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    Grayscale resolves lawsuit with Fir Tree over proposed changes to Bitcoin Trust

    According to a July 11 announcement from Fir Tree, Grayscale agreed to provide additional documentation related to its Bitcoin Trust (GBTC) after Fir Tree filed a lawsuit in December 2022. The complaint against Grayscale aimed at having the asset manager stop plans to turn its GBTC trust into a spot exchange-traded fund (ETF) and provide documentation on its relationship with Digital Currency Group, Grayscale’s parent company.Continue Reading on Coin Telegraph More

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    Canada regulator proposes banks hold more capital to tackle mortgage risks

    Variable home loan rates have risen as the country’s central bank has hiked benchmark interest rate to a 22-year high of 4.75% in its bid to tame inflation. Some of Canada’s top lenders have given customers the option to extend their home loan amortization period beyond 30 years, while keeping their monthly repayment commitments the same, shielding them from a jump in borrowing costs. But higher overall debt load has got regulators worried. The Office of the Superintendent of Financial Institutions (OSFI) told Reuters in June that lenders should manage such risks as soon as possible.Proposed changes to the guidelines for capital adequacy requirements and mortgage insurer capital adequacy test “should encourage banks to lessen the number of mortgages that would otherwise go into negative amortization,” OSFI said on Tuesday.Negative amortization is a situation in which the amount that borrowers owe keeps rising as their payments are not enough to cover the due interest.More than 20% of the mortgage portfolio of the big six Canadian banks had a repayment period of over 30 years in the first quarter, according to Desjardins analyst Royce Mendes.If interest rates stay high over the next few years, as the central bank has warned, it would impede customers’ ability to service debt at higher rates during renewals. The regulator has sought feedback on its proposals by Sept. 1, and said the changes would not lead to an increase in monthly payments for consumers. More

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    Anthropic launches Claude 2 amid continuing AI hullabaloo

    According to a company blog post, Claude 2 shows improvements across nearly every measurable category. Perhaps most noteworthy among the differences between it and its predecessor is how the researchers discuss their work. Continue Reading on Coin Telegraph More

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    Marketmind: Markets upbeat, China cheer at last

    (Reuters) – A look at the day ahead in Asian markets from Jamie McGeever, financial markets columnist.The mood across Asia at the midpoint of the week is increasingly upbeat, as a growing consensus that the U.S. central bank is near the end of its policy tightening cycle continues to weigh on the dollar, improve sentiment, and lift asset prices.The Reserve Bank of New Zealand’s latest interest rate decision and Indian inflation figures are the main local set-piece events on Wednesday, while U.S. inflation later in the day will go a long way to setting the tone for the rest of the month.There also finally appears to be some good news from China. Figures on Tuesday showed surprisingly strong bank lending in June, helped by central bank efforts to support an economy that has struggled to rebound from pandemic restrictions as expected.Chinese regulators this week extended some policies in a rescue package introduced in November to shore up liquidity in the real estate sector.Global hedge funds added more Chinese stocks to their portfolios than they sold in recent days for the first time in seven weeks, Goldman Sachs (NYSE:GS) said in a report.Chinese stocks on Tuesday registered their best day in over a week, while the MSCI Asia ex-Japan index jumped 1.5% – its biggest rise in over a month and sixth biggest this year.On a micro level in Asia, shares of Taiwanese chipmaker Foxconn and Indian metals-to-oil conglomerate Vedanta (NYSE:VEDL) could be under the spotlight again after Foxconn pulled the plug on a $19.5 billion joint venture. Trading volume in Vedanta shares on Tuesday was the highest in seven weeks.On a macro level, the U.S. dollar’s weakness continues to help fuel the optimism across Asian markets. The dollar’s broad value has now fallen four days in a row, the longest losing streak since March.New Zealand’s central bank is expected to keep its cash rate – already at a 14-year high and the highest in the developed world – at 5.50% on Wednesday and leave it there for the rest of the year.It would be the first time the RBNZ has not raised rates at a policy meeting in nearly two years, and the pause would come a month after it was confirmed that the economy is in recession. But with inflation running well above target, rates markets are leaning toward one more 25 basis point hike by year end.Indian consumer price inflation, meanwhile, is expected to tick up to 4.58% in June from 4.25% in May, the lowest in more than two years.Here are key developments that could provide more direction to markets on Wednesday:- New Zealand interest rate decision- India inflation (June)- U.S. inflation (June) (By Jamie McGeever; Editing by Deepa Babington) More

