blocks.Continue Reading on Coin Telegraph More

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    Household credit card debt rose above $1 trillion in the second quarter, Fed says

    The regional Fed’s Center for Microeconomic Data said there was a slight uptick in overall household debt in the second quarter, climbing 0.1% from the first quarter of 2023 to a total of $17.06 trillion.Credit card balances rose by $45 billion in the second quarter, or 4.6% higher than the first quarter. “Credit card balances saw brisk growth in the second quarter,” said Joelle Scally, regional economic principal at the New York Fed’s Household and Public Policy Research Division. “And while delinquency rates have edged up, they appear to have normalized to pre-pandemic levels.”Credit card accounts expanded by 5.48 million to 578.35M, the report said. Aggregate limits on credit card accounts rose $9B and now total $4.6 trillion.Falling mortgage origination and slowing home prices meant that mortgage balances didn’t budge much from the first quarter, the Fed said, standing at $12.01 trillion by the end of June.Auto loan balances rose by $20B. More

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    Reddit community tokens soar on Kraken listing

    In an Aug. 7 announcement, Kraken announced the listing of Moons (MOON) and Brick (BRICK) for spot trading and perpetual futures. At the time of publication, users could only deposit the two tokens via the Arbitrum Nova network. Continue Reading on Coin Telegraph More

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    The west shouldn’t give up on ‘gentle commerce’ just yet

    One of the oldest and most persistent ideas of the western enlightenment is the civilising force of free economic exchange. The belief that trade and political concord reinforce one another — at times called doux commerce or “gentle commerce” — goes back at least as far as Montesquieu’s writings 300 years ago.This belief motivated some of the weightiest economic decisions of the past 50 years: Washington’s welcome of China into the World Trade Organization; Germany’s determination to tie itself to Russia in a relationship of energy-based interdependence; and the EU’s confidence that its granting of membership could turn poor, unstable neighbours at risk of authoritarianism into bulwarks of liberal democracy.In each case, an overarching confidence in the link between economic growth and political liberalism joined more selfish motives to tip the scales in favour of deeper economic ties.Granting China permanent market access while tying it into the global architecture of trading rules would, many thought, strengthen its reformers. Germany’s pipeline policy paired industrialists’ interest in cheap gas with the nobler justification of Wandel durch Handel, or “change through trade”: that Russia’s elites would conclude from economic rewards of ties with the west that they should emulate its example. The EU accession process demonstrated its power to drive liberalising reforms many times over since the 1980s.But in the past 20 years, the modern incarnation of the doux commerce thesis has taken some significant knocks. Far from “westernising” poorer, less democratic countries, today’s consensus is that economic integration undermined liberal democracy in the west while giving autocracies the added appeal of economic strength.The charge sheet looks damning enough. The “China shock” is blamed for hollowing out manufacturing and creating demoralised “left-behind” regions in the US and beyond. Since Xi Jinping rose to the top in Beijing, he has increased repression inside China and aggression outside, burying hopes for political liberalisation or support for the rules-based global order.Moscow’s brutal assault on Ukraine has put paid to Wandel durch Handel — and should have done so when Putin’s Russia first attempted to dismember Ukraine in 2014. The spell of EU integration has been broken, with not just prospective but current members, from Turkey to Hungary, turning their backs on pluralist liberalism. And through it all, the global financial crisis and its political aftermath undermined western countries’ credibility as examples of the notion that prosperity and liberal democratic governance go hand in hand.But look closer and the story these events tell is more complex, and more flattering for the old view of liberalism and prosperity’s codependence.Start with China. Expectations of a strong rebound once Beijing abandoned its repressive version of “zero Covid” have given way to economic pessimism. Waning growth prospects look increasingly like a consequence of Xi’s shift from a developmental to a security state. As Adam Posen highlights in an important new essay, the extreme arbitrariness of Beijing’s Covid policy “reinforced the sense among Chinese people that their jobs, businesses, and everyday routines remain at the mercy of the party”. Arbitrary political interventions kill the willingness to spend and invest in illiquid assets, as “risk aversion and greater precautionary savings act as a drag on growth, rather like what happens in the aftermath of a financial crisis”.Rather than disproving the old liberal belief, China increasingly looks like it was at most a temporary exception that confirms the rule.We also cannot dismiss the EU’s power to drive liberal reforms. In some cases it remains strong, most evidently in Ukraine where it has fuelled economic and governance reforms for a decade. In Hungary and Poland, the very fact of EU membership has restrained their authoritarian slide: just imagine what Viktor Orbán or Jarosław Kaczyński could have wrought had their countries been outside the bloc. As for Turkey, its liberalising era ended when it became clear EU membership was not in fact on offer, due to opposition from members such as France.Far from refuting claims of a link between liberal economic exchange and political liberalisation, these cases rather show that, over time, liberalism and prosperity decline (or hold up) together.If anything disproves the thesis, it would seem to be Russia — and other petrostates like Saudi Arabia. But recognise these for the special cases they are: not diverse webs of deepening economic exchange so much as monopolised supplies of essential inputs. The west’s mistake was not to believe in the power of doux commerce, but in seeing these ties as bona fide commerce rather than geostrategic shakedowns.Consider, too, how liberal democracies substituted for Russian energy in record time. In a vindication for the liberalism-prosperity link, their political system helped address economic emergencies when it mattered most.Besides, Russia has only begun to be tested by its far-from-complete economic isolation. To achieve the hoped-for political effects, it must be cut off more thoroughly and for longer. The west would do well to rediscover the patience and courage of its convictions. [email protected] More

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    Bank of England will get more power in regulating stablecoins

    The British government launched the consultation under the headline “Payments Regulation and the Systemic Perimeter” in 2022 to get market proposals on reforming the BoE payments perimeter, given the evolution of financial stability risks. Continue Reading on Coin Telegraph More