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    Blur Compensates All Users Affected By Recent Bug

    Popular NFT marketplace Blur has addressed the recent bug that affected some bids on its platform. Users who incurred losses as a result of the bug’s impact on the platform bidding process have been accordingly compensated by the marketplace as assured.Blur’s founder, who goes by Pacman on Twitter, informed the NFT marketplace’s community recently about the bug that was detected in the platform’s message processing system. The bug reportedly affected some bids placed by users over the past 85 hours, prompting some to get canceled.Following the bug’s discovery, Blu disabled the platform’s bid accept functionality. Thirty-six affected bids were subsequently accepted over 30 minutes. The bug was fixed soon after that and the bidding functionality has since been re-enabled. However, the bids above the floor at the time were automatically canceled.Speaking on additional measures undertaken by the NFT marketplace to prevent such issues in the future, Pacman stated, “In addition to fixing the bug that caused this issue, we implemented two additional redundant safety checks so that this issue doesn’t happen again.” News of the bug induced considerable volatility in the BLUR token, as is visible below.
    Source: CoinMarketCapIn his Tweet, the Blur founder also assured refunds to compensate all users who were affected by the canceled bids. The compensation structure was such that the refund would be two times the difference between their bid price and the proper top bid at the time. “For instance, if the top bid was 14.5 ETH, and the affected bid was accepted at 15.5 ETH, we’ll refund 2 ETH,” Pacman explained.Data from Etherscan shows that the refund transaction for affected bidders was successful, with 2327 block confirmations. The refund was processed within 24 hours as assured. The compensation cost Blur 50.8 ETH worth roughly $95,000 at the time.The post Blur Compensates All Users Affected By Recent Bug appeared first on Coin Edition.See original on CoinEdition More

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    Arbitrum Protocol Surpasses ETH In Daily Activity For Second Time

    The Arbitrum protocol recently hit over 200 million transactions. Experts claim the protocol’s mainnet, Arbitrum One’s performance is the reason behind it. What can the market anticipate when it comes to Arbitrum’s token airdrop?Initially, Arbitrum garnered significant interest when it announced the release of its long-awaited token airdrop. The protocol even surpassed Ethereum in terms of daily active addresses due to the excitement surrounding the event. However, as time went on, the buzz surrounding the Arbitrum network began to dwindle.Subsequently, the decline in hype around Arbitrum resulted in a decrease in network activity and transaction volume. Additionally, the brief period during which Arbitrum surpassed Ethereum in terms of daily activity was dismissed as a singular occurrence.However, Arbitrum has once again surpassed Ethereum in terms of daily activity. This recent development suggests that the heightened level of activity on the Arbitrum network might be a pattern rather than a one-time occurrence.
    Arbitrum, Ethereum, and Optimism Daily Activity Levels by ArtemisThe extensive adoption of the Arbitrum protocol has corresponded to a significant rise in the total value locked (TVL) in its smart contracts. According to Artemis’ data, except for Ethereum, the Arbitrum protocol has outperformed most other projects in this regard, with its TVL reported to be $2.2 billion at present.
    Arbitrum’s TVL as per ArtemisAlthough Arbitrum’s protocol experienced high activity, the same cannot be said for its GitHub. Token Terminal’s data showed a significant decline in the number of active developers on the network over the past few months. Moreover, the number of code commits to Arbitrum’s GitHub has dropped by 51.4% in the last 90 days.
    Drop in Arbitrum’s active developer rates by Token TerminalIf this trend continues, it could take Arbitrum longer than other protocols to introduce new features and upgrades, potentially leading to a loss of its dominant position in the market.Despite the positive performance of the protocol, the overall sentiment around ARB has been negative. Santiment’s data indicated a sharp decline in weighted sentiment over the last few days, accompanied by a drop in the velocity of the ARB token. This decline in sentiment and trading frequency caused the price of ARB to plummet on the charts.
    Arbitrum’s Price vs Velocity vs Weighted Sentiment by Santiment The post Arbitrum Protocol Surpasses ETH In Daily Activity For Second Time appeared first on Coin Edition.See original on CoinEdition More

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    How fast is the eurozone recovering from the impact of high gas prices?

