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    Price of AXS Rests on a Key Support Level as Bears Step In

    According to the market tracking website CoinMarketCap, Axie Infinity (AXS) emerged as one of the few cryptocurrencies that witnessed a price increase in the past day. At press time, AXS was trading at $6.91 following a rise of 2.78%.This indicated that AXS was closer to its daily high of $7.13 than its 24-hour low of $6.54. The price surge has also allowed AXS to strengthen its position against the market leaders, Bitcoin (BTC) and Ethereum (ETH), by approximately 4.62% and 4.53% respectively.Despite this recent price upturn, AXS’s weekly performance remained in the red at -4.79%. However, the altcoin had experienced a significant surge in its 24-hour trading volume, reaching $88,984,466 – marking a jump of over 170% over the last day.4-hour chart for AXS/USDT (Source: TradingView)From a technical perspective, the altcoin’s price was able to break above the resistance level at $6.85 earlier today and flip it into support. During the same 4-hour cycle, AXS attempted to do the same with the next resistance level at $7.11 and was able to reach a high of $7.20, but closed the 4-hour candle back below the mark.At press time, there was a bullish flag that was about to trigger on AXS’s 4-hour chart, with the 9 EMA line looking to cross bullishly above the 20 EMA line. Should this cross happen within the next 24 hours, the crypto’s price will most likely have the momentum needed to flip the aforementioned $7.11 resistance into support.One thing to note, however, was that the RSI line on the 4-hour chart was bearishly sloped towards oversold territory. If the RSI line crosses below the RSI SMA, before the end of today’s trading session, it could result in AXS’s price dropping below the recently-flipped level at $6.85.Disclaimer: The views and opinions, as well as all the information shared in this price analysis, are published in good faith. Readers must do their own research and due diligence. Any action taken by the reader is strictly at their own risk. Coin Edition and its affiliates will not be held liable for any direct or indirect damage or loss.The post Price of AXS Rests on a Key Support Level as Bears Step In appeared first on Coin Edition.See original on CoinEdition More

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    DBRS Morningstar puts U.S. triple-A rating on downgrade warning

    “The Under Review with Negative Implications reflects the risk of Congress failing to increase or suspend the debt ceiling in a timely manner,” DBRS said in a statement.”If Congress does not act, the U.S. federal government will not be able to pay all of its obligations.” More

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    7 ChatGPT plugins to enhance productivity

    Plugins are software components or extensions that provide an existing software application with additional capabilities. By offering extra tools, functions or integrations, they are intended to improve the functionality and features of the main software. The functionality of the primary software can be expanded by installing or activating plugins, which are frequently made by outside developers to suit the needs or preferences of the user. Here are seven noteworthy plugins:Continue Reading on Coin Telegraph More

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    Celsius Network Paves Way for New Beginnings with Fahrenheit LLC

    In a decisive turn in its bankruptcy proceedings, Celsius Network LLC has selected Fahrenheit, LLC to be the victorious bidder. This follows a competitive court-supervised auction, where Fahrenheit emerged as the chosen manager of a new entity, set to be entirely owned by Celsius’ creditors.Fahrenheit, a consortium comprised of US Bitcoin Corp., Arrington Capital, Proof Group, Steven Kokinos, and Ravi Kaza, will take the reins and infuse the necessary capital, management acumen, and technological expertise to steer the new company known as NewCo.One of the primary highlights of the associated Chapter 11 plan is a substantial distribution of Celsius’ liquid cryptocurrency to its account holders, an event slated to happen as soon as practically possible after the plan’s effective date. Additionally, the plan lays out provisions for settlements with the Custody and Withhold groups, illustrating a comprehensive approach to recompense.Further, the Chapter 11 plan also proposes the establishment of NewCo. This new, publicly traded company will manage a range of Celsius’ illiquid assets, including its institutional loan portfolio, mining business, and alternative investments. Notably, Celsius’ account holders will retain 100% ownership of the new equity in NewCo, although this is subject to dilution by the equity allocated to Fahrenheit as part of their management fees.The deal also includes plans to revitalize Celsius’ currently dormant mining operations, with the winning bid offering conditions that would enable immediate reactivation of the firm’s mining rigs. NewCo will also be tasked with the gradual expansion of this mining business, potentially providing an additional revenue stream for the company.In the meantime, the crypto community has shown an outpouring of gratitude towards Simon Dixon, whose “stalking horse” bid is believed to have increased the recovery for creditors by hundreds of millions. Twitter users have been expressing their heartfelt thanks and deep appreciation for Dixon’s work​​.The post Celsius Network Paves Way for New Beginnings with Fahrenheit LLC appeared first on Coin Edition.See original on CoinEdition More

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    DeSantis Promises to Protect Bitcoin and other Cryptocurrencies

