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    FirstFT: Economists expect a more cautious approach from Fed

    $75 per monthComplete digital access to quality FT journalism with expert analysis from industry leaders. Pay a year upfront and save 20%.What’s included Global news & analysisExpert opinionFT App on Android & iOSFT Edit appFirstFT: the day’s biggest stories20+ curated newslettersFollow topics & set alerts with myFTFT Videos & Podcasts20 monthly gift articles to shareLex: FT’s flagship investment column15+ Premium newsletters by leading expertsFT Digital Edition: our digitised print edition More

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    As Bolivia’s big state economic model slowly implodes, fear of ‘total crisis’

    LA PAZ (Reuters) – Housewife Yola Chura worried about high food prices while shopping at a market in Bolivia’s highland city of El Alto, where she and many others are struggling with rising prices, stagnant wages and a scarcity of dollars that has put the long-stable Andean economy on edge.”We are in a total crisis. Salaries don’t increase and so everything is expensive,” Chura told Reuters at the market in the city that perches in the mountains above Bolivia’s political capital La Paz. “With the excuse that there’s no diesel or gasoline, the price of everything has gone up.”Inflation is its highest level in over a decade in Bolivia, which was heralded for its commodities-backed “economic miracle” in the 2000s. Now the country faces its worst economic crisis this century with natural gas exports tumbling while the dominant socialist party’s spend-to-grow economic model has imploded.Bolivia’s gas exports, the key source of foreign income, have halved in the last decade as producers have not found new gas fields to replace those that have been tapped out. Central bank hard currency reserves have drained to nearly zero, which has hit imports of fuel, pushed up prices and strained the boliviano currency.Frustrated motorists often wait in long lines for fuel. Wary investors have pushed bond yields up toward record highs. A black market for dollars, common in crisis-hit neighbor Argentina, has grown in Bolivia for the first time in decades, with savers paying a 60% premium to the official exchange rate. The economic slide has turned Bolivian politics nasty.In June a military faction failed in a dramatic coup attempt. President Luis Arce is locked in a bitter fight with his powerful former ally and boss Evo Morales, who accused Arce of trying to kill him in late October.Anger at the ruling party and in-fighting fueled a recent protest in La Paz.”Where is the diesel, the fuel, the dollars?” farmer Margarita Llanque said at the march.’FROM GAS TO DEBT’Dollars have been getting scarcer for a decade, but the currency crisis exploded last year. Central bank data showed net foreign currency reserves are under $2 billion, down sharply from $15 billion in 2014. Most of the reserves are actually in gold, with liquid hard currency at just $121 million.”Financial institutions don’t have dollars,” said local economic analyst Jaime Dunn. He blamed spending by socialist governments that have largely led the country this century, first under Morales and now former economy minister Arce.Flagging gas exports were now making that spending unsustainable.”Their model has now gone from gas to debt,” Dunn said. “Default is a ghost that is circling Bolivia.”Bolivia’s government says it will meet its debt payments. The Ministry of Economy says external debt stands at some $13 billion, equivalent to 27% of GDP. It plans to issue $3 billion of sovereign bonds next year to help meet its obligations.The ministry declined a Reuters request for comment.The dearth of reserves, however, has distorted the local currency that has been pegged to the U.S. dollar for years.”Getting dollars is hard,” said Arash Masoudi, citing restrictions put on paying overseas with Bolivian bank cards. “Cards won’t accept purchases over $100… It’s impossible to pay even if you have millions of bolivianos in your account.”The crisis has hit importers and companies operating in the market, including airlines. The International Air Transport Association (IATA) warned this month that airlines were facing increasing issues getting revenues out of Bolivia.”There’s a lack of dollars, of diesel and, if this continues, there will be a lack of food,” said Jean Pierre Antelo, representative of CAINCO, a major business association in the country. “We need an economic rescue.” More

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    ECB’s Lagarde says ‘darkest days’ of high inflation are behind Eurozone

    $75 per monthComplete digital access to quality FT journalism with expert analysis from industry leaders. Pay a year upfront and save 20%.What’s included Global news & analysisExpert opinionFT App on Android & iOSFT Edit appFirstFT: the day’s biggest stories20+ curated newslettersFollow topics & set alerts with myFTFT Videos & Podcasts20 monthly gift articles to shareLex: FT’s flagship investment column15+ Premium newsletters by leading expertsFT Digital Edition: our digitised print edition More

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    ECB is confident that inflation will converge to target in 2025, De Guindos says

