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    Fed’s Kashkari: Recession possible, but high inflation would be worse

    “It could be that our monetary policy actions and the tightening of credit conditions because of this banking stress leads to an economic downturn. That might even lead to a recession,” Kashkari said in a town hall at Montana State University, in answer to a student question about job prospects. But, Kashkari said, “We need to get inflation down. … If we were to fail to do that, then your job prospects would be really hard.”Yields on long-term bonds are lower than those on shorter-term bonds, known as the “yield-curve inversion” and which is often a harbinger of a recession. Kashkari said he reads the pricing in bond markets as reflecting an expectation that inflation will fall quickly, allowing the Fed to cut rates. But Kashkari said he is not that optimistic, and believes inflation, now at 5% by the Fed’s preferred measure, will get to “the mid threes” by the end of this year, still far above the Fed’s 2% target. Most Fed policymakers see inflation falling to somewhere in the 3%-3.8% range by year-end, projections show, with the median projection at 3.3%. More

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    IMF says more flexible BOJ yield control can prevent market whiplash

    TOKYO (Reuters) -The Bank of Japan could help prevent abrupt policy changes later by allowing more flexibility in its bond yield curve control, the International Monetary Fund said in its global financial stability report released on Tuesday.Under yield curve control (YCC), the BOJ guides the 10-year government bond yield around 0% as part of efforts to sustainably achieve its 2% inflation target.The central bank’s decision in December to widen the tolerance band around the yield target has heightened market bets of a further near-term tweak or end to YCC.Changes to the BOJ’s yield control policy may affect financial markets through exchange rates, term premiums on sovereign bonds and global risk premiums, the IMF said.”While allowing more flexibility in the yield curve control policy could have some repercussions in global financial markets, such a change not only is warranted to meet monetary policy objectives but could also help prevent abrupt policy changes later that could trigger larger spillovers,” the IMF said in the report.The BOJ has kept policy ultra-loose even as other major economies hiked interest rates to combat soaring inflation, on the view the recent cost-driven price growth won’t be sustained unless accompanied by stronger economic and wage growth.While the yield control policy has helped keep borrowing costs low, it has come under increasing criticism for distorting market pricing and crushing financial institutions’ profits.The BOJ’s new governor, Kazuo Ueda, stressed on Monday his resolve to keep ultra-low interest rates for now, brushing aside lingering market expectations of a near-term policy shift.In the report’s section analysing the potential impact of a tweak to YCC, the IMF said a further rise in Japanese long-term interest rates could affect bond yields of Australia, several euro-area countries and the United States as Japanese investors repatriate the huge amount of funds parked in these markets.Some emerging markets like Indonesia and Malaysia could also face “material” capital outflows due to the significant presence of Japanese investors, it said.”The pace and possible effects of repatriation could be larger, however, should market participants be surprised by the Bank of Japan’s announcements and actions,” the report said.”Clear communication in the event of adjustments to the Bank of Japan’s monetary policy is critical to avoid market volatility,” it said. More

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    Bitfinex Securities El Salvador receives Digital Asset Service provider license in El Salvador

    According to the announcement, the license, which was granted on April 11 by El Salvador’s National Digital Asset Commission, makes Bitfinex Securities El Salvador “the world’s first international digital asset platform to receive approval to be licenced as a Digital Asset Service Provider” in El Salvador Continue Reading on Coin Telegraph More

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    Core Scientific debtors petition bankruptcy court to approve new president

    In an April 10 filing with United States Bankruptcy Court for the Southern District of Texas, Core Scientific said it was addressing “a gap in the Debtors’ management team” prior to the firm filing for bankruptcy in December 2022. The debtors appointed Adam Sullivan, a managing director at investment banking firm XMS Capital Partners, to assume the role of president amid the company’s bankruptcy proceedings.Continue Reading on Coin Telegraph More

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    Renminbi’s share of trade finance doubles since start of Ukraine war

