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    Marketmind: Yen braces for Ueda’s BOJ debut

    (Reuters) – A look at the day ahead in Asian markets from Jamie McGeever.Amidst a deluge of economic indicators across the continent and a screeching U.S. tech sector rally that’s lifting global stock markets, all eyes in Asia will be fixed on one event Friday: the Bank of Japan’s policy meeting.Much has been written, discussed and speculated about Kazuo Ueda’s debut as new central bank chief, and the waiting is almost over. The most likely scenario is that he keeps monetary settings ultra-loose and maintains a dovish stance, while facing a communications test by modifying the bank’s forward guidance. Tweaks or changes to the bank’s controversial “yield curve control” policy may have to wait. Or, he could ignore any notion of gradualism and make an instant mark by calling time on YCC. True, this is highly unlikely, but he did say this month that he and his colleagues will “discuss all options at each of our policy meetings.”Also, the BOJ is no stranger to the element of surprise – remember Dec. 20 last year? The BOJ stunned markets by raising the upper limit of its YCC band, triggering the yen’s biggest one-day rise in nearly quarter of a century.The yen is likely to move quite a bit, whatever is said or signaled. Markets are braced for it – one-week implied volatility in dollar/yen jumped to a five-week high on Thursday and is notably higher than every other part of the curve. If Ueda plays it as most observers expect, and chooses not to rock the boat, the yen could come under pressure in the short term. U.S. bond yields rose sharply and implied Fed rates ticked higher on Thursday, widening the dollar’s rate advantage. Looking ahead, however, the yen will likely benefit when the BOJ does start phasing out YCC. All else being equal, tighter domestic monetary policy will encourage Japanese investors to repatriate money back home. Being the world’s largest creditor with trillions of dollars invested overseas, inflows into the yen later this year could potentially be very powerful.We won’t be seeing that on Friday though. Right? Here are three key developments that could provide more direction to markets on Friday:- Bank of Japan policy meeting- Japan unemployment, retail sales (March)- Euro zone GDP (Q1, advance) (By Jamie McGeever) More

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    Capital One posts worse-than-feared quarterly profit on provisions

    The Federal Reserve’s rate hikes to tame soaring inflation since the past year benefited lenders as they charged higher interest from borrowers.Capital One’s net interest income rose 12% to $7.19 billion in the first quarter.Still the rate hikes left the economy reeling from higher costs of borrowing and saw banks stockpile rainy day funds to prepare for soured loans.The Virginia-based lender said provision for credit losses swelled to $2.8 billion in the quarter ended March, up from $677 million a year ago.Capital One shares are up 3.6% so far this year but fell 4.9% to $91.3 in extended trading on Thursday.Net profit more than halved to $960 million, or $2.31 a share, for the first quarter, from $2.40 billion or $5.62 a share, a year go.Analysts on average had estimated a profit of $3.92 per share, according to data from Refinitiv. More

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    Ether price holds $1,820, but pro traders are skeptical about further gains

    Worsening macroeconomic conditions have driven cryptocurrencies’ positive momentum in 2023, including the ongoing banking crisis. According to Arthur Hayes, former CEO of crypto derivatives exchange BitMEX, if the government refuses to bail out First Republic Bank (NYSE:FRC), it could set off a dangerous chain reaction of insolvencies.Continue Reading on Coin Telegraph More

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    Samson Mow Says Bitcoin Fixes Problem of the Unbanked

    Samson Mow, the CEO of JAN3 and a nation-state Bitcoin adoption worker, has recently said that the unbanked exist because of the system that denies people access to money and finance.Speaking about the benefits of Bitcoin adoption outside of national prosperity, Mow stated that the other benefit of Bitcoin is simply financial inclusion. Additionally, he stated that the benefit of Bitcoin would be the banking of the unbanked. Samson Mow spoke about the unbanked, stating:Mow spoke about Bitcoin, stating that it can be accessed freely by anybody around the world, regardless of their social standing or economic situation. Moreover, he stated that it gives everyone an equal chance for financial prosperity.The JAN3 CEO stated that many countries are now moving to a Bitcoin standard. He predicts that in five to ten years, all fiat money would be obsolete. He also stressed that it is better to act now from a position of power and strength and adopt the Bitcoin standard.Speaking about his belief that all nations should adopt Bitcoin, Mow stated that he would love for Mexico to be one of those first countries.El Salvador adopted Bitcoin as legal tender with the vision of helping 70% of its citizens escape the unbanked system. With cryptocurrencies, people can just set up a crypto wallet and send, receive, and send crypto to anyone, despite their economic background.Compared to traditional banking, sending cryptocurrencies does not necessarily entail possessing a physical home address or official identification documents, which may be unavailable to some individuals from lower-income situations.The post Samson Mow Says Bitcoin Fixes Problem of the Unbanked appeared first on Coin Edition.See original on CoinEdition More

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    Two Traders Have Opposing Views on What BTC’s Price Will Do Next

    The price of Bitcoin (BTC) continues to trade above the $29k level according to CoinMarketCap. At press time, BTC is trading at $28,919.71 following a 3.10% decrease over the last 24 hours.One crypto trader by the name of The Wolf tweeted today that the crypto derivatives market is extremely bearish given the constant shorting taking place in the perpetual market. However, the trader did add in his tweet that the opposite is true for the spot market which is currently seeing overwhelming buy pressure.The Wolf suggested that BTC’s price may rise soon as a result of the sell pressure in the perpetual markets and the buy support in the spot markets. Should this bullish thesis play out, BTC’s price could rise to $30k soon.A few hours after The Wolf’s BTC tweet, the crypto trader Crypto Rover tweeted that a bearish head and shoulders chart pattern has formed on BTC’s 12-hour chart. Should the bearish chart pattern be validated, then BTC’s price will drop in the coming 24 – 48 hours.On the other hand, there is a chance that history will repeat itself and BTC’s price will be squeezed once again to rise to $30k in the next couple of days. Should BTC’s price be squeezed, it may only postpone the inevitable downward move for BTC’s price forecasted by the head and shoulders pattern highlighted by Crypto Rover.Daily chart for BTC/USDT (Source: TradingView)BTC’s price is currently trading within the consolidation channel between $26,800 and $30,800 after it broke above the 9-day and 20-day EMA lines in yesterday’s trading session. At press time, a significant bullish technical flag is on the verge of triggering with the 9-day EMA line looking to cross above the 20-day EMA line.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 Two Traders Have Opposing Views on What BTC’s Price Will Do Next appeared first on Coin Edition.See original on CoinEdition More

