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    Alex McCurry Says All Meme Coins Including DOGE and SHIB Are Garbage

    Alex McCurry, the founder of Solidity, a smart contract solutions platform, recently dropped his two cents on meme coins. In reply to BSC News’s tweet on which major meme coin outperformed BTC and ETH in January, McCurry made his remarks.McCurry mentioned all meme coins, including Dogecoin, Shiba Inu, Baby Doge, Floki Inu, and Dogelon Mars, are garbage. He also said the Twitter accounts of these meme coins in his tweet reply.The comment comes amidst a time when most of the major meme coins performed exceptionally well in January, as opposed to Bitcoin and Ethereum. The king of meme coins, Dogecoin, is up by 15.73% in the last 30 days. Shiba Inu has been up by 50.64% in the last 30 days.However, the most exceptional performance was put out by Baby DogeCoin. Baby Doge rose by 225.9% over the last 30 days. This is almost 10x the growth as compared to ETH. BabyDoge is also up by 111.5% over the last seven days. The meme coin is trading at $0.00000…The post Alex McCurry Says All Meme Coins Including DOGE and SHIB Are Garbage appeared first on Coin Edition.See original on CoinEdition More

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    Disney delights, consumer earnings, jobless claims – what’s moving markets

    Investing.com — Walt Disney stock jumps as the company’s streaming loss narrows and CEO Bob Iger flags a dividend restart. Pepsi, Unilever, and BAT, all forecast weak outlooks for 2023 after forcing consumers to wear some chunky price increases last year. Stocks are set to open higher ahead of the weekly jobless claims numbers, and oil rises on the back of another report showing how much the market will tighten this year. Here’s what you need to know in financial markets on Thursday, 9th February.1. Disney delightsWalt Disney (NYSE:DIS) stock soared in premarket after the company narrowed its loss on streaming and announced 7,000 job cuts to shore up profitability.Chief executive Bog Iger, presenting his first quarterly results since replacing Bob Chapek, also said he will ask the board to reinstate the company’s dividend by the end of the year, addressing one of activist investor Nelson Peltz’s key points.Disney posted first quarter earnings that were 25% above market forecasts, thanks to the strength of its theme parks division, while Disney+, ESPN, and Hulu all eked out marginal gains in subscribers in the quarter, but the company saw average revenue per user drop as customers opted for better-value multi-product bundles. Worldwide subscriber numbers dropped after Hotstar’s loss of broadcast rights to Indian Premier League cricket.2. Consumer sector posts weak outlook after hefty price risesIt’s a day when the consumer sector dominates the earnings calendar, with updates due from PepsiCo (NASDAQ:PEP), Philip Morris (NYSE:PM), Kellogg (NYSE:K), Unilever (NYSE:UL) and British American Tobacco (NYSE:BTI).Pepsi and Unilever both forecast demand would weaken this year, in response to some huge price increases for their range of food and drink products.Pepsi’s average prices jumped 16% for the fourth quarter, while organic volume slipped 2%. Unilever, the owner of Dove soap and Ben & Jerry’s ice cream said its prices were up 13.3%, while sales volumes declined, leaving 9% rise in net sales.BAT (LON:BATS), meanwhile, hit a 12-month low in London after suspending buybacks as it grapples with rising costs for servicing over $40 billion of debt. Mattel (NASDAQ:MAT), another consumer-facing company, also slumped in premarket after a weak late update.3. Stocks set to open higher; jobless claims due, earnings torrent continuesU.S. stock markets are set to open higher, supported by Disney’s earnings, but still appear to be struggling for direction amid a mixed earnings season dominated by gloomy full-year outlooks.By 06:30 ET, Dow Jones futures were up 215 points or 0.6%, while S&P 500 futures were up 0.8%, and Nasdaq 100 futures were up 1.1%.Other companies due to report earnings in the course of the day include AbbVie (NYSE:ABBV), PayPal (NASDAQ:PYPL), Apollo Global (NYSE:APO), and Warner Music (NASDAQ:WMG). BorgWarner (NYSE:BWA) has already joined O’Reilly Automotive (NASDAQ:ORLY) in posting surprisingly strong numbers from the auto components sector.The data calendar is light, with only U.S. jobless claims of note.4. German CPI may cause Eurozone number to be revised higherThe mystery over Germany’s January inflation deepened, with Destatis publishing figures that suggest the Eurozone’s number for last month will have to be revised upward.Headline CPI fell to 9.2%, using the EU’s methodology, but rose to 8.7% on the national standard, after a 1% rise in prices in the month. However, there was no hint as to how the agency had accounted for rebates on gas and electricity bills, which are supposed to be issued retroactively in March, backdated to the start of the year.The numbers at least gave no clear signal that would cause the ECB to deviate from the guidance it gave at last week’s press conference (which was, in any case, dismissed as a bluff by Eurozone stock and bond markets). ECB vice president Luis de Guindos may shed more light in a speech later.5. Oil hits one-week high, shrugs off U.S. stock buildCrude oil prices edged to new one-week highs, shrugging off official U.S. data which showed that crude stocks actually rose last week. That’s seven straight weeks of rising inventories, the longest such streak since 2020.By 06:40 ET, U.S. crude futures were up 0.1% at $78.56 a barrel, while Brent crude was up 0.2% at $85.22 a barrel.Earlier, Saudi Arabian think tank KAPSARC said it expected Chinese demand to rise by an average of 550,000 barrels a day, while some 820,000 barrels a day of Russian output will be lost to western sanctions and price cap measures. More

