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    How high will rates go?

    The inflation figures the UK reported on Wednesday were not just objectively bad, with prices rising just as fast as a month before.They also come at a supremely sensitive time, with the Bank of England meeting to decide interest rates and mortgage costs an issue of nationwide concern. If the central bank is true to its word, it is bound to raise rates on Thursday. The only question is how much higher they have to go.The BoE said after its meeting on May 11 that the Monetary Policy Committee would increase the cost of borrowing further, “if there were to be evidence of more persistent [inflationary] pressures”.According to almost all economists, that test has been passed. Since the meeting in early May, official figures for April showed a sharp rise in core inflation — which excludes items such as food and energy where prices are generally more volatile — from 6.2 per cent to 6.8 per cent. The measure then rose further in May to 7.1 per cent. Over the same period, core inflation was flat or declining in 28 of the 35 countries tracked by the Financial Times.The BoE had not expected a significant rise in such underlying measures of inflation and it thought the headline rate would drop to 8.3 per cent by May. In the event, it remained at 8.7 per cent.Even more troubling for the BoE are signs that wages and prices are rising in tandem, making inflation harder to eradicate. The latest annual regular wage growth of 7.2 per cent was far above the level that the BoE thinks consistent with meeting its 2 per cent inflation target. With productivity growing at best at 1 per cent a year, wage growth will need to drop to about 3 per cent before the BoE feels comfortable with persistent inflationary pressures. The new information since the MPC’s last meeting means the BoE will need a tough message on Thursday, economists said. Martin Beck, chief economic adviser to the EY Item Club, said, “The MPC’s criteria for further rate rises appears to have clearly been met,” adding that a half point rise on Thursday was “now not out of the question”.

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    Economists generally think the BoE will raise rates by a quarter point this week but might opt for a larger rise in August, bringing the benchmark rate from 4.5 per cent now to 5 or 5.25 per cent by midsummer. Such is the seriousness of the UK’s plight that some central bank watchers think the BoE will have to be much more forceful, at least with its communication on Thursday. Krishna Guha, vice chair of Evercore ISI, said that the BoE now had to “stamp out” the second-round effects of a ratchet between higher wages and prices that was “uncomfortably visible in the data”.Although he said the BoE might not ultimately need to raise rates higher than 5.25 per cent, he argued that the central bank should make it clear it was going to squeeze the economy hard in the months ahead to prevent inflation sticking at high rates even longer. Financial markets are suggesting an even tougher path ahead than economists. Traders expect interest rates to climb to 6 per cent by the end of the year before they begin to fall back. One problem with such predictions is that neither economists nor financial markets have been correct so far in this inflationary cycle.

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    Both groups have substantially revised higher their predictions of the peak interest rate over the past 18 months. At the start of 2022, traders thought interest rates would peak at 1.25 per cent and a year ago they expected the cost of borrowing would not rise above 3.5 per cent. With inflation more ingrained into daily life in the UK than in the US or the eurozone, rates are now expected to stay higher than elsewhere. UK interest rates are now forecast to rise above those in the US later this year. For the 7.5mn households with a mortgage, the interest rate outlook is turning into what politicians are calling a “ticking time bomb”, because most face large increases in repayments as their fixed-rate deals come to an end. Some 1.6mn who need to move to a new fixed rate in 2024 will face increased payments averaging £2,900 a year, according to the Resolution Foundation, a think-tank. The BoE is aware of the hardship caused by interest rates, which squeeze the economy until households cannot afford to spend as much or will not accept price rises in shops. Catherine Mann, the MPC member who has been most concerned about high inflation, maintains this is the necessary process of bringing inflation down towards reasonable levels. Speaking to MPs last month, she said the BoE needed to make life sufficiently tough so that consumers prevented companies raising prices. “[Inflation] becomes a reinforcing dynamic until consumers boycott and say, ‘I cannot’, because of the purchasing power or cost of living, or, ‘I will not pay that high price’,” Mann added. The danger of a rapid further rise in interest rates, however, is that the BoE goes into overkill mode, creating a recession and more pain than is necessary. That point is difficult to judge in advance because the effects of interest rates on inflation are generally thought to take at least 18 months to work through the system. So far, the evidence from the BoE’s own forecasts on the persistence of inflation is that it has done too little too late to control inflation. That means it has a more difficult inflation problem to resolve than it and most analysts previously thought. More

