More stories

  • in

    Do Kwon removed 10K Bitcoin from Terra after collapse — Takeaways from SEC complaint

    According to the SEC complaint filed in the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York on Feb. 16, Kwon and Terraform have transferred more than 10,000 Bitcoin (BTC) from the platform and the Luna Foundation Guard to a cold wallet, then to a Swiss bank account to convert to fiat. The financial regulator said that the Terra co-founder and his company might have access to more than $100 million in cash since withdrawals started in June 2022. Continue Reading on Coin Telegraph More

  • in

    Allianz swings to quarterly profit in rebound from funds debacle

    FRANKFURT (Reuters) – Germany’s Allianz (ETR:ALVG) on Friday swung to a fourth-quarter net profit, rebounding after taking big charges a year earlier for a U.S. funds scandal and as a higher investment margin boosted its life and health insurance business.But its asset management division – which includes bond giant PIMCO – saw lower revenues and fees as total assets under management dropped 18% during the year.Its shares dropped 3.2% in morning trade in Frankfurt, though analysts at DZ Bank, who rate the company a “buy”, said the results were overall “good”.The bounce-back in profit marked a return to business as usual for Allianz, which has been trying to restore its reputation after one of its funds units, Allianz Global Investors, was dogged with a fraud case in the United States that resulted in $6 billion in settlements and fines in May. Graphic: Allianz results- https://www.reuters.com/graphics/ALLIANZ-RESULTS/zgpobkomevd/chart.png”Allianz has consolidated its position as one of the world’s largest, most resilient, and trusted global financial institutions,” Chief Executive Officer Oliver Baete said.Net profit attributable to shareholders of 2.007 billion euros ($2.13 billion) in the three months through December compares with a loss of 292 million euros a year earlier. Analysts had expected a net profit of 2.034 billion euros. On top of the $6 billion in fines and settlements announced last year, Allianz agreed to a guilty plea for its U.S. Allianz Global Investors (AGI) business that oversaw the funds at the center of the fraud. Allianz’s own lawyers described the plea as the equivalent of a “death penalty”, and AGI had to shut its U.S. operations.A global insurer, Allianz ranks as one of the world’s biggest money managers, but its assets under management dropped 18% to 2.1 trillion euros in 2022 from 2021, figures on Friday showed.Allianz said the decline was mainly because of market developments, though outflows resulting from the closure of its U.S. AGI business also played a role.Asset management was the only major division at Allianz that saw a drop in 2022 operating profit from a year earlier. ($1 = 0.9403 euros) More

  • in

    Goldman Sachs, BofA expect three more U.S. rate hikes this year

    (Reuters) – Goldman Sachs (NYSE:GS) and Bank of America (NYSE:BAC) said they expect the U.S. Federal Reserve to raise interest rates three more times this year, lifting their estimates after data pointed to persistent inflation and a resilient labor market.Producer prices accelerated in January by the biggest margin in seven months, according to data on Thursday, while a Labor Department report showed the number of Americans filing new claims for unemployment benefits unexpectedly fell last week.”In light of the stronger growth and firmer inflation news, we are adding a 25bp (basis points) rate hike in June to our Fed forecast, for a peak funds rate of 5.25%-5.5%,” Goldman Sachs economists led by Jan Hatzius said in a note dated Thursday.Meanwhile, money markets are currently pricing in a terminal rate of 5.3% by July.BofA Global Research also expects a 25bps hike in the Fed’s June meeting, pushing the terminal rate up to a 5.25%-5.5% range. It had earlier pencilled in two rate hikes of 25 bps each in the March and May meetings.”Resurgent inflation and solid employment gains mean the risks to this (only two interest rate hikes) outlook are too one-sided for our liking,” BofA wrote in a client note.After the recent U.S. data, European investment bank UBS said it was expecting the Fed to raise rates by 25 bps at its March and May meetings, which may leave the Fed funds rate at the 5%-5.25% range.In sharp contrast to its U.S. peers, however, UBS estimated that the Fed would ease interest rates at the September meeting this year.Before the recent U.S. data, J.P. Morgan had forecast the terminal rate at 5.1% by the end of June.A majority of economists polled by Reuters before the latest data said they expected the Fed to raise rates at least twice more in the coming months, with the risk of them going higher still. None of them are expecting a rate cut this year. More

