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    Canada girds for long haul after historic storm Fiona ravages east coast

    STEPHENVILLE, Newfoundland (Reuters) – After powerful storm Fiona left a trail of destruction in Canada’s east coast on Saturday, the focus shifted to massive clean-up efforts, damage assessment and restoration of power and telecom services as officials warned of a long road to recovery.The historic storm slammed into eastern Canada with hurricane-force winds, forcing evacuations, uprooting trees and powerlines, and reducing many homes to “just a pile of rubble.”The Canadian Hurricane Centre estimated that Fiona was the lowest pressured land falling storm on record in Canada.Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said Canadian armed forces will be deployed to help with the clean-up, adding that Fiona caused significant damage and recovery will require a big effort.Despite the intensity of the storm, there were no serious injuries or deaths, which government officials said was a result of residents paying heed to the repeated warnings.Still, thousands of residents across Nova Scotia, Prince Edward Island (PEI) and Newfoundland were without power and dealing with patchy telecom connections, and government officials pleaded with residents for patience.They warned that in some cases it would take weeks before essential services are fully restored.”We do know that the damage is very extensive, quite likely the worst we have ever seen,” Dennis King, PEI premier, told reporters on Saturday.”Islanders … should know that our road to recovery will be weeks or longer. It will be an all-hands on deck approach,” he added.Several university students lined up for food outside convenience stores powered by generators due to the power outage caused by Fiona. The Canadian Red Cross has launched a fund raising drive to support the affected people.Government officials said the full-scale of the destruction will only be known in the coming days and weeks. But with the storm packing gusts of up to 170 km/hour sweeping away homes, bridges and roads, Fiona was reminiscent of the damage caused by other storms, including Hurricane Dorian in 2019, which is estimated to have had an insurance bill of C$105 million.For details of Canada’s worst natural disasters, click.Premiers of the affected provinces told the federal government they need long-term support around public and critical infrastructure after the storm tore off roofs of schools and community centers, as well as quick relief to businesses and families to get on with normal life quickly.The storm also severely damaged fishing harbors in Atlantic Canada, which could hurt the country’s C$3.2 billion lobster industry, unless it is fully restored before the season kicks off in few weeks.”Those fishers have a very immediate need to be able to access their livelihood once the storm passes,” Dominic LeBlanc, Minister of Intergovernmental Affairs of Canada, said on Saturday.”So this is exactly the kind of work that will accompany provincial authorities in the coming weeks and months,” he added. (Reporting John Morris in Stephenville; Additional reporting by Steve Scherer in Ottawa and Eric Martyn in Halifax; Writing by Denny Thomas; Editing by Daniel Wallis) More

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    Brazil’s election and the search for an economic revival

