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    Citigroup quarterly profit falls on provision hike, slowdown in dealmaking

    Merger and acquisition activity slowed dramatically last year as companies shunned deals amid higher interest rates, the war in Ukraine and growing economic uncertainties.The U.S. Federal Reserve last year raised its interest rate by 425 basis points from the near-zero level to tame inflation, raising fears of an economic downturn, and thus, forcing many firms to forecast slower growth in revenue and profit.Fears of a potential recession prompted Citi to add $640 million to its reserves in the fourth quarter. That compares with a release of $1.37 billion from its reserves in 2021 when pandemic-related loan losses failed to materialize.Net profit came in at $2.5 billion, or $1.16 per share, for the three months ended Dec. 31, compared with $3.2 billion, or $1.46 a share, a year earlier. More

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    Donald Trump’s company to be sentenced for 15-year tax fraud

    NEW YORK (Reuters) – Donald Trump on Friday will learn how the company that bears the former U.S. president’s name will be punished after being found guilty of scheming to defraud tax authorities for 15 years.A New York state judge will impose the sentence after jurors in Manhattan found two Trump Organization affiliates guilty of 17 criminal charges last month.The sentencing comes three days after Justice Juan Merchan of the Manhattan criminal court ordered Allen Weisselberg, who worked for Trump’s family for a half-century and was the company’s former chief financial officer, to jail for five months after he testified as the prosecution’s star witness. Trump’s company faces only a maximum $1.6 million penalty, but has said it plans to appeal. No one else was charged or faces jail time in the case.Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg’s office, which brought the case, is still conducting a criminal probe into Trump’s business practices.Bill Black, a professor at the University of Missouri-Kansas City School of Law specializing in white-collar crime, called the expected penalty a “rounding error” that offers “zero deterrence” to others, including Trump.”This is a farce,” he said. “No one will stop committing these kinds of crimes because of this sentence.”The case has long been a thorn in the side of the Republican former president, who calls it part of a witch hunt by Democrats who dislike him and his politics.Trump also faces a $250 million civil lawsuit by state Attorney General Letitia James accusing him and his adult children Donald Trump Jr., Ivanka Trump and Eric Trump of inflating his net worth and the value of his company’s assets to save money on loans and insurance.Bragg and James are Democrats, as is Bragg’s predecessor Cyrus Vance, who brought the criminal case. Trump is seeking the presidency in 2024, after losing his re-election bid in 2020. At a four-week trial, prosecutors offered evidence that Trump’s company covered personal expenses such as rent and car leases for executives without reporting them as income, and pretended that Christmas bonuses were non-employee compensation.Trump himself signed bonus checks, prosecutors said, as well as the lease on Weisselberg’s luxury Manhattan apartment and private school tuition for the CFO’s grandchildren.”The whole narrative that Donald Trump was blissfully ignorant is just not real,” Assistant District Attorney Joshua Steinglass told jurors in his closing argument.Weisselberg’s testimony helped convict the company, though he said Trump was not part of the fraud scheme. He also refused to help Bragg in his broader investigation into Trump.The Trump Organization had put Weisselberg on paid leave until they severed ties this week. His lawyer said the split, announced on Tuesday, was amicable.Weisselberg, 75, is serving his sentence in New York City’s notorious Rikers Island jail.State law limits the penalties that Justice Merchan can impose on Trump’s company. A corporation can be fined up to $250,000 for each tax-related count and $10,000 for each non-tax count.Trump faces several other legal woes, including probes related to the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the U.S. Capitol, his retention of classified documents after leaving the White House, and efforts to overturn his 2020 election loss in Georgia. More

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    Investors snap up record $39 billion emerging market sovereign bond splurge

