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    Bitcoin hits more than 1-year high amid BlackRock ETF excitement

    (Reuters) -Bitcoin, the world’s largest cryptocurrency, hit a more than one-year high on Friday, capping a week of gains helped in part by BlackRock (NYSE:BLK)’s plans to create a bitcoin exchange-traded fund (ETF) despite heightened U.S. regulatory scrutiny on the digital asset sector.BlackRock, the world’s biggest asset manager, filed last week to launch iShares Bitcoin Trust, an ETF that would have Coinbase (NASDAQ:COIN) Custody as its custodian as well as offer institutional investors exposure to the cyptocurrency. Crypto exchange EDX Markets, backed by investment firms Charles Schwab (NYSE:SCHW), Fidelity and Citadel Securities, also announced earlier this week that it will allow trading on some cryptocurrencies.The moves have revived investor interest in cyptocurrencies, which have been in the doldrums after a series of crypto company meltdowns including the sudden collapse of exchange FTX late last year.Compounding negative sentiment has been increased regulatory scrutiny, including the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission’s move this month to sue crypto giants Coinbase Global and Binance, alleging violation of its rules. The pair deny the allegations. Bitcoin has gained nearly 25% in value since BlackRock’s filing. It rose as high as $31,458 on Friday, the highest level since June 7, 2022, and was last up 3.29% at $30,872. “The dark clouds overshadowing crypto have lifted in recent days amid a burst of institutional interest,” said Kate Laurence, general partner of Bloccelerate VC, which invests in crypto projects.”The likes of BlackRock, Charles Schwab, Fidelity and Citadel throwing their hats into the crypto ring is hugely significant because it shows that institutions are very serious about the space – despite the recent regulatory crackdown.” Investors piled into cryptocurrencies when interest rates were low, pushing the market to a peak value of $3 trillion in 2021. But they turned cautious as rates rose, with the value of the market now standing at around $1.24 trillion, according to CoinGecko data.Ethereum, the world’s second-largest cryptocurrency, has risen more than 16% since last week. It was up 1.63% at 1,903.20 on Friday.Some market-watchers said the SEC crackdown may be good for bitcoin, which is generally considered a commodity rather than a security, and therefore beyond the SEC’s remit. “The SEC lawsuit has created opportunities for robust, regulated players, so I’m cautiously optimistic that this BlackRock event will have some sustainability,” said Doug Schwenk, CEO of Digital Asset Research. More

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    Judge blocks Bankman-Fried’s attempt to obtain key documents in fraud prosecution: Report

    In a recent development, Bankman-Fried’s legal team approached the judge overseeing the case, urging the prosecution to hand over the documents obtained from Fenwick & West or to allow them to be obtained directly through a subpoena. However, U.S. District Judge Lewis Kaplan dismissed the request, calling it a “fishing expedition” that would not be justified.Continue Reading on Coin Telegraph More

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    Sequoia partner says investing in FTX was the right move: Report

    Speaking at Bloomberg’s Tech Summit, Lin said if he were tasked with evaluating FTX again for the first time, Sequoia would likely make the same investment decision. “I looked at the work we did in 15 different ways. […] We probably would have made the investment again,” Lin reportedly stated. Continue Reading on Coin Telegraph More

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    Dollar higher on safety bid as data spurs growth worries

