More stories

  • in

    SEC Commissioner Criticizes Agency’s Approach to Crypto Regulation

    In an exciting turn of events, Hester Peirce, the Commissioner of the US Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), has criticized the agency’s regulatory approach towards new technologies and business models, including those in the crypto industry.Commissioner Peirce argued that the SEC’s rigid approach to regulation does not allow for room for new technologies or ways of doing business. She also criticized the SEC for punishing entrepreneurs who try to innovate but fail to comply with existing regulations instead of working with them to find practical solutions.Paul Grewal, the Chief Legal Officer of the Coinbase (NASDAQ:COIN) crypto exchange, shared Peirce’s statement with the crypto community over the weekend, thanking her for the positive words. “In just 60-something words,” Grewal wrote, “SEC Commissioner has managed to articulate all that hits awfully close to home.”Notably, the Commissioner’s comments come when the SEC grapples with regulating cryptocurrencies and related activities, such as initial coin offerings (ICOs) and decentralized staking services. The SEC has faced criticism for being slow to provide clear guidance regulating crypto and for its enforcement actions.Commissioner Peirce’s statement highlights the need for regulators to balance fostering innovation and protecting investors. While regulatory oversight is necessary to ensure investor protection, experts have argued that overly burdensome regulations can stifle innovation and prevent entrepreneurs from bringing new products and services to market.In a recent letter, the Investor Advisory Committee (IAC) asked the SEC to treat all crypto tokens as securities and pursue aggressive enforcement. A lawyer started the conversation on Twitter, quoting the IAC to have said crypto poses a risk to investors and harms racial minorities.See original on CoinEdition More

  • in

    Poland and Hungary defy Brussels to halt Ukraine grain imports

    Poland and Hungary have temporarily halted imports of Ukrainian grain despite a warning from Brussels that such unilateral action would contravene EU trade policy.After Moscow launched its full-scale invasion of Ukraine last year, the EU scrapped customs duties and quotas on Ukrainian grain imports and rerouted some shipments from blockaded Black Sea ports via Polish and Romanian roads and railway networks. The announcement by Poland and Hungary is an attempt to placate their farmers amid a grain glut that has sent prices crashing in their domestic markets as cheap Ukrainian grain undercuts local producers. Most of the grain was meant to be re-exported from the EU to the Middle East and Africa to help Ukraine’s economy and at the same time alleviate food shortages sparked by the war. But the grain remained in countries close to Ukraine because of a shortage of trucks and trains to move it to neighbouring ports. A bumper grain harvest in central Europe meanwhile helped to avert a food crisis. Struggling with high debt and weakening economies, poorer nations in Africa and elsewhere have also recently been seeking to curtail food imports. Eastern European farmers have complained about the level of compensation offered by Brussels.The European Commission on Sunday said it was aware of the move by Warsaw and Budapest regarding the import of Ukrainian grain and other agricultural products. Miriam Garcia Ferrer, commission spokesperson for trade and agriculture, said: “Trade policy is of EU exclusive competence and, therefore, unilateral actions are not acceptable. In such challenging times, it is crucial to co-ordinate and align all decisions within the EU.”Opposition parties in Poland have seized on the grain dispute to attack the conservative government, which is relying on the backing of voters in farming regions to win parliamentary elections scheduled for this autumn.The issue this month forced the resignation of the country’s agriculture minister, Henryk Kowalczyk, who quit while blaming Brussels for not providing sufficient help for Polish farmers. Poland’s decision to temporarily halt some Ukrainian imports was announced by Jarosław Kaczyński, the leader of the ruling Law and Justice party, during a party convention in Łyse on Saturday. Hungarian agriculture minister István Nagy said in a separate statement that the temporary ban on imports of grain and oilseeds from Ukraine, as well as several other agricultural products into Hungary would be in place until June 30. Nagy said that the timeframe should be enough for the EU to come up with appropriate rules, including a review of the free trade regime with Ukraine. He added that Hungary and Poland were acting “in the absence of meaningful EU measures”. Poland’s new agriculture minister Robert Telus also indicated last week that his country wanted an import ban until at least the start of July. The EU moratorium on tariffs ends on June 30 but the commission has proposed extending it for another year. Member states, including Spain and the Netherlands, want Ukrainian cereals for animal feed.During a visit to Warsaw on April 5, Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelenskyy had pledged to resolve a dispute that had become one of the few areas of discord between Kyiv and Warsaw, from where the Polish government has spearheaded western efforts to send more weapons to Ukraine. On Saturday Ukraine’s agriculture minister, Mykola Solski, said Kyiv understood the difficulties facing farmers in Poland but insisted “it is the Ukrainian farmer who is in the most difficult situation. We ask the Polish side to take this into account.”

