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    Wall St set for lower open as bank contagion worries flare up

    (Reuters) – Wall Street’s main indexes were headed for a lower open on Friday as concerns over the banking sector’s health sapped the appetite for financial stocks.Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen said on Thursday that measures will be taken to keep Americans’ deposits safe, but that did little to ease investor nerves about a liquidity crisis in the banking sector that could limit lending and tip the economy into a severe recession.Shares of major U.S. banks such as JPMorgan Chase & Co (NYSE:JPM), Wells Fargo (NYSE:WFC) and Bank of America (NYSE:BAC) dropped between 1% and 2.8% in premarket trade.Shares of regional lenders First Republic Bank (NYSE:FRC), PacWest Bancorp, Western Alliance (NYSE:WAL) Bancorp and Truist Financial (NYSE:TFC) Corp fell between 2% and 4.9%.European banks also came under pressure after a report of a U.S. probe into Credit Suisse and UBS further soured the mood. Their U.S.-listed shares were down about 4.6% and 3.4%, respectively.U.S. shares of Deutsche Bank (ETR:DBKGn) fell nearly 10% after the bank’s credit default swaps rose to a four-year high.”Although they are trying to reassure markets that they’ll be standing by to take action if necessary, what investors are taking this as is the fact that regulators, central bankers and the U.S. government are still concerned about the potential for contagion,” said Susannah Streeter, head of money and markets, Hargreaves Lansdown.Banking crisis concerns were also reflected in bond markets, with U.S. two-year Treasury yields falling sharply to their lowest levels since September on Friday.Traders’ bets have now shifted toward a pause in U.S. rate hikes in May, after the Fed signaled caution about its next move amid the global banking crisis, sparked by the failure of two regional banks.Data on Friday showed orders for durable goods fell 1% last month against expectations of a 0.6% rise. S&P Global (NYSE:SPGI)’s survey due later in the day is expected to show a weakening in U.S. manufacturing activity in March, while remarks by Fed’s St. Louis president, James Bullard, are also expected after the opening bell.At 8:32 a.m. ET, Dow e-minis were down 345 points, or 1.07%, S&P 500 e-minis were down 36.5 points, or 0.92%, and Nasdaq 100 e-minis were down 76 points, or 0.59%.Among major movers, Block Inc fell 2.4% in premarket trading and looked set to extend losses from Thursday when Hindenburg Research disclosed short positions in the payments firm.Activision Blizzard (NASDAQ:ATVI) jumped 5.5% after the UK competition regulator dropped some competition concerns in the Microsoft-Activision deal.Crypto stocks like Coinbase (NASDAQ:COIN) Global, Marathon Digital Holdings and Riot Platforms dropped between 2.2% and 3.4% after cryptocurrency exchange Binance paused deposits and withdrawals on its platform due to issues affecting its spot trading. More

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    IMF official says Pakistan must explain fuel-pricing scheme before any loan deal

    ISLAMABAD (Reuters) -A long-awaited loan agreement between Pakistan and the International Monetary Fund (IMF) will be signed once a few remaining points, including a proposed fuel pricing scheme, are settled, an IMF official said on Friday.Pakistan and the IMF have been negotiating since early February on an agreement that would release $1.1 billion to the cash-strapped, nuclear-armed country of 220 million people.The latest issue is a plan, announced by Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif last week, to charge affluent consumers more for fuel, with the money raised used to subsidise prices for the poor, who have been hit hard by inflation. In February it was running at its highest in 50 years.The plan involves a difference of around 100 rupees (35 U.S. cents) a litre between the prices paid by the rich and poor, according to the petroleum ministry.Petroleum Minister Musadik Malik told Reuters on Friday that his ministry was working out details. It was not a subsidy but a relief programme, he said.”People with larger cars will pay more than people with smaller cars. Smaller cars are more fuel efficient, so people will move towards more fuel-efficient cars,” Malik said.IMF NEEDS EXPLANATION But the IMF’s resident representative in Pakistan, Esther Perez Ruiz, said the government had not consulted the fund about the scheme.Ruiz, in a message to Reuters, confirmed a media report that a staff-level agreement would be signed once a few remaining points, including the fuel scheme, were settled.She has said that the IMF would ask the government for more details, including how it would be implemented and what protections would be put in place to prevent abuse.The minister said the scheme wouldn’t cost the government anything extra. “We can explain all this to the IMF when they ask,” he said, adding that the lender was in touch with the finance ministry not his. The finance ministry did not immediately respond to a request for a comment.With $4.6 billion in foreign exchange reserves held by Pakistan’s central bank in the week ending Match 17, enough to cover only about four weeks of necessary imports, Pakistan is desperate for the IMF agreement to disperse a $1.1 billion tranche from a $6.5 billion bailout agreed in 2019.Islamabad has implemented several measures, including devaluing the rupee, lifting subsidies and raising energy prices, as preconditions for the agreement, which the finance minister said this month was “very close”. More

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    Euro, sterling fall sharply amid jitters over European banks