    Brazil’s ascendancy in the early years of the 21st century as an emerging market darling — the B in the Brics — ended with a thud in 2014.The nation had been riding a global commodities boom with increased exports of raw materials and foodstuffs, especially to a resource-hungry China. It then collapsed into a brutal recession from which the country has still not recovered.Since then, the economy has barely budged. Gross domestic product expanded just 0.15 per cent, on average, annually in the decade up to the end of 2021. Living standards have fallen in a country where the middle class had been expanding. And despite being one of the world’s foremost agricultural producers, food insecurity has risen. “Brazil’s growth underperformance since the end of the previous commodity supercycles in 2014 has surprised even those who were pessimistic,” says Marcos Casarin, chief economist for Latin America at Oxford Economics. “Per capita income is still 10 per cent below its 2013 peak and will take at least another four years to return to that level.”Political coverage in the build up to next week’s presidential election has been dominated by the controversies around the two leading candidates — whether incumbent Jair Bolsonaro will respect the result if he loses and the potential return to power of former leader Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva who spent time in jail on corruption charges.But as Brazilians prepare to vote on October 2, it is the widespread decline in quality of life that is at the forefront of their minds.São Paulo is facing a homelessness crisis. ‘If you walk through downtown São Paulo or other cities, you will see there are a lot of people going hungry,’ says Maria Isabel da Costa, who runs a restaurant in the city © Nelson Almeida/AFP/Getty Images“If you walk through downtown São Paulo or other cities, you will see there are a lot of people going hungry,” says Maria Isabel da Costa, who runs a restaurant in the city. “People are having a hard time maintaining themselves.”Bolsonaro and Lula have both promised a path to prosperity but espouse starkly different visions for reviving Latin America’s largest economy.Lula, a former trade unionist who governed Brazil between 2003 and 2010 at the height of the commodities boom, is leading in the polls by about 10 percentage points. He wants to put the state back at the centre of economic policymaking and use government spending, notably on infrastructure, to spur growth. Yet much of his rhetoric has focused on past achievements rather than fresh policy proposals.Under Bolsonaro, voters can expect a continuation of the free market, pro-business agenda of Paulo Guedes, his finance minister, who has focused on cutting bureaucracy, promoting privatisation and simplifying labour regulations. Although largely overlooked by wider society, many of the administration’s microeconomic reforms have been lauded by the country’s business community.Neither candidate, however, has focused on the difficult structural changes deemed necessary to improve productivity and generate long-term growth. These include an overhaul of Brazil’s notoriously complex tax system and the significant investments needed in infrastructure and education.This partly comes down to political priorities. But it also reflects how, under Brazil’s system of proportional representation, no candidate’s party ever wins a majority in Congress, the federal legislative body. Whoever is elected president will be forced to deal with the Centrão — literally, the “big centre” — a loose political bloc encompassing almost half of the lower house’s lawmakers, who lend support in exchange for funds to plough into their home constituencies.This pork barrel politics undermines growth by diverting precious government resources away from where they are most needed, critics say.“The Centrão will continue to be the most important political group in Congress and whoever is the next president will have to negotiate with them,” says Bruno Carazza, a professor at the Dom Cabral Foundation.Evandro Buccini, economist at Rio Bravo Investimentos, says growth will prove elusive without big reforms. “We have low investment rates, low saving rates, the deterioration of the demographic profile and, the most important one, a lack of productivity growth. In terms of productivity, Brazil has stagnated for the past 20 to 30 years,” he says.“If you want to talk about [improving] productivity, you need to talk about education and trade, neither of which are detailed in Lula or Bolsonaro’s plans.”Deeper need for changeThe Bolsonaro administration did not hide its glee when the latest growth figures were released this month. “Brazil is flying,” cheered Guedes, after data showed GDP expanded 1.2 per cent in the second quarter from the previous quarter. It was an unexpectedly buoyant result that prompted several investment banks to revise forecasts for this year upwards to more than 2.5 per cent. Services drove the recovery, complementing commodities exports, which have become a bedrock of the economy.