    LONDON (Reuters) -Developing countries have sold a huge $39 billion of international bonds since the start of the year, with investors happy to pile into riskier debt as they bet global interest rates are nearing a peak.The first half of January saw 11 countries launch more than 20 dollar- and euro-denominated bond issues. The scale of borrowing dwarfs the previous record of $26 billion raised in the same period in 2018, data from Morgan Stanley (NYSE:MS) shows. All the sales were at least three times oversubscribed, a sign that appetite for emerging market debt is back after a year in which many countries were effectively locked out from markets as global interest rates surged. “More and more investors are willing to deploy cash and take some risks,” Merveille Paja, EEMEA sovereign credit strategist for BofA said, adding that issuers such as Romania and Hungary had offered “extremely attractive premiums” on their recently issued dollar bonds. Investment-grade-rated Saudi Arabia is the largest borrower so far, having sold $10 billion of five-, 10- and 30-year dollar bonds. High-yield countries have also joined the issuance frenzy. Turkey sold a $2.75 billion Eurobond at a 9.75% yield on Thursday while Mongolia is also set to tap markets. “A coupon of about 10%-ish is quite high even by Turkey’s standards,” said Paul Greer, portfolio manager at Fidelity International.    Morgan Stanley strategist Simon Waever said yields are high in historic terms, but that “most countries have no choice but to issue and absorb the higher cost”. Issuance year-to-date was already equivalent to 40% of all 2022’s emerging hard-currency bond issuance, said Waever. ROARING STARTWhile emerging bond markets are off to a roaring start, that might not translate into a bumper year overall. Morgan Stanley predicts total 2023 sovereign debt gross sales to hit $143 billion, driven by sales from the Middle East and North Africa and investment-grade countries in Asia. That is well above last year’s multi-year low of $95 billion, but well short of 2020’s record $233 billion. Madhur Agarwal, head of Debt Capital Markets Origination Asia ex. Japan at JPMorgan (NYSE:JPM), said that while January is usually a good month for countries to issue, demand was high because “investors see we are nearing the cap on U.S. interest rate hikes and it should be more stable going forward”. Emerging economies were not alone in their push to raise cash, with U.S. corporate issuers, European governments and other parts of the fixed income universe also ramping up issuance at the start of the year, some raising funds to help offset the impact of the energy crisis. Costa Rica and Dominican Republic are among countries that need to tap the market this year and are likely to move soon, said Carlos de Sousa, a portfolio manager at Vontobel.”It doesn’t mean this is a short window of opportunity. It may be a long one, but the countries just don’t know and we don’t know either,” de Sousa added, stressing that only two months ago investors “were still very much on the defensive” and sitting on a pile of cash.With almost no bonds maturing in 2023, most economies in Sub-Saharan Africa don’t need to issue overseas debt, de Sousa said, while Ivory Coast and Senegal will only do so if the market continues to rally.”The blessing for 2023 is that we haven’t got a huge spike in Eurobonds maturities for the frontier,” said Gregory Smith, emerging markets fund manager at M&G Investments, referring to what are perceived as the riskiest of emerging markets. He said Egypt would need to issue debt in the medium term but might wait for better market conditions, with indicated yields dropping to the 8-9% range from double-digits now. “The country needs to deliver on the reforms it promised to the IMF,” Smith said. Nigeria could muddle through this year’s presidential election without borrowing if it maintains a good buffer of FX reserves, according to Paja from BofA. “Kenya and Angola will need to tap the market, while South Africa is staying away completely this year,” she said. More

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    BofA profit tops estimates as higher rates boost interest income

    (Reuters) -Bank of America Corp reported a bigger-than-expected fourth-quarter profit on Friday, helped by a surge in net interest income as the U.S. Federal Reserve raised rates through most of last year.The ‘higher-for-longer’ rate environment to battle decades-high inflation has underpinned profits at consumer banks, with analysts expecting those gains to peak in 2023 and help offset sluggish dealmaking as well as bigger loan loss provisions.Bank of America (NYSE:BAC)’s net interest income (NII), which reflects how much money s bank makes from charging interest to customers, jumped 29% to $14.7 billion in the quarter.Its profit applicable to common shareholders rose 2% to $6.9 billion, or 85 cents per share. Analysts, on average, had estimated a profit of 77 cents per share, according to Refinitiv IBES data.The bank’s revenue, net of interest expenses, increased 11% to $24.5 billion.Though four-decade-high inflation rates are testing U.S. consumers, spending trends have still largely been positive, bolstering Bank of America’s profit in its key consumer banking unit.”The consumer still remains in pretty good shape,” said Chief Financial Officer Alastair Borthwick. “There’s a lot of pent-up demand,” especially for travel, he said.Net income at the bank’s consumer banking unit jumped 15% to a record $3.6 billion in the quarter. Combined credit and debit card spending rose 5% to $11 billion.”We ended the year on a strong note, growing earnings year over year in the fourth quarter in an increasingly slowing economic environment,” Chief Executive Brian Moynihan said in a statement.The economic outlook darkened in 2022 as the Russsia-Ukraine conflict, high inflation and growing fears of a recession prompted lenders to set aside bigger reserves for bad loans and also cast a pall over capital markets, curbing investor appetite for deals and straining investment banking units.Bank of America’s investment banking fees more than halved to $1.1 billion in the quarter, taking some shine off its consumer business.Income at its global markets business, which includes investment banking, decline 25% to $504 million.The bank’s provision for credit losses was $1.1 billion, compared to a reserve release of $500 million in the year-ago quarter.Its Wall Street rivals JPMorgan Chase (NYSE:JPM) and Co and Wells Fargo (NYSE:WFC) also set aside larger provisions to prepare for a tougher economy.Bank of America’s income in its global wealth and investment management business declined 2%, while global banking fell 5%.Borthwick said the bank continues to hire, particularly in wealth management, while also remaining disciplined on its expenses. “We don’t have any plans for mass layoffs,” he said.That contrasts with Goldman Sachs Group Inc (NYSE:GS), which started laying off more than 3,000 employees this week.Bank of America’s shares were down nearly 3% in premarket trading. The stock lost about 25.5% last year. More

