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    Global hedge funds gain in January, but not as much as stock market, HFR says

    NEW YORK (Reuters) – Global hedge funds posted a solid 2.8% gain in January, but they missed out on the stellar rally that broader stock market indexes posted to start the year because the funds were mostly positioned for a continued bear market, data provider HFR said on Tuesday.All four major hedge fund strategies ended the month higher, with equity hedge funds as the top gainer, up 4.24%, in a fresh start for a category that posted major losses in 2022.Last year, hedge funds posted their worst performance since 2018, mainly dragged down by equities as portfolio managers struggled to place bets amid market turmoil.”Equity hedge funds led strategy gains for the month, as investors positioned for an improved equity market environment in 2023, including a moderation of interest rate increases and slowing of generational inflation,” HFR said in a presentation.Still, the main Wall Street indexes far outperformed hedge funds. In January, the Nasdaq rose 10.7%, in its best January since 2011, while the S&P 500 advanced 6.18%.Data from Goldman Sachs (NYSE:GS)’ prime brokerage showed that last month hedge funds massively abandoned their bets against stocks as they became too expensive amid a rally. Short covering reached its fastest pace since 2015, surpassing the speed seen during the meme stock frenzy.Hedge funds’ bearish bets prevented them from posting higher returns in January.Event-driven strategies, which mostly bet on deals conclusions or failures and activism situations, were up 3.55% last month.Relative value hedge funds, which trade price disparities, rose 1.95%, while macro hedge funds gained 0.26%, mainly dragged down by algorithm-driven and commodities strategies. More

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    US financial regulators warn against crypto exposure in retirement accounts

    In a Feb. 7 notice, the United States Securities and Exchange Commission’s Office of Investor Education and Advocacy, the North American Securities Administrators Association, and Financial Industry Regulatory Authority said self-directed individual retirement accounts, or IRAs, may include assets with potential risks, including cryptocurrencies. According to the agencies, some of the aforementioned IRAs could offer exposure to crypto assets that qualify as securities “without SEC registration or a valid exemption from registration” and without providing the information necessary to make informed decisions on investments.Continue Reading on Coin Telegraph More

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    Ebay to lay off 500 employees

    Shares of the San Jose, California-based company rose about 1% in aftermarket trade. “This shift gives us additional space to invest and create new roles in high-potential areas – new technologies, customer innovations and key markets,” said Jamie Iannone, Chief Executive Officer of Ebay in a message to employees. A raft of U.S. companies from Goldman Sachs Group Inc (NYSE:GS) to Alphabet (NASDAQ:GOOGL) Inc have laid off thousands this year to ride out a demand downturn wrought by high inflation and rising interest rates. More

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    US Attorney requests SEC and CFTC civil cases against SBF wait until after criminal trial

    In Feb. 7 filings, Williams requested that the court issue an order staying civil proceedings as well as discovery from the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission and Commodity Futures Trading Commission against Bankman-Fried until after his criminal case, scheduled to go to trial in October. According to Williams, the criminal case against Bankman-Fried was “likely to have a significant impact” on the SEC and CFTC civil cases.Continue Reading on Coin Telegraph More

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    France and Germany claim assurances from US over green subsidies

    The economy ministers of France and Germany said the US had agreed to address European concerns over the Inflation Reduction Act, the $370bn support programme for US clean tech, but acknowledged that their talks with US officials had not yielded any concrete proposals. Bruno Le Maire, France’s economy minister, said he and his German counterpart Robert Habeck had achieved “substantive progress” in their talks in Washington and won “assurances” that the US would seek to assuage European concerns. But few specifics emerged from the meetings, apart from an agreement on full transparency over the level of subsidies on offer under the IRA so that Europe can match them if necessary.The EU has grown anxious that the targeted support now on offer in the US might cause a stampede of business and investment away from the EU to America.The unusual decision by Habeck and Le Maire to go together to Washington was meant to underline the full extent of European disquiet over the US support measures. Habeck said that the meetings — with US trade representative Katherine Tai and Gina Raimondo, the commerce secretary, as well as Treasury secretary Janet Yellen — conveyed the “European view of a few problems” with the IRA, as well as the EU’s concern that the act could usher in a “bidding war on subsidies”.Both he and Le Maire insisted that the message had got through. Le Maire said an agreement had been reached with US officials that the implementation of the IRA “should include as many EU components as possible, for example electric vehicles, electric batteries and critical minerals”. The IRA offers companies billions of dollars in tax credits to boost investment in clean-energy technologies, with the aim of boosting the homegrown development of everything from hydrogen and electric-car batteries to solar panels and sustainable aviation fuel.Companies will be rewarded for locating their supply chains either in the US or with allies and partners. European officials complain that the domestic content requirements run counter to World Trade Organization rules that are meant to bar discrimination against products based on their country of origin.The act has triggered fears in the EU that companies will decamp from Europe to the US to take advantage of the subsidies. It has also raised concerns over the danger of a damaging subsidy race that will skew the competitive playing field in international trade.“Building a strong industry in the US cannot be at the expense of EU countries,” Le Maire said before the meetings. But the message from officials in Washington on the eve of the talks was defiant. Brian Deese, director of the National Economic Council at the White House, said the US allies had “nothing to fear . . . and quite a bit to gain” from the IRA.

