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    Inscriptions Are Filling Bitcoin Block Space, Consumes 50% of Space

    According to a recent post, Bitcoin ordinals and inscriptions are quickly filling up block space due to a recently introduced and somewhat controversial use case for Bitcoin. Reportedly, this is made feasible because users may arbitrarily store data on-chain.According to the article, this was previously achievable with text by using the OP RETURN function. However, these new “inscriptions” may be anything from jpegs to brief sound recordings or even simple games.On the other hand, the consensus among Bitcoin experts is that inscriptions are longer files, and as a result, they use a higher portion of the…The post Inscriptions Are Filling Bitcoin Block Space, Consumes 50% of Space appeared first on Coin Edition.See original on CoinEdition More

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    FirstFT: Powell warns of higher rates if jobs data remains strong

    Federal Reserve chair Jay Powell warned yesterday that it would probably take a “significant period of time” to tame inflation given stronger labour market data.Powell’s comments to the Economic Club of Washington were his first since Friday’s data showing a surprising jump in jobs growth last month, which suggested the Fed might have to go further in its monetary tightening to cool down the economy.Answering questions from David Rubenstein, co-founder of private equity group Carlyle, Powell said the “disinflationary process” still had a “long way to go” and was in its early stages. “It’s probably going to be bumpy,” he added.“I think there has been an expectation that [inflation] will go away quickly and painlessly and I don’t think that’s at all guaranteed. That’s not the base case,” Powell said.“The base case, for me, is that it will take some time. And we will have to do more rate increases and then we’ll have to look around and see whether we’ve done enough.”But the comments were not as hawkish as some investors had anticipated, given the labour market data on Friday that confirmed the US economy added more than half a million jobs in January and the unemployment rate fell to the lowest level in 53 years. After a bout of choppy trading that briefly dragged stocks into negative territory, US equities rallied to close higher. The benchmark S&P 500 rose 1.3 per cent and the tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite gained 1.9 per cent. European stocks have followed Wall Street’s lead today. US futures, however, have lost ground with contracts tracking the S&P 500 and Nasdaq down 0.3 per cent.Go deeper: Financial markets got off to a rip-roaring start to 2023. The risk-on appetite hinged on expectations for a “soft landing” in the US: speedy disinflation, without a recession. Investors were brought back down to earth by Friday’s jobs report, writes the FT’s editorial board. Five more stories in the news1. Biden warns China over threats to US sovereignty President Joe Biden used his annual State of the Union address to Congress to deliver a defiant message to Beijing and defend his economic record in the White House. Biden also said his economic plans, with billions of dollars in subsidies for domestic manufacturing including semiconductors, were helping the US win the economic competition.Analysis: This was one of the feistiest speeches of Biden’s presidency, in which he went off script on several occasions to respond to Republican heckles and jeers.2. Microsoft takes aim at Google’s search dominance Microsoft’s use of the AI used in ChatGPT to disrupt the internet search market is set to demolish the high profit margins that have underpinned Google’s core business, chief executive Satya Nadella predicted yesterday. “From now on, the [gross margin] of search is going to drop forever,” Nadella said in an interview with the Financial Times as the software giant unveiled an overhaul of its Bing search engine.3. Fall in US petrol use heralds shift for global markets The gas-guzzling heyday of the world’s largest oil market is receding as more efficient cars, the arrival of mass-market electric vehicles and the rise of working from home prompt US motorists to burn less petrol. The US consumed 8.78mn barrels a day of petrol last year, down 6 per cent on the record volumes sold before the coronavirus pandemic. Consumption will continue to decline in 2023 and 2024, the US Energy Information Administration forecast yesterday.4. Death toll from Turkey and Syria earthquakes passes 11,000 A frantic rescue effort stretched into a third day as the death toll from earthquakes in Turkey and Syria rose to more than 11,000. Yesterday Turkish president Recep Tayyip Erdoğan declared a state of emergency to deal with the humanitarian crisis. The emergency powers will enable him to rule by decree in much of Turkey’s south-east, bypassing parliament and regional authorities run by opposition parties.5. UAE grants Russian lender rare banking licence The United Arab Emirates has approved a licence for MTS Bank. The move will help meet growing demand for financial services from Russian expatriates but also risks exacerbating western concerns about the Gulf state’s emergence as a potential financial haven for Moscow.The day aheadMonetary policy There are more appearances today by Federal Reserve governors, including Christopher Waller, Lisa Cook, New York Fed president John Williams and Minneapolis Fed president Neel Kashkari. Vice-chair for supervision Michael Barr is also speaking at an economic mobility student career expo in Mississippi.Earnings Disney reports its first quarterly earnings since activist investor Nelson Peltz built a $900mn stake in the entertainment group and tried to force his way on to the board. Also reporting before the bell are rideshare group Uber, Under Armour, Brookfield Asset Management, Taco Bell parent Yum! Brands, pharmacy chain CVS Health and media company Fox Corp. Broker Robinhood, airline Frontier Group, and buy-now-pay-later company Affirm will report after the market closes.Politics Republicans on the House oversight committee, chaired by the Republican congressman from Kentucky James Comer, will grill three former Twitter executives over the alleged censorship of news about Hunter Biden. Ukraine Volodymyr Zelenskyy will pay a surprise visit to the UK today, where he will meet prime minister Rishi Sunak and address parliament on the day Britain unveiled more military support for Ukraine — including training for Nato-standard jets.What else we’re reading Credit Suisse’s make-or-break moment Tomorrow the scandal-plagued lender is set to publish what will arguably be the most important set of financial results in its 167-year history. Credit Suisse has warned it is on course for its second consecutive annual loss, with chair Axel Lehmann describing 2022 as a “horrifying year”. Will a radical restructuring be enough to turn it into a banking powerhouse?How FTX built its network of stars Endorsements from celebrities and athletes such as American football player Tom Brady, basketball star Steph Curry and comedian Larry David played a big role in the rapid rise of FTX. But behind the star-studded facade, court documents reveal a web of personal and financial relationships.

