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    Corporate America increasingly concerned over Taiwan risks

    Executives at publicly traded US companies are becoming increasingly worried about the spectre of a further escalation of tensions over Taiwan, a major supplier of crucial components like semiconductors. The number of annual regulatory filings citing Taiwan as a risk factor has risen significantly over the past 12 months, according to Financial Times calculations based on Sentieo data. In March, a popular time for releasing so-called “10-k” reports, 116 companies mentioned Taiwan as a risk to their business, and the rolling 12-month average this month reached its highest level in at least 16 years. Technology companies represent the sector most concerned, with those in the semiconductor industry raising the loudest alarm. This is because Taiwan, which is the biggest producer of the most advanced chips, is rapidly becoming one of the world’s most dangerous geopolitical flashpoints. The fear is that in the event of a conflict with China, US firms will be unable to get the microchips needed to make smartphones, electric cars, new weapons, computers industrial machines, and even medical devices. Healthcare is the second most-concerned sector.“A ‘de facto’ blockade by Mainland China’s regular military exercises would create bottlenecks in fast-growing sectors dependent on semiconductors, such as high performance computing, internet of things, data centres and electric vehicles,” Alicia García-Herrero, chief Asia-Pacific economist at French bank Natixis, said.

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    In a sign of the potentially wide-ranging corporate effects, a clutch of chief executives at big US banks told Congress this week that they would comply with any US government demand to pull out of China if Beijing were to attack Taiwan. The remarks came just days after US president Joe Biden said the US would defend Taiwan from a Chinese attack. The median US company had only had five days’ worth of chip inventories in 2021, down from 40 in 2019, according to a study the Department of Commerce.At the beginning of August, Biden signed the Chips Act, which will provide $280bn in funding to prop up and kick-start domestic semiconductor manufacturing and research.“The US will put more pressure on key suppliers to ban exports to China and develop production in its own market with industrial policy tools, such as the Chips Act and a push for friend-shoring,” García-Herrero said. More

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    Canada’s Crypto Exchange Announces Its Acquisition of CoinSmart

    Canada’s leading crypto exchange, Coinsquare, acquired the competing cryptocurrency trading platform CoinSmart Financial Inc. for about $29 million.On Thursday, Coinsquare announced that it had adhered to a definitive agreement with CoinSmart, to purchase the issued and outstanding shares of the company’s subsidiary, Simply Digital. On a proforma basis, CoinSmart would hold a 12 percent ownership stake in Coinsquare.It is told that the new venture would join Canada’s biggest crypto companies under the same roof, lending them more than one million customers and more than $ 350 million in digital assets. However, the deal between the companies would come to an end in the fourth quarter of this year.Coinsquire’s acquisition of Simple Digital would enable it to expand its performance nationwide. The chief executive officers of both companies announced that the new move aimed at expanding the companies’ functioning, thereby making the digital assets and blockchain industry accessible to the whole country.Martin Piszel, the CEO of Coinsquare commented:Since the inception of Coinsquare in 2014, the company had been seeking to become a member of the Investment Industry Regulatory Organization of Canada (IIROC), but under certain regulations, the attainment was far ahead. However, the acquisition of CoinSmart facilitated it to become a marketplace member.The post Canada’s Crypto Exchange Announces Its Acquisition of CoinSmart appeared first on Coin Edition.See original on CoinEdition More

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    Six New Crypto Whales Accumulate 620 Million DOGECOIN

    The number of whale addresses on the Dogecoin (DOGE) network has significantly increased after six new whales joined the investor class by accumulating 620 million units of the meme-inspired token. According to the crypto enthusiast Ali Martinez, who shared the data on Twitter (NYSE:TWTR) from crypto analytics firm IntoTheBlock, the addresses holding between 100 million and 1 billion DOGE went up by 5.13%.Given the massive investment in the DOGE token by crypto whales, its price has increased by 6.59% in the last 24 hours, while other top coins like Bitcoin (BTC), Ethereum (ETH), and Binance Coin (BNB) have been trading in the red.Of all the top ten cryptocurrencies, DOGE performed second best after Ripple (XRP), with over a 7% increase in the last seven days. XRP increased by 40.71% during the previous seven days, trading at $0.4903, with a 4.80% drop in the previous 24 hours.At the time of writing, Dogecoin is worth $0.06542, having lost almost 64% of its value this year owing to a general cryptocurrency market collapse. Elon Musk, the CEO of Tesla (NASDAQ:TSLA), said a few months ago that he wants to keep supporting DOGE wherever possible. Additionally, Tesla trades its merchandise for Dogecoin. Robinhood (NASDAQ:HOOD) Crypto’s first chief operating officer, Christine Brown, asserted earlier this year that the meme-inspired crypto “does not get the credit it deserves” for promoting more extensive usage of cryptocurrencies.The post Six New Crypto Whales Accumulate 620 Million DOGECOIN appeared first on Coin Edition.See original on CoinEdition More

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    Waves Was Able to Rise Above the $4 Level After BTC’s Price Drop