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    Hunt orders ministers to find £2bn savings for public sector pay rises

    Jeremy Hunt has ordered ministers to find over £2bn of savings to fund 6 per cent public sector pay rises this year, as he prepares to hold crunch talks with Rishi Sunak on the matter.The chancellor has warned that he will not borrow more money to fund pay rises for police officers, teachers, nurses and other public sector workers, arguing it would fuel consumer price inflation, currently running at 8.7 per cent.Independent pay review bodies have recommended public sector awards of about 6 per cent for the 2023-24 pay round, well above the 3.5 per cent proposed by the government, creating a funding gap.Hunt’s edict has provoked a flurry in Whitehall to find savings, including reviewing capital programmes, with warnings from some ministers that the cuts would damage already-stretched public services.“The conversations are live and the bleeding stumps are out,” said one person close to the negotiations, referring to the habit of spending ministers to issue dire warnings of the consequences of cuts.Hunt and Sunak are expected to agree a strategy on public sector pay on Thursday after the prime minister returns from the Nato summit in Vilnius, government insiders said.New data on Tuesday showed that pay in the UK grew faster than expected and hit a record high in the three months to May, adding to pressure on the Bank of England as it tries to curb inflation.Employees’ regular average pay, which excludes bonuses, grew at an annual rate of 7.3 per cent in the three months to May, higher than the 7.1 per cent forecast by analysts polled by Reuters.Sunak and Hunt agreed to discuss the government’s response to the pay review bodies after digesting the new data, which has heightened official concern about wages fuelling inflation.Hunt told the Financial Times last week that the pay review process, which covers 2.5mn public sector workers, was a good one, adding: “We would want to go along with it in all but the most exceptional circumstances.”But he added: “If they’re funded in a way that puts additional demand into the economy at a time when there’s already too much demand, that only makes the battle against inflation harder.”

    Those briefed on the Whitehall negotiations said ministers have been asked to find savings of between £2bn-£3bn to fund the pay awards, to avoid the need for extra government borrowing.Hunt and Sunak will also have to weigh whether 6 per cent pay rises for teachers, nurses, doctors, dentists, prison officers, the police, armed forces and senior public officials is responsible in a high-inflation environment.Ministers have previously warned that public sector pay deals set a template for the corporate sector, but government insiders said “the main transmission mechanism” to higher inflation was through more borrowing.In any event, from March to May 2023 average regular pay growth for the private sector was 7.7 per cent, compared with 5.8 per cent in the public sector.Governments rarely reject the recommendations of the pay review bodies; doing so this year would only heighten tensions with public sector workers who are conducting a wave of strikes in protest at last year’s awards.On Monday, both Hunt and Andrew Bailey, Bank of England governor, warned at the annual Mansion House dinner in the City of London about the inflationary impact of high pay settlements.Sunak told reporters en route to Vilnius that he was determined to hold down borrowing, partly because interest rates were rising — pushing up government debt costs — and partly because it would fuel inflation.“Government should not fuel the fire by excessively borrowing at a time when that would make the situation worse,” he said, adding that tax cuts were off the agenda for now.“The number one priority right now is to reduce inflation and be responsible with government borrowing,” he said. “That takes precedence over everything else.” Meanwhile, the IMF, in a review of the UK economy, said on Tuesday that the country was “expected to avoid a recession in 2023” but there were “considerable risks in the period ahead”, including on pay. More

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    FTX claims portal becomes unavailable shortly after going live

    Many social media users reported the FTX claims portal went live on July 11, offering customers of the failed crypto exchange who had accounts with FTX, FTX US, Blockfolio, FTX EU, FTX Japan and Liquid the opportunity to access their account information and submit claims for consideration in the firm’s restructuring proceedings. According to FTX’s Kroll page, users had until Sept. 29 to submit claims.Continue Reading on Coin Telegraph More