    “The United States is now leading, and other like-minded countries should both recognise that and also seek . . . opportunities to partner with us,” he added, saying the IRA would “accelerate the reduction in cost of deploying next-generation energy technologies that are critical for the world”. “We have nothing to apologise for, and, frankly, everything to be proud about,” he added.Le Maire said French, German and US officials had agreed on the need for “full transparency about the level of subsidies and tax credits” awarded to private companies, as well as the need for “constant communication at the ministerial level” about strategic investments on both sides of the Atlantic.Habeck said they had also discussed creating a “critical minerals club”, designed to reduce the US and EU’s dependence on certain countries such as China for essential raw materials and to diversify supply chains. He also said that the Europeans and US agreed to let the US-EU Trade and Technology Council, which seeks to develop common tech standards, work towards creating a “common market in green industrial goods”. The EU knows there is no chance of reopening the IRA. But it is hoping that it can influence the drafting of “guidelines” that determine how the act is implemented, in the hope that European companies might be cut into some of its benefits. The guidelines for critical minerals, for example, have not yet been drafted in detail.However, talks held by a US-EU task force on the issue have yielded only partial progress. EU officials recently said Washington had agreed to allow electric vehicles built outside North America to qualify for tax credits if leased by consumers — a huge market in the US. But US officials denied it was a concession and said they were simply following the letter of US law, which allows for such a loophole. Additional reporting by James Politi More

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    Ex-Coinbase manager pleads guilty in insider trading case

    NEW YORK (Reuters) – A former Coinbase (NASDAQ:COIN) Global Inc product manager pleaded guilty on Tuesday in what U.S. prosecutors have called the first insider trading case involving cryptocurrency, his defense lawyer said in a court hearing.Ishan Wahi, 32, pleaded guilty to two counts of conspiracy to commit wire fraud, after initially pleading not guilty last year.Prosecutors said Wahi shared confidential information with his brother Nikhil and their friend Sameer Ramani about forthcoming announcements of new digital assets that Coinbase would let users trade.”I knew that Sameer Ramani and Nikhil Wahi would use that information to make trading decisions,” Ishan Wahi said during Tuesday’s hearing in federal court in Manhattan. “It was wrong to misappropriate and disseminate Coinbase’s property.” Nikhil Wahi and Ramani were charged with using ethereum blockchain wallets to acquire digital assets and trading at least 14 times before Coinbase announcements between June 2021 and April 2022.The announcements typically caused the assets to rise in value and generated at least $1.5 million in illicit gains, prosecutors have said. Nikhil Wahi pleaded guilty in September to a wire fraud conspiracy charge, and in January was sentenced to 10 months in prison. Ramani is at large.As part of a plea deal, prosecutors stipulated that sentencing guidelines called for Ishan Wahi to be imprisoned for between 36 and 47 months. U.S. District Judge Loretta Preska scheduled his sentencing hearing for May 10. Coinbase is one of the world’s largest cryptocurrency exchanges. The company has said it shared its findings from an internal probe into the trading with prosecutors.On Monday, Ishan Wahi asked a judge to dismiss a parallel lawsuit from the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), saying that charges represent an “abuse of power” by the agency. At issue is whether nine tokens listed on Coinbase were, in fact, securities and subject to SEC regulation. A spokesperson for the SEC declined to comment. In pleading guilty to the criminal charges on Tuesday, Ishan Wahi said he did not believe any of the relevant tokens were securities. Noah Solowiejczyk, a prosecutor, said the question of whether or not the tokens are securities was not an element of prosecutors’ case. More