    “If our inflation projections hold true, the (monetary policy) evolution Will continue the (rate cuts) trend we’ve had in recent months,” he said.Last week, the ECB cut interest rates for the fourth time this year and kept the door open to more easing as the euro zone economy is dragged down by political instability at home and the threat of a fresh U.S. trade war. More

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    ECB should keep cutting rates in small steps, Kazimir says

    The ECB cut rates by 25 basis points to 3% last week but some policymakers pushed for a bigger step on the premise that growth is especially weak and inflation could even undershoot the ECB’s 2% target in the medium term. “Maintaining a gradual, step-by-step approach through 25 basis point rate cuts continues to be the most prudent strategy,” Kazimir, an outspoken policy hawk, said in a blog post.”A more aggressive monetary easing would require a dramatic shift in conditions to justify it,” Kazimir added.The ECB last week lowered its growth forecast for the 20- nation euro zone and said that risks were still skewed to even more negative outcomes, especially if the new U.S. administration introduces trade barriers.But Kazimir said laxer monetary policy was merely a band aid for deeper structural faults and not a real solution. “Lower interest rates can provide breathing space, but they cannot replace the vital reforms,” he said. “Europe’s economic malaise is largely structural and demands solutions that extend beyond the remit of monetary policy.” “We must resist the temptation to overreact to short-term pressures,” Kazimir said. More

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    Bitcoin price today: hits record high above $106k on Trump, MicroStrategy cheer

    The world’s biggest cryptocurrency reversed a weekend rout and pushed further above the $100,000 level, after Trump once again floated the idea of a Bitcoin reserve. Sentiment was also boosted by MicroStrategy Incorporated (NASDAQ:MSTR) being added to the Nasdaq 100 index- a move that could draw even more capital into the world’s biggest corporate Bitcoin holder.Bitcoin rose over 3% to a record high of $106,569.4, and traded at $104,977.1 by 00:47 ET (05:47 GMT). On-chain data showed a flurry of transactions by major crypto holders, called whales, to move Bitcoin off major exchanges. Such a move usually limits the crypto’s supply in open markets, prompting further price gains. Trump told CNBC in an interview last week that he potentially planned to build a crypto reserve similar to the Strategic Petroleum Reserve.The President-elect reiterated his plans to make the U.S. a global crypto leader, claiming that other countries, including China, were embracing the technology.Trump had campaigned on promises of friendlier crypto regulations, with his picks for key cabinet and regulatory roles also harboring pro-crypto sentiments.But analysts have questioned just how far his plans for a Bitcoin reserve will go, considering that any government purchases of the crypto will likely need to be funded by increased fiscal spending.Such a scenario appears unlikely in a Republican-led Congress that plans to slash the U.S. fiscal deficit. Still, the government could also turn its confiscated crypto assets into a reserve. Data from CoinGecko says the U.S. government holds over 200,000 coins, while China has about 190,000 coins. Sentiment towards crypto markets was also boosted by Nasdaq announcing that MicroStrategy- the world’s biggest corporate holder of Bitcoin, will be added to the Nasdaq 100 index.The move is expected to spark even more capital flows into the Microstrategy stock, as exchange-traded funds readjust their holdings.The stock surged over 400% this year as traders treated Microstrategy as a Bitcoin proxy play. The company has also ramped up its Bitcoin buying in recent weeks, funded largely by debt. Broader crypto prices mostly tracked gains in Bitcoin, although overall gains were limited by anticipation of a Federal Reserve meeting this week. The central bank is widely expected to cut rates by 25 basis points, but could flag a slower pace of rate cuts in 2025 on concerns over sticky inflation. World no.2 crypto Ether rose 2% to $3,972.39, while XRP steadied at $2.4123.Solana and Cardano rose 1.3% each, while Polygon rose 1.5%.Among meme tokens, Dogecoin rose 1.8%.  More

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    IMF warns EU against state aid glut and ‘unilateral industrial policies’

    $75 per monthComplete digital access to quality FT journalism with expert analysis from industry leaders. Pay a year upfront and save 20%.What’s included Global news & analysisExpert opinionFT App on Android & iOSFT Edit appFirstFT: the day’s biggest stories20+ curated newslettersFollow topics & set alerts with myFTFT Videos & Podcasts20 monthly gift articles to shareLex: FT’s flagship investment column15+ Premium newsletters by leading expertsFT Digital Edition: our digitised print edition More