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    Coinbase discloses recent cyberattack targeting employees

    As per the report, on a late Sunday several Coinbase employees received SMS messages requiring them to urgently log in via the link provided to access an important message. Acting in a good faith, one employee followed the exploiter’ instructions:Continue Reading on Coin Telegraph More

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    Gary Gensler’s SEC is playing a game, but not the one you think

    But we’re not here to debate whether stablecoins are securities. The Howey test has been discussed to death, and while it’s true that few people expect to profit from a token pegged to a fiat currency, the issue is more nuanced than the debate typically suggests.Continue Reading on Coin Telegraph More

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    Marketmind: BOK steady

    (Reuters) – A look at the day ahead in Asian markets from Jamie McGeever.An interest rate decision from South Korea takes center stage in Asia on Thursday, in the midst of a widespread selloff in risk assets on growing fears that the Fed will keep U.S. interest rates higher for longer to quell inflation.Asian stocks are on course for their fourth down week in a row, the MSCI World index and the S&P 500 are eyeing their biggest weekly fall this year, and U.S. breakeven inflation rates are sailing up to 2.50% and beyond. One quirk of rising global inflation fears, however, was a 3% slide in oil on Wednesday, as traders bet that high consumer prices will sap growth and demand. A lower oil price, of course, is disinflationary, and base effects right now also mean that Brent crude is 17% cheaper today than it was a year ago. Light at the end of the inflation tunnel? Graphic: Brent oil – year-on-year change https://fingfx.thomsonreuters.com/gfx/mkt/klpygngerpg/OilYY.png Minutes from the Fed’s Jan. 31 to Feb. 1 policy meeting showed that most rate-setters voted to slow the pace of tightening. But in an interview with CNBC on Wednesday, St. Louis Fed chief James Bullard reiterated his view that rates must be raised to 5.25% to 5.50% to get inflation down this year.Central banks in Asia and elsewhere are getting caught in the Fed’s – and the dollar’s – slipstream. The Bank of Korea is expected to leave interest rates on hold at 3.50% on Thursday, and leave it there for the rest of the year, according to a Reuters poll. Economists surveyed reckon the BOK’s longest tightening cycle on record is over despite still high inflation. Graphic: South Korean economy & markets https://fingfx.thomsonreuters.com/gfx/mkt/egpbyoynwvq/SK1.jpg However, Korean policymakers may be forced to talk tough and say they stand ready to raise rates again.Anything other than that could lead the won to slip further from its two-month low against the dollar, which would only intensify domestic inflationary pressures and perhaps force the central bank to act again later in the year.Consumer price inflation in January was 5.20%, well over double the central bank’s 2.00% target and unlikely to return there for at least another year, economists reckon.Meanwhile, inflation figures from Hong Kong and Singapore will also be released on Thursday, as well as Thai trade and Taiwanese industrial production data.Here are three key developments that could provide more direction to markets on Thursday:- South Korea interest rate decision- Fed’s Bostic and Daly speak- U.S. Q4 GDP (second estimate) (By Jamie McGeever; Editing by Josie Kao) More

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    Fed is ‘absolutely’ committed to 2% inflation target, Williams says

    “Our job is clear: our job is to make sure we restore price stability, which is truly the foundation of a strong economy,” Williams said at a conference hosted at the bank.He noted that with global supply chains still disrupted, goods prices may not continue their recent decline, and inflation in core services excluding housing continues to be far too high, driven by too much demand relative to supply. More

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    Rep. Maxine Waters says all US regulators ‘better get together on crypto’

    Speaking to Cointelegraph, Representative Waters suggested that recent enforcement actions on the crypto space from the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) and Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) may have been to present the image of “doing something substantive and meaningful” following the collapse of major exchanges including FTX. According to Waters, the market crash and related bankruptcies of major firms gave U.S. lawmakers an opportunity of “getting accountability” in the crypto space.Continue Reading on Coin Telegraph More