    NEW YORK (Reuters) -The dollar rose against the euro on Friday after dismal business activity data from around the globe soured risk sentiment and as hawkish comments from central banks added to pressure on riskier currencies.U.S. business activity fell to a three-month low in June as services growth eased for the first time this year and the contraction in the manufacturing sector deepened, closely watched survey data out Friday showed.The overall picture, though, indicated U.S. economic growth ticked up a notch in the second quarter even as worries persist that the Federal Reserve’s aggressive interest rate increases over the past year will trigger a recession.Earlier in the session data showed euro zone business growth virtually stalled in June. A downturn in manufacturing deepened, while activity in the bloc’s dominant services sector barely expanded, as overall demand fell for the first time since January.”We’re starting to see signals from businesses that the demand is starting to ease up at the margin and that’s leading to recalibration of expectations of what future output looks like,” said Bipan Rai, North America head of FX strategy at CIBC Capital Markets.”I do think that the concern with the future outlook is weighing on risk appetite right now and the dollar is catching somewhat bid off of that,” Rai said.The euro fell 0.57% to $1.08925, a three-day low against the U.S. dollar. The dollar index, which measures the currency against six rivals, rose 0.49% to 102.89. Traders squaring books as the end of the month and the quarter nears was also likely supporting the U.S. currency, Rai said.Friday’s data arrived after rate hike surprises and hawkish comments from central banks globally which have renewed market fears that policymakers have further to go in tightening policy to tame inflation, even at the risk of tipping their economies into a recession. “After bigger than expected rate hikes in the UK and Norway yesterday, the markets are nervous about upside rate surprises, and that was helping the dollar overnight, even before we saw the European PMI data,” Kit Juckes, chief FX strategist at Societe Generale (OTC:SCGLY), said in a note.Fed Chair Jerome Powell said on Thursday the central bank would move interest rates at a “careful pace” from here, but ruled out interest rate cuts “happening any time soon.” Against the yen, the dollar was up 0.44% at 143.76 yen, its strongest level in more than seven months. The Japanese currency has come under renewed pressure as the Bank of Japan (BOJ) maintains an ultra-dovish stance.Data out on Friday showed that Japan’s core consumer inflation exceeded forecasts in May and an index excluding fuel costs rose at the fastest annual pace in 42 years, putting pressure on the BOJ to phase out its massive stimulus.The pound was down 0.30% on Friday at $1.271, on pace to finish the week down about 1%, its largest weekly loss in six weeks. The British currency has come under pressure from rising expectations the UK economy could slip into recession after the Bank of England on Thursday delivered an outsized rate hike in response to persistent inflation.The Australian and New Zealand dollars struggled on Friday as traders avoided riskier currencies.The Aussie fell 1.16% to $0.6678 and was headed for a weekly loss of nearly 3%, its worst week since late August. The kiwi slid 0.62% to $0.6139, down about 1.6% for the week.In cryptocurrencies, bitcoin rose 3.46% to a 1-year high of $30,924, on pace for a near 17% gain for the week, its best weekly gain since mid March, boosted by BlackRock (NYSE:BLK)’s plan to create a bitcoin exchange-traded fund. More

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    Forecasts show U.S. earnings decline in second quarter