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    Robinhood Plans To Buy Back Shares From SBF, Negotiations Underway

    The Board of Directors at Robinhood Markets Inc (NASDAQ:HOOD). has approved the plan to buy back $55 million in shares bought by Sam Bankman-Fried (SBF), ex-CEO of bankrupt FTX, last year. Currently, they are negotiating with the justice system to facilitate the move.Robinhood Chief Financial Officer Jason Warnick states:According to a report, shares jumped 4.78% after Robinhood made the announcement of repurchasing the 7.6% stake that Sam Bankman-Fried had owned in May last year through Emergent Fidelity Technologies. At the time, the share price had rallied to 25%.Bankman-Fried and FTX co-founder Gary Wang had taken loans totaling $546 million from Alameda Research, SBF’s trading firm, to purchase the shares in Robinhood. They now plan to use it for SBF’s criminal defense.The Department of Justice had seized the shares, worth arou…The post Robinhood Plans To Buy Back Shares From SBF, Negotiations Underway appeared first on Coin Edition.See original on CoinEdition More

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    Bank of England rate-setters air their differences on inflation risks

    LONDON (Reuters) – Bank of England interest rate-setters aired their differences on how quickly inflation is likely to fall on Thursday with Governor Andrew Bailey stressing the uncertainty, a week after the BoE suggested its run of rate hikes might be near a peak.Members of the Monetary Policy Committee struck contrasting notes on the risks posed by an inflation rate that hit a 41-year high of 11.1% in October before falling to 10.5% in December, still more than five times the BoE’s 2% target.Jonathan Haskel, an external MPC member, told the Treasury Committee of lawmakers in parliament that he remained ready to “act forcefully” against persistent inflation – keeping a phrase that was dropped by the majority of his colleagues last week.At the other end of the MPC’s debate, Silvana Tenreyro said interest rates were already too high.Like other central banks, the BoE is trying to reduce the risks from the surge in inflation and it raised interest rates for the 10th time in a row last week, taking Bank Rate to its highest since 2008 at 4%.But it is also worried about aggravating what is expected to be the worst recession among big rich economies this year.Last week, Bailey signalled the tide was turning in the BoE’s battle against high inflation, even if it was too soon to declare victory. On Thursday he reiterated the risks to the central bank’s main forecasts.”I am very uncertain particularly about price-setting and wage-setting in this country. We have got the largest upside skew in our forecasts that we have ever had on inflation,” Bailey said.Thursday’s comments by the MPC members to the parliamentary committee underlined that sense of uncertainty.Haskel aligned himself with Catherine Mann who also sees big upside risks to the BoE’s price forecasts.”Economic theory suggests that uncertainty around the persistence of inflation should be met with more forceful action,” Haskel said in his annual report to parliament.”(So) I shall remain alert to indications that inflation is more persistent than we expected, and act forcefully if necessary.”By contrast, Tenreyro, who last week voted to keep Bank Rate at 3.5%, stressed that the full force of the BoE’s rate hikes over the last year had yet to be felt, with the momentum in the economy already fading.”In my view, yes, rates are too high right now,” she said, adding that she would consider a cut in future policy meetings.BoE Chief Economist Huw Pill told the lawmakers there were some signs of a weakening in the labour market which could help to contain inflation pressures.”That said, there is no room for complacency. Inflation remains unacceptably high,” he said in an annual report to the Treasury Committee. “Returning inflation to target in a sustainable manner requires that the MPC continues to be watchful for signs of greater persistence in inflationary pressures than is embodied in our baseline forecast.” More