    How fast is the eurozone recovering from the impact of high gas prices?The recovery of the eurozone economy from last year’s energy price shock is expected to be confirmed this week with the release of gross domestic product figures showing a return to positive growth in the first quarter.A continued decline in energy prices — natural gas futures are down 45 per cent since the end of December — has given a boost to economic activity as worries about potential fuel shortages and a recession have receded.Economists polled by Reuters expect first-quarter GDP in the single currency bloc to rise 0.2 per cent from the previous quarter and 1.3 per cent from a year ago. That compares with zero growth in the fourth quarter.Reinhard Cluse, an economist at Swiss bank UBS, said: “The incoming hard data — in particular industrial production and construction — have clearly reinforced upside risk for the first quarter”. Eurozone industrial production rose 1 per cent month-on-month in January and 1.5 per cent in February as an easing of supply bottlenecks lifted factory output, particularly at carmakers. Construction also rebounded with growth of 3.8 per cent in January and 2.3 per cent in February. One weak spot is retail spending, which fell 0.8 per cent in February, wiping out January’s gain.But trade provided “a significant boost” to eurozone GDP this year, according to Melanie Debono, an economist at research group Pantheon Macroeconomics. Exports were helped by China’s lifting of zero-Covid policies, while imports fell due to lower energy prices. The bloc’s trade deficit fell from over €13bn in December to almost zero in February. Martin ArnoldWill US growth have slowed in the first quarter?The US economy is expected to have expanded in the first quarter but at a slower pace than the fourth quarter of last year, as the Federal Reserve’s aggressive campaign to tighten monetary policy takes its toll.Economists polled by Reuters have forecast that gross domestic product will have increased 2 per cent in the first quarter of 2023, down from an increase of 2.6 per cent in the fourth quarter. Citi analysts argue that rising home sales will have bolstered the headline number for the first time since the end of 2021. The slower growth comes as interest rates stand at their highest level in 15 years — in a range of 4.75-5 per cent. Higher interest rates crimp lending to businesses and individuals, slowing the economy along the way.The first quarter also contained the banking turmoil following the collapse of two regional US lenders, SVB and Signature Bank. Though that is expected to have curtailed lending, particularly in commercial real estate, those effects may not be evident in first quarter data. The Fed continues to argue that a “soft landing” of the economy is possible, and so it could lower inflation back to its 2 per cent target without pushing the country into recession. Market participants are less convinced and are pricing in interest rate cuts as soon as the end of this year, implying a recession to come in the second half. Kate DuguidWill the BoJ ease yield curve control?Markets are preparing for Kazuo Ueda’s inaugural policy meeting as governor of the Bank of Japan, at a time when multi-decade high inflation is making the BoJ’s ultra loose monetary stance harder to maintain.Investors had been speculating for weeks that the arrival of the 71-year-old academic, who took the helm on April 10, could spark the scrapping of the BoJ’s yield curve control, a policy which has been in place since 2016 to hold rates on the benchmark 10-year JGB at or around zero. Analysts at Japanese bank Nomura think the BoJ will wait until June before it starts to curb yield curve control. Japanese inflation excluding volatile food and energy prices hit 3.8 per cent in March — its highest level since 1981 — but wage growth has been more subdued. “It is unlikely that the Bank of Japan will change policy next week because it’s been saying it needs wage inflation to end yield curve control,” said Jordan Rochester, a foreign exchange strategist at Nomura. In his first press conference Ueda said it was “appropriate to maintain the yield curve control for now” because of the current economic, price and financial conditions.”Instead, Ueda could use the meeting on Thursday and Friday to change the BoJ’s forward guidance for monetary policy away from the impact of the Covid-19 pandemic towards the outlook for inflation, which could sow the seeds for tighter policy. But traders do not rule out the possibility of the world’s third-largest economy taking the market by surprise next week, as it did in December when the target range for yield curve control was doubled to plus or minus 0.5 per cent. Mary McDougall More

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    Fed weighs impact of banking turmoil on next interest rate moves