“This year is much stronger than we imagined,” says Guido Oliveira, chief financial officer of shopping mall operator Iguatemi. “The population had pent up income.”It came on top of a reduction in unemployment, which has fallen below the double digits to the lowest point since 2015, and also falling inflation. Yet for all the government’s crowing in the run-up to the election, the longer-term horizon remains cloudy.Economists expect GDP growth to slow next year to less than 1 per cent as a confluence of high interest rates, an unfavourable global scenario and potential political uncertainty take a toll. The deeper issue though is that Brazil has struggled to find an effective and sustainable model for broad economic growth. In the years leading to the 2014 crash, Dilma Rousseff’s leftwing administration used spending to keep up momentum. This, combined with a simultaneous collapse in the price of commodities, eventually resulted in a fiscal crisis, which snowballed into the recession.“Brazil used to grow due to the influence of the public sector; the state and the state-owned companies were geared towards supporting economic growth,” says David Beker, chief Brazil economist at Bank of America in São Paulo. “Brazil needs to search for new engines of growth because the state cannot grow more.”Although agribusiness has surged in recent years and now accounts for more than 25 per cent of GDP, the gains have been offset by a long decline in industry.Industrial output shrank by about one-fifth in the 10 years to late 2021, according to the Brazilian Institute for Geography and Statistics.It is a phenomenon described as “premature” deindustrialisation, since the loss of manufacturing occurred earlier than would be expected given the country’s stage of development.Many blame what is known as the custo brasil: the combination of bureaucracy, a complex tax system and poor logistics infrastructure that elevates the cost of doing business in the country.For others, it is also a legacy of Brazil’s relatively closed economy and residue of protectionist policies, which they argue has resulted in a lack of competitiveness and dynamism.“Most of the industries in Brazil are far behind other countries. We need to reindustrialise,” says Luiz Tonisi, chief executive of semiconductor group Qualcomm in Brazil, who suggests homing in on sectors with the most potential. “We had a lot of chicken flights over the last years,” he adds, referring to short, limited periods of growth. “Why? Because we did not make the reforms, we did not do the infrastructure, we did not invest where we should have invested. If we want a decade of growth, we need to do all this.”‘Taxes are a mess’Guedes — educated at the University of Chicago under Milton Friedman, the father of the monetarist school of economics — came to office with a pro-business agenda.His successes include a landmark overhaul of pensions in 2019, helping secure the independence of the central bank, as well as a host of microeconomic reforms aimed at increasing the ease of doing business.“The attraction of investments into infrastructure has also been positive, with multiple concessions and the privatisation of [power utility] Eletrobras,” says Lucas de Aragão, a partner at Arko Advice, a political consultancy. “Media often overlooks these themes, since it is a government that generates a lot of controversy.”Most analysts expect a continuation of these economic policies if Bolsonaro wins a second term and Guedes has signalled he would stay on as finance minister.To date, however, his agenda of major structural reforms has mostly floundered. Paramount among them is a shake-up of the country’s byzantine tax system.“Taxes are really a mess and this drags us down in terms of consumption and investment,” says Tonisi. A midsized Brazilian company takes more than 1,500 hours to prepare and pay taxes, according to World Bank data — the highest in the world. By contrast, a US counterpart takes 175 hours and a UK business about 110 hours. Dealing with this was a central objective for Guedes but he has little to show for it. An attempt to pass a limited tax reform, which among other measures would have introduced a tax on dividends, is stuck in the Senate.Tax reform is a particularly knotty endeavour because of the plethora of competing interests, notably Brazil’s 27 states and thousands of municipalities, as well as influential corporate lobbies. Critics are sceptical that Guedes has the nous to guide such projects through Congress and win over the Centrão, which increasingly calls the shots in Brazilian politics.“Neither Lula nor Bolsonaro’s parties are close to reaching half plus one of the Congress [to pass legislation], let alone the two-thirds majority needed to approve constitutional amendments,” says de Aragão. Securing the Centrão’s support, he adds, means the “government often has to water down, or downright forget, proposals considered extreme or ideological”.Neglected infrastructureAnother widely acknowledged factor holding Brazil back is poor educational standards, leading to a skills shortage that weakens productivity.“There is a chronic deficiency in the quality of education. Brazil spends around 13 per cent of GDP on pensions and approximately 6 per cent of GDP on education. The solution involves directing these resources more efficiently,” says Buccini. Adjusting for inflation, government spending on education fell from R104bn ($20bn) in 2016 to R80bn last year, a 23 per cent drop. Defence spending remained stable in the same period.