    The crypto market leader, Bitcoin (BTC), rose to $19.5k. However, the crypto market was flooded with bearish volume to foil bulls’ attempts. As such, the downside target for BTC is around $17.8kShould BTC’s price fall below $19k, it could drag the rest of the crypto market down along with it. Despite BTC’s weak bounce, Waves was able to move above the $4 market over the past 2 days.4 hour chart for WAVES/USDTA (Source: CoinMarketCap)The 4 hour chart for WAVES/USDT showed that the price saw a strong move downward into September. The market structure flipped bearish after WAVES was unable to cling to $4.8 and blew right past $4.68 as well.In the following days, the price bounced between the $4.2 and $4.37 levels with little to no intent. More recently, the $4.2 support failed and was soon retested as resistance.WAVES’ price recently dropped below the $4 level briefly but was elevated within the same 4 hour candle by a small introduction of buy volume as bulls fought to protect the support.Several technical indicators on the 4 hour chart for WAVES/USDT are still in favor of bulls. The first indicator that shows that bulls have a slight upper hand is the RSI line positioned above the RSI SMA line. Next is the MACD line that is positioned above the MACD signal line, and the MACD histogram is positive.However, if the $4 support is tested again then there may not be enough bull strength to stop a further decline, and any bullish thesis will be invalidated.Disclaimer: The views and opinions, as well as all the information shared in this price analysis, are published in good faith. Readers must do their own research and due diligence. Any action taken by the reader is strictly at their own risk. Coin Edition and its affiliates will not be held liable for any direct or indirect damage or loss.The post Waves Was Able to Rise Above the $4 Level After BTC’s Price Drop appeared first on Coin Edition.See original on CoinEdition More

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    Tanzania central bank to reduce liquidity to tackle inflation

    “In the context of … high inflation and commodity prices, which has contributed to rising inflationary pressures in the country, the MPC approved for the bank to continue with gradual reduction of liquidity in September and October 2022,” the statement said. “The policy decision aims at reducing inflationary pressures, while safeguarding economic activities.”Inflation in Tanzania rose to 4.6% in August from 4.5% the previous month, while the country’s economy was facing a range of challenges, including weak global growth, high commodity prices, tight financial conditions and the recurrence of COVID-19 in some countries, the statement said. More

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    Global climate leaders push for overhaul of IMF and World Bank

    A rebellion against the status quo of the global financial architecture dating to the second world war gathered momentum in New York this week as developing world and climate leaders demanded action to help to them deal with climate change.In closed-door meetings on the sidelines of the UN General Assembly, and so-called climate week discussions alongside, wealthy countries were confronted by increasingly urgent questions about who pays for the catastrophic impact of hurricanes, floods and wildfires.Mia Mottley, the prime minister of Barbados, who has become the de facto leader of efforts by smaller, less wealthy nations to build a global coalition to secure funds to help tackle the ravages of climate change, called on Friday for “a new internationalism”.The postwar financial institutions established as a result of the Bretton Woods agreement in 1944, including the IMF and what became the World Bank Group, “no longer serve the purpose in the 21st century that they served in the 20th century”, Mottley said.The multipronged actions demanded from the IMF and World Bank included the redistribution of $100bn in special drawing rights, or extra foreign reserve assets; a requirement for the IMF to temporarily suspend interest surcharges for heavy borrowers in need of funds; and concessional funding to be provided for infrastructure related to climate resilience.The plans Mottley put forward included the issuance of $650bn of special drawing rights or other low-interest, long-term debt instruments to finance clean-energy development across the world. All major issuers of debt should “normalise” natural disaster and pandemic clauses in debt instruments to help borrowing countries better absorb the shocks, she said.Mottley was not the only leader to push for a rethink of how the world pays for the effects of climate change. Earlier in the week, fellow Caribbean Philip Davis, the prime minister of the Bahamas, said the IMF and World Bank should “revisit” their recommended debt-to-GDP ratios for borrowing countries “in the context of adaptation, mitigation, loss and damage, particularly, as a result of climate change”.Davis pointed out that “vulnerable countries” were “far above” the debt-to-GDP ratio recommended as sustainable by multilateral development banks, but they still had to pay to rebuild after natural disasters. Simon Stiell, newly appointed executive secretary of the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change, told the FT there was “growing consensus” that the so-called Bretton Woods structures were “appropriate for the postwar world” but now needed to be “reformed and adjusted”.

    John Kerry, centre left, expressed frustration about the role of the banks that provide loans and grants to poorer countries dealing with climate change © Getty Images

    Critically, US climate envoy John Kerry on Wednesday said he had also been pushing for reform of international financial institutions over a failure to marshal funds related to climate change. He said the need for an overhaul had been discussed at a leaders’ roundtable organised by the UN that day. The US is the largest shareholder in both the IMF and the World Bank, regarded as a laggard in financing climate change action under its president David Malpass, who drew fire this week after repeatedly failing to answer directly a question about his acceptance of climate change science.Kerry expressed frustration about the role of the institutions that provide loans and grants to poorer countries and are seen as crucial to distributing money to help limit global warming as developing economies grow.

    The discussion comes as part of a fraught broader debate around so-called “loss and damage”. At the COP26 UN climate summit in Glasgow last year the rich countries that represent the bulk of historical global greenhouse gas emissions rejected a proposal by the world’s poorest countries to create a new facility to help pay for the damage from climate change.Vanessa Nakate, a Ugandan climate activist, told the Financial Times this week that there should be more finance available to help developing economies shift from fossil fuels for energy and adapt to climate change, and that it should take the form of a loss and damage facility. “International climate finance needs to help the global south, who do not have the resources to pay for the clean energy transition,” said Nakate. During the week, Denmark became the first country in the world to offer loss and damage compensation to countries affected by climate change, pledging around $13mn of support. UN secretary-general António Guterres has called for governments to impose a windfall tax on oil and gas company profits and redistribute the proceeds to countries harmed by climate change.Kristalina Georgieva, IMF managing director, said on Tuesday that demands from