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    Sunak’s election strategy under threat as economic gloom intensifies

    Chancellor Jeremy Hunt on Wednesday promised to squeeze “every last drop of high inflation out of the economy”, but that arduous task could put a serious dent in the Conservative party’s strategy for a 2024 general election.Hunt is under pressure from Tory MPs to deliver significant tax cuts in next year’s spring Budget, in a signal to voters that better times are around the corner.But if inflation is still high and the Bank of England is trying to cool an overheating economy next spring, tax cuts could be economically reckless.Hunt acknowledged the risks on Wednesday, as he responded to official data showing UK inflation static at 8.7 per cent, insisting that curbing price growth came before cutting taxes.Asked about tax cuts, he said: “The way to grow the economy, the way to give ourselves more headroom, to spend more on public services like the NHS, to bring down the tax burden, is to tackle inflation. “Inflation is the biggest, the most invidious tax rise the British people are facing right at the moment because it’s eroding the value of their weekly, monthly salaries. So that is our primary priority.” Rishi Sunak, who has pledged to halve inflation to about 5.5 per cent by the end of the year, will face questions about the government’s strategy at prime minister’s questions in the House of Commons on Wednesday.Many economists thought Sunak had set a modest target when he promised in January to halve inflation, although it appears harder to meet now. International economic bodies have previously forecast that he will hit his target.The high level of public debt, with the UK debt-to-gross domestic product ratio exceeding 100 per cent on Wednesday for the first time since 1961, is another constraining factor for the government.Analysts said the worse than expected state of the public finances cast doubt on Hunt’s ability to make big pre-election tax cuts while adhering to his fiscal rules.Hunt has promised the government will “stick to its guns” on fighting inflation, but if that means the BoE has to push the economy into a recession in election year, it will present a big political challenge.So far there has been little public or private criticism by senior Tory MPs of the BoE and its handling of inflation, in spite of the central bank admitting it needs to look again at its forecasting models. The bank’s Monetary Policy Committee is expected to raise interest rates again on Thursday.However, former Conservative minister Jacob Rees-Mogg said BoE governor Andrew Bailey should take “primary responsibility for the bank’s failure on inflation”, adding the MPC took its lead from him. “When Andy Haldane warned, as the bank’s chief economist, that inflation was not a blip the governor ignored him and now interest rates are going up more than would have been necessary,” added Rees-Mogg.The Labour party published analysis on Wednesday showing how the average household in the UK is paying more than £1,000 a year more for food this year than in 2020-21. “This Tory government can’t get a grip of this problem because they are the problem,” said shadow chancellor Rachel Reeves.Labour’s strategy is to try to draw a link between inflation and the rising cost of mortgages now with the chaos of Liz Truss’s shortlived government last year, which culminated in her “mini” Budget. “Thirteen years of the Tories and their disastrous mini-Budget are damaging our economic security and leaving families worse off,” said Reeves.“We need a more secure economy, more secure family finances and a plan to help us grab hold of the opportunities before us.” More

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    Vitalik Buterin Releases Fundamental New Text About Ethereum’s Future