    Ron DeSantis, the Floridan Republican Governor, and the US Presidential candidate advocated safeguarding Bitcoin, assuring to protect the rights of individuals to hold and trade cryptocurrencies if he is elected as the US President.During a Twitter space with the American entrepreneur Elon Musk and the venture capitalist David Sacks, DeSantis promised more than 520,000 live audiences to support them hold their every right for being a crypto trader, adding that crypto is a case of civil liberties. He affirmed that he would “protect the ability to do things like Bitcoin,” as a President.DeSantis strongly criticized the US regulators who restrict the development of digital currencies, claiming:As a governor, DeSantis has proposed to ban the central bank digital currencies (CBDCs) to protect consumers. According to DeSantis, CBDCs would hinder innovation and promote authoritarian surveillance.The stringent rules of US regulators have been long known to suffocate the crypto interest of investors. In a recent interview, Michael Saylor, the co-founder of MicroStrategy, said that the treatment of Bitcoin as an indefinite and intangible asset is a drawback of the conservative regulatory system.The tech-related Twitter account Moe, retweeted the words of DeSantis:Moe’s tweet concentrated on the Presidential candidate’s criticism of President Joe Biden’s regime which deliberately controls Bitcoin, accusing that if the administration continues for another four years, “they’ll probably end up killing it [BTC]”.The post DeSantis Promises to Protect Bitcoin and other Cryptocurrencies appeared first on Coin Edition.See original on CoinEdition More

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    Ripple CEO Brad Garlinghouse Expects SEC Lawsuit Verdict Within Weeks

    Brad Garlinghouse, the man behind enterprise blockchain solution firm Ripple, expects a resolution in the controversial lawsuit filed by the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) within the next few weeks. Garlinghouse’s ETA on the resolution presents an expedited timeline as compared to the community sentiment, which estimated that a verdict may take months.Garlinghouse’s comments came during an interview with Mukaya Panich, the CEO of SCB 10X. SCB 10X is currently hosting its 4th Annual DeFi and Web3 Virtual Summit, featuring industry leaders like Circle Chief Jeremy Allaire, Arbitrum CEO Steven Goldfeder, Chainalysis CEO Michael Gronager, and Curve co-founder Michael Egorov.When asked about the ongoing battle with the SEC, Brad Garlinghouse revealed that he expects a decision within weeks and not months. The Ripple CEO’s estimation of a resolution is based on the recent decision of the overseeing judge to deny the securities regulator’s motion to seal the infamous Hinman documents, which Garlinghouse believes is an indicator of the court’s sentiment.The Hinman documents are internal communications and speeches related to William Hinman, the SEC’s former Director of Corporation Finance, who stated in 2018 that Ethereum is not a security. The SEC has made several attempts to seal these documents, given the precedent they may set in the ongoing lawsuit against Ripple.Brad Garlinghouse also accused the SEC and the Biden administration of putting politics ahead of smart policy, leading to crypto entrepreneurs and innovation moving out of the United States. The Ripple CEO stated that the regulatory landscape in the U.S. is part of the reason why most of his firm’s clients are not from the U.S.The post Ripple CEO Brad Garlinghouse Expects SEC Lawsuit Verdict Within Weeks appeared first on Coin Edition.See original on CoinEdition More

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    The stark ‘de-risking’ choice facing economies