  • in

    Analysis-What recession? Strong economy buoys U.S. stocks, though Fed casts shadow

    NEW YORK (Reuters) – Signs of strength in the U.S. economy have buoyed stocks in the face of rising Treasury yields and hawkish Federal Reserve expectations, though some investors believe the rally may be on borrowed time. Stronger-than-expected reports on employment, retail sales and inflation have pushed up expectations for how much higher the Federal Reserve will need to raise rates and ignited a surge in Treasury yields – typically a negative development for stocks. Yet the robust data has also dispelled fears of an impending recession that plagued Wall Street at the end of 2022, giving investors a reason to hold on to equities, at least for now. The S&P 500 is up 6.6% for the year-to-date, even as benchmark 10-year Treasury yields have risen nearly 50 basis points from their lows of the year. Only 24% of global fund managers now expect a recession, down from 77% in November, a recent survey by BofA Global Research showed.“Everyone came into the year thinking that there’s an imminent recession in the first half of 2023,” said Charlie McElligott, managing director, cross-asset strategy at Nomura Securities. “They got caught off guard because there’s much more resilient domestic and global growth.” Graphic: Yields vs stocks: https://fingfx.thomsonreuters.com/gfx/mkt/znvnbkwnlvl/Pasted%20image%201676580956813.png Investors’ resolve can be seen in the resilience of the Nasdaq Composite Index, home to many of the tech and growth stocks that were particularly sensitive to higher yields last year, when it registered a 33% loss.Based on historical regression, the Nasdaq should have sold off between 5% and 10% based on the increase in two-year yields since the Fed meeting earlier this month, according to a report from analysts at JPMorgan (NYSE:JPM), including chief global markets strategist Marko Kolanovic. Instead, the index is up 0.3% over that time, and is up 13.3% for the year to date.Some investors say the market’s resilience is unlikely to last much longer, especially if yields keep rising. Higher Treasury yields can weigh on stocks as they offer equities investment competition, increase companies borrowing costs and hurt valuations. Many also believe that a recession has been delayed but not avoided. A severe downturn could await in the second half of the year, especially if rebounding inflation forces the Fed to keep rates at a higher level for longer to cool prices.“The market in equities is just not appreciating that there will be more stepping on the brakes from the Fed and more earnings at risk of going lower,” said Torsten Slok, Chief Economist at Apollo Global Management (NYSE:APO). “Everyone wants to buy the dip in the stock market but the risk is that with inflation at 6.4% the Fed is just not done.”There are already signs that investors may be growing nervous over the economy’s strength. The S&P 500 dropped 1.4% on Thursday, helped in part by a stronger than expected U.S. producer price index reading.Bearish investors also note other factors that tend to weigh on stocks have reared their heads in recent weeks. Real yields – which measure return on Treasury yields after inflation – have turned higher, taking the yield of the U.S. 10-year Treasury Inflation Protected Security near its highest level since early January. That can dull the allure of stocks, which are seen as far riskier than U.S. government bonds.Rising yields have also arrested a decline in the U.S. dollar, which tumbled from a two-decade high in the latter half of 2022 but is now up nearly 3% from its low of the year against a basket of currencies. A stronger dollar tends to hurt the profits of U.S. multinationals and exporters.In BoFA’s survey, 66% of fund managers said the move in stocks, which began in October and has seen the S&P 500 rise 14% from that month’s lows, was a bear market rally rather than a new bull market.Still, some investors believe risks are tilted in favor of stocks, with the bulk of the Fed’s monetary policy tightening likely in the rearview mirror and valuations broadly lower after last year’s 19.4% selloff in the S&P 500.Lara Reinhard, senior portfolio strategist at Janus Henderson Investors, is avoiding technology and growth stocks but focusing on shares of companies that pay out dividends as a hedge against inflation.“We are starting at more normal valuations and in some cases cheaper valuations than in the last few years,” she said.Meanwhile, stocks are getting strong support from retail investors, who pumped a record net average of $1.51 billion per day into U.S. stocks over the last month, according to Vanda (NASDAQ:VNDA) Securities.”Retail investors have plenty of dry powder in the form of capital parked in money market funds that could be deployed in the equity space once confidence about future market returns increases more broadly,” the firm’s analysts wrote. More

