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    Kraken reaches $30M settlement with SEC over staking as IRS seeks user information

    In a Feb. 9 announcement, the SEC said it had charged Kraken with “failing to register the offer and sale of their crypto asset staking-as-a-service program,” which the commission claims qualified as securities under its purview. The crypto firm has agreed to cease operations of its staking program for U.S. customers as well as pay $30 million in disgorgement, prejudgment interest and civil penalties.Continue Reading on Coin Telegraph More

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    PayPal’s spending warning casts pall over upbeat forecast

    (Reuters) – PayPal Holdings Inc (NASDAQ:PYPL) forecast full-year profit above Wall Street estimates on Thursday but warned of pressure on discretionary spending, and said Chief Executive Dan Schulman will retire at the end of 2023. Macroeconomic pressures have begun to hurt American consumers, particularly those in the lower income bracket, but PayPal’s customers continue to spend largely undeterred by decades-high inflation.Even so, the company’s upbeat forecast comes alongside its previously announced commitment of lowering expenses in the backdrop of its key e-commerce segment feeling the pinch of a slowdown. “The rate of e-commerce growth in our core markets has decelerated. Inflationary pressures have affected discretionary consumer spending and post-COVID spending patterns are still evolving,” acting finance chief Gabrielle Rabinovitch said in a call with analysts. Shares in the payments heavyweight fell 1% in extended trading after results.In a divergence from prior quarters, PayPal said it will not provide a forecast for full-year revenue growth. “They don’t want to call out a revenue number at this point because of the macro uncertainty, they don’t want to put themselves in a box,” D.A. Davidson analyst Chris Brendler told Reuters. GRAPHIC: Total Payment Vols (TPV) come off pandemic highs – https://www.reuters.com/graphics/PAYPAL-RESULTS/egpbyaengvq/chart.png Schulman joined PayPal in 2014 to lead the company, after its separation from eBay (NASDAQ:EBAY) the following year.”Dan’s had notable success in growing PayPal materially over the years, however the change may remove an overhang for some investors given recent/post-pandemic volatility,” Wolfe Research analyst Darrin Peller said in a note. Shares in PayPal have lost about 66% of their value since 2021, through the stock’s last close.Last week, PayPal said it will lay off 7% of its workforce, or about 2,000 employees.PayPal said it expects full-year adjusted profit of roughly $4.87 on a per share basis. Analysts on average had expected $4.75 per share, according to Refinitiv IBES data. PayPal earned a profit of $1.24 per share on an adjusted basis in the fourth quarter ended Dec. 31, beating analyst estimates of $1.20 per share.Its revenue rose 9% on an FX-neutral basis to $7.4 billion. More

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    Rocket Pool’s Ethereum staking service reaches $1B in TVL

    Unlike conventional staking solutions, the capital requirements are far less, as users can run their own node with just 16 Ether (ETH) as opposed to the network specified 32 ETH, with another 16 ETH coming from a pool of users who join a decentralized node operator. For the latter, the deposit requirement is only 0.01 ETH. Depositors receive liquid staking token rETH in exchange for their ETH, which proves the user is entitled to staking rewards over time and accrues yield.Continue Reading on Coin Telegraph More

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    FirstFT: US says Chinese balloon was part of a broader fleet