    For decades, I have argued that the US dollar will maintain its position as the predominant currency in the world economy. This remains the case today. There is no other currency — physical or virtual — able to replace the dollar at the centre of the international monetary system.However, the global influence of the dollar is facing several non-economic challenges, despite its continued status as the world’s “reserve currency”. This is a consequence of an increasingly fragmented international economic system. National security and geopolitics are supplanting economics in shaping national and international interactions.Slowly and surely, countries will now be pushed towards choosing between two strikingly divergent paths: collaborate more to strengthen multilateralism and its ruled-based framework, or embrace economic decoupling as an inevitable accompaniment to greater risk mitigation by individual states.The role of the dollar as a reserve currency has long been supported by three US attributes: its status as the world’s largest economy, the depth and breadth of its financial markets, and the predictability stemming from institutional maturity and respect for the rule of law.By adopting the dollar as a medium of exchange and as a store of value, other countries have achieved significant efficiency gains while affording the US the ability to enjoy what former French president Valéry Giscard d’Estaing famously described in the 1960s as an “exorbitant privilege” — essentially, greater power to exchange its own currency for goods and services from other countries while having access to a larger pool of low-cost financing.It is part of an implicit contract: America benefits in return for responsibly managing the system. Yet the latter aspect of the contract has been challenged in the past 15 years by the 2008 global financial crisis that originated in the US and the sudden imposition of trade tariffs in 2017.While these events shook the dominance of the dollar, they did not fundamentally undermine it due to what can be described as the “cleanest dirty shirt syndrome”: the dollar may not be a pristine reserve currency but it is still considered cleaner than any other currency for this role.Over the past two years, this situation has become notably trickier because of the US Federal Reserve’s mishandling of the interest rate hiking cycle and the growing emphasis on resilience in economic and business strategies. Rather than seeking to replace the dollar outright, there is now a step up in efforts to build pipes around it in the world’s trading and payment infrastructures.China has maintained its leading role in this, strengthening initiatives to create new regional and global institutions, expanding the use of its own currency in bilateral payments and lending agreements, and revamping its Belt and Road Initiative. But it is not just China.The tough sanctions imposed on Russia have helped spur greater country interest in arrangements that bypass the dollar. Additionally, more nations are starting to perceive it as feasible to reduce their reliance on the US currency over time. They are looking at how Russia has reorientated its trade and substituted for the dollar in both its export and import transactions, albeit in cumbersome and costly ways.In the face of these developments, the US and its allies essentially have two options. They can work collectively to revamp multilateralism in an inclusive manner that secures buy-in from what Goldman Sachs’ Jared Cohen refers to as the “geopolitical swing states”. This would include modernising the governance, representation and operations of the IMF and World Bank. Or they can choose to accept the short-term costs and uncertainties associated with the decoupling needed to properly de-risk. The notion of “de-risking, not decoupling” advanced last weekend by the G7 may appear appealing, but it is likely to result in an unstable middle ground rather than a viable new equilibrium.From an economic perspective, a more inclusive multilateralism supported by a robust rule-based system undoubtedly offers greater benefits compared with the alternatives. However, it is increasingly evident that economics no longer holds the reins in driving the process of trade and international finance. There has been a fundamental shift in the relationship between economics on the one hand, and the combined forces of national security, politics and geopolitics on the other.It is an inversion that now encourages both the de-risking and the decoupling of cross-border supply chains and cross-border payments, and it is one that the secularly weakened multilateral system cannot effectively counter without a new major effort. More

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    The other economic security threat from China