    The renminbi’s share of trade finance has more than doubled since the invasion of Ukraine, analysis by the Financial Times has found — a surge that analysts say reflects both greater use of China’s currency to facilitate trade with Russia and the rising cost of dollar financing.Trade financing data from Swift, the international payments and financing platform, shows that the renminbi’s share by value of the market had risen from less than 2 per cent in February 2022 to 4.5 per cent a year later. Those gains put China’s currency in close contention with the euro, which accounts for 6 per cent of the total.Both are, however, still a tiny fraction of the dollar’s share. This stood at 84.3 per cent in February 2023, down from 86.8 per cent a year earlier.“This is a substantial move,” said Mansoor Mohi-uddin, chief economist at the Bank of Singapore. “It’s hard to think of anything else that could be behind this step change other than what’s happened with the war in Ukraine.”The Chinese currency’s growing share of trade finance — in which lenders extend credit to facilitate the cross-border movement of goods — represents a boon for Beijing in its drive to accelerate renminbi internationalisation and a stark challenge to the west, which has sought to use sanctions to bar major Russian financial institutions from utilising Swift.“It’s likely that a lot of this, given the timing, represents Russian trade [with China] which is done through intermediaries,” said Arthur Kroeber, founding partner of China-focused research group Gavekal Dragonomics. “The fact that Russia itself is cut off from Swift is perhaps irrelevant.”“There’s clearly a lot of Russian oil that’s showing up in China via the Middle East and Malaysia,” he added, pointing to an “explosion” in Chinese oil import volumes from Malaysia since March of last year that exceeds the country’s production capacity.The People’s Bank of China had carried out a concerted internationalisation drive in the years leading up to August 2015, when a devaluation led to severe capital flight. This forced the central bank to reverse course and impose draconian capital controls that stalled China’s progress in promoting the currency’s global use.The renminbi’s latest rise through the ranks of trade finance currencies has not been matched by greater use in international payments made on Swift, which have plateaued at about 2 per cent of the global total.However, Russia does have access to the Cross-Border Interbank Payment System (Cips), China’s alternative to Swift, and last year bilateral trade between the two countries rose to a record $185bn as Russian companies paid for most purchases of Chinese goods in renminbi. Total settlements on Cips came to Rmb97tn ($14.1tn) in 2022, central bank data showed, a year-on-year increase of 21 per cent. “There’s a limit to how much you can unearth in terms of the precise mechanics of how these payments occur,” Kroeber said. “But I would suspect a very substantial portion of this increase in trade finance, when you get to the bottom of it, reflects transactions involving Russia.”Analysts and economists said the rising cost of dollar funding had also made China’s currency relatively more attractive for trade financing. The US Federal Reserve has raised rates nine times since 2022, while the PBoC has cut its benchmark loan prime rate twice over the same period.Guan Tao, global chief economist at Bank of China International and a former official at the State Administration of Foreign Exchange, said the currency’s rise in trade finance “relates to the divergence of US and China monetary policies . . . the renminbi’s role has changed from a high interest rate currency into a low interest rate currency.”“On the interest rate side . . . with the US having hiked, on a relative basis the renminbi is cheaper. We do see recently there is more interest in trade finance being done in renminbi,” said Kelvin Lau, senior economist for Greater China at Standard Chartered. “With or without Russia, structurally we’re seeing renminbi internationalisation making a comeback.”The PBoC has shifted its renminbi internationalisation strategy since the beginning of 2022, according to a recent paper from Zhang Ming, deputy director of the Department of International Finance at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences.Rather than focus on pushing more renminbi pricing for crude oil and expanding foreign investor access to onshore securities as it did up until the end of 2021, Zhang said, the central bank has begun aggressively pushing for greater use of the currency in settlement of cross-border commodities trades and improving global access to derivatives tied to renminbi assets.That sharper focus on commodities settlement is evident from deals like the one struck last month with Brazil, which will allow the largest economies in Asia and South America to conduct trade and financial transactions in their own currencies. “China has a strong incentive to push forward renminbi internationalisation to manage the rising risks of geopolitical tensions and US-China decoupling,” said Zhi Xiaojia, head of Asia research at Crédit Agricole. “It has intensified international dialogue and made some positive progress on this front, especially with the Association of South-East Asian Nations, Middle Eastern, and Latin economies.”However, in light of the tight capital controls maintained by China’s central bank, few experts expect the renminbi to quickly rocket up the ranks of global payments currencies.“The Chinese are using a salami-slicing tactic to internationalise the renminbi,” said Chi Lo, Senior China strategist at BNP Paribas Asset Management. “They’re not in a hurry.” More

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    The feds must rein in crypto-financed terrorism

    The recent indictment of a New York woman accused of sending funds to Hay’at Tahrir al-Sham — designated by the United States and United Nations as a Foreign Terrorist Organization — is newsworthy because it’s the exception, not the rule. But this does not necessarily mean that financing terrorism with cryptocurrencies is itself a rare event. Rather, the few prosecutions that have been announced reflect the limitations of law enforcement’s capabilities in the United States and around the world — a problem that can and should be solved.Continue Reading on Coin Telegraph More

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    UK house sales at pre-COVID levels after ‘mini-budget’ shock – Rightmove

    LONDON (Reuters) – British homes sales recovered to within a whisker of pre-pandemic levels in March, representing a recovery from September when the failed economic plan of former prime minister Liz Truss sparked turmoil across markets, a survey showed on Wednesday. Property website Rightmove (OTC:RTMVY) said the number of sales agreed between sellers and buyers was just 1% lower last month than in March 2019 as borrowing costs edged down from their leap after the September ‘mini-budget’. “The market is remaining surprisingly robust given the economic headwinds that have affected movers over the last six months,” Rightmove’s property expert Tim Bannister said.However, while the total number of agreed sales had improved from being 21% below 2019 levels as recently as January, they remained down 18% when compared with March 2022.As well as Britain’s high inflation rate, the country’s housing market is facing the challenge posed by the Bank of England’s run of interest rate increases going to back to December 2021. Real estate agents noted a “significant upswing” in buyer demand for apartments of all sizes, with agreed sales rising 10% from 2019, up from a fall of 11% at the start of 2023. London saw the most pronounced recovery in the broader market, with overall agreed sales increasing 11% compared to March 2019, and agreed sales of apartments 23% higher.Robert Sturges, central London area director at estate agents Chestertons, said demand for apartments was being driven by commuters looking to move closer to their work and overseas buyers taking advantage of favourable currency exchange rates. “In the face of rising living costs, some buyers may also decide that a flat is financially more viable than a house at this moment in time,” Sturges added. Rightmove said a third of properties were reduced from their original asking price, up from 19% last year although in line with pre-pandemic levels.The average size of price reduction rose to 6%, or 22,000 pounds ($27,341.60) based on the current national average asking price of 365,357 pounds, according to Rightmove. Mortgage lender Nationwide has previously said its measure of house prices fell 3.1% in the 12 months to March – the biggest annual drop since July 2009 – while rival Halifax reported a 1.6% year-on-year rise.($1 = 0.8046 pounds) More