    US central bankers face a tricky balancing act as they prepare to deliver another interest rate increase next month, weighing evidence that inflation is still too high against a pullback in lending following the recent banking turmoil.Ahead of the quiet period before their next policy meeting in early May, officials at the Federal Reserve have tacitly endorsed another rate rise, in a move that would lift the federal funds rate above 5 per cent for the first time since mid-2007. Beyond that point, however, policymakers have been non-committal about how much more they will need to do to get inflation under control. This reflects a desire to keep all options on the table, but also uncertainty over how much a credit crunch will slow an economy that remains robust.John Williams, president of the New York Fed and a close ally of chair Jay Powell, articulated this dilemma just days before the so-called communications “blackout”.“There are a lot of factors that are telling me the economy is doing better and could even surprise further on the upside, but then obviously there are concerns around the risks around the tightening of credit conditions,” he told reporters on Wednesday. “It’s just a question of getting the right view on the balance of that and the right monetary policy.”He added: “The uncertainty can go both ways.”The economy is still showing signs of rude health. Most Fed officials characterise the labour market as “tight” even as monthly jobs growth has ebbed. Wage growth, while slower, remains far above a level consistent with inflation trending back to the Fed’s 2 per cent target. While the annual pace of inflation has declined significantly, monthly measures of underlying price pressures remain worryingly elevated. Speaking on the final day before the quiet period, Lisa Cook, a Fed governor, emphasised the Fed’s focus on incoming data in guiding their future policy decisions.“If tighter financing conditions are a significant headwind on the economy, the appropriate path of the federal funds rate may be lower than it would be in their absence,” she said, adding that “if data show continued strength in the economy and slower disinflation, we may have more work to do.”In justifying his stance for at least one more rate rise, Christopher Waller, an influential Fed governor, went so far as to say that the recent data indicate “we haven’t made much progress on our inflation goal”. Opinions have diverged, however, about how significantly regional banks have pulled back from lending in the wake of Silicon Valley Bank’s failure last month and the extent to which credit availability around the economy is now hamstrung. Powell and other officials acknowledge the credit crunch will act as a substitute for additional rate rises from the Fed itself. But given that the full impact is not yet known, “it is about risk management at the moment”, said Matthew Luzzetti, chief US economist at Deutsche Bank.According to the Fed’s latest Beige Book, which compiles anecdotal evidence from businesses across the country, there has already been a broad-based tightening in lending standards and a sharp drop in loan volumes for consumers and businesses across a number of districts. The question now is how much worse it could get, fomenting fears that the central bank is on the precipice of pushing its monetary tightening campaign too far.“Even in the best of times, monetary policy is a mistake-prone undertaking,” said David Wilcox, who led the research and statistics division at the Fed and is now affiliated with the Peterson Institute for International Economics and Bloomberg Economics. “That banking contraction probably makes the calculus a bit trickier at the moment.”Since the SVB debacle, staffers at the central bank have altered their call about a recession, concluding that a “mild” one was now their base case this year, according to minutes from the March meeting. Officials continue to play down the likelihood of an economic contraction but several have adopted a more circumspect approach about the path for policy.“At this point, I don’t see why we would just continue to go up, up, up and then go, ‘oops’” and rapidly cut rates, Patrick Harker, president of the Philadelphia Fed and a voting member on the Federal Open Market Committee, recently said. Austan Goolsbee, the new president of the Chicago Fed as well as a voting FOMC member, has also called for “prudence and patience” following what has been the most aggressive campaign to tighten monetary policy in decades.

    Tim Duy, chief US economist at SGH Macro Advisors, said: “As interest rates get higher, you’re getting that conflict between people who are really still focused on the data and then others who are being more cautious because of the potential for policy lags, which has been exacerbated by the banking situation.”Duy expects the Fed to signal at its policy meeting that it could well raise rates again in June in order to carve out as much flexibility as possible. That could be done by maintaining the language in the last policy statement, which was adapted to a more non-committal stance that “some additional policy firming may be appropriate”.As of March, most officials forecast fed funds to peak between 5 per cent and 5.25 per cent and for that level to be maintained until 2024.Duy said: “It’s very hard for an inflation-targeting central bank to walk away from rate hikes when underlying inflation has not shown persistent progress towards its target.” More

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    PackShieldAlert Cites Wintermute Exploiter Holds 28% Of $3CRV After Hack

    PeckShieldAlert recently shared an update about the stolen Wintermute funds, in their latest tweet. The PackShieldAlert community contributor reportedly detected that the Wintermute Exploiter-labeled address now holds the highest percentage (28%) of $3CRV. Additionally, the crypto platform also stated that in September 2022, Wintermute experienced a $160 million exploit, and the perpetrator deposited a staggering $114 million into the Curve platform, according to data from Etherscan.
    Curve.fi DAI/USDC/USDT Token Holders as per EtherscanAs per the data, Wintermute Exploiter’s wallet address 0x6c3F90f043a72FA612cbac8115EE7e52BDe6E490 holds a total of 111,953,508.959916301101032331 Curve.fi DAI/USDC/USDT tokens out of a total supply of 397,988,859.53 tokens.PackShieldAlert’s older post suggested that the exploit at @wintermute_t resulted in a theft of $160M, with stablecoins ($DAI, $USDT, $USDC, $USDP) accounting for approximately 73% of the stolen funds, worth $118.4 million, while $WBTC and $ETH made up 8% and 6%, respectively.Moreover, Etherscan data noted that back then, the exploiter behind @wintermute_t was the third-largest holder of 3CRV tokens, with a holding valued at around $112 million.In other news, the London-based crypto trading platform and liquidity provider, Wintermute recently announced its integration with CoinRoutes, a startup that assists crypto hedge funds and other investors in obtaining the best possible trade prices.Through this integration, CoinRoutes clients will have increased options and flexibility in terms of accessing liquidity providers on the platform, as stated by Wintermute in a press release.The post PackShieldAlert Cites Wintermute Exploiter Holds 28% Of $3CRV After Hack appeared first on Coin Edition.See original on CoinEdition More