    Governments on both sides of the Atlantic have resolved that they will not let their economic relations with China become — or remain — a geopolitical dependency that Beijing could use for its own strategic purposes. While this fear had been growing for years, helped along nicely by an increasingly unabashed Chinese openness that economic dependencies on it were precisely what it was seeking, Russian president Vladimir Putin’s weaponisation of energy demonstrated how real the risk was. That political shock is a main driver of global politics today, as the latest G7 summit shows. That is despite Europe’s surprisingly creditable performance in weaning itself off Russian gas at much less economic cost than many had feared — including in Germany, as I highlighted in my column this week.Western companies, however, are starting to squeal. A striking example is Nvidia, the US chipmaker that is a global leader in AI-suitable semiconductors. In an interview with the FT, chief executive Jensen Huang warned that US policies to limit US chip sales to China threatened “enormous damage to US companies” because it removed the incentive to invest in capacity:“If the American tech industry requires one-third less capacity [due to the loss of the Chinese market], no one is going to need American fabs [semiconductor factories], we will be swimming in fabs . . . If they’re not thoughtful on regulations, they will hurt the tech industry.”The importance of the Chinese market is front and centre of European business leaders’ minds too. In another FT interview, the chief executive of industrial conglomerate Siemens said that it was “not an option” to lose Chinese market share, which accounts for 13 per cent of the group’s total revenues. Even as his company is scouring south-east Asia to find alternative manufacturing locations, Roland Busch argues that sales to China drive its overall innovation and growth.No western companies better illustrate this dependence on China than Volkswagen Group, which makes half of its profits in the country. It is investing massive amounts in Chinese manufacturing operations in collaboration with Chinese partners, potentially including software company Huawei. The strategy is to produce cars “in China, for China”, which in the case of electric vehicles could well become producing cars in China for import into Europe. Many a business leader is watching both the size of China’s market and the growth of its own industrial companies and worry if they can afford not to try to embrace both as much as they can.It is understandable that executives of such companies look with trepidation at the thought of a “decoupling” between China and western economies. (Do read my colleague Peter Campbell’s excellent analysis of their conundrum.) But the more acute risk may be something close to the opposite of what they think, namely, that the Chinese economy is not all that it’s cracked up to be.This week, statistics showed that German exports to China in the first four months of this year had dropped 11.3 per cent on the previous year. Since the EU as a whole saw a small rise, that meant the German share of EU exports to China shrank. The reason could presumably be that Germany trades intensively in industrial goods where Chinese competitors are doing better (cars) or that were particularly hit by high energy prices (chemicals).But the bigger point applies to European and American companies in general: what if the Chinese market is not going to be as big as it was? It has become clear that the post-pandemic rebound in demand-driven growth that everyone expected when China lifted Covid-19 restrictions is not materialising. In addition, the long-term headwinds to China’s growth are making themselves felt: the population has peaked, the bill for bad investments in real estate is coming due and the country faces the familiar “middle income trap” — the difficulty of shifting from poor-to-middle-income economic growth based on adding more capital to middle-to-high-income economic growth based on greater productivity. A good summary of the pessimistic outlook is a note from Capital Economics, which points out that the demographic outlook has got a lot worse in just a few years. It estimates that China’s economy will never outgrow the US’s when measured at market exchange rate: the convergence will top out at 90 per cent of the US economy’s size in 2035. If so, much of the expected market growth at the root of the western companies’ angst about “missing out” on China may be illusory. Even some of the growth to date may have been based on illusory wealth.We don’t know the answer to this question. But surely it behoves western companies’ governments to think not just about the risks of untying themselves from a China that expands strongly, but also those of tying themselves to one that does not. What are those risks? Think of three different things you could mean by “depending” on the Chinese market. First, a western company could be making money from exporting things to China. Second, it could be making money from producing things in China for sale to that market (or indeed for export to other countries). Both of these create profits for the company, but only the former also employs people, pays salaries, invests physical capital and generates learning-by-doing in Europe or the US. The third dependence could be on technology. So far, this dependence has gone the other way: China has allowed western companies in on the condition that they share their technology with local joint venture partners. But in some areas where China is at the technological frontier — battery and EV technology may be one — it could be increasingly relevant, especially if western companies decide to put their research and development resources there. And in an indirect sense, a western company’s perceived need to succeed in China could motivate it to innovate more at home.In most of the public debate in Europe, the discussion seems to take for granted that we are talking about the first kind of relationship. It’s certainly the one that brings the most tangible benefits to the “home” economies. But conversely, it’s the one that makes you most dependent geopolitically, because the fallout from losing an export market would be felt so widely at home. In contrast, the second mode of “dependence” is really only a matter of money — which is important, for sure, but benefits a much smaller constituency at home (and big European and US companies have a global shareholder base anyway). But that also means that if politicians see straight, this is a lesser source of geopolitical dependency insofar as it should be politically less traumatic to take a hit to western companies’ operations “in China, for China”. As for the third “dependency”, so long as technology still flows mostly from the west to China, it is really just a way of deepening the other two kinds of dependencies.Politicians and their technocratic servants — and, above all, the populations they serve — would benefit from cutting through this fog and being clear about which companies “depend on China” and in which way. Losing a profit source is one thing; losing a lot of voters’ jobs and earnings is another. If a company’s “in China, for China” profits in effect cross-subsidise operations at home, that would be good to know. So here is a suggestion: you could enforce a clearer separation between the legal entities of big western companies’ China-based and home operations with strict transparency and publicity requirements for the financial flows and technological transfers/licensing between them. A bit like with big financial companies’ “living wills”, the idea would be to require companies to make plans for a restructuring that would split off their China operations entirely — that is to say, end common ownership, financial cross-subsidies and technology transfers. Knowing what this would do to the home operations’ finances and sales would be a great help in judging how vulnerable they are to a weaponisation of economic relations in a geopolitical crisis. And knowing this, in turn, would raise the pressure to reduce that vulnerability before it was exploited. Free Lunch readers on AIMany of you were unconvinced by my decidedly unpanicked assessment of artificial intelligence in last week’s Free Lunch. The main objection was that I underplay what is really new about AI — namely, that the technology becomes a decision-making subject in its own right. One reader took me to task for using the term “AI algorithm” since it doesn’t make sense to compare an impenetrable neural network with a decision rule that can transparently be broken into sequential steps. Point taken — I should really have said just “decisions taken by AI” (although I think it could still make sense to talk about AI algorithms in the sense of algorithms that require user input, and where that input is provided by AI instead of a human decision). But it doesn’t change my broader point about good policy, which I argued should ensure that any AI decision-making should be assigned to humans who can be held legally (and morally?) accountable for it. Rather than tell AI developers and company executives how they should design and use it, the prospect of jail time for harmful effects is more likely to instil caution. Other readablesThe German economy adapted much better to the loss of Russian gas imports than doomsayers had predicted, I point out in this week’s column. We should draw the broader lesson that the European economy is more adaptable than policymakers, and corporate lobbies, give it credit for.If we want to get serious about sanctions evasion, we need to crack down on secrecy jurisdictions, says the FT Editorial column.A very modest idea is making the rounds in the EU for letting Ukraine benefit from immobilised Russian assets: pass on profits from the securities settlement house Euroclear’s reinvestment of cash left idle by coupon payments and redemptions Russian owners have had to leave unclaimed because of sanctions.Numbers newsThe UK’s latest inflation numbers are terrible through and through.

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