    NEW YORK (Reuters) – Forecasts for second-quarter U.S. earnings still look gloomy after a much-better-than-feared first quarter season as the likelihood of further interest rate hikes this year creates more potential risks for companies.Analysts expect earnings for S&P 500 companies to fall 5.6% in the second quarter from a year ago, according to IBES data from Refinitiv.Year-over-year earnings rose 0.1% in the first quarter, based on data Friday, much better than the forecast for a 5.1% drop at the start of the reporting season. The improvement followed upbeat results from a host of big names including Microsoft Corp (NASDAQ:MSFT) and Apple Inc (NASDAQ:AAPL).Fourth-quarter 2022 earnings for S&P 500 companies declined 3.2%, so a first-quarter profit fall would have been a second straight quarterly decline, which some strategists call an earnings recession. The last one occurred when COVID-19 hit corporate results in 2020.The second-quarter season does not get rolling until the middle of July, but it is now becoming clearer the Federal Reserve likely has not reached the end of its tightening cycle.Fed Chair Jerome Powell said in remarks to lawmakers in Washington this week that the outlook for two more 25-basis-point rate increases are “a pretty good guess” of where the central bank is heading if the economy continues in its current direction.Other Fed officials have supported the view.After lifting rates by 5 percentage points since March 2022, the Fed this month took a breather to assess the effects of its actions.Higher interest rates mean higher borrowing costs for businesses and consumers, and investors have been worried that an extended tightening cycle could push the U.S. economy into recession. Other central banks, including the Bank of England this week, have hiked rates amid worries about global inflation.Some strategists are betting that U.S. earnings will hold up as long as employment does.”If you have full employment, that means the consumer, while they may shift their attitudes and pull back in certain areas, are still going to be participants in the economy,” said Oliver Pursche, senior vice president and advisor for Wealthspire Advisors in Westport, Connecticut.”As long as that holds true, corporate earnings are going to generally hold up better than bears and pessimists expect,” he said.”Is it going to be particularly strong? No. But that expectations are so low, I would say the surprise is more likely on the upside than the downside.”Walmart (NYSE:WMT) Inc in May raised its annual sales and profit targets thanks to resilient consumer spending.But other recent U.S. company outlooks suggest at least some pockets of problems.Package delivery firm FedEx (NYSE:FDX) this week posted disappointing quarterly earnings and said waning global demand is pressuring its profit margins.Also, Olive Garden parent Darden Restaurants (NYSE:DRI) delivered a disappointing annual profit outlook. Morgan Stanley (NYSE:MS) this week said it expects margin pressures due to an inventory glut for Nike (NYSE:NKE), which is due to report quarterly results June 29.”The market has been too hopeful the Fed can tame inflation, avoid a recession, and cut interest rates,” Nick Raich, CEO of The Earnings Scout, an independent research firm, wrote in a note this week. “S&P 500 EPS estimates and stock prices will need to reset lower.”The S&P 500 is down about 1% this week, but remains up more than 13% for the year to date. More

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    Commerzbank to book further provision for mBank after court ruling

    The new figure means that Commerzbank, which has extensive operations in Poland through its mBank, has provisioned or made payouts of more than 2 billion euros to deal with the issue. It had already warned that further provisions were likely.The bank said the figure would impact its second-quarter earnings but that it still expects a 2023 net profit “well above that of 2022”.The issue, which has affected banks across Poland, stems from more than a decade ago, when mortgage customers took out loans in Swiss francs to take advantage of low Swiss interest rates, only to face far higher costs when the value of the Polish zloty slumped.Polish courts have been deciding how the loans can be treated, including what banks can charge in interest for the loans, creating uncertainty for banks and their bottom lines.($1 = 0.9187 euros) More

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    Growth in business activity slows as central banks battle inflation

