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    Binance-Voyager deal to proceed without holdings, NY judge rules

    The decision to deny the government’s motion came on March 15. In it, Wiles realleges his prior approval of Voyager Digital’s Chapter 11 bankruptcy plan, which suggests selling billions of dollars in assets to Binance.US in an effort to regain liquidity to pay back customers. Continue Reading on Coin Telegraph More

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    Yellen to say US banking system ‘remains sound’ despite bank failures

    Treasury secretary Janet Yellen will tell a Senate committee that the US banking system “remains sound” and defend the Biden administration’s actions to rescue depositors at two failed banks and thwart broader financial contagion, according to prepared testimony ahead of a hearing on Thursday.Yellen is expected to be grilled by lawmakers on the Senate finance committee regarding the aggressive intervention by US regulators and officials on Sunday to guarantee all deposits at Silicon Valley Bank and Signature Bank, two collapsed regional banks, and set up a new Federal Reserve facility to provide liquidity to other banks.“I can reassure the members of the committee that our banking system remains sound, and that Americans can feel confident that their deposits will be there when they need them,” Yellen will say at the hearing, which begins at 10am ET. “This week’s actions demonstrate our resolute commitment to ensure that depositors’ savings remain safe.”Although the US government’s actions stabilised markets early in the week, investors were again spooked on Wednesday by turmoil at Credit Suisse, the Swiss bank, which Yellen may have to address.Most Democratic lawmakers have praised President Joe Biden’s administration for taking action to protect the banking system, and blamed a rollback of financial regulation under Donald Trump for paving the way for the crisis.

    But some Republicans have charged that US officials and regulators mismanaged the financial system by keeping borrowing costs too low for too long during the coronavirus pandemic, fuelling inflation and forcing the Fed to increase interest rates so quickly it hurt some banks.While some have suggested Biden’s actions were appropriate, others have criticised it as another dangerous bailout. But Yellen will defend the administration’s moves, along with those of the Fed and the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, according to her prepared remarks.“The government took decisive and forceful actions to strengthen public confidence in our banking system,” she will say. “On Monday morning, customers were able to access all of the money in their deposit accounts so they could make payroll and pay the bills.” More

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    Hyperinflation Argentina is ready to bloom

    Expressing optimism about Argentina might seem an act of madness.Inflation is running at over 100 per cent a year, the government is funding itself by printing money and crippling exchange controls mean a black market dollar is worth almost double the official rate.Cut off from international markets after its ninth default in 2020 and suffering a severe drought, the South American food exporter could lapse this year into hyperinflation or even economic collapse.Yet, look a little further out, and a tantalising series of opportunities come into view. These, together with a new government in October, could offer Argentina its best chance in a generation.“Nobody doubts this will be a very difficult year,” says Pierpaolo Barbieri, founder and chief executive of the internet bank Ualá. “But in the medium term, four sectors make me very optimistic: agribusiness, energy, mining and digital services.”The giant Vaca Muerta development in Patagonia is changing that. The world’s second biggest shale gasfield, Vaca Muerta will this year start pumping gas down a new pipeline to supply the Buenos Aires region. A second stage will open up exports to Brazil and Chile.© Tomas Cuesta/Getty Images“In two years, we could go from an energy trade deficit of $5bn a year to a surplus of $15bn,” explains Alfonso Prat-Gay, a former finance minister. “There are other low-hanging fruit; I am very optimistic about the potential for copper and lithium. Last year, Chile made nearly $50bn from mining exports while in Argentina it was $5bn. But we share the same mountain range.”Argentina’s lush pampas, succulent beef and prized Malbec wine mean the nation thinks of itself primarily as an agricultural powerhouse. But another boom is under way in the north of the country, which is rich in lithium, the “white gold” of the electric revolution. JPMorgan estimates that by 2030 Argentina will be the world’s number three lithium producer.In a nation almost as famous for squandering economic opportunities as for winning football World Cups, the question inevitably arises of whether this vision of prosperity is just another mirage.“Just because Argentina has enormous possibilities to improve its economy doesn’t mean it will necessarily happen,” said Diana Mondino, an economist at the CEMA university in Buenos Aires. “There’s phenomenal uncertainty over the potential direction of Argentina policy.”Mondino points out that Argentina has about 7mn citizens living on welfare, many of whom have never worked and have little incentive to do so. Millions more enjoy heavily subsidised energy prices. Removing such perks will be hard.© Martin Silva/AFP/Getty ImagesMarcos Casarín, of Oxford Economics, is sceptical about Argentina, pointing to the IMF’s extreme generosity in rolling over $45bn of Argentine debt while demanding little in the way of belt-tightening. “It’s a super-lax programme,” he says. “It’s giving a false sense of prosperity.”Much depends on the next government, which will take office in December. President Alberto Fernández and his radical vice-president Cristina Fernández de Kirchner are too unpopular to win again and it is unclear whom the ruling Peronists will field.