“Certainly one of Brazil’s biggest problems is its poor basic education and the main cause of this is the disregard of the elected authorities,” says Ana Maria Diniz, founder of the Peninsula Institute, an education-focused non-profit.Infrastructure is similarly plagued by a lack of investment. Poor quality roads and the absence of rail links dramatically increase logistics costs and reduce margins. In terms of sanitation, almost 100mn Brazilians lack wastewater services for the removal of sewage.Redirecting resources to these areas, however, is not straightforward. More than 90 per cent of the government budget is pre-assigned to mandatory expenses, mostly public sector salaries and pensions. Overhauling this system would require an administrative reform of the state, one likely to be bitterly contested by a multitude of vested interests, including the Centrão.For many investors with exposure to Brazil, the immediate post-election worry is the country’s approach to rectitude in the public accounts. Both Bolsonaro and Lula have demonstrated a propensity to spend when politically expedient. “Neither of the candidates’ proposals highlight a commitment to promoting a stable macroeconomic environment, rooted in low inflation, sustainable fiscal policy and predictability,” says Mariam Dayoub, chief economist at Grimper Capital. “They focus on proposals that increase spending [and] lack ideas on how to boost productivity.”Jair Bolsonaro greets economy minister Paulo Guedes during a meeting with businessmen promoted by the National Confederation of Industry last December in Brasília © Mateus Bonomi/Getty ImagesThe concerns centre on the future of the public sector spending ceiling implemented in 2016, known as the teto. By limiting growth in the budget to the rate of inflation, it is viewed as a key fiscal anchor. Ahead of the election, Bolsonaro has circumvented the cap in order to increase social welfare payments, while Lula has been open about his desire to abandon it altogether. This is the “biggest near-term risk,” says Jared Lou, a portfolio manager at William Blair Investment Management. “That’s the key thing to watch out for in this election.” The lure of Lula 2.0 Lula has made no secret of his plans to shift the centre of gravity in the economy. “The state needs to take the lead,” the former president said this month. “The state has to use all its powers of influence so that we can develop this country and convince businessmen and foreigners to invest in Brazil.”He has also spoken about a return to a greater role for the national development bank; suggested the government should take a firmer hand in the running of Petrobras, the state-controlled oil producer; and also enact legislation to better protect workers.The leftwinger also talks about reducing inflation — now at 9 per cent — and forging a more progressive tax system, although he has offered scant details on how he would do either.Lula insists his time in power is evidence of his fiscal responsibility. Critics, however, blame him for the start of a more interventionist approach embraced by his successor, Rousseff, who was impeached in 2016.Solar panels in Pirapora, Minas Gerais state. Almost 80 per cent of Brazil’s electricity comes from renewable sources © Carl De Souza/AFP/Getty ImagesElena Landau, an adviser to Simone Tebet, the fourth-placed candidate in the presidential election, argues Lula set the stage for the nation’s economic woes. “From an economic point of view, he left us in a very bad position. By the time he left, he had exacerbated countercyclical policies, fiscal spending and intervention in state-owned companies,” she says. Wagner Parente, chief executive of consultancy BMJ, adds: “Although Lula is unlikely to adopt the same economic policies as Rousseff, some specific goals — such as overturning the government spending cap — bring uncertainty to the private sector.”So far financial markets have been sanguine about a potential new Lula presidency, mostly owing to the fact that he is a known quantity who is perceived as moderate on economic policy.He also enjoys a better reputation among many western investors, who fretted over Bolsonaro’s at times authoritarian rhetoric and blatant disregard for the environment.The business elite believe Brazil could reap enormous dividends from “green” investments and combating climate change, if the next administration in Brasília shows more interest in protecting the Amazon. A preserved Amazonia rainforest area known as Transamazonica, crossing the indigenous community Aldeia Tenharin Marmelo, between the cities of Manicore and Humaita, Amazonas state © Michael Dantas/AFP/Getty ImagesDespite a surge in the destruction of the rainforest, Brazil still maintains 60 per cent of its native forests — a much higher level than western nations — and almost 80 per cent of its electricity comes from renewable sources. “Brazil has great potential to lead the decarbonisation agenda on multiple fronts, notably energy transition but also nature-based solutions — carbon capture via reforestation, for example. We also have the opportunity to lead on frontier segments, such as green hydrogen,” says Gabriel Brasil, an analyst at Control Risks.But he cautions overall growth depends on “structural reforms and increased institutional stability”, adding that both Lula and Bolsonaro are likely to face challenges.Beker is more bullish, saying the country is primed to grow if it maintains fiscal discipline and continues reforming: “We have big potential for ESG investments. We are far away from conflict and it is peaceful country. The question is, can we capitalise on that?”Additional reporting by Carolina IngizzaData visualisation by Steven Bernard and Keith Fray More