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    Column-Where to park the 401(k) when you switch jobs or retire

    (Reuters) – The old line that “you can’t take it with you” does not apply when it comes to your 401(k).When you change jobs or retire, you have three basic choices: leave your retirement account where it is, roll it over to a new employer or move it to a standalone individual retirement account (IRA).IRAs have been gaining ground. The share of the retirement market held in IRAs jumped from 31% to 38% in 2021, according to a recent report by Cerulli Associates. The research and consulting company expects that figure to rise further, to 41% percent by 2027, with most of the growth coming from rollovers.When does it make sense to leave a 401(k) plan behind? That depends on its quality. A rollover can make sense if you are in a 401(k) plan with poor investment choices or high fees. A study by Morningstar found that average total costs paid by sponsors and participants varied widely; some plans charge as little as 0.1% against your assets, and some have total costs over 3%. These higher rates are usually found among small employers. If you are not sure about your plan’s expense, send a written request to your employer’s human resources department, and ask for a written response to this question: “What are all the fees I’m paying, direct or indirect, on my account?” Ask the same question of any IRA provider that you consider.Another benefit of rolling over is account consolidation. Many people wind up with a number of retirement accounts over the course of their working years as they move from job to job. Getting in the habit of rolling funds into a single, low-cost IRA as you move around is a good way to stay organized and avoid losing track of your money.A rollover allows you to maintain the tax-deferred status of your assets without paying taxes or incurring penalties. The most efficient approach is a direct rollover, in which your 401(k) plan drafts a check or wire transfer made out to the new IRA custodian – not to you.But avoiding high fees is critical. Research published last year by the Pew Charitable Trusts found that investors potentially can lose thousands of dollars over time owing to what might seem like small differences in total expenses – especially the cost gap between retail and institutional shares.FOCUS ON THE FEESPew analyzed the difference between average institutional and retail share class expense ratios across all mutual funds that offered at least one institutional share class and one retail share class in 2019. The review found that annual expenses for median retail shares were 37% higher; for hybrid mutual funds holding both equities and bonds, the differences were larger – around 41%.Pew concluded that these differences translated to more than $980 million in direct fees in a single year – and potentially tens of billions of dollars in losses from fees and forgone earnings over a 25-year investing horizon. “What you want to be looking at is, are you going to be able to accomplish your investment objectives more effectively with the options in your plan, or outside in an IRA,” said Bob French, CFA, director of investment analysis at Retirement Researcher, which provides retirement guidance centered around academic research. There is also a case to be made for staying in your 401(k) plan – especially if you work for a large employer. Big plans can negotiate low fees that will beat some IRAs. Another plus for sticking with your 401(k): it is subject to the fiduciary requirements of the Employee Retirement Income Security Act (ERISA), meaning plan sponsors must put the interests of account holders first. This is not the case with IRAs. And most employer-sponsored retirement plans are protected from creditors under the ERISA standards. Non-ERISA accounts, such as traditional and Roth IRAs, do not enjoy those protections, although they are protected under federal bankruptcy law, should you file for bankruptcy.There are signs that more retirees are sticking with their employer plans when they leave the workforce: 73% of the assets that were eligible for distribution that year stayed in their plans – up from 66.5% in 2019. That points to growing efforts by employers to adopt retiree-friendly features in their retirement plans, especially more flexible ways to take regular drawdowns, according to Cerulli. “Not that long ago, there really weren’t good options for drawing down your money, other than a lump sum distribution to an IRA,” said David Kennedy, senior analyst for retirement at Cerulli. “But more employers want to maintain some sort of connection with their retired employees – and keeping more assets in the plan helps them get lower prices on the investment options they’re offering.” More

