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    S&P upgrades outlook on Greece credit rating but keeps Italy on hold

    Greece’s sovereign credit rating outlook was upgraded to positive by S&P Global Ratings on Friday, while Italy’s was kept at stable, highlighting a divergence of the two southern European economies. S&P said its decision was based on Greece’s recent progress in structural reforms, a surge in investment and its rapidly improving fiscal position, which have made the country one of Europe’s fastest-growing economies.In contrast, S&P kept its outlook on Italy’s credit rating unchanged, saying it expected the country’s debt to decline gradually over the next few years but that this was “balanced against the risk of a reversal in the delivery of critical reforms” that could delay critical EU funding.Data published by Eurostat, the EU’s statistics agency, on Friday showed that Greece last year returned to a primary budget surplus of 0.1 per cent of gross domestic product, which excludes the cost of interest payments, after two years of deficits.However, S&P kept Greece’s credit rating below investment grade at “‘BB+/B”, while Italy’s remains in investment grade at “BBB/A-2”.Greece, which has an election next month, has benefited from a surge in investment, a reduction in its vast debt burden and more efficient tax collection. Tourism in the country rebounded to reach 97 per cent of pre-pandemic levels last year, while Greek banks have cut toxic loans from 45 per cent of their balance sheets in 2017 to below 10 per cent.The Greek economy has made one of the strongest recoveries from the Covid-19 pandemic of any eurozone country, growing 8.4 per cent in 2021 and 5.9 per cent last year, with growth widely expected to remain above the eurozone average over the next two years.The country’s debt as a proportion of GDP fell from a peak of 206 per cent in 2020 to 171 per cent last year, according to S&P, which predicted that it would keep falling to just over 135 per cent by 2026.Italy’s fiscal position also improved but its primary budget remained in a deficit of 0.1 per cent of GDP last year. S&P said it expected Rome to achieve a surplus from next year, while growth in Italy would accelerate from 0.4 per cent this year to 1.4 per cent by 2025.“Anchored by the reintroduction of EU fiscal rules next year, authorities are set to pursue a gradual pace of consolidation over the next few years, posting slight primary surpluses by 2024, putting debt to GDP on a slight downward path,” S&P said. Italian debt would fall from 144 per cent of GDP last year to 136 per cent by 2026, it forecast.S&P also revised the UK’s credit outlook to stable from negative, indicating that heightened economic risks have subsided.“The government’s decision to abandon most of the unfunded budgetary measures proposed in September 2022 has bolstered the fiscal outlook,” S&P said, referring to former prime minister Liz Truss’s proposed fiscal agenda that sent UK government debt into a tailspin and raised risks for pensions in the country when it was announced.While the agency affirmed the UK’s AA credit rating, it said growth would be below historical averages in the medium term.Additional reporting by Jaren Kerr More

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    Innovate some compliance mechanisms, US Treasury official tells DeFi community

    Rosenberg was referring to a report released earlier in April by the Treasury that found scammers, money launderers and North Korean hackers benefitting from the lack of Anti-Money Laundering (AML) and Countering the Financing of Terrorism (CFT) compliance in the sector. That report was part of the Treasury’s response to U.S. President Joe Biden’s executive order on the responsible development of digital assets. Continue Reading on Coin Telegraph More

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    Blockchains like Solana brag about ‘speed’ — but it’s misleading

    There is no denying that throughput and scalability are important, indeed vital if blockchains are eventually to become the rails on which the financial system is run. However, there is a major misconception surrounding the metric used to assess the scalability of layer-1s and 2s.Continue Reading on Coin Telegraph More

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    Lack of regulatory clarity on payment solutions could undermine US sanctions, says expert

    Speaking to Coinbase (NASDAQ:COIN) CEO Brian Armstrong and listeners in an April 21 Twitter Spaces discussion, Manuel said that because the U.S. was one of the biggest global leaders in payments, it allowed the government to enforce sanctions on “bad actors” like Iran or North Korea. According to Manuel, letting the country lead in innovation under clear rules reinforced U.S. national security controls, but China seemed to be catching up on dominance in mobile payments “both in sophistication and scale.”Continue Reading on Coin Telegraph More

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    US bank deposits, loans ticked down in latest week -Fed data

    Federal Reserve data released on Friday showed deposits at all commercial banks fell to $17.38 trillion in the week ended April 12, on a non-seasonally adjusted basis, from $17.43 trillion a week earlier.The drop was almost entirely at the top 25 banks, the data showed.A drop in deposits can leave banks with less capacity for loans, though there was little to show that in the Fed’s data Friday. Loans and leases at all banks ticked down to $12.05 trillion from $12.06 trillion a week earlier. Fed officials have a sharp eye on bank lending and credit as they consider how much more to raise interest rates after the most aggressive round of rate hikes in 40 years since last March. The banking sector turmoil that erupted last month after regulators shuttered Silicon Valley Bank and Signature Bank (OTC:SBNY) had some policymakers worried that sharply tighter credit could follow, slowing the economy and inflation and leaving less for the Fed to do. One effect of the higher interest rates is a rise in large time deposits, which at $1.87 trillion are now their highest since November 2009 on a nonseasonally adjusted basis. As a share of deposits, though, they remain very low at 10.8% of all deposits, the largest since August 2020 and up more than 3 percentage points from their record low in January 2022. They are still only about a third of their record-high share 31% in May 2008. More

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    3AC founders’ OPNX exchange claims to be funded by AppWorks, SIG, MIAX Group

    OPNX has been heavily criticized in the crypto community for its association with Su Zhu and Kyle Davies, founders of the bankrupt 3AC hedge fund. Some firms have claimed they may refuse to associate with anyone who helps fund the new exchange. But the company behind the project has defended itself, arguing that it will help make customers of failed crypto ventures whole again.Continue Reading on Coin Telegraph More