    LONDON (Reuters) – The euro and sterling fell sharply against a strengthening dollar on Friday amid nervousness over banks, with better-than expected economic data failing to lift sentiment. Banking stocks plunged in Europe with heavyweights Deutsche Bank (ETR:DBKGn) and UBS Group pummelled by worries that the worst problems to hit the sector since the 2008 financial crisis have not yet been contained.Better-than-expected flash Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI) data failed to lift the single currency as sentiment in markets were fragile with European banks falling more than 5%.”The data were better than expected, but the mood in the market is risk aversion, which is supporting another move back to the safe haven dollar,” said Jane Foley, Head of FX Strategy at Rabobank London.  The euro sank more than 1% to $1.0714 and was last down 0.9% at $1.0735. Risk aversion also sent sterling 0.6% lower to $1.2214, despite data showing the British economy was set to grow in the first quarter and confidence was growing. The pound touched a seven-week high of $1.2341 on Thursday in volatile trading after the Bank of England raised interest rates by 25 bps to 4.25%, but said a surprise resurgence in inflation would probably fade fast, stoking speculation it had ended its run of hikes.Banking stocks have been battered this month following the sudden failures of two regional U.S. lenders and the emergency sale of embattled Swiss bank Credit Suisse to rival UBS.SAFE-HAVEN DEMANDThe FX world seemed to suggest a bout of risk aversion with safe-haven proxies, gold and yen outperforming and most other currencies softer, according to Christopher Wong, currency strategist at OCBC. “I think with sentiment still fragile, price action can swing both ways depending on whether there are any contagion surprises.”The safe-haven yen was in demand, up 0.7% to 129.95 per dollar, after touching a seven-week high of 129.64. Japan’s core consumer inflation slowed in February, but an index stripping away energy costs hit a four-decade high, data showed on Friday.With inflation still exceeding the Bank of Japan’s 2% target, the data will keep alive market expectations of a near-term tweak to its bond yield control policy, according to analysts.The dollar index, which measures the currency against six major rivals, rose 0.6% at 103.22.The Fed on Wednesday raised interest rates by 25 basis points, as expected, but took a cautious stance on the outlook because of banking sector turmoil even as Fed Chair Jerome Powell kept the door open on further rate rises if necessary.U.S. Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen reiterated on Thursday that she was prepared to take further action to ensur Americans’ bank deposits stayed safe, to ease investor nerves. More

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    Liquidity Struggles Plague Crypto Markets Amid Banking Upheaval

    Liquidity concerns in the cryptocurrency markets have been growing, and recent collapses in the banking sector have only served to exacerbate an already precarious situation. Analyst Conor Ryder from Kaiko Research addressed this issue in a recent blog post, examining market depth, spreads, slippage, and volumes as key indicators of liquidity in the crypto markets.According to Ryder’s analysis, the closure of the SEN network and Silvergate’s Signet payment network — both crucial for market makers in the space — has further strained liquidity. His examination of market depth shows that neither Bitcoin nor Ethereum has seen improvements in native units, with liquidity levels at their lowest in 10 months.Spreads have also become more volatile due to banking issues, particularly affecting USD-linked exchanges and pairs. Ryder notes that the longer it takes for a viable alternative to SEN or Signet to emerge, the more volatile these spreads and depth will become. He also highlights the impact of Binance’s decision to halt its zero-fee program for Bitcoin trading pairs, which caused a 70% drop in liquidity for the BTC-USDT pair on the exchange.In terms of slippage, Ryder’s analysis reveals that liquidity issues in the U.S. have led to increased slippage on Coinbase (NASDAQ:COIN) compared to Binance, with BTC-USD pair slippage on Coinbase two and a half times higher than at the start of the month. On the subject of trading volumes, Binance continues to dominate the market, while U.S. exchanges have struggled to gain share.Ryder further noted the shift in volume share per exchange, pointing out that very little volume actually flows into U.S. exchanges and, in turn, USD pairs. The split of stablecoin vs. USD volumes reinforces this conclusion, with stablecoins rising from a 77% share of volumes to 95% in just over a year.Ryder concludes that investors are gradually moving away from USD pairs in favor of stablecoins, resulting in a shift in liquidity dynamics. The development of a new payment network similar to SEN or Signet could potentially restore liquidity and reduce market volatility, making the cryptocurrency asset class more attractive to new investors.The post Liquidity Struggles Plague Crypto Markets Amid Banking Upheaval appeared first on Coin Edition.See original on CoinEdition More

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    Best Performing Cryptocurrencies for This Week