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    S.Korea finance minister says more FX stabilising measures on the way

    The measures include utilising the government’s foreign exchange equalisation fund to meet shipbuilding companies’ FX hedging demands, thereby increasing dollar supply in the local market, minister Choo Kyung-ho said during a televised interview on Sunday.It is part of FX authorities’ efforts to ease volatility in the FX market, Choo said, in addition to a currency swap arrangement between the country’s central bank and a pension fund announced on Friday, as they are seeing the South Korean won recently weakening at a faster pace than most peers.On a question about the possibility of a currency swap deal between the Bank of Korea and the U.S. Federal Reserve, Choo said it would definitely be helpful for the local market, but is not necessary yet in the current market situation. More

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    Biden's anemic crypto framework offered us nothing new

    While Biden’s administration appears to be taking a “whole-of-government approach” toward overseeing the decentralized finance (DeFi) sector and its ripple effects on the traditional economy, they are focused predominantly on defending against negative events — such as financial crime — and failing to facilitate positive events, such as the wealth-building opportunities that crypto offers to Americans excluded from the traditional big-banking system.Continue Reading on Coin Telegraph More

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    Storm Fiona ravages Canada's east coast, causing 'terrifying' destruction

    STEPHENVILLE, Newfoundland (Reuters) – Powerful storm Fiona ripped into eastern Canada on Saturday with hurricane-force winds, forcing evacuations, knocking down trees and powerlines, and reducing many homes on the coast to “just a pile of rubble in the ocean.” The U.S. National Hurricane Center (NHC) said the center of the storm, downgraded to Post-Tropical Cyclone Fiona, was now in the Gulf of St. Lawrence and losing some steam. The NHC canceled hurricane and tropical storm warnings for the region.Port aux Basques, on the southwest tip of Newfoundland with a population of 4,067, bore the brunt of the storm’s rage.The mayor was forced to declare a state of emergency and evacuated parts of the town that suffered flooding and road washouts.Several homes and an apartment building were dragged out to sea, Rene Roy, editor-in-chief of Wreckhouse Weekly in Port aux Basques, told the Canadian Broadcasting Corp.”This is hands down the most terrifying thing I’ve ever seen in my life,” Roy said, describing many homes as “just a pile of rubble in the ocean right now.””There is an apartment building that’s literally gone. There are entire streets that are gone,” he added. Police are investigating whether a woman had been swept to sea, CBC reported.”We’ve gone through a very difficult morning,” Button said in a Facebook (NASDAQ:META) video, adding that the evacuations had been completed. “We’ll get through this. I promise you we will get through it.”Prime Minister Justin Trudeau met on Saturday morning with members of a government emergency response team, and later told reporters that the armed forces would be deployed to help with the clean up.”We’re seeing reports of significant damage in the region, and recovery is going to be a big effort,” Trudeau said. “We will be there to support every step of the way.”Trudeau had delayed his planned Saturday departure for Japan to attend the funeral of former Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, but said he now would no longer make the trip. Instead he said he would visit the storm-damaged region as soon as possible.Federal assistance has already been approved for Nova Scotia, Trudeau said, and more requests are expected. Fiona, which nearly a week ago battered Puerto Rico and other parts of the Caribbean, killed at least eight and knocked out power for virtually all of Puerto Rico’s 3.3 million people during a sweltering heat wave. Fiona made landfall between Canso and Guysborough, Nova Scotia, where the Canadian Hurricane Centre said it recorded what may have been the lowest barometric pressure of any storm to hit land in the country’s history.Ian Hubbard, meteorologist for the Canadian Hurricane Centre, told Reuters it appears Fiona lived up to expectations that it would be a “historical” storm.”It did look like it had the potential to break the all-time record in Canada, and it looks like it did,” he said. “We’re still not out of this yet.”Storms are not uncommon in the region and typically cross over rapidly, but Fiona is expected to impact a very large area.While scientists have not yet determined whether climate change influenced Fiona’s strength or behavior, there is strong evidence that these devastating storms are getting worse.HUNDREDS OF THOUSANDS WITHOUT POWERSome 69% of customers, or 360,720 were without power in Nova Scotia, and 95%, or more than 82,000, had lost power on Prince Edward Island, utility companies said. Police across the region reported multiple road closures. The region was also experiencing spotty mobile phone service. Mobile and Wifi provider Rogers (NYSE:ROG) Communications Inc said it was aware of outages caused by Fiona, and that crews would work to restore service “as quickly as possible.”PEI produces more than a fifth of Canada’s potatoes and the island’s potato farms, which are in harvest season, were likely to be impacted by the storm, Hubbard said.”This morning we all woke up to some very scary scenes, roads washed down, uprooted trees, mail boxes where they are not supposed to be,” Darlene Compton, deputy premier of PEI, told reporters, saying it had been a “nerve wracking” night.In Halifax, 11 boats sank at the Shearwater Yacht Club and four were grounded, said Elaine Keene, who has a boat at the club that escaped damage. Quebec Premier Francois Legault said no injuries or fatalities had been reported so far, and officials from both PEI and Nova Scotia said the same.The storm weakened somewhat as it traveled north. By 5 pm in Halifax (2100 GMT), it was over the Gulf of St. Lawrence about 80 miles (130 km) northwest of Port aux Basques, carrying maximum sustained winds of 70 miles per hour (110 kph), the NHC said. (Reporting Eric Martyn in Halifax and John Morris in Stephenville; Additional reporting by Ivelisse Rivera in San Juan, Puerto Rico, Ismail Shakil and Steve Scherer in Ottawa, and Denny Thomas in Toronto; Writing by Steve Scherer; Editing by Bill Berkrot, Diane Craft and Daniel Wallis) More

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    Blockchain infrastructure firm Chain will sponsor New England Patriots football team

    In a Thursday announcement, Chain said it will be the official blockchain and Web3 sponsor of the Patriots, the New England Revolution soccer club, Gillette Stadium in Massachusetts and the shopping center Patriot Place as part of a multi-year partnership deal with Kraft Sports + Entertainment, the marketing and events division of the Kraft Group. Chain will work to develop Web3 experiences for visitors to Gillette Stadium and Patriot Place by “merging the physical with the digital.”Continue Reading on Coin Telegraph More

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    Wintermute suffers $160M attack, Kraken CEO departs and US bill aims to ban algo stablecoins: Hodler’s Digest, Sept. 18-24

    In line with other advances South Korea has taken to embrace the digital world, the country wants to create new laws regarding the Metaverse, according to plans from the Ministry of Science and ICT. The ministry wants proper laws in place for the Metaverse, but thinks its unwise to form-fit current regulations to new technology. Previous news saw South Korea invest $200 million toward metaverse development in the country. Continue Reading on Coin Telegraph More

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    Why is the crypto market down today?

    Investors know that cryptocurrencies exhibit higher than average volatility, but this year’s drawdown has been extreme. After hitting a stratospheric all-time high at $69,400, Bitcoin price crumbled over the next 11 months to an unexpected yearly low at $17,600. Continue Reading on Coin Telegraph More