    According to the Polish ban regulation published at the weekend, Warsaw will stop imports of several other farm products from Ukraine, ranging from beef and pork to eggs and dairy products. The ban also covers Ukrainian produce specifically earmarked for transit through Poland. For several weeks farmers in Poland, Romania and other countries on the eastern flank of the EU have been holding protests and blockading roads to demand more compensation and to halt the arrival of Ukrainian grain. Last month the commission proposed that affected EU farmers receive a total of €56.3mn to mitigate the fallout caused by an “excessive supply” of Ukrainian grain imports. It is considering extending aid to more countries soon, a move that must be approved by member states.The decision was taken after Romania, Bulgaria, the Czech Republic, Hungary, Poland and Slovakia wrote to Brussels to demand urgent measures. Slovakia is also holding national elections in September. More

  • in

    US’ Payment Stablecoin Bill Poses Issues Along with Advantages

    Jeremy D Allaire, the American technologist and CEO of the digital asset company Circle, wrote on his official Twitter page about the US Draft of the Payment Stablecoin Bill, acknowledging it as “a product of bi-partisan efforts”.On April 15, the entrepreneur shared a chain of Twitter posts, hailing “the first comprehensive proposed law for Payment Stablecoins”:Previously, the US Congress released the Discussion Draft, proposing the basic requirements for establishing the legal status of a stablecoin issuer, ensuring that “digital dollars on the internet are safely issued, backed and operated”.Following the publication, Allaire shared a glimpse of the draft, describing it as “an extraordinary moment for the future of the dollar in the world, and the future of currency on the internet”.As per the words of the Circle CEO, Congress’ move is a necessity to sustain US’ leading position in the crypto space. He commented that:Interestingly, the internet entrepreneur also threw light upon the bi-partisan sponsored hearing that is supposed to be organized in the US House Committee the next week, focusing on the possible issues of the bill.Further, he posited that apart from being a boon for the country, the bill has certain challenges, stating:In addition, he attached a memo, addressed to the Committee on Financial Services, through which the members call attention to the issues, seeking the US government’s and the financial industry’s scrutiny over the issue.The post US’ Payment Stablecoin Bill Poses Issues Along with Advantages appeared first on Coin Edition.See original on CoinEdition More

  • in

    Panasonic says it may build EV battery plant in Oklahoma

    “Panasonic has entered into an agreement with the State of Oklahoma that defines the eligibility and terms of the incentives under Oklahoma’s LEAD Act,” the company told Reuters in an email, referring to an incentive package the state has established to attract major companies to its MidAmerica Industrial Park in Pryor.”There are no other specific decisions that have been made by the Company. We will share more information as it is available,” the statement said.Panasonic’s decision to consider Oklahoma, which was reported earlier by Kyodo news agency, comes amid surging sales for electric vehicles, and other EV makers besides longtime customer Tesla are looking to the Japanese conglomerate as a possible battery supplier.Panasonic is in talks with other Stellantis and BMW about building a new EV plant in North America, the Wall Street journal reported this month.The Japanese company in July rejected Oklahoma as the site for its second EV battery plant, picking Kansas instead to make batteries for Tesla. State officials there said that investment of up to $4 billion will create up to 4,000 jobs. More