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    SHIB Descending Channel Upside Breakout Confirmed: Crypto Analyst

    Crypto Analyst and Trader Captain Faibik tweeted that Shiba Inu (SHIB) was breaking upside from its descending channel. Moreover, he stated, “C’mon Bulls, Send it to the Mars,” reciprocating the bulls to drive SHIB higher. The analyst predicted that SHIB had the potential to go up by 280.94% and reach $0.00002579. More

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    Hodlnaut creditors reject the restructuring plan, prefer liquidation

    The group of creditors rejected a restructuring plan offer allowing the current directors to oversee the firm’s operations during the restructuring phase. However, a Jan. 12 hearing rejected an application to remove the interim judicial managers, reported Bloomberg.Continue Reading on Coin Telegraph More

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    Animoca Brands Pours JP¥100 million Into Psychic VR Lab

    Considering Psychic VR Lab’s role as a leader in Japan’s extended reality (XR) space, Animoca Brands saw it fit to contribute to building the project. The investment will lead to more collaborations in the future and building the infrastructure for the ‘Real Metaverse.’ The investment could be a part of the company’s proposed $2 billion fund to invest in upcoming metaverse projects.Animoca Brands Japan’s investment reportedly followed a previous collaboration with Psychic VR Lab in June 2022. The two companies jointly presented an XR NFT Art Exhibition leveraging XR technology. The exhibition showcased Japanese art and culture by overlaying artists’ creations over a virtual New York City cityscape. Masahiro Yamaguchi, the CEO of Psychic VR Lab, commented in a press release that the investment from Animoca Brands would significantly accelerate the creation of the ‘Real Metaverse’ through their platform STYLY. STYLY is Psychic VR Lab’s flagship VR creative platform that allows artists to express creativity in the third dimension. Creators can make various spaces, render ideas, and extend their creations into virtual reality. The app has been used by over 50,000 artists worldwide and amassed over five million downloads. STYLY has become an essential part of the infrastructure in the Japanese XR space. Kyoya Okazawa, the co-founder of Animoca Brands Japan, highlighted the role of XR technology in expanding real-life experiences. Okazawa added that XR technology could redefine the value of urban spaces, parks, and atriums, by extending it into virtual reality while preserving the real-life experience. The co-founder asserted that the possibilities with XR are immeasurable. He highlighted that media and entertainment outlets could break into our reality with XR technology. Okazawa shared that the partnership with Animoca Brands will help them create new user opportunities by connecting their extended reality technology with the Web3 ecosystem.Masahiro Yamaguchi later affirmed in the press release that XR and Web3 could change the structure of modern society by evolving people’s lifestyles. The CEO shared that they hope to play a role in helping society transition into virtual reality and Web3. Extended Reality (XR) and Virtual Reality (VR) are still experimental and need a fair degree of attention as we transition to Web3. Animoca Brands’ investment in the space could lay out the infrastructure and catalyze the transition into Web3. Follow Animoca Brands’ other investments: Animoca Brands Plans to Invest $2 Billion in Web3 Startups.Animoca and GameFi Ventures Lead Wanderers’ $2 Million Seed Funding Round.See original on DailyCoin More