    Read more to find out the best-performing tokens for this week and the reason behind their success.Ranking first as the top-performing coins, MASK is currently priced at $6.24 witnessing a massive surge of 45.56% in seven days. MASK has a market cap of $474,514,314 while experiencing a hike of 17.78% in one day. Meanwhile, the trading volume of MASK is valued at $360,773,409 with a sudden jump of 70% jump in 24 hours, which indicates that traders have a keen interest in this coin.
    MASK/USDT (Source: TradingView)Looking at the 4-hour chart, MASK is currently riding with the bull as its candlesticks are above the EMA indicators. Moreover, the 50EMA and the 200EMA recently formed a golden cross, which signaled the start of the upward momentum. As more buyers entered the market, MASK’s rise in popularity drew its price upwards. However, traders are doubtful about the upcoming week.MASK seems to be forming a pattern, however, it is hard to predict the price momentum without the confirmation of the pattern. Currently, there could be a possibility that a double top pattern could be formed, however, this could reverse if a double bottom is formed. Looking at the MA indicators, the gap between the 200MA and the 50MA continues to widen, this could also confirm that instead of a double top, a double bottom would be formed, thus leading the price higher. Therefore, traders must closely observe the price patterns and the indicators over time.Read Also : Mask Network (MASK) Price Prediction 2022-2030Ripple Lab’s native token, XRP, made an unexpected entry into the market and proved that it is one of the top-performing coins for this week. Even though XRP would move often sideways, this digital token made an unexpected surge this week. Currently, XRP is priced at $0.4265 experiencing a surge of 14.51% in just seven days, however, it faced a downfall of 3.75% in 24 hours. Moreover, the trading volume is down by 41.40% to $1,722,409,614, indicating the demand for XRP is settling down.
    XRP/USDT (Source: TradingView)The 4-hour chart shows that XRP was below the 200EMA and the 50EMA, however, on Tuesday, XRP made a massive jump by 26.89%. This was one of XRP’s greatest breakthroughs as it was moving sideways for a long period of time, stuck below the $0.4 resistance level. After reaching 0.4745, the price dropped to $0.4065. Ever since then, the price has been struggling to stay top of the $0.4 resistance level.Looking at the 50EMA and the 200EMA, a golden cross was formed on XRP’s Tuesday giant leap. This confirmed that XRP will run with the bulls, however, the gaps between these indicators are becoming narrow, indicating that the XRP’s bull run will soon be over. Traders should be cautious of XRP’s price movement as there is an indication that XRP might fall back to the support level and continue to move sideways for some time.Read Also : XRP Price Prediction 2023-2030Litecoin returns to the list of top-performing coins after showcasing an incredible performance this week. LTC experienced a surge of 13.36% in one week, while its current price is at $92.87. With its market cap at $6,737,193,994, LTC also observed a slight price increase of 4.61% in 24 hours. LTC has a trading volume of $1,018,656,937, however, there was a fall of 12.19% in one day, indicating that traders’ demand for Litecoin reduced.
    LTC/USDT (Source: TradingView)Looking at the 4-hour chart, LTC is facing an uptrend as the prices are above the 200 EMA and 50 EMA. Although the 200 EMA is above the 50 EMA, which is considered a signal for the bear trap, the gaps between these indicators continue to reduce. If the MA indicators cross and form a golden cross, this will confirm that LTC will continue to run with bulls for some time.Moreover, the RSI is valued at 64.27 indicating that LTC has a strong trend as the the buyers continue to show demand and enter the market. However, RSI’s trajectory is faced downwards which could mean that it might divert away from the overbought region. Traders often shared their viewpoint that the 50 to 70 region is the ideal range, expecting the price continues to rise. However, traders should be cautious as the trend could reverse at any time.Read Also : Litecoin Price Prediction 2022-2030ADA has also joined the ranks as one of the top-performing coins after showcasing a tremendous performance this week. ADA is currently priced at $0.3617 with a spike of 5.95% in seven days. The market cap of ADA is at $12,576,730,244, however, it has a downfall of 2.66%. Similar to XRP, traders’ interest in ADA is diminishing as the trading volume fell by 38.26% to $377,078,995 in 24 hours.
    ADA/USDT (Source: TradingView)The 4-hour charts indicate that ADA could face a bull run soon as the 50 EMA and the 200 EMA crossed each other’s paths and formed a golden cross. Moreover, the price is above the indicator which also confirms that ADA’s sentiment is bearish.However, looking at the candlesticks, they seem to give out a double top pattern which could mean that ADA could make an entry downwards. Unlike many of the top-performing coins, ADA actually formed the golden cross mid-week and the gap between the indicators continues to widen. Traders should especially observe the indicators closely and wait for a confirmation of whether the price will remain with bulls or bears. Read Also : Cardano Price Prediction 2023-2030Wrapped Bitcoin is a tokenized version of Bitcoin (BTC) that runs on the Ethereum (ETH) blockchain.WBTC is compliant with ERC-20 — the basic compatibility standard of the Ethereum blockchain — allowing it to be fully integrated into the latter’s ecosystem of decentralized exchanges, crypto lending services, prediction markets, and other ERC-20-enabled decentralized finance (DeFi) applications.
    WBTC/USDT ( Source: TradingView)When considering the chart above, it could be noted that WBTC experienced a Golden cross where the 50-day MA intersected the 200-day MA from below. If WBTC continues in rising exponentially, then it could reach Resistance 1 at (≈$40,000). Although WBTC’s Golden cross produced a sudden surge in prices as a conventional one would, WBTC’s Golden cross was short-lived.Just after a little spike, the prices dropped but fortunately the 200–day MA offered support to WBTC, hence it didn’t tank further. However, WBTC rose almost exponentially after rebounding on the 200-day MA.The RSI is at 66.74 and is tilting down toward the signal. If it falls below the signal, then there could be a bearish trend in the future. Contrastingly, if the RSI is going to head over to the overbought region, above 70, then we could expect the market to correct the prices. Moreover, the Bollinger bands too second the preceding thesis. The reason is that WBTC has touched the upper Bollinger band, hence, WBTC could fall down in price. Moreover, the widening bands too suggest that there is going to be more volatility in the coming days. In the event that WBTC falls, it may seek support near $22,500.Read Also : Wrapped Bitcoin Price Prediction 2022-2030Stacks is a Bitcoin Layer for smart contracts; it enables smart contracts and decentralized applications to use Bitcoin as an asset and settle transactions on the Bitcoin blockchain.When considering the daily chart for Stacks (STX) we can see that at present the coin is on the rise after a Golden cross. This behavior was seen back in May and June of 2022 when STX had a golden cross. Currently, STX is fluctuating while taking the same pattern as in May-June 2022. Hence, this makes us question whether STX is reciprocating this behavior now.
    STX/USDT (Source: TradingView)If STX is repeating its previous behavior as mentioned above then we could expect STX to break above Resistance 1 (≈ $1.5) and reach resistance 2 at (≈$2.4).STX approximately took 77 days to reach resistance 2 as shown in the chart. So the question is, will Stacks take the same amount of time to surge?On the contrary, the RSI is at 64.50 but titling down. If the RSI doesn’t reach the overbought region then STX could reach resistance 2 but if it does STX could go through some consolidation. However, if the bears are to take over the market, then we could expect STX to reach Support 1.There is also the possibility that the 50-day MA and the 200-day MA could interject STX if it was to fall but if the bears are too strong then STX could break below these two lines.Read Also : Stacks Price Prediction 2023-2030Neo bills itself as a “rapidly growing and developing” ecosystem that has the goal of becoming the foundation for the next generation of the internet — a new economy where digitized payments, identities, and assets come together.
    NEO/USDT (Source: TradingView)When considering the above chart, NEO has been on an up trend since late 2022. It has been making higher lows almost exponentially. The previous time this kind of near-exponential behavior was in April-October 2022. Moreover, NEO is showing the same kind of behavior as it showed during the time span mentioned in 2022. As such this could be a reciprocation of its behavior.Therefore, we could expect the prices to reach resistance 2 at (≈$25). However, the bulls will need to bash through resistance 1 to reach resistance 2. There is also a possibility that NEO could be rejected at resistance 2. If the preceding is to happen then NEO could have a brief period of consolidation between Resistance 1 and the current price range it is fluctuating at.Another possibility is that if NEO is rejected from resistance 2, then it could fall to support at (≈$7.5).Read Also : Neo Price Prediction 2022-2030Nexo is a blockchain-based lending platform that offers users instant cryptocurrency-backed loans. The project was first announced in December 2017, and it launched in April 2018. Nexo was founded by a team of finance professionals and crypto enthusiasts.
    NEXO/USDT Chart ( Source: TradingView)When considering the chart above Nexo has been on a bull run since March, if this trend continues NEXO could reach resistance 1 at (≈$1.1). But the Bollinger bands don’t support the preceding sentiment. The reason is that NEXO has touched the upper Bollinger band and as such a correction is due in the near future. Hence, if there is a correction the price of Nexo could go down. Additionally, the RSI at 59.28 shows that the trend is strong. The RSI is parallel to the horizontal axis. However, if the RSI goes into an overbought region above 70, then the market could correct the prices. In the event the market corrects prices, the bulls could take over the market and if this happens, then NEXO could tank to support at ($0.5).Read Also : Nexo Price Prediction 2022-2030Many of the cryptos mentioned above have already formed a golden cross and are expected to experience an uptrend over the coming days. XRP was one of the coins that made an unexpected entry as it was moving sideways for a long time. Moreover, many top-rankling coins like LTC and ADA also made it to the list, indicating a bullish season is near. Concurrently, traders should be cautious of any trend reversal that could happen in the future.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 Best Performing Cryptocurrencies for This Week appeared first on Coin Edition.See original on CoinEdition More