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    Bold (but not crazy) solutions to Britain’s growth problem

    There has been a flurry of attention recently to the fact that the UK needs a growth plan and it does not have one. Why this is happening just now is slightly mystifying — after all, as my colleague Tim Harford pointed out last week, Britain’s economy has been failing to deliver for 15 years (at least, we may add). The sudden urgency may have something to do with the IMF’s forecast update which painted the UK as the only major economy to contract this year. Or with the chancellor of the exchequer’s speech ostensibly setting out a plan for growth (plot spoiler: it didn’t). Or with the recent polls showing record numbers of Britons saying Brexit has been bad for the country (54 per cent, against 23 per cent who think it has been positive) — and revealing a lot of unhappiness with the state of things all round.Whatever the reason, the need to get the UK growing faster and better is on a lot of people’s minds. And some more sustainable growth in one of Europe’s biggest countries wouldn’t be a bad thing. But those in a position to make that happen are very far from doing so. There are three main reasons and they apply respectively to the government, the official opposition and the real internal opposition.The government, as I hinted above, does not have a plan for growth but a “plan for growth”. That is to say, laudable aspirations — even targets! — but without policies, much like last year’s levelling up white paper. Another term for it is willing the ends without willing the means.The Labour party, meanwhile, is not offering much more meat on the bone. The Economist had fun with this in its last issue with “Ms Heeves” — the blend of actual and shadow chancellors (Jeremy) Hunt and (Rachel) Reeves, whose policy proposals are, if not indistinguishable, little less than variations on a theme. On the growth-killing phenomenon of Brexit, Labour solemnly vows to only tweak it at the edges, if that. Even Conservative trade envoys reassure international investors that a Labour government would be safe, according to Politico.Then there are the government’s own backbenches. These do have big ideas for radical change, it is just that their radicalism for restoring growth would achieve the opposite. You may have noticed that Liz Truss is back. The most arresting sentence in her long Daily Telegraph essay at the weekend was (my italics): “while I saw the power of ‘the blob of vested interests’ within many a Whitehall department during my more than 10 years in ministerial office, I seriously underestimated the strength of the economic orthodoxy and its influence on the market”. There you have it: the market thought Truss’s libertarianism would hurt growth. And you don’t get to say “markets are wrong” if your economic philosophy is based on the opposite.Which leaves us with an unsatisfied hunger for (good) bold ideas that fit the magnitude of the problem. So can we do better than either tweaking at the edges or vandalising what is left of the economy? Let me share my thoughts — and encourage Free Lunch readers to share theirs. Here is a three-pronged policy programme I think is bold without being unrealistic. First, a policy for investment. Every country needs to build more capital, but investment has been particularly stagnant in the UK since 2016. So greater public investment and stronger incentives for private investment should be a no-brainer. That should be politically attractive too — not just because it’s always a good look for politicians to be getting things built, but because this government could build on its own recent policies of boosting public capital spending and granting a temporary “super-deduction” to business investment. Why not make the deduction permanent?Greater investment would not be politically painless, admittedly. The spending and tax incentives would need either to be covered by higher taxes or more borrowing. Either makes good economic sense, of course. But not in the standard Conservative narrative. Either the narrative or the country’s growth prospects have to give. Other Conservative shibboleths are threatened by the most obvious supporting policies for a Britain that builds more: deregulating planning and building more publicly owned housing. Second, a policy for creative destruction. The UK is unproductive because too many people work in unproductive jobs. Productivity will come from getting rid of those jobs and over time moving more workers into jobs that create more value per hour and can therefore pay higher wages. Those jobs could be within the same companies and sectors as where the bad jobs are eliminated, but are more likely to be offered by better and expanding employers in the same sector or in other sectors altogether that grow to take the place of declining ones.What I have described is what creative destruction looks like. It is a process of healthy growth. Here it is true that economic orthodoxy stands in the way, though not in the way Truss has in mind. For the way to encourage such a reallocation is to combine policies that make it unprofitable for companies to hire people to do what machines could do — bettering and enforcing labour standards, pushing minimum wages up — and sustain demand growth enough to give more productive companies the confidence to expand, invest and hire. Both sides of that