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    Decentralized file storage pricing differentials persist despite market growth: Report

    However, the report also outlined other costs associated with decentralized storage, such as data upload fees and retrieval fees, the latter of which can amount to $7 per TB. Some service providers mentioned in the report, such as Filecoin, only had storage fees, which were also quite low, while others had all three types of aforementioned fees.Continue Reading on Coin Telegraph More

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    AI wants to know what dove is

    The first instinct of a lot of academics, when given a natural language processor, is to feed it on something deeply unnatural. How else to explain the recent rash of research that pits AI against Fedspeak?To be fair, there are very good reasons for wanting to ignore central bankers, and the desire to delegate the chore of listening to their strangulated equivocalities predates ChatGPT by at least a century. But it’s the possibility of automating the process that has been causing excitement recently — such as in papers here, here, here and here, as well as in an Alphaville post here.Now it’s the subject of a flagship JPMorgan note that we can’t link to, so will summarise here. It opens with a big claim:With central bank communications now at the frontlines of policy setting, everything from official policy statements to individual speeches are scrutinized for hints of policy guidance. It is against this backdrop that machine learning and natural language processing (NLP) find fertile ground. The use of NLP to assess central bank communications has been around for some time. However, prior attempts failed to gain traction because they lacked the sophistication to generate actionable results. Simply put, the technology was not yet ready for primetime. This has changed. We believe NLP is ready for the successful application that many have long waited for. Here’s what many have long waited for:Y tho? If monetary policy guidance is of such fundamental importance, and if clear communication is the post-GFC prerequisite, why pass the job to an algorithm? JPMorgan suggests five reasons.AI offers a second opinion to human economists; its interpretations are systematic and transparent; it’s quicker to reach a conclusion; it spits out metrics rather than essays; and its findings are invulnerable to retrospection. “While an economist can offer an informed judgment of a particular central bank speech, this assessment is often multi-dimensional and may be dependent on context which can be lost in a matter of weeks or even days,” JPMorgan says. “By contrast, the HDS is singular and permanent in the historical record, making it ideal for gauging how central bank thinking is changing over time and how it compares to past episodes.”The HDS referred to above is the JPMorgan Hawk-Dove Score. It’s an upgrade of the bank’s 2019 attempt at Fedspeak processing using BERT, a language model developed by Google. The rebuild uses ChatGPT and in theory can make sense of any central bank on the planet, because it frames its whole world around three rules.And here’s how it rates individual Federal Open Market Committee committee members, based on recent speeches, with positive numbers meaning hawkish and negative ones meaning dovish . . . … which isn’t how humans see things at all. Bullard and Kashkari are generally considered the most hawkish, Cook is the dove and Barr stays in the middle of the pack next to Powell. Luckily, because the FOMC is the world’s most micro-analysed committee, it’s reasonably easy to guess where garbage in has become garbage out:One reason Governor Barr comes across as the most dovish member of the FOMC is that he is the vice chair for supervision and many of his speeches are less relevant to macro monetary policy while also having numerous references to financial stability—a concept that can be interpreted as dovish (though not always). [ . . . ] President Bullard is often noted for having a wide range of views that are hard to pin down. Moreover, because he often presents in slide-format without a speech, he is harder to quantify.The hawk-dove ratios for the European Central Bank and Bank of England committees also need humans to add context.Schnabel is probably too near the centre of the ECB because her most hawkish speeches have all been recent, so they haven’t yet moved the average. Broadbent probably over-indexes on dovishness because he speaks rarely and cagily. The opposite may be true of Pill and his unique presentation style. Etc. Whether it’s possible to apply this level of granular analysis to less studied rate-setting committees is a question the paper does not investigate. One interesting theme in JPMorgan’s hawk-dove study is that in all three committees examined, the chairs tilt hawkish. That’s a surprise, as chairs are expected to be in the middle of the pack, but is probably an accurate reflection of recent communications. It’s possible that because of the background noise, chairs are having to take a bigger role communicating their committee’s direction of travel — though a speech-by-speech analysis doesn’t make it easy to spot any pattern:To be clear, the hawk detector works. JPMorgan’s machine is at least as good as the average economist at identifying changes in the mood music:But the paper only touches briefly on whether it’s a lead indicator or a temperature check, and its findings are complicated by periods when rates were zero-lower-bounded.Broadly speaking, JPMorgan finds that when the three-month average of its hawkishness-of-speakers measure rises between meetings by 10 points, it’s worth roughly 10 basis points to short-term interest rates, with a one-week lead. That’s what the below chart apparently illustrates, albeit with a promise that the full working will follow in a later note:

    “Debate about these rankings is as likely as debate over who is the best footballer or baseball player,” JPMorgan says, accurately. Because while ten basis points of outperformance is not to be sniffed at, the enterprise brings to mind sports performance metrics like expected goals, which often seem more useful for prolonging arguments than for predicting outcomes. And in the end, isn’t a prolonged argument what (human) economists want most of all? More