    The opposition is divided, with a far-right libertarian, Javier Milei, polling strongly against more established candidates, such as Buenos Aires mayor Horacio Larreta or former security minister Patricia Bullrich.But the most likely scenario is victory for a more pro-business government. If it moves quickly to deregulate the economy, cut spending, and restore confidence in the battered peso, Argentina could take off — and the worse the crisis when it takes over, the easier it may be to adopt radical measures.“The economy is still functioning even with all the distortions which have been created,” says Fernando Jorge Díaz, an Argentine economist at Citi. “If you can bring some stability, it will start growing very fast.”Argentina won’t need to do much to look good against the rest of Latin America. Sickly growth is the order of the day from Mexico to Chile, as the region’s mainly leftwing leaders put wealth distribution before wealth creation. The perennial let down, Argentina may yet spring a [email protected] More

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    The Silicon Valley Bank fallout makes the case for digital currencies

    Ah, the memories a good bank run can bring back. I was in Brussels earlier this week, and enjoyed reminiscing with veterans of the global financial crisis and the eurozone debt crisis over FT front pages plastered in downward-pointing charts and pictures of worried traders. For a moment, it felt like 2008 (or 2009, or 2010) all over again.

    Hopefully, the fallout from the Silicon Valley Bank collapse will not come anywhere near that, although as Credit Suisse’s troubles show, nervousness has already crossed the Atlantic. At least one difference from 15 years ago is that we gained quite a lot of understanding from how those crises unfolded. Nevertheless, the SVB story tells me that we did not fully learn the lessons from last time. In fact, we are still not in agreement on what those lessons are.For some — including, it seems, the US government — the lesson was that nobody should ever lose any money they deposit in a bank, even if the “somebody” is a sophisticated midsize business and the amount is far above the deposit insurance limit. For me, the lesson was that we must have a financial system where private banks can never blackmail governments into bailing them out, lest panicked depositors bring the whole economy down.As Matthew Klein so memorably puts it, banks are “speculative investment funds grafted on top of critical infrastructure. This structure is designed to extract subsidies from the rest of society by threatening civilians with crises if the banks’ bets are ever allowed to fail. [The SVB bailout] is a reminder that those threats usually work.” The policy challenge has always been to end this state of affairs.I’m with former US regulator Sheila Bair, who slams her successors for ruling the SVB situation a risk to the entire US financial system: “Is that system really so fragile that it can’t absorb some small haircut on these banks’ uninsured deposits?” But even if you agree with retroactively guaranteeing SVB’s uninsured depositors, you must admit it reflects a policy failure. If all bank deposits should always have the government’s backing in full, then why didn’t we abolish outright the deposit insurance limit of $250,000, which is now presumably only notional? (It is €100,000 in Europe, which means the question there is even more pressing.)Note, by the way, that no one has questioned the wisdom of the part of the US bank resolution system that has worked as it is supposed to: unsecured bondholders in the failed banks will be written down — depositors, even uninsured ones, come first. Back in the eurozone crisis days, such “depositor preference” was seen as anathema, and as a result, a lot of Irish taxpayers are still shouldering the burden that the eurozone made Dublin take off the backs of Irish banks’ bond investors.The real question SVB throws up is one that has received far too little attention in the debate since the crisis broke. Do we need our financial system to offer an instrument where anyone can store any amount of money with absolute safety (in nominal terms)? That is what guaranteeing deposits in full amounts to.There are reasons why such guarantees have been kept limited — although the limits have been increased in crises. It gives banks an incentive to be prudent if they know they will not be bailed out. It provides incentives to bank customers too. As Bair points out: “The uninsured depositors of SVB are not a needy group.” It is obvious why individuals and households need a safe place to receive their salaries, manage their spending and hold an amount of liquid savings. But their need is met by the existing insurance schemes. The question is whether it is necessary to provide medium-sized businesses that need to keep millions in cash buffers with the same safety.Even for those of us who are sceptical of the SVB bailout, it is not obvious how such businesses should go about managing their liquidity needs. The current model requires companies either to take a forensic look at their bank’s balance sheet — essentially treating a deposit as the unsecured loan it really is — or to spread their cash buffers across dozens of banks so as to stay below the limit everywhere. Neither is particularly practical. And many businesses’ exposure to bank deposits could be indirect: the Washington Post’s blow-by-blow account cites the case of a payroll processor that used SVB for helping its client companies pay about 1mn employees.Once we start thinking about this, it becomes hard to see how a banking system designed along current lines could ever address this problem. That is why I think the main criticisms SVB has triggered — of management failure and regulatory failure — are legitimate but somewhat beside the point. SVB had a lot of bonds on its balance sheet of the type that are ultra-safe (US government and agency debt), but not if you have to sell before maturity, in which case the price you get depends on current interest rates. Since the Federal Reserve has raised