    Buterin’s writings outline two major issues. First, as users begin to hold assets across various L2s and L1s, a method is needed for users to change their access keys across multiple accounts without the need for a high number of transactions. Secondly, Buterin notes the need to handle counterfactual addresses; these are addresses not yet registered on-chain, but they need to securely hold funds.Source: Vitalik ButerinTo address these issues, Buterin proposes a unique architecture known as asset/keystore separation. Under this model, users would maintain a keystore contract that houses their verification key and the rules for its modification. In addition, wallet contracts on L1 and several L2s would read cross-chain to fetch the verification key.Two implementations of this system are proposed. The “light version” would necessitate each wallet storing the verification key locally and updating it with a cross-chain proof of the keystore’s current state. The “heavy version” would require cross-chain proof for each transaction, making keystore updates cheaper but raising per-transaction costs.Buterin identifies five types of proof schemes that could be used, ranging from Merkle proofs to Verkle proofs, each with its own strengths and weaknesses. Importantly, he emphasizes the need for cross-chain proofs, which should be highly .In the long term, the aggregation of proofs through bundling operations submitted by users can help reduce costs. Additionally, Layer 2 solutions should minimize the latency of reading the Layer 1 state. Wallets can also be placed on systems with lower Ethereum connections, such as Layer 3s or separate chains. However, the keystore should be kept either on Layer 1 or on high-security zero-knowledge rollup Layer 2s.According to Buterin, right now, Ethereum is actively moving toward better cross-chain interactions, asset/keystore separation and a stronger focus on privacy.This article was originally published on U.Today More

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    Binance Netherlands exit — Dutch central bank says registration failings are confidential

    On June 16, Binance announced it would terminate its services in the Netherlands with immediate effect, having failed to get the all-clear from De Nederlandse Bank (DNB). From July 17, Dutch customers will only be able to withdraw assets from the platform, while trading and deposits were stopped on the date of the announcement.Continue Reading on Coin Telegraph More

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    US lawmakers introduce National AI Commission Act

    The bill’s primary objective revolves around establishing regulations in the AI industry. The act comes hot on the heels of consumer protection groups in the European Union (EU) urging regulators to conduct investigations on AI models behind popular chatbots. Continue Reading on Coin Telegraph More

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    UK government debt surpasses GDP for first time in 62 years

    UK debt has risen above 100 per cent of gross domestic product for the first time since 1961 after public sector borrowing doubled in May.The Office for National Statistics on Wednesday said net government debt hit 100.1 per cent of GDP last month, the first time the figure exceeded 100 per cent since March 1961.The rise came after public sector net borrowing reached £20bn for May, £10.7bn more than in the same month last year, largely because of the cost of social security benefits and energy support schemes.This was the second-highest figure for borrowing in May since monthly records began in 1993 and was higher than the £19.5bn forecast by economists polled by Reuters, as well as the £18.3bn expected by the Office for Budget Responsibility, the UK fiscal watchdog.Borrowing in the financial year to May 2023 was £42.9bn, £19.6bn more than in the same two-month period last year and £2.1bn higher than forecast by the OBR.“May’s poor public finances figures cast further doubt on the chancellor’s ability to unveil big pre-election tax cuts while still meeting his fiscal rules,” said Ruth Gregory, economist at Capital Economics, referring to UK chancellor Jeremy Hunt.The ONS reported that in May “the additional costs of the energy support schemes and increases in both benefit payments and staff costs all increased public sector spending”.It also showed that last month saw the lowest year-on-year increase in government receipts in any month since March 2021.Samuel Tombs, economist at Pantheon Macroeconomics, said a sharp deterioration in the outlook for debt interest payments following a recent surge in government bond yields “suggests that the chancellor will not have scope to cut taxes before the next general election, which must be held by January 2025”.

    He calculated the OBR would revise up its forecast for debt interest payments by about £39bn in 2024-25 and about £17bn in five years’ time, based on the current level of gilt yields and market expectations for interest rates.Hunt said the government had “taken difficult but necessary decisions to balance the books in order to halve inflation this year, grow the economy and reduce debt”. Separate ONS data released on Wednesday showed inflation failed to decline as expected and remained at 8.7 per cent last month. Michal Stelmach, senior economist at KPMG UK, said with a general election on the horizon, “finding a sustainable solution to balance the books amid new election pledges will undoubtedly be a tricky task for the government in the months ahead”. More