    Today’s top storiesUK banks agreed to a 12-month delay on home repossessions following a meeting with chancellor Jeremy Hunt. The country’s mortgage crisis was exacerbated yesterday by the Bank of England’s surprise 0.5 percentage point rise in interest rates to 5 per cent. Meanwhile, the BoE governor’s call for wage restraint has gone down like the proverbial lead balloon.Italy’s Eni agreed to buy private equity-backed Neptune Energy for $4.9bn in the largest cash deal in the European oil and gas sector for almost a decade.Siemens shares plunged 30 per cent as it scrapped its profit outlook for the year as problems mounted at its wind turbine unit Siemens Gamesa. For up-to-the-minute news updates, visit our live blogGood evening.Today’s “flash” estimates of business activity from global PMI surveys for June paint a picture of, at best, a slowing global recovery, and in the eurozone, a sharp slowdown.The composite PMI reading for the EU single currency bloc fell to a five-month low of 50.3, where 50 marks the dividing line between activity shrinking and expanding, damping hopes of an economic rebound after two quarters of mild recession.“This is a severe slowdown,” said Carsten Brzeski, an economist at Dutch bank ING. “It shows the ECB forecasts were utterly over-optimistic. We are clearly heading for another weak quarter, with a possible flirtation with recession again.” The biggest surprise was the sharp slowdown in services, one of the few positive areas for much of this year, although there was evidence that price pressures were cooling. The result could instil a note of caution in the European Central Bank about further interest rate rises following a “very likely” increase in July. The eurozone data knocked back stocks, leading European shares to their worst week since March as interest rate rises fuel fears of recession.A slowdown in the services sector was also evident in the UK as businesses raised prices. Data on Wednesday showed inflation stuck at 8.7 per cent in May, the fourth month in a row that prices have topped forecasts, with the “core” measure still increasing. The overall PMI score for the UK hit a three-month low of 52.8.In the US, the PMI reading also hit a three-month low of 53.0, highlighting a stuttering recovery. Manufacturing shrank while the service sector showed a slower, but still solid, upturn in output. Jobs growth, meanwhile, sank to the slowest since January.Elsewhere, Japan’s PMI hit a four-month low of 52.3, while Australia eked out growth with a score of 50.5.All of which adds up to one giant headache for the world’s central banks as they enter a new phase in their battle with inflation.Although headline figures have fallen back sharply in many economies, core inflation, which excludes volatile items such as energy and food, remains at or close to multi-decade highs, fuelling concern that policymakers will struggle to hit their targets without wiping out growth.“The next leg of the improvement in the inflation numbers is going to be harder,” said Carl Riccadonna, chief US economist at BNP Paribas. “It requires more pain, and that pain likely involves a recession in the back half of the year.” Need to know: UK and Europe economyInflation may be high but UK retail sales grew unexpectedly last month, boosted by spending on summer clothing and outdoor goods.There was more disappointing news from Germany, home of Europe’s largest property market, where house prices fell by a record 6.8 per cent in the first quarter.The EU agreed on an 11th package of economic sanctions against Russia including unprecedented new powers to punish countries suspected of helping Moscow evade existing restrictions.One of the last pipelines carrying Russian gas to Europe could be shut off by the end of next year when Ukraine’s supply contract with Gazprom expires, the Ukrainian energy minister told the FT. The route accounts for almost 5 per cent of Europe’s total gas imports.Turkey almost doubled its main interest rate from 8.5 per cent to 15 per cent, breaking with previous policies that had stoked inflation and sent foreign investors fleeing. Investors, however, remain sceptical.Need to know: Global economyThe World Bank will allow countries hit by disasters to pause loan repayments, in a win for a campaign led by Barbados prime minister Mia Mottley. Kenya’s president William Ruto called for the creation of a global green bank, separate from the World Bank and IMF, warning that traditional multilateral lenders were “hostage” to rich world interests and unable to solve the climate crisis. A Big Read details how the US quietly pressured discontented politicians and generals to respect last year’s Brazilian election victory of Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva over Jair Bolsonaro. Bolsonaro is facing a potential eight-year ban from office as a court decides whether he abused his presidential powers.Zambia is on the verge of a debt restructuring deal after years of delays. Africa’s second-biggest copper producer had been left in financial limbo since its 2020 default, unable to continue accessing a $1.3bn IMF bailout, as China and other lenders clashed over proposals to reduce the value of its debts. Guatemala votes for a new president on Sunday, but with several opposition candidates disqualified from standing, rights groups have warned that Central America’s largest economy is sliding towards authoritarianism.Need to know: businessA flurry of deals at the Paris Air Show have confirmed that the aviation industry is back in business after the pandemic although supply chain challenges remain.Microsoft began its court showdown with US regulators over its $75bn Activision deal. The Federal Trade Commission is blocking the deal pending the outcome of a separate antitrust challenge.A realignment of the container shipping business has important implications for the future pattern of globalisation. Our Big Read explains.

