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    FTX creditors list, BlockFi $1.2B exposure and new Celsius token: Hodler’s Digest, Jan. 22-28

    Bankrupt crypto lending firm BlockFi uploaded uncensored financials by mistake, revealing $1.2 billion in assets tied up with bankrupt exchange FTX and defunct trading firm Alameda Research. The unredacted filings show that, as of Jan. 14, BlockFi had $415.9 million worth of assets linked to FTX and a whopping $831.3 million in loans to Alameda. BlockFi filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy on Nov. 28, citing the collapse of FTX just weeks earlier as the cause of its financial troubles.Continue Reading on Coin Telegraph More

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    Ireland sees lower than forecast inflation in 2023

    Annual Irish inflation slowed to 8.2% in December after hitting a 38-year high of 9.2% two months earlier. The finance department said on Saturday that the easing in wholesale prices supported the idea that inflation had peaked and was on a downward trajectory.The updated analysis was contained in an assessment of the government’s Temporary Business Energy Support Scheme (TBESS), introduced late last year to provide firms with up to 40% of the increase in energy bills up to 10,000 euros per month.To date just 15,000 businesses have registered for the scheme, which the finance department said was a relatively lower level of uptake than initially expected and budgeted for.The government has so far approved claims worth 17.5 million euros, having set aside 1.25 billion euros to cover the six-month scheme. More

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    China aims to boost consumption and imports as global demand cools

    At a meeting chaired by Premier Li Keqiang, China’s state council – which functions as the cabinet – also vowed to speed up the rollout of foreign investment projects, maintain a stable yuan, ease cross-border travel and help companies to participate in domestic and overseas trade shows.The cabinet also reaffirmed its support for the private sector and digital platform economy, which have taken a knock from a series of regulatory crackdowns in recent years.It also discussed measures to support farmers to start spring planting, including subsidies for soybean sowing, CCTV reported.During the week-long Lunar New Year holiday that ended on Friday, consumption increased 12.2% from the same period last year, the tax authority said on Saturday, reflecting a rebound after the relaxing of some of the world’s tightest COVID-19 curbs.Analysts at Japanese brokerage Nomura said in a research note on Saturday that consumption of in-person services had recovered notably, as seen in the rebound of trips made and tourism earnings.But they said households were likely to be moderate in releasing pent-up demand.Chinese exports shrank sharply in December as global demand cooled, but a more modest decline in imports led economic analysts to forecast a slow recovery in domestic demand in the coming months.China’s economy grew by 3.0% in 2022, when stringent COVID measures were still in place, well below the official target for “around” 5.5%, official data showed earlier this month.Growth is expected to rebound to 4.9% in 2023, before steadying in 2024, according to a Reuters poll of economists.(This story has been corrected to make clear in the ninth paragraph that official 2022 GDP data was released) More

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    Republicans vow to probe US banks’ ‘ESG agenda’ in Congress

    Banks and asset managers will face scrutiny from Congress on their “ESG agenda”, according to a senior Republican lawmaker, pointing to tensions ahead between the new House majority and America’s financial sector.The comments by Andy Barr, the chair of the House financial services subcommittee responsible for financial institutions and monetary policy, fire a new salvo at Wall Street banks and asset managers for their social and climate goals.“We think that banks should be non-political. Banks should not be a political party,” the Kentucky lawmaker said in an interview at his office on Capitol Hill. “Banks should serve creditworthy borrowers and focus on earnings and profitability for their shareholders.”Republicans from potential presidential candidates such as Florida governor Ron DeSantis to state officials have in recent months stepped up attacks on Wall Street and corporate America for allegedly being too “woke”.After gaining control of the House, congressional Republicans will now have the power to open a new front in that push by holding public hearings and demanding more information from financial institutions about their employment and lending practices.“We want to promote the depoliticisation of our capital markets. In order for our country to be economically competitive we need our financial system to provide equal access to capital to all kinds of businesses,” Barr said. He added that his concern was that America’s financial system had been “co-opted by the intolerant left that is intolerant of diversity”.As well as having jurisdiction over banks, Barr also has primary responsibility for overseeing the Federal Reserve. He said the US central bank should also expect more scrutiny from Capitol Hill if it sets its own climate-related goals for financial institutions, including in its stress tests.“We want the Fed to stick to their dual mandate of price stability and full employment. To the extent they get into this game of capital allocation and climate finance and this network for the greening of the financial system, that’s when our reform agenda would kick into high gear,” he said.Jay Powell, the Fed chair, is expected to steer the central bank towards a slower pace of monetary tightening at next week’s Federal Open Market Committee meeting, with a 25 basis point interest rate increase compared to the 50bp rise in December. Barr warned the Fed not to let up prematurely.“The Fed needs to have some fortitude. We don’t want a return to the 1970s where there was a failure to get inflation under control and then having the inflation problem persist,” Barr said. He also said the Fed should not raise its inflation target, which is currently 2 per cent on average. “They need to stick with their 2 per cent and they need to get there.”On the regulatory front, Michael Barr, the Fed’s vice-chair for supervision and a former Treasury official in the Barack Obama administration, has been conducting a “holistic” review of the capital rules for US financial institutions — possibly heralding a change in the central bank’s stance.The Kentucky lawmaker said he worried that “additional strenuous capital requirements” could be introduced, even though Powell has said the existing ones are appropriate.“Sidelining capital, preventing the banking system from deploying capital in the real economy. That’s not going to help fix supply chains. That’s not going to help business investment, capex. We need capex to fix the supply side, to fix inflation,” Andy Barr said. He also said that in the implementation of Basel III capital rules for global banking standards, the US should not “move faster than Europe”, or “we’re going to put our institutions at a competitive disadvantage”.