  • in

    New York’s JFK Airport terminal to reopen after power outage

    “Contingent on the completion of repairs and testing, we anticipate the start of limited operations at Terminal 1 on Saturday,” the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey, JFK’s owner, told Reuters in a statement on Friday.Terminal 1 represents 5% of all JFK scheduled passenger flights, and of today’s 64 scheduled Terminal 1 arrivals and departures, 39 have been canceled, the Port Authority said.The outage, disrupting inbound and outbound flights at one of the world’s busiest airports, began after an electrical panel failed and caused a small, isolated fire that was immediately extinguished overnight on Thursday. The terminal serves several international carriers, including Air France and Lufthansa. Amongst other disrupted flights, the outage forced a JFK-bound Air New Zealand airplane to return to Auckland about eight hours into a trip, returning to its departure point about 16 hours after the flight began.Air New Zealand said “diverting to another U.S. port would have meant the aircraft would remain on the ground for several days, impacting a number of other scheduled services and customers.” The airline said all passengers on the flight have been accommodated on flights leaving Auckland. The Federal Aviation Administration declined to comment about the disruption to air travel.As of 1:30 p.m. on Friday, JFK’s website showed 120 inbound and outbound flights were either delayed or canceled at the airport. About half were international flights. In all, about 3% of flights at the airport had been canceled on Friday, according to flight-tracking website Flightaware.com. “We apologize there are no new updates at the moment. Please continue to check with your air carrier for flight status,” JFK said in a tweet on Friday afternoon. The Port Authority of New York and New Jersey, JFK’s owner, was working with the terminal’s operator to restore flight operations as quickly as possible, it said earlier. JFK said it was working to accommodate affected flights using some of the other four terminals at the airport. More

  • in

    Cardano (ADA) Dev Working Groups to ‘Empower’ the Community

    Developer numbers on the Cardano network have been soaring since the beginning of February 2023.Input Output Global (IOG), the blockchain technology firm responsible for the development of Cardano (ADA), has invited more community members to join several developer Working Groups to catapult the ecosystem.According to IOG, the goal is to self-mobilize the community to collaborate on decision-making processes with the combined expertise of the members. The Working Groups will bring together a group of committed community members around specific topics, such as developer experience, certifications, interoperability, and stablecoins.In another developer-focused event, the network launched its SECP upgrade on Valentine’s day to increase interoperability and secure cross-chain dApp development. The new Working Group initiative serves as another testament of Cardano’s community-centric approach.IOG further revealed that interested community members could join their preferred type of Working Group by choosing from the four current pools of developers.Developer numbers and whale activity on Cardano have been increasing throughout February. The price of ADA has recently surged, trading at $0.40 USD at the time of writing, a 23.70% increase from its one-month low of $0.32 on January 19th.By empowering and mobilizing its community, IOG is fostering a culture of innovation within the Cardano network. By progressing such principles of decentralization, Cardano could inspire market sentiment to boost its current #8 ranking by market capitalization.Read more about Cardano’s latest SECP upgrade:Cardano (ADA) Launches SECP Upgrade: A Cross-Chain Love Story?Read more about the recent bullish Cardano whale activity:Cardano Whales Bullish on ADA – Is the Optimism Warranted?Continue Reading on DailyCoin More