    The Chinese balloon that crossed the continental US last week had multiple antennas for intelligence gathering and was part of a broader surveillance fleet, a senior US state department official said on Thursday. The US said the Chinese have used these surveillance balloons over more than 40 countries and five continents. It added that Washington will continue to brief allies on the scope of the programme, while senior state department and Pentagon officials will brief Congress on Thursday. “High-resolution imagery from U-2 fly-bys revealed that the high-altitude balloon was capable of conducting signals intelligence collection operations,” the official said, referring to US efforts to examine the balloon using spy planes while it was still airborne. “It had multiple antennas to include an array likely capable of collecting and geolocating communications,” the official added. The Biden administration is looking into blacklisting Chinese entities linked to the country’s military that supported the balloon’s crossing into the US, as well as other actions to tackle Beijing’s surveillance programme.Five more stories in the news1. Peltz calls off Disney proxy fight Nelson Peltz has ended one of the biggest corporate battles in recent years a day after Walt Disney unveiled a restructuring plan involving the loss of 7,000 jobs. The end of the activist investor’s push removes a distraction for chief executive Bob Iger, who is seeking to steer the company’s lossmaking streaming services towards profitability.2. Chinese revival for offshore listings Hesai Technology, a Shanghai-based maker of sensors for cars, has become the largest Chinese group to go public in the US since 2021, in a development that exchange executives hope will ease almost two years of tensions during which such listings ground to a halt. The company raised $190mn from investors in an initial public offering on the Nasdaq stock exchange that valued it at about $2.4bn.More markets news: Global investors have snapped up a record $21bn worth of Chinese equities this year, as robust economic data spurs traders to make larger bets that the reopening rally has further to run.3. Turkey-Syria death toll tops that of devastating 1999 quake Almost 20,000 people have died as a result of this week’s earthquakes in southeastern Turkey and neighbouring Syria, according to the latest figures released on Thursday by authorities in the affected area. The toll exceeds that of the devastating İzmit quake in 1999, underlining the scale of the unfolding disaster as rescue workers continued to pull bodies from the rubble. The earthquake in graphics: The FT lays out the scale, geology and human impact of the devastating quakes along the East Anatolian faultline.4. Toshiba receives $15bn buyout proposal A consortium led by private equity firm Japan Industrial Partners has proposed buying Toshiba for $15bn in what would be Japan’s largest buyout. After Toshiba’s plan to split into three was rejected by shareholders last spring, a private sale was launched, attracting interest from some of the world’s leading private equity groups like Bain Capital and CVC.5. MSCI to revise Adani Group weightings Global index provider MSCI is set to change its weightings for Adani Group stocks after reviewing how many shares can be freely traded, in a further setback for the Indian conglomerate reeling from fraud allegations.How well did you keep up with the news this week? Take our quiz. The day aheadChina inflation figures January consumer price index and producer price index inflation rate data will be released today.US consumer sentiment figures The University of Michigan will release its survey on consumer sentiment today.UK ambulance worker strikes Workers from the Unite and Unison unions are set to strike in London, the South West, North West, North East, Yorkshire and the West Midlands.Earnings Results are expected from Aker BP, Eneos, Honda Motor and Saab.Join us on February 23 at 1pm GMT for a subscriber-only webinar, Putin’s war on Ukraine: when and how will it end? with the FT’s Ben Hall, Chris Miller and guests. Register for your free ticket at ft.com/ukraine-event.

    What else we’re reading Hong Kong reopens with post-Covid charm offensive Facing a challenge in luring workers back and resetting a woeful economic climate, Hong Kong has offered incentives including funds for international businesses to set up operations in the territory, new visas for graduates from top global universities and 500,000 free airline tickets to encourage tourism. “This is probably the world’s biggest welcome ever,” John Lee, the city’s current leader and former top police officer.‘Sam? Are you there?!’ The bizarre and brutal final hours of FTX Sam Bankman-Fried and his band of millennial millionaires lost $40bn following the collapse of the FTX crypto empire. FT reporter Joshua Oliver has pieced together the final, brutal hours (complete with screenshots) in a read for the weekend magazine. ‘Street fighter’ takes the helm at rudderless Carlyle After years of lacklustre performance and management unrest, Carlyle this week named the former Goldman Sachs executive Harvey Schwartz as its new chief executive. The FT spoke to former Goldman colleagues, including Lloyd Blankfein, for this profile. The urban ideal borrows from the past When done well, the 21st century enhances cities. WiFi has turned cafés, parks, even beaches into workspaces. Tinder and LinkedIn introduce you to people, and Google Maps helps you find them. But the best physical bits of today’s best cities were built by our ancestors. Modernity often just makes cities worse, writes Simon Kuper.How an MBA changed America’s top doctor Dr Vivek Murthy, the US surgeon general, had no plans to pursue an MBA. But he signed up when the Yale School of Medicine, where he was studying, offered a joint degree programme with its management school in 2001. “I felt like I was looking at the world with new glasses on and seeing opportunity much more clearly all around me,” he said.Sign up: The FT is launching a six-part email series that will take you through every stage of applying for an MBA. Register for free today.Take a break from the newsUp Helly Aa, Shetland’s wild, weird, annual Viking-inspired fire festival is back with blazing torches, a burning longboat and — for the first time — women.

    For the first time girls have been able to join the ‘squads’ at Up Helly Aa © Euan Cherry/Getty Images More

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    Banks under pressure from U.S. authorities to cut ties with crypto firms

    The alleged strategy consists of isolating the traditional financial system from the crypto market by relying on “multiple agencies to discourage banks from dealing with crypto firms,” with the goal of leading crypto businesses to become “completely unbanked,” according to Nic Carter — co-founder of venture firm Castle Island and crypto intelligence firm Coin Metrics.Continue Reading on Coin Telegraph More