    What the west’s shifting red lines mean for Ukraine There is growing consensus among western military officials that Ukraine has a narrow window to launch a counteroffensive against Russia in the spring, prompting the US and other allies to commit weapons systems once considered off limits. Analysts say the constant crossing of self-imposed boundaries reflects Kyiv’s changing battlefield requirements.The revenge of the incumbents Amazon’s retreat on physical stores shows that disruption is harder than it looks, writes Brooke Masters. We are seeing the best environment in decades for established companies with strong franchises to push back against disrupters with innovative products and services of their own.Allure of abroad fades for Chinese MBA students Enrolling for an MBA abroad has been an important part of many Chinese professionals’ career plans for the best part of two decades. But the pandemic and rising tensions between China and the west are leading some prospective students to study domestically or within Asia. Thanks to all those readers who voted in yesterday’s poll. Nearly two-thirds of participants believed MBAs were not an advantage for running a business.Sign up: The FT is launching a new 6-part email series that will take you through every stage of applying for an MBA. Register today.Take a break from the newsActress Naomi Watts is just one of a growing number of public figures speaking out about the menopause with a range of symptoms such as hot flushes (Michelle Obama), palpitations (Oprah Winfrey), sleep problems, dry skin and sexual discomfort (Davina McCall). As celebrities help break these taboos around what is really the “bookend of puberty”, brands are looking to cash in. More

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    Binance to support users in Turkey’s earthquake region with $100 airdrops in BNB tokens

    In response to the tragedy, cryptocurrency exchange Binance has announced that it will airdrop $100 USD worth of BNB tokens to all Binance users residing in the regions hardest hit by the earthquake. The process of identifying eligible users will involve checking Proof of Address (POA) submissions made before Feb. 6 in 10 cities affected by the earthquake: Adana, Adıyaman, Diyarbakır, Gaziantep, Hatay, Kahramanmaraş, Kilis, Malatya, Şanlıurfa, and Osmaniye.Continue Reading on Coin Telegraph More

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    Lido Releases Latest Analytics Revealing Interesting Numbers