  • in

    Moody’s Israel rating outlook cut “not big drama,” finance minister says

    JERUSALEM (Reuters) – Israeli Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich on Sunday said Moody’s (NYSE:MCO) decision to cut the outlook for Israel’s sovereign credit rating was “not a big drama” and that the government’s plan to overhaul the judiciary would help the economy.Moody’s Investors Service on Friday lowered Israel’s outlook to stable from positive, saying the planned reforms could weaken Israel’s institutions. Israel’s sovereign credit rating was affirmed at “A1”. Israel’s government is seeking to give politicians greater sway over selecting judges and to limit the power of the Supreme Court to strike down legislation in reforms that have sparked mass protests.Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, under pressure at home and abroad, has agreed to delay the overhaul to try to negotiate a middle ground, but demonstrations have continued.Smotrich told a session of parliament’s finance committee during a debate on the 2023-24 state budget that Israel’s credit outlook was lowered in 2020, but raised in 2022. “I take the opinion seriously but it’s not big drama,” he said, noting Moody’s had also pointed to a strong economy.Smotrich said he did not “think economists are great experts on the judicial issue,” and that any damage to the economy would come from the campaigns against the reforms. He said the reform plan will bolster Israel’s economy.Data published on Sunday showed that the economy grew an annualised 5.3% in the fourth quarter from the prior three months, versus a prior estimate of 5.6%. Israel’s economy grew 6.5% in 2022 but the Bank of Israel foresees 2.5% growth this year.On the heels of Moody’s action, Israeli government bond prices were down as much as 0.9%, while Tel Aviv share indexes were down 0.2%. The shekel doesn’t trade on Sundays but it weakened 0.7% versus the dollar in New York on Friday. More

  • in

    Hundred Finance Lending Protocol Loses $7M to Hack on Optimism

    Hackers attacked the Hundred Finance multi-chain lending protocol on Saturday, April 15, 2023. According to PeckShield, the blockchain security and data analytics company, the DeFi lending protocol incurred a loss of around $7 million during the attack.A report by PeckShield revealed a hacker exploited the lending protocol by donating 200 WBTC to inflate hWBTC’s exchange rate. That allowed the hacker to drain the lending pools using small amounts of hWBTC.Hundred Finance originally announced the protocol breach via its official Twitter handle. According to the DeFi lending platform, the breach occurred on its Optimism Layer 2 scaling solution. The announcement reads:Following the announcement, multiple users attempted to analyze the hack, providing alternative results to what happened. Some of them posted their analysis as replies to Hundred Finance’s tweet.A user who analyzed the transaction on Etherscan noted two contracts could mint hWBTC. According to the user, both mints have slightly different ratios in the fifth decimal place, and the hacker tested both mints before the hack.Another user provided a more detailed description of the hack, noting that the hacker executed the hack using a unique attack loop involving minting, transferring, borrowing, redemption, and liquidating tokens.In a follow-up tweet, Hundred Finance announced to its customers that it had sent a message to the hacker and claimed to be in talks with different security teams. It also solicited help from the public on how to resolve the issue.The platform also advised users to desist from further speculations about the attack. It claimed that the project’s team is preparing a post-mortem, noting that its primary focus is to establish communication with the hacker and negotiate an agreement.The post Hundred Finance Lending Protocol Loses $7M to Hack on Optimism appeared first on Coin Edition.See original on CoinEdition More

  • in

    The UK’s future depends on improving economic performance

    It is “the economy, stupid”. James Carville coined this phrase in Bill Clinton’s campaign of 1992. He was right. The economy is not everything. But it is almost everything.Modern democracy itself would not have been born if it were not for the opportunities created by sustained growth. Political stability, too, depends on the positive-sum politics that economic growth creates. If, as now, in the UK and other high-income countries, the economy stagnates, politics becomes fraught, since one group cannot have more without others having less. The struggle becomes more bitter if the labour force shrinks relative to the population and so tax-funded transfers tend to rise as a share of national incomes.Today, the focus is on a recent shock to aggregate real incomes — the so-called cost of living crisis. This crisis is portrayed as the consequence of a sudden rise in prices. But today’s realities reflect not one, but four developments: a lengthy period of stagnant real incomes; the pandemic; the post-pandemic deterioration in the country’s “terms of trade” (the relative prices of its imports against its exports), greatly exacerbated by the impact on energy prices of Russia’s war on Ukraine; and, finally, high inflation. One outcome of the latter is that it brings about large and unexpected reductions in the real incomes of workers whose pay is fixed by government, with the results we now see in its strife with its employees.

    You are seeing a snapshot of an interactive graphic. This is most likely due to being offline or JavaScript being disabled in your browser.