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    Harvard’s Hal Scott warned that investors were at risk because of a lack of regulation around the US crypto industry.The Church of England ditched oil majors from its endowment and pension funds over climate concerns.The City of London is planning to fast track applications to convert unused older offices to new uses to minimise the amount of “stranded assets” lying empty. Office demand in the central financial district is projected to grow by up to 2mn sq ft in the next decade, with fierce competition for buildings with the best facilities and environmental credentials.Science round-upThe EU plans to lift controls on some genetically modified crops to help farmers cope with climate change, a move likely to reignite a debate about the controversial techniques.Why are global sperm counts falling? Read our interview with Shanna Swan, the scientist who has been investigating the impact of chemicals on human fertility for decades.Synthetic embryos could shed light on infertility and pregnancy loss, but updated regulation is essential, says commentator Anjana Ahuja, who asks the question: Where does tissue end and life begin? Science editor Clive Cookson explains why marine scientists have for decades been drawn to the depths of the world’s oceans. US regulators are considering clearing a treatment for muscle-wasting disease Duchenne muscular dystrophy, despite lack of “unambiguous evidence” that it works.Scientists are trying to work out why increasing numbers of young people in the developed world are being diagnosed with cancer. An FT Big Read tries to uncover what’s going on.

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    Something for the weekendTry your hand at the range of FT Weekend and daily cryptic crosswords.Some good newsUN member states have adopted a landmark marine biodiversity agreement on the high seas following nearly two decades of negotiations.

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    A first step in repairing US-China ties

    The visit this week by Antony Blinken to China, the first by a US secretary of state to Beijing since 2018, represented an important moment for the world’s most fateful bilateral relationship. But although his talks yielded claims of “progress”, incidents that have followed it serve to underline that the US-China rivalry remains unchecked.The initial soundings out of Beijing were fairly positive. Xi Jinping, China’s leader, declared that the two sides “made progress and reached agreement on some specific issues”. Blinken’s five and a half-hour meeting with Qin Gang, China’s foreign minister, produced similarly upbeat readouts, with Qin saying Beijing was committed to a stable and predictable relationship. Blinken stressed the importance of “maintaining open channels of communication”.Such statements reflected the desire to stabilise the relationship after the US shot down an alleged Chinese spy balloon that flew over American airspace in February. US diplomatic efforts have included a secret visit to China in May by Bill Burns, CIA director.But since Blinken’s visit, several signs suggest that mutual suspicion remains undiminished. China responded with outrage after Joe Biden, the US president, called Xi a “dictator” shortly after Blinken left Beijing. Biden’s words were “extremely absurd and irresponsible”, China’s foreign ministry said. Blinken, for his part, raised concerns even before leaving Beijing about alleged Chinese electronic spying facilities in Cuba.These signals point to the extreme difficulties managing a relationship bedevilled by strategic competition over Taiwan, which China regards as part of its territory, and the Ukraine war, a theatre in which Beijing’s support for its “strategic partner” Russia puts it on the opposite side to the US-led Nato. So how should China and the US seek to prevent their relationship from further deteriorating in a way that could risk a horrific superpower conflict?The answers require honest appraisals, transparency from both sides and, where possible, a readiness to prize any small wins that can be made. In the first instance, Washington and Beijing should be clear that their main aim now is to prevent a bad relationship from becoming a catastrophic one — which means, quite simply, avoiding war. If there is an upside to the absence of bilateral trust, it is that both the US and China have an opportunity to recognise how dangerous their rivalry has become. The main task in this regard is for both sides to communicate clearly their strategic and military red lines. In the economic realm, the US should be much clearer about its “de-risking” strategy towards China. The Biden administration talks of a “small-yard, high-fence” policy in restricting trade and investment in sensitive areas — limiting the extent of such restrictions, but trying make them watertight. The difficulty is that many technologies have both civilian and military uses, and Beijing sees such efforts as aimed simply at holding back its development. The White House ought to publish a clear and comprehensive list of technologies to which it wants to restrict China’s access. Beijing is likely to denounce such a list but the removal of ambiguity will over time allow both sides to readjust. China and the US should not lose sight of the efficacy of “small wins”. There is, for instance, no humane reason for China to resist helping to restrict the trafficking in fentanyl and its precursors to the US, where fentanyl overdoses are a prime cause of untimely death.Blinken’s visit may not have yielded much in itself. But the fact it took place at all should be a starting point for renewed efforts by Washington and Beijing to stabilise a relationship that has been dangerously unravelling. More