interest rates drastically in the past year, selling its bonds would have wiped out SVB’s equity cushion. Not hedging against this risk was the management failure. The regulatory failure was in letting this go under the radar, after all, but the biggest banks a few years ago were spared the stress tests required by the hard-won Dodd-Frank rules imposed after the global financial crisis.Both accusations have merit but miss the bigger point. After all, Treasuries and US agency bonds are the most liquid assets you can invest in, and as guaranteed as anything ever gets to pay out its promised value in full. If even this is problematic from the point of view of banks’ ability to offer safe homes for large depositors, what about their supposed function of channelling savings to things such as mortgages and business loans, which are much riskier and much harder to liquidate? SVB’s critics say they should have bought hedging instruments that eliminated the interest rate risk in case of having to sell their assets before maturity. But that is essentially saying that banks should refrain from their other traditional function of maturity transformation — pooling immediately redeemable deposits against investments locked up for the long term.Ultimately, then, the SVB crisis should make us ask: what is the point of banks? If providing safe storage of money for business depositors requires them to hold riskless assets with no effective duration, they may as well simply hold central bank reserves. Or — what amounts to the same thing — be promised access to cash from the Fed against the full value of government bonds, which is what the central bank’s latest emergency programme offers. But these are very roundabout ways to secure economic stability, which we now seem to say require completely safe business deposits in arbitrary amounts. If we need those deposits to be backed by central bank reserves or something very much like them, what is gained by interposing private banks out to make profits on the intermediation?Which is why, in Brussels this week, I asked Paschal Donohoe, the president of the eurogroup of finance ministers, and Paolo Gentiloni, the EU commissioner for the economy, whether they and the assembled ministers had drawn the link between the SVB crisis and the project for a digital euro, which was also on their agenda. Because a central bank digital currency would provide precisely what seems to be missing today: a means by which businesses could keep cash completely safe, without any need for banks. If a CBDC is issued by the European Central Bank, which could be decided this year, any business with liquidity buffers greater than the deposit insurance limit should see the interest in keeping those buffers in digital euros. Here is an answer to those who dismissively ask what the use case is for a CBDC: it would eliminate the type of systemic risk identified by US regulators in which ordinary business depositors doubt the safety of their deposits. But it would only do so if users are allowed to hold more than the very low limits the ECB is at present contemplating.From Donohoe’s and Gentiloni’s answers, it is clear that ministers have not drawn this link. I rather suspect that they will have to think about it soon.Other readablesMy colleague Richard Milne takes a deep dive into the industrial adventure that is Northvolt, the Swedish battery manufacturing start-up.Can Europe’s start-up sector innovate its way out of a plastic bag? A new Sifted report gives some answers on how we might get to a post-plastic future. Numbers newsThe latest US inflation numbers — with stubbornly high month-on-month consumer price increases — were taken as bad news for the Federal Reserve. I disagree. There is only one sector where inflation is misbehaving, and that is shelter — outside of housing, inflation has been back to normal since last summer.But for shelter prices, then, we would declare the inflation danger over. And we know that the CPI measure of housing costs is backward-looking — it reflects changes that have already happened. This means current movements in shelter prices will show up in the CPI measure over the next year. So this component should fall too. If you look at a private rent index such as the Zillow Observed Rent Index, you find that rental prices have hardly moved since September. More

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    Celsius Releases Update on Rewards And Bonuses For Certain Customers

    Bankrupt cryptocurrency lender Celsius recently stated in a tweet that it will be reissuing and mailing 1099-MISC forms for certain customers in the coming days.Celsius mentioned in the tweet that it was revisiting its tax compliance reporting obligations. It determined that customers didn’t have control over rewards, promotions, and bonuses that were paid between the pause date and the Chapter 11 bankruptcy filing date.As a result of this determination, Celsius updated all pertinent data through data validations and adjusted the dates utilized in the initial calculation of reward payments for 2022 from July 14, 2022, to June 12, 2022.Celsius has indicated that due to these revisions, the rewards payments for customers may deviate from the figure shown on the 1099-MISC forms that were issued in January 2023. The crypto lender also stressed that the forms won’t be marked as “corrected.” The reason cited was that it hadn’t submitted these values to the IRS.Regarding the threshold, Celsius stated in the tweet:In response to “extreme market conditions,” Celsius suspended withdrawals, swaps, and transfers, prompting speculations of the platform’s significant insolvency. The downfall was a follow-up to the collapse of Do Kwon‘s Terra and the LUNA ecosystem in May.In an effort to address mounting liquidity concerns, the company disclosed on July 3, 2022, that it would be terminating 23% of its workforce. However, on July 13, 2022, Celsius Network ultimately resorted to filing for bankruptcy.The post Celsius Releases Update on Rewards And Bonuses For Certain Customers appeared first on Coin Edition.See original on CoinEdition More