    Arguably the biggest risk to the US and global financial system this year would be a failure to raise the country’s $31.4tn borrowing limit that could trigger a debt default.House Republicans are demanding spending cuts and reforms in exchange for increasing the US debt ceiling. Democrats and the White House have said the measure should be passed without strings attached because it pays for debt racked up by both parties over time. They say Republicans only revert to fiscal conservatism and attach conditions to debt ceiling increases under Democratic presidents.Barr offered few signs that the stand-off will be resolved soon. He blasted Democrats for being “cynical and hypocritical” in failing to have raised the debt limit over the past two years when they controlled both chambers of Congress, and called for talks.“Avoiding default is obviously critically important and we’re not going to default. The full faith and credit of the United States is very important, but if we don’t demand reforms in exchange for raising the debt limit, what is the purpose of the debt limit law to begin with?” he asked.“Brinkmanship is not good for the economy, not good for the financial system. But I think what’s reckless and irresponsible is the White House saying they won’t negotiate.” More

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    Sri Lanka economy could shrink by -3.5% to -4%, president says

    “From 2024, we will take this economy to positive growth. We are creating a strong country that does not bow down to anyone and is debt-free,” he said.Speaking at a religious event, he said: “The growth rate of the economy in 2022 was -11%  and could be -3.5 or -4.0% this year.”If economic programs which includes difficult changes in policy such as higher taxes, cuts in public expenditure and debt restructuring were not implemented then Sri Lanka could witness further political unrest, he said.”No one can prevent the country from falling into crisis again similar to May and June last year,” Wickremesinghe said.The island nation of 22 million people has struggled with challenges during the past year ranging from a shortage of foreign currency to runaway inflation and a steep recession – the worst such crisis since independence from Britain in 1948.The government signed a preliminary agreement with the International Monetary Fund (IMF) in September for a $2.9 billion program but has to put its debt on a sustainable path before disbursements can begin. More

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    Crypto Trader Identifies a Change in the Altcoin Market Trend

    A crypto trader and influencer with the identity Pentoshi has identified a new pattern in the price behavior of altcoins. Pentoshi observed that the altcoin market moves quickly, without having significant pullbacks, unlike a few months ago. Something different from the past few months.In a tweet, he told his followers about some trading opportunities he missed by a narrow margin. He had concluded analyses, identified entries, and prepared his trades, only for the market to miss those entries and move higher. More

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    SBF Attempts to Manipulate Evidence: Imposes Tougher Bail Conditions

    According to recent reports, the US Attorneys in Manhattan proposed to impose inflexible bail conditions on the disgraceful Sam Bankman-Fried, the former CEO of the crypto exchange FTX. The proposal to the US District Judge Lewis Kaplan has been elicited from the concern that SBF would try to manipulate the witnesses or the shreds of evidence.Notably, New York Times tweeted that SBF “tried to contact a potential witness in his criminal case”: More

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    MATIC Whale Triggers 20% Rally With $56 Million Transfer

    MATIC, the native token of Ethereum’s most popular scaling solution Polygon, has seen a massive rally over the past few days. The token has gone from $0.94 to $1.13 within a span of 72 hours. Blockchain analytics firm Santiment tweeted the details of a whale transfer earlier today that most likely triggered the rally. More