equation run against some conventional tenets held dear by “responsible” policymakers. Politically, creative destruction requires a tolerance for the sort of wage inflation that accompanies a reallocation into higher-productivity activities, and a willingness to explain that the death of inefficient businesses is how the country progresses. Third, a policy for trade. Brexit has, of course, imposed huge costs on UK companies’ international trade. It would be best to reverse it. But short of that, what direction gives the best ratio of economic benefit to political cost? I would say seeking to join a full customs union with the EU. That would at a stroke remove rules-of-origin obstacles, giving UK battery production a place in export-orientated supply chains of electric vehicles, for example. It would also solve most of the friction in Northern Ireland-Great Britain shipments. A customs union would not solve the cost of regulatory divergence, of course, but Great Britain exporters will, for now, simply have to stick with EU rules and pay the cost of certification and border controls.Why do I say the political price would be worth paying? Because it would be smaller than many think. It would, of course, be giving back control to the EU in a very specific and limited way, to coin a phrase. But much less control than rejoining the single market would. And it would give up control that is demonstrably not terribly worth having. There will be no trade deal with the US. The deals the UK has struck have largely been adaptations of the EU’s deals with the same partners (which helps ease the way back). Elsewhere, the EU is at least as likely to conclude new deals and more likely to strike a hard bargain than the UK on its own. Meanwhile, the EU would have gained a big economy as its rule-taker in trade policy.If rejoining the EU is conceivable in the mid-term future, as Gideon Rachman wrote this week (and I wrote in 2016), then a customs union is surely a reasonable ambition. Somehow that seems more likely than the two other prongs, which rely on the UK getting its domestic policy act together. The EU strikes back, sort ofEU leaders congregate today to discuss the bloc’s response to the US’s green subsidy programme. Alan Beattie has delivered his preliminary verdict on the European Commission’s proposal for a “Green Deal Industrial Plan”.My own take is that it checks all the available boxes but doesn’t overcome the main issue that companies mention when they swoon about the Inflation Reduction Act: that the US tax credit system is so much simpler and more predictable. EU countries arguably put at least as much money available collectively, but it is spread across a patchwork of support schemes (even those at EU level). Many require an approval process after being granted, or have to be applied for, or involve officials selecting only some project among many. All this causes delay and uncertainty.But it is structurally almost impossible for the EU to overcome it, for several reasons. The biggest is that the power of the purse remains in the hands of national capitals. You can loosen the power of 27 governments to subsidise, but there remain 27 of them. Tax credits, while a more straightforward tool than allocated subsidies, do not overcome this problem since there is no EU-level tax against which credits can be given, so again there will be 27 different tax credit schemes on offer in the best of cases. And, of course, all this means EU governments get into competition with one another more easily than they compete against the US — the reason why state aid is rightly and tightly controlled at EU level.What to do, then? There is the good intention to streamline some of the subsidy streams; consolidating them would be better but harder. More EU-level funding, but without adding yet another structure, would help too. But perhaps the most promising solution is the commission’s suggestion for a “common scheme” that national capitals could align their tax incentives with. A standard template would do wonders if it let companies know that the 27 different taxmen would all grant the same tax credits.Other readablesPresident Joe Biden’s State of the Union address was largely focused on domestic policy. That makes sense: Biden has to begin to convince voters in next year’s presidential election that he has delivered for them. As importantly, he has in fact delivered a lot; just look at The Economist’s latest briefing on just how transformative his policies are for the US economy. It is gratifying to those who from the start commended the magnitude of Biden’s policy goals and achievements.My colleague Andrew Jack tells a tale of two business schools: one in Kyiv, the other in St Petersburg.With rising interest rates, many central banks will record accounting losses. A new article from the Bank for International Settlements (known as “the central banks’ bank”) sets out why this does not matter, because “losses do not compromise a central bank’s ability to fulfil its mandate”. Nor does having negative equity. Agustín Carstens, BIS head, makes the point forcefully in an FT op-ed.Numbers newsOECD inflation peaked in October and is at its lowest since last April, says the latest data release from the club of mostly rich countries.US police officers receive only one-eighth as much training as their Finnish counterparts — and less than one-sixth of that required for US plumbers. More