    Lido Finance released analytics for the period of January 30 to February 6 on its Twitter account. The data reveals that Lido crossed 5.05 million ETH staked on the beacon chain.The information also reveals that the February incentives of 1.95 million LDO are now available. The team also mentioned that new lending pools on Ethereum are exploding. MakerDAO and AAVE are two examples, with 636 percent and 140 percent growth over the last seven days, respectively.Moreover, there was a visible growth in the TVL, which stood at $8.4 billion, yesterday. There was a 3.83% positive change in the last seven days. The…The post Lido Releases Latest Analytics Revealing Interesting Numbers appeared first on Coin Edition.See original on CoinEdition More

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    European stocks rally as investors take heart from Powell comments

    European stocks rallied on Wednesday morning after investors grew optimistic that the US Federal Reserve would not need to raise its benchmark interest rate more than expected.Equities in Europe followed late gains overnight in the US after remarks from the US central bank’s chair Jay Powell that were less hawkish than some traders had anticipated.Powell was responding to Friday’s job’s report, which showed higher growth than economists had forecast and had led to a sell-off in US stocks and bonds. US markets reacted to his comments, with the S&P 500 closing 1.3 per cent higher.The European benchmark Stoxx 600 was up 0.9 per cent and Germany’s Dax was 0.7 per cent higher. The FTSE 100 gained 0.8 per cent to hit a record intraday high.However US futures lost ground, with contracts tracking the blue-chip S&P 500 down 0.3 per cent and the tech-heavy Nasdaq off 0.2 per cent in pre-market trading.“Europe has a natural correlation with the United States, so when sentiment there improves it drives sentiment across European markets,” said Mobeen Tahir, director of macroeconomic research and tactical solutions at WisdomTree Europe. “Our assessment is that stock markets are starting to realise that policy tightening is not necessarily crippling the economy. Markets are learning to live with higher rates, a profound change from last year.”The dollar index, a measure of the US currency’s strength against a basket of six peers, fell 0.3 per cent. The euro strengthened against the greenback, up 0.2 per cent to $1.07.Yields on 10-year German government bonds rose 0.04 percentage points to 2.34 per cent and 0.03 percentage points on the 10-year French equivalent to 2.79 per cent. Separately, the European Central Bank said it would cut the maximum rate it paid on government deposits to encourage investors to put their money in the market.At The Economic Club in Washington, DC, Powell stressed the need for further rate rises to cool the economy. Addressing the jobs data, he said it “shows you why we think this will be a process that takes a significant period of time . . . the labour market is extraordinarily strong”.“The process has a long way to go and further interest rate increases will probably be needed,” said Toby Sturgeon, Global Head of Fiduciary Investment Services at Zedra, a wealth planning company. “With so much volatility in all markets, we will watch closely the changes in the coming weeks.”In Asia, the Hang Seng index was closed flat, down less than 0.1 per cent, while the Chinese CSI 300 fell 0.4 per cent.On commodities markets Brent crude, the international benchmark, rose 0.9 per cent while its US counterpart, WTI, was 0.8 per cent higher. More

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    Maersk forecasts plunge in profits

    AP Møller-Maersk has forecast a plunge in profits this year and a probable contraction in global trade as the pandemic-driven boom in container shipping comes to an abrupt end.The world’s second-largest container shipping group said on Wednesday that underlying operating profits this year would be $2bn-$5bn, down from the record $31bn it made last year. It made $5.1bn in the fourth quarter of last year alone, even as freight rates, which had rocketed as the pandemic disrupted global supply chains, normalised.“We are seeing this correction happen. It creates a few new challenges. First and foremost though, it’s a return to normal . . . What we see more than [a change in] GDP is an inventory correction,” Vincent Clerc, Maersk’s new chief executive, told the Financial Times.Clerc said that customers, who include most of the world’s largest retailers, had over-ordered during the congestion of recent years. “When this congestion goes away, you get more goods, your warehouses are full, your inventory is high,” he added.The first non-Dane to head Maersk and only in the role since January 1, Clerc faces a tricky challenge: presenting record results for 2022 and a steep drop in profits and demand this year.Maersk said it expected global container demand to be between minus 2.5 per cent and plus 0.5 per cent this year. Shares in Maersk fell 4 per cent in early trading on Wednesday.“It’s a message about balance. There is no painting the world like everything is going to be fine and easy. Delivering those results is extraordinary . . . We are heading now into a different world, and there is no time for the team to lean back and say: thank God, we are going back to normal,” Clerc said.Revenues in 2022 increased by a third to $82bn while operating profit rose by 57 per cent to $31bn.The Danish group largely refrained from ordering new ships during the boom years unlike many rivals, especially Mediterranean Shipping Company, the secretive Swiss company run by a former Maersk executive which last year overtook it as the world’s biggest container shipping line by volume.Some analysts believe the industry is in danger of returning to the pattern of boom and bust that dominated before the past decade of consolidation.