    Consider each element in this story.According to the IMF’s latest data, real gross domestic product per head in the UK rose by a mere 6 per cent between 2008 and 2022. This was the second worst performance in the G7, above Italy’s. To put this dire outcome in context, UK real GDP per head rose by an impressive 33 per cent in the 14 years to 2008. Such weak growth ensured austerity. But the decision to make almost all the post-financial crisis fiscal adjustment by cutting spending made this even worse.In 2020, came the pandemic. Between 2019 and 2022, real GDP per head in the UK shrank by 1.9 per cent, the deepest fall in the G7. One explanation for this big hit to output was indeed the deterioration in the country’s terms of trade. As a net energy importer, this was sure to be large for the UK: according to Silvana Tenreyro, a member of the UK’s Monetary Policy Committee, the country’s terms of trade deteriorated by 9.5 per cent between February 2020 and September 2022. Partly as a result, real GDP and household consumption remain well below even their poor 2013-19 trends. The US, in contrast, enjoyed a gain in its terms of trade and, partly as a result, has already returned to pre-pandemic trends.

    You are seeing a snapshot of an interactive graphic. This is most likely due to being offline or JavaScript being disabled in your browser.

    Finally, the overall price level has also soared, so bringing about large shifts in the distribution of real earnings. According to the IMF, consumer prices will jump by 21 per cent between the end of 2020 and 2023. Evidently, this is imposing a huge cut in real earnings upon those whose pay does not also rise substantially in nominal terms.So, yes, the shocks of the past few years have been large and unexpected. But what has made them particularly difficult to cope with was the long period of stagnation and austerity that preceded them. Indeed, everything has become far harder to manage in this context.

    You are seeing a snapshot of an interactive graphic. This is most likely due to being offline or JavaScript being disabled in your browser.

    Give credit where it is due. Former prime minister Liz Truss was right about one thing: economic growth matters. But she and her chancellor Kwasi Kwarteng had no intelligible view on how faster growth was to be achieved. Yes, incentives are important. But so are sound public finances, low interest rates, an open economy and a reputation for sound economic management. Much of this has been sacrificed to the totemic politics of Brexit. These are not yet even over: consider the nonsense of the “retained EU law bill”, which is a plan to “review or revoke” much of the EU-derived law that forms the basis for much of today’s national life.All this is just dancing on the decks of the Titanic. It is hard to believe that the UK will thrive, perhaps even survive, as a peaceful and orderly democratic society without faster economic growth. To bring that about, the country will need to raise its dreadfully low national rates of savings and investment, build far more houses, and reform its pension system, in order to generate more risk-taking capital, create dynamic new businesses, discover a route towards better opportunities for trade in its European neighbourhood, offer high quality jobs to its people and fund the education and training they desire. Only if all this is done can it also afford the public services it needs and its public will certainly continue to demand.The UK is not alone in hitting the economic buffers. But its plight is dire. Why are its politicians incapable of [email protected] Follow Martin Wolf with myFT and on Twitter More

  • in

    ETH’s Amount of Supply Last Active 3Y-5Y Is at a 3-Month High

    The blockchain tracking firm, glassnode alerts (@glassnodealerts), tweeted this morning that the Ethereum (ETH) Amount of Supply Last Active 3y-5y (1d MA) recently reached a 3-month high of 12,726,298.738 ETH. The tweet added that the previous 3-month high of 12,673,320.712 was observed on 16 January 2023.In related news, the price of ETH stands at $2,096.12 at press time according to CoinMarketCap. This is after the altcoin leader printed a 24-hour gain of 0.32% and a weekly gain of more than 14%.ETH was also able to strengthen against the market leader Bitcoin (BTC) by 0.66% over the last 24 hours. As a result, 1 ETH is estimated to be worth around 0.06913 BTC at press time. The altcoin’s price is also currently trading between its 24-hour low of $2,076.83 and its daily high of $2,111.08.
    Daily chart for ETH/USDT (Source: TradingView)The bullish ascending triangle chart pattern on ETH’s daily chart was validated over the past week, which resulted in ETH’s price breaking through the key resistance level at around $1,920 on Thursday.This bullish momentum continued on Friday and saw the leading atlcoin’s price successfully flip the resistance level at $2,015 into support to reach a high of $2,128.76 before a pullback to close Friday’s trading session off at $2,099.99.ETH’s price is currently looking to challenge the resistance level at $2,170. However, technical indicators on ETH’s daily chart suggest that the crypto’s price has established a peak. This is evident by the vertex seen on ETH’s daily RSI chart.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 ETH’s Amount of Supply Last Active 3Y-5Y Is at a 3-Month High appeared first on Coin Edition.See original on CoinEdition More