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    Chinese city public servants to receive digital RMB salaries from May

    According to the notice issued by local Chinese authorities, Changshu Local Financial Supervision Bureau and the Changshu Municipal Bureau of Finance, civil servants including public service personnel, public institution personnel and personnel of state-owned units at all levels in the city will be compensated in digital RMB payment. Continue Reading on Coin Telegraph More

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    Crypto Analyst Says Bitcoin is in an Undeniably Bullish Trend

    Bitcoin is in an undeniably bullish market, according to Adrian Zdunczyk, Chartered Market Technician and founder of The Birb Nest. In a Twitter thread, Adrian provided multiple reasons he believes the Bitcoin market will continue with the newly discovered uptrend.According to Adrian, relying on existing phenomena maintained over decades delivers better results when trading the financial markets. Hence, he based his analysis on facts about historical market behaviors.Adrian noted that the financial markets performed their best in pre-election years, with only one exception in the past 84 years. With such data, there is a 98.8% chance that the market will trend higher in 2023. With a screenshot, Adrian explained Bitcoin is in an uptrend and traders should approach it using the John R. Hill & George Pruitt recommendations. They suggested trend-following breakout systems be the best-performing tactics under such market conditions.Adrian used the 200-day moving average to predict that Bitcoin is in a dominant bull trend, and traders should consider it so. He supported his claim using a pictorial illustration of the psychology of a Bitcoin cycle. He also explained that traders still shorting Bitcoin may be experiencing the cognitive dissonance of the early stages of a reversal.The Birb Nest founder acknowledged corrections are inevitable in the Bitcoin market. He attributed them to market sentiments and traders’ attitudes. However, he encouraged traders driven by regret bias to take the buying opportunity in the fear they would miss out again.Adrian favored trading breakouts along the dominant trend over anticipated mean reversion tactics. He believes that the money is in the established market direction. He advised against trading counter the market trend, noting it could lead to significant losses in the market.Under the current market situation, Adrian identified the $26,500 to $27,000 Bitcoin price level as an area of interest for buyers. It is the recent territory dominated by bulls. He thinks the recency, regret, and representativeness biases can encourage traders to use the heuristic ‘rule of thumb’ and buy the support.Disclaimer: The views, opinions, and information shared in this price prediction are published in good faith. Readers must do their research and due diligence. Any action taken by the reader is strictly at their own risk. Coin Edition and its affiliates will not be liable for direct or indirect damage or loss.The post Crypto Analyst Says Bitcoin is in an Undeniably Bullish Trend appeared first on Coin Edition.See original on CoinEdition More

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    Ripple Counsel: U.S Crypto Policy Is Driving The Industry Offshore

    Susan Friedman, the International Policy Counsel for Ripple, recently took to Twitter to highlight the consequences of American crypto firms moving abroad as a result of the United States’ failure to adopt an appropriate regulatory regime for the crypto industry. Friedman’s comments came in response to a Twitter spaces session titled “Crypto Policy and National Security”, which saw participation from Coinbase CEO Brian Armstrong, Haun Ventures’ Chief Policy Officer Tomicah Tillemann, Coinbase’ Chief Policy Officer Faryar Shirzad and Ripple board member Anja Manuel. According to Friedman, the United States’ failure to adopt clear crypto regulations has led to crypto activity moving offshore. With the industry moving out of American jurisdiction, the ability of US law enforcement to monitor illicit and criminal activity has been restricted considerably. Friedman argued that this was the exact opposite outcome of what critics had been calling for.Faryar Sharzad, who previously served as the Deputy National Security Advisor for the George Bush administration, pointed out that the technological edge that the country derives from domestic innovation, was a crucial part of the United States. One of the latest leaps in innovation has been in the crypto space and that space is now looking to move offshore. All the speakers in the spaces session agreed that the offshore push by crypto firms in the United States was a concern in terms of national security. Gemini has become the latest crypto firm to announce a non-U.S. crypto derivatives platform that will not be available to clients in the US. Last week, reports started circulating about Coinbase setting up a crypto derivatives platform in Bermuda. The post Ripple Counsel: U.S Crypto Policy Is Driving The Industry Offshore appeared first on Coin Edition.See original on CoinEdition More