    “Capital discipline across the industry remains evasive. Capacity investments is ahead of what we foresee for demand growth,” Clerc added.This year is likely to be mixed for Maersk’s different businesses. Its land-based logistics and port terminals units should see improving profits in the second half, Clerc said. But its main container shipping business would see strong profits in the first quarter because of the number of long-term contracts employed, which would then fall throughout the year as the drop in freight rates feeds through. It would be a “pretty sharp adjustment”, he added.Clerc, who has been at Maersk for a quarter of a century, most recently as head of container shipping and logistics, said he would stick to Maersk’s strategy of bulking up its logistics business and focus on solving customers’ supply chain problems.Although Maersk is forecasting a sharp drop in profitability compared with last year, operating profits of $2bn-$5bn would be better than what it delivered in 2017-19 as well as possibly 2020’s $4.2bn. More

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    Is everything the Fed’s fault?

    Good morning. Fed chair Jay Powell spoke yesterday, and basically said the same thing as he did at the press conference last week — that is, if the strong economic data keeps coming, more tightening will be in order. The market took this as dovish, which makes some sense. Powell had an opportunity, in the face of strong markets, to strike a more hawkish note. He declined to do so. Have another interpretation? Email us: [email protected] and [email protected] Fed as threat to financial stabilityA lot of people don’t like the Fed. Write an FT article about any imperfect feature of the financial system, you are likely to get a comment saying “it’s the Fed’s fault”. The Fed, according to its detractors, has suppressed interest rates, printed cash, distorted asset prices, encouraged malinvestment, worsened inequality, and increased the odds of a market crash. The source of these arguments at times undermines their credibility. They are frequently (though not exclusively) made by underperforming value investors, bears who shorted the long bull market, gold bugs, and assorted other malcontents. This does not make the arguments wrong, though. It is useful, then, when the case against the Fed is framed intelligently by a very reputable voice. Dennis Kelleher and Phillip Basil, of Better Markets, did just that in a report last month, “Federal Reserve Policies and Systemic Instability.” I encourage everyone to read it, if only to crystallise views about Fed policy works. A brief summary of the arguments: Since 2008, Fed rate and balance sheet policy has decoupled asset prices from risk, and encouraged both companies and households to use a dangerous amount of debt. Very low rates mean investors have been “strongly incentivised if not forced into riskier assets, leading to mispriced risk and a build-up of debt” Comparing the decade after the great financial crisis to the decade before, the growth in US debt held by the public was nearly 500 per cent larger, the growth in nonfinancial corporate loans and debt securities was about 90 per cent larger, and the growth in consumer credit — excluding mortgages — was roughly 30 per cent larger.Proof that the central bank had pushed too much liquidity into the market with quantitative easing can be found in the Fed’s own reverse repo operations. “The Fed was pumping trillions of dollars into financial markets and limiting the supply of safe assets on one side of the market and siphoning out trillions of dollars from financial markets through its RRP facility on the other side.”All this created a market excessively dependent on easy money, as the 2013 taper tantrum and the Fed being forced to ease policy in mid-2019 demonstrate.Reversing these bad policies in the face of inflation risks recession, corporate defaults, stress in the Treasury market, and a cracked housing market. The Fed may overreact to these stresses, too — perpetuating the cycle of error.This charge sheet is not crazy. But it attributes too much power to monetary policy. Central banks do have direct control over the very shortest interest rates. Their influence on long rates — the ones that really matter — is real, too, but is usually indirect, contingent, changeable, and depends on mass psychology (the Bank of Japan’s experiment in direct control over long yields is something of a special case). It may be true that easy money is a necessary condition for an asset bubble, but it is not a sufficient one.There is case to be made that the Fed follows long rates, rather than long rates following the Fed. A very strong version of this argument was recently made by Aswath Damodaran of NYU. He writes:If the question is why interest rates rose a lot in 2022, and if your answer to that question is the Fed, you have, in my view, lost the script. I know that in the last decade, it has become fashionable to attribute powers to the Fed that it does not have and view it as the ultimate arbiter of rates. That view has never made sense, because central banking power over rates is at the margin, and the key fundamental drivers of rates are expected inflation and real growth.He offers this long-term chart of real GDP growth, inflation, and 10-year yields:

    “It was the combination of low inflation and anaemic growth that was at the heart of low rates,” he writes, “though the Fed did influence rates at the margin, perhaps pushing them down below their intrinsic levels with its machinations.” You can quibble with Damodaran’s own account of rates (especially the link between rates and real growth), but the point is that you can’t just assert that Fed policy determined the last decade of very low rates.We have argued — and still believe — that the quantitative easing, by increasing liquidity in markets, drives asset prices up, through the portfolio balance channel. But, just like rates, market liquidity is determined by a number of factors. Foreign central banks play a role, as do demographics and wealth inequality. Still, the basic point remains: the Fed was too loose, and now we have a heavy debt burden, expensive assets, and inflation. But remember the reason that the Fed went for loose policy all those years: demand was weak. And there is a very strong, perhaps unanswerable, case that the Fed was a year late to raising rates and tapering asset purchases. But do Kelleher and Basil think that the Fed was too accommodative in, say, 2011-14? Why?One final point. So far — somewhat to Unhedged’s surprise — the return to a neutral policy stance is going pretty well. Asset prices are down and home sales are falling, but after the run they have had, that seems healthy. Unemployment is lower than ever. The Kelleher/Basil argument will look a lot stronger if we get a proper market crash or a deep recession. What the Fed might think about financial conditionsThe Fed wants to tighten financial conditions to root out inflation. Markets just want an excuse to rally. But markets have a big role in determining financial conditions. This leaves the Fed with less-than-ideal options: tighten monetary policy still further, to whip markets into line, or accept watered-down monetary policy transmission for a while. Asked about this Fed/markets gap last week, Powell seemed remarkably chill about it all. He’s “not particularly concerned” about “short-term moves” in financial conditions because they simply reflect markets’ dovish opinion of inflation falling quickly. His is not a ludicrous view. Still, one wonders if there’s more to what Powell, and the Fed, is thinking.A new research note from the San Francisco Fed might hold a clue. The authors, Simon Kwan and Louis Liu, look at a measure of policy tightness called the “real funds rate gap”. This is the difference between the fed funds rate and the Fed’s estimate of the neutral rate (ie, the theoretical interest rate that neither stokes nor suppresses inflation) after both are adjusted for inflation. The bigger the gap, the tighter policy is; the smaller, the more accommodative. Estimates for this cycle’s rate gap (January 2022 to May 2023 below) come partly from the Fed’s latest set of economic projections.The exercise reveals just how much more dramatic recent monetary tightening looks compared to tightening cycles in the past:

    In this cycle, real rates moved way up (rightmost green bar) from a very low baseline (rightmost blue bar) as inflation ran hot. If the Fed’s projections roughly bear out, it will be the most drastic real funds rate gap change — that is, the most screeching tightening cycle — in the postwar era.This will matter to financial conditions. In the past, Kwan and Liu find that a highly negative rate gap (ie, highly accommodative policy) at the start of a tightening cycle is followed by widening yield spreads and falling stock prices. But based on how vastly negative this cycle’s initial rate gap was, stocks haven’t fallen and spreads haven’t expanded nearly as much as history would suggest they should. Much tighter financial conditions may lie ahead:When we use this historical relationship to evaluate stock prices at the large negative funds rate gap, stock prices are projected to decline further. The historical relationship between the funds rate gap and bond spreads also calls for more tightening in the bond market . . . past experiences indicate that more tightening of financial conditions could follow.If you’re at the helm of the Fed, this is reason enough for forbearance. Monetary tightening is only part way through; financial markets could catch up fast, and violently. Recent “short-term moves” in markets just might not be worth sweating. (Ethan Wu)One good readRIP to this Australian Shepherd. Good dog! More