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    So you think you know your supply chain?

    In 2018 the Responsible Sourcing Network presented an alarming figure: twice as many people worldwide were in forced labour as had been taken to the Americas during the 300 years of the transatlantic slave trade. In the five years since that statement by RSN, a US non-profit organisation that combats human rights and labour abuses in raw materials sourcing, the upending of supply chains caused by the Covid-19 pandemic has put millions more workers at risk of this kind of abuse.Statistics on forced labour and human rights violations make for grim reading, not least because efforts to end such abuse have been going on for decades.Bennett Freeman, a corporate responsibility adviser and vice-chair of RSN, remembers the birth of organisations such as the Clean Clothes Campaign in the Netherlands (1989), the Ethical Trading Initiative in the UK (1998) and the Fair Labor Association in the US (1999).“This agenda emerged in the early to mid-90s and the moving parts were visible and working by the end of the 90s,” says Freeman, a US state department human rights and labour official at the time. “We’re talking about a quarter of a century of focus, effort, initiatives, successes and failures, and frankly there’s a big question to be asked about how much progress we’ve made.”He is not alone in wondering. Alison Taylor, a specialist in ethical business at the Stern School of Business, New York University, likens the situation to a game of Whac-a-Mole. “There will be a revelation of some horrible abuse and collective action from the companies in question,” she says. “Some of that will be quite effective but then another problem will pop up somewhere else. It’s all very reactive.”But with continuing scrutiny from consumers, activists and the media — and growing interest from investors — companies are now under more pressure than ever to meet obligations over responsible sourcing. When we asked FT Moral Money readers to point to the biggest risks posed by unethical labour practices in supply chains, most picked reputational damage while others cited consumer boycotts and legal challenges.No silver-bullet solution has appeared since human and labour rights abuse emerged as a corporate risk in the 1990s. Thirty years on, companies are still not prioritising action in this area. Asked how important ethical supply chain practices are to their organisation, most readers of FT Moral Money ranked them the same as other sustainability challenges. Nevertheless, in sectors such as apparel and footwear, which have faced particular scrutiny, the years of effort have begun to pay off. At the same time, innovators have developed technologies that can track products back to individual factories, fisheries and plantations. Alongside emerging legislation that imposes financial penalties for non-compliance, this has led to cautious optimism about the emergence of a new era — one in which fewer iPhones and sneakers are made by children or exploited workers.

    Not an out-there problem At the heart of the challenge is the length and complexity of the journeys that products take as raw materials become finished goods. Many pass through the hands of thousands of workers in enterprises that range from huge factories to agricultural co-operatives, micro businesses or farms of just a few hectares. Even the sourcing of raw materials — where Patricia Jurewicz, chief executive of RSN, sees some of the worst abuses — is fraught with complexity. “There is a huge web of so many different actors, of transportation of materials, of the different processing and blending,” she says. “It is really hard to peel all that back.”Disruptions such as the pandemic, inflation and currency fluctuation exacerbate the problems that face workers, as do geopolitical upheavals. LRQA, a global assurance firm, formerly part of Lloyd’s Register, recently reviewed its 2022 audits — nearly 20,000 of them. It concluded that violence and macroeconomic volatility increased the risk of child labour in 18 production markets. Purchasers’ buying practices can also create problems. In 2017 and 2018, Mark Anner, a professor and an expert in pricing practices at Pennsylvania State University, studied 340 Indian factories making clothing for export. He found that price pressures and shortened lead times led most suppliers to raise production quotas for workers, maintain below-subsistence wages and make overtime obligatory.Anner’s analysis also revealed a greater reliance on female and migrant workers, the imposition of short work contracts to avoid paying benefits, and outsourcing to unregistered factories. Workers who failed to meet production targets were verbally and even physically abused.“It’s not just an out-there problem,” says Caroline Rees, president of Shift, a non-profit organisation that is a centre of expertise on the UN guiding principles on business and human rights. She argues that when buyers push down prices, particularly at a time of rising input costs, suppliers’ struggle to survive will always win out over codes of conduct.“There’s been too much externalising the problem then coming in behind to say, ‘let’s be part of the solution,” she says. “[This never questions] how much internal practices or the business model itself is creating the context for that problem.”As procurement decisions make their way through the supply chain, it is workers who suffer most. “Those at the top of the supply chain have incredible power and resources,” argues worker rights advocate Cathy Feingold, director of the international department at AFL-CIO, the US’s largest trade union federation. “They should be responsible for assisting suppliers in having a supply chain that upholds their commitments to good worker and human rights.”

    Scrutiny finds a new homeAs a student in 2001 Jonah Peretti, who went on to co-found the Huffington Post and BuzzFeed news outlets, took up an offer by Nike to personalise his trainers. He asked for the word “sweatshop” to be stitched into them — and his email exchanges with the company were broadcast globally. The age of online consumer activism had arrived. What followed was a wave of interest from consumers in knowing that what they were buying was not made by children or underpaid workers in dangerous or sweatshop conditions.Shoppers began to vote with their wallets. Between 2004 and 2016, Statista estimates that retail sales of products certified by Fairtrade International rose by nearly 10 times, from €830mn to €7.9bn. At the same time, new digital tools emerged to help consumers make more ethical choices, including QR codes, mobile apps and interactive websites. In the end, it may not be shoppers pushing companies hardest. The Statista research, published in 2021, found that only 26 per cent of US consumers would pay a premium for fairly traded food and drink.“It’s hard to engage consumers,” says Rees. “I feel there’s a ceiling on the percentage of consumers for whom that will tip the balance.”Consumer pressure can only go so far, says Shawn MacDonald, chief executive of Verité, a non-profit organisation that highlights and remedies supply chain violations. “It’s not fair to expect consumers to hold companies accountable.” The investment community, meanwhile, is increasingly a force to be reckoned with. “I have [sustainability executives] frequently tell me that when investors call, that is when I can get the C-suite’s attention,” says MacDonald.Yann Wyss, global head of social impact and human rights at Nestlé, knows how this works in practice. He has seen a sharp rise in interest from investors since joining the company 12 years ago. “Back then I would attend maybe a call a month with investors,” he says. “These days it’s more like a call every two days.”The questions investors ask vary. According to FT Moral Money readers, they range from the origins of the materials that companies use to the nature of local labour practices.Finding answers can be tough for investors. “Getting a baseline understanding of these issues is incredibly hard,” says Dan Hochman, head of sustainability research at Bridgewater Associates, the asset manager.He compares data on supply chains with that now available for carbon emissions. “We’re so much earlier in the data evolution,” he says. “Almost by definition some of the worst parts of the supply chain happen in the shadows.”For investors, this means looking beyond compliance or audit data, or whether companies have a supplier code of conduct or a human rights policy.At Wellington Management, due diligence in its Global Stewards fund covers everything from whether a company is meeting its legal obligations to how it holds suppliers to account on issues such as fair wages and working conditions, as well as what it is doing on the ground and through third-party assurance firms to verify all this.In 2021, for example, concern about the use of forced labour in China’s Xinjiang province prompted Wellington to seek an assurance that Inditex, which owns Zara, the fast-fashion retailer, did not source its cotton from the region — which it was able to confirm. “You get them on the phone and you unravel how they work, how their supply chain is overseen and how they have confidence that they aren’t involved in that region,” says Yolanda Courtines, an equity portfolio manager at Wellington.Needless to say, this is harder than verifying reductions in carbon emissions. “You can say we want to reach net zero and that’s a pretty common standard,” she says. “But how you roll up all the different issues around modern slavery — that is much more complex.”

    Regulators show their teethIn March 2022 at the port of Baltimore, Maryland, customs officers seized four shipments from Malaysia with a combined value of almost $2.5mn. These were not narcotics, counterfeit products or goods from embargoed countries. They were palm oil products destined for a processing facility in Delaware.The cargo was seized because of the alleged use of forced labour. Officials can use a withhold release order, or WRO, to detain goods until they are re-exported or until the importer can show that no forced labour was used in their production. If neither happens, the goods can be destroyed.It is not the only ban importers now need to worry about. Since June, the US has used the Uyghur Forced Labor Prevention Act to prohibit imports from the Xinjiang region of China, where there have been allegations of human rights violations that include forced labour.These are not regulators’ first efforts to combat forced labour. Issuance of WROs falls under a more than 90-year-old law: the Tariff Act of 1930. In recent years forced labour has been targeted with laws including the California Transparency in Supply Chains Act of 2012 and the Modern Slavery Act 2015 in the UK. Some critics say this legislation lacks teeth, however.The Californian law only requires companies to report publicly on efforts to eradicate human trafficking and slavery, even if this is insufficient; it does not mandate new measures. Similarly the emphasis of the UK’s law is on reporting. Its lack of financial penalties in 2021 for non-compliance prompted a parliamentary committee to call for tougher enforcement.“These were well-intentioned but fairly limited, given the lack of back-up beyond what was expected to be disclosed,” says Eric Biel, senior adviser at the Fair Labor Association in the US.He says the nature of legislation now emerging is markedly different. “With the Uyghur Forced Labour Prevention Act and the use of WROs, it is no longer a choice,” he says. “That is where government engagement has been a game-changer.”Rees, of Shift, agrees that WROs are an effective tool for change. “It is mission-critical — companies cannot get their goods into the country.”At one time, the main risk to a company found to be using forced or child labour was to its reputation. “Now it’s costing millions of dollars. The financial hit is real,” says MacDonald of Verité. Import bans are not the only sticks regulators can wield. The EU is working on a directive to require large businesses to disclose and manage environmental and human rights standards along their supply chains. Germany has such a law in place already.Debates are taking place on whether the best way forward is an import ban, which the EU is also considering, or due diligence. “For the EU legislation, so much is going to depend on the enforcement and enforceability,” says Rees. She warns against legislation that permits a tick-box approach, or one in which companies pass responsibility for compliance back to suppliers that are not equipped or cannot afford to handle it. The discussion will continue, alongside calls from those who would like to see rules made consistent internationally. Most agree, however, that regulations on forced labour have entered a new era, one in which companies failing to provide assurances that their goods have been responsibly sourced will be deemed negligent. In other words, ignorance is no longer bliss.

    Digital detective workIf regulators are pressing companies to disclose their products’ provenance and how they were made, tracking and tracing technologies — from satellite imaging to the isotopic fingerprints on foods and textiles — are making it harder to claim ignorance. At Verité, MacDonald has watched with interest as science has enabled the work needed to find out whether goods are made by children or bonded workers. “I’ve been doing this work for a long time,” he says. “Five years ago I never would have thought of something like isotope tracing.”Through a project called Streams (supply chain tracing and engagement methodologies), Verité is working with the RSN and others to identify the most effective approaches and which to apply more broadly.Technology is even shining a light on one of the murkiest supply chains: that for seafood. Evidence has emerged of workers being forcibly held on unregistered “ghost ships” on the seas around south-east Asia and other regions. Many are forced to work 20-hour shifts and have been beaten or killed.Until now, such vessels have been hard to track since they often disable the automatic identification system (AIS), which provides location and other data to other ships and to coastal authorities. However, Global Fishing Watch — a partnership between conservation organisation Oceana, digital mapping watchdog SkyTruth and Google — is using machine learning to flag up when boats’ location beacons are intentionally turned off, suggesting unregulated fishing activity.GFW makes this data freely available on its platform. “We are working with port authorities to help them identify which vessels they should inspect,” says David Kroodsma, the director of research and innovation at the organisation.Mission-driven investors take a keen interest in these kinds of technologies. Working Capital is among them. An early-stage venture fund, it was incubated at Humanity United, part of the Omidyar Group.Its investments include OpenSC, which uses data science and machine learning to verify ethical production claims, and internet of things technologies to trace products across the supply chain. Another is Kenzen, whose wearable device for industrial workers can detect risks such as heat stress and fatigue that could lead to injuries. Still, Ed Marcum, the fund’s managing director, believes that responsible sourcing technology has some way to go. “There’s demand for information,” he says. “The problem remains that the quality and scale is limited, especially when it comes to labour rights.”One investment by Working Capital that is achieving scale is Altana AI, a New York-based start-up whose clients include US Customs and Border Protection, BMW, Merck and Maersk. Altana has an ambitious goal: to build what Evan Smith, its chief executive and co-founder, calls “Google Maps for the supply chain”. As well as using public data, Altana applies machine learning to non-public data, such as shipment bookings, purchase orders and bills of materials, to build a picture of what is happening across supply chain networks. This allows customers to identify risks such as worker exploitation, whether in regions, manufacturing facilities or raw materials.“We’re connecting the dots across product flows, physical shipment locations, value-added manufacturing and then end-use and distribution,” says Smith. “We take the thumbprint of the data, which benefits the entire network, but sensitive data elements and raw data stay private.”Smith believes this approach underpins something he sees as essential in managing supply chains: a change in mindset that treats them not as outsourced buyer-supplier relationships but as multi-tiered networks. “That’s the key,” he says.

    All together now . . . Advocates for responsible sourcing practices are the first to point out that while data is a critical tool, it cannot tackle labour abuses alone. “You can have the fanciest technology but in the end we need to make sure workers feel their companies respect their right to a collective voice,” says Feingold of the AFL-CIO. “They’re the ones who can tell you what is happening in their workplaces.” When she was leading Unilever’s social impact work, responsible and sustainable business expert Marcela Manubens learnt the importance of including suppliers and their employees in decision making processes. “When you think about the progress made, in many instances it is because we listened to workers, to management and to communities,” she says.In 2007, to equip female workers to play a bigger role in decision making — both at work and in their communities — Gap, the clothing company, launched Pace, a voluntary programme that delivered life skills and technical training to women in the factories that made its garments. Yet when other brands began similar initiatives, this created a problem: multiple sessions were being delivered in the same facility. “Workers would be going through similar training, depending on which buyers were sourcing from that factory,” says Daniel Fibiger, head of responsible sourcing at Gap.To fix this, four organisations — Better Work, an International Labour Organization initiative, Gap’s Pace programme, humanitarian agency Care and advisory BSR’s HERproject — came together to launch Reimagining Industry to Support Equality, or Rise, to give workplace training to increase women’s wellbeing and skills.The group works with 50 of the world’s largest apparel brands. “The integration does away with duplication. It brings this proven training to other factories that might not otherwise have been able to benefit,” says Fibiger.As the Rise initiative suggests, if companies have learnt one thing over decades of working on responsible sourcing it is that they cannot make progress on their own.Sometimes, this means building local capacity, as Walmart has done in Thailand. “They had laws against forced labour but there was an opportunity to enhance enforcement,” says Kathleen McLaughlin, Walmart’s head of sustainability.Part of the challenge, she says, is that law enforcement officials sometimes lack the capacity to build cases against traffickers. In Thailand, this led the company to make a grant through its foundation to the International Justice Mission, a US-based non-governmental organisation. This enabled the IJM to open an office in Bangkok and to train police officers in how to build strong cases that have the best chance of securing convictions.Building capacity can also involve bricks and mortar. In Ivory Coast, for example, the sustainability goals of Nestlé’s income accelerator programme — which gives farmers direct payment incentives — include increased school enrolment to help prevent child labour. But in communities that have no schools, the company has sometimes needed to build them. “You could argue it’s not our job to build schools,” says Wyss. “But sometimes the government has limited resources and other priorities. It’s a combination of us stepping in but also engaging in discussions and making them aware of these gaps.” The Cotton Campaign is an example of what can be achieved by bringing together organisations from all sectors. In March 2022 the campaign, which sought to stop the systematic use of forced labour by the government of Uzbekistan, was able to announce the end of its 12-year boycott of Uzbek cotton.The victory came as a result of years of efforts by Uzbek activists, international advocates, multinational companies, human rights organisations and others. “From the beginning, this was a multi-stakeholder coalition that brought together not just the usual suspects but also big apparel brands and their trade associations,” says Freeman, who co-founded the campaign. “That was the secret sauce.”

    A possible turning pointBattles to end worker exploitation or prevent child labour are far from over. In fact, geopolitical and economic upheavals, as well as the pandemic’s long tail, have exacerbated these problems in many places. Among the more worrying statistics, for example, is a 2022 ILO estimate that more than 27mn people worldwide — equivalent to the population of Shanghai — are working in situations of forced labour.Yet in some places, years of work on the ground with governments and NGOs appear to be paying off. “One must look at the data at a national level and preferably even at the factory level,” says Fibiger. “I’ve visited some of the same factories I visited 10 years ago and today they are completely different places to work.” New sources of pressure may help. While activists have long understood how to express disapproval of poor labour practices, investors are also making their voices heard. In 2021, for example, investors representing more than $6.3tn in assets sent a statement to the European Commission and the European parliament in support of mandated human rights and environmental due diligence.Feingold cites the commitment she has seen from Norway’s sovereign wealth fund to using its financial clout to drive better labour standards. “That could be huge if they take action,” she says. “That’s where I get excited.”In 2021, Just Capital, which monitors the effect of business on society, found that companies that explicitly mention human rights in their supplier code of conduct tended to outperform those whose code omits them.For Jurewicz of the Cotton Campaign all this is a cause for optimism. “A lot of people ignored this for a long time,” she says. “But something is finally happening.” What comes next may be a case of two steps forward, one step back. But the current combination of forces — collaborative, regulatory, financial, technological and legal — may just be enough to start laying the foundations for global supply chains that benefit, rather than abuse or exploit, the people who work in them. More

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    Despite industry headwinds, Bitcoin mining booms in Texas

    MCCAMEY, Texas (Reuters) – Cryptocurrency bankruptcies and worries over electric power consumption have failed to dent the industry’s growth in Texas, according to a top trade group, citing the rise in the miners’ power demands. Bitcoin miners consume about 2,100 megawatts of the state’s power supplies, said Lee Bratcher, president of industry group Texas Blockchain Council. That power usage rose 75% last year and was nearly triple that of the prior 12 months, Bratcher said. Those demands amount to about 3.7% of the state’s lowest forecast peak load this year, according to data from grid operator Electric Reliability Council of Texas (ERCOT).     “There’s been some challenges with the Bitcoin mining industry,” Bratcher said, noting his group recently saw two prominent bankruptcies and other miners scaling back expansions.     The industry also faces new federal regulations, including a proposed 30% tax on electricity usage for digital mining and calls by the U.S. Treasury secretary and commodities regulator for a regulatory framework. New York this year imposed a ban on some cryptocurrency mining that runs on fossil fuel-generated power. Other states are expected to follow suit.But in Texas, some counties have offered tax incentives and miners continue to be drawn to its wind and solar power, which could supply about 39% of ERCOT’s energy needs in 2023.     “Bitcoin mining is a very energy intensive business, which is why we tend to find places like West Texas to be full of Bitcoin miners,” said Matt Prusak, chief commercial officer at cryptocurrency miner U.S. Bitcoin Corp, which has one of its mining operations in a 280-megawatt wind farm in Texas.     Its McCamey, Texas, site last month consumed 173,000 megawatt hours of power – about 60% provided by the grid and nearly 40% from the nearby wind farm. The average American home uses about 10 MWh in a year, according to the Energy Information Administration.     In Texas, where about 250 people died during a winter storm blackout that exposed the fragility of the state’s grid, the prospect of higher crypto demand has raised alarms.     “There are a lot of Bitcoin mines that are trying to connect to the system,” said Joshua Rhodes, a research scientist at the University of Texas at Austin. “If all of them were to connect in the timelines that they are looking to connect, then it probably would present an issue to the grid because that load would be growing way faster than it ever has before.” More

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    TSX set to open lower on worries over European banking crisis

    European banks fell sharply, led by Deutsche Bank (ETR:DBKGn) and UBS, on mounting worries that the crisis in the sector was showing no signs of easing. [MKTS/GLOB]March futures on the S&P/TSX index were down 0.7% at 7:17 a.m. ET.Crude oil prices fell on lower demand prospects after U.S. Energy Secretary Jennifer Granholm said refilling the country’s Strategic Petroleum Reserve (SPR) may take several years. [O/R]Among company news, Enbridge (NYSE:ENB) Inc said it was “disappointed” by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers’ decision to extend the federal permitting process for the oil distributor’s proposed Great Lakes Tunnel.Western Copper (NYSE:WRN) and Gold Corp said Mitsubishi Materials Corp has agreed to acquire a 5% stake in the miner for $C2.63 per share.Investors also await Canada’s retail sales data for January, which is expected to rise 0.7%, as per a Reuters poll, from a 0.5% increase in the previous month.In the previous session, the Toronto Stock Exchange’s S&P/TSX composite index closed down 0.4% to a six-day low, dragged down by energy and financial stocks. (TO)Dow e-minis were down 326 points, or 1.01%, at 7:17 a.m. ET, while S&P 500 e-minis were down 33 points, or 0.83%, and Nasdaq 100 e-minis were down 67.25 points, or 0.52%. [.N]COMMODITIES AT 7:00 a.m. ET Gold futures: $2,002; +0.3% [GOL/]US crude: $67.42; -3.63% [O/R]Brent crude: $73.4; -3.64% [O/R]U.S. ECONOMIC DATA DUE ON FRIDAYFeb Durable Goods due at 8:30 a.m. ETMarch S&P Global (NYSE:SPGI) composite PMI data due at 9:45 a.m. ETFOR CANADIAN MARKETS NEWS, CLICK ON CODES:TSX market report (TO)Canadian dollar and bonds report [CAD/] [CA/]Reuters global stocks poll for CanadaCanadian markets directory($1 = 1.3769 Canadian dollars) More