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    BNB Coin Breaks Above $320 Level as Bullish Momentum Intensifies

    The latest Binance price analysis shows a positive trend for the BNB/USD pair. The coin has been trading in positive sentiment for the last few hours after recovering from the bearish pressure that was in control earlier today. The bullish pressure on the coin has been strong, and it even managed to break above the psychological $ 320.00 level.
    BNB daily chart: CoinmarketcapThe current price of BNB Coin is at the $320.76 level, with strong bullish momentum in play. The coin has moved up 2.68% over the last 24 hours, and buying activity is likely to increase further in the coming days. The next target for the BNB/USD pair would be at the $322.12 resistance level, which is expected to be a strong hurdle for bulls. If breached successfully, we could expect further gains in the coming days.On the other hand, the coin is likely to face support at $301, which was a current trading level earlier. If this support does not hold up, the coin could pull back to the $299 level. Today’s market opened trading at a low of $307, and the surge in bullish momentum has taken the coin closer to its resistance level.Looking at the coin 360-day chart, it can be seen that the BNB/USD pair has followed a bullish trend for the past few hours, with only minor pullbacks along the way. However, other cryptocurrencies in the market have seen losses, which could be attributed to lower investor sentiment and low liquidity, with BTC and ETH seeing losses of -1.8% and -2.84%, respectively.The circulating supply of BNB Coin is at 157,891,903, indicating the coin’s demand continues to rise. The 24 trading volume for the coin is valued at $739,045,342, and it is down by -12%, indicating a cooling off of investor sentiment. The market cap is on gain as more buyers are entering the market. Currently, it is standing at $50,770,267,660, with an increase of 2.93 percent.The four-hour technical indicators display a bullish outlook for BNB/USD pair. The Relative Strength Index (RSI) appears to be moving in neutral territory as buyers become more active, and this could cause the RSI to reach the overbought zone. The moving averages have also moved up to $312.0, just below the current market price.
    BNB/USD 4-hour chart: TradingViewThe Moving Average Convergence Divergence (MACD) is on the rise, reflecting the bullish momentum. The MACD line is currently above the signal line, indicating that the buyers are in control of the market. Additionally, The histogram is also in the green zone, revealing that the bulls are getting stronger.Overall, BNB Coin has seen a strong surge in price over the past few hours, and it appears that this momentum is likely to continue in the near term. The coin is currently trading near its resistance level, but if it breaks through this level, we could see further gains soon. The technical indicators are all pointing toward the bulls, so investors should watch out for further price action.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 BNB Coin Breaks Above $320 Level as Bullish Momentum Intensifies appeared first on Coin Edition.See original on CoinEdition More

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    FTX transferred $3.2 billion to Bankman-Fried, documents show

    Investing.com — FTX transferred over $3 billion to founder Sam Bankman-Fried and his inner circle before its collapse in November, according to a statement issued by the bankrupt exchange’s administrators late on Wednesday. FTX Trading Ltd. issued late on Wednesday what are known as Schedules of Assets and Liabilities and Statements of Financial Affairs (the “Schedules and SOFAs”) for all of the entities involved in its Chapter 11 bankruptcy proceedings. The ‘Schedules and SOFAs’ filed describe $3.2 billion in payments and loans to founders, chiefly from Alameda Research the hedge fund which FTX vainly tried to keep afloat as its bets on cryptocurrency went wrong last year. The payments included $2.2B to Sam Bankman-Fried himself, around $587M to Nishad Singh, $246M to Gary Wang and $6M to Caroline Ellison, Bankman-Fried’s sometime girlfriend, whom he installed as CEO of Alameda. All of the above except Bankman-Fried have already pleaded guilty to federal fraud charges, and are likely to receive more lenient sentences in exchange for cooperation in the prosecution of Bankman-Fried. The new management of FTX, under John J. Ray, noted that this didn’t include $240M spent to buy luxury property in the Bahamas, or the millions paid in political donations by Bankman-Fried and others in the U.S. and elsewhere.”Although some of the property purchased with the proceeds of these transfers is already in the control of the FTX Debtors or governmental authorities with whom the FTX Debtors are cooperating, the amount and timing of eventual monetary recoveries cannot be predicted at this time,” the statement said. Two other senior executives, Sam Trabucco and Ryan Salame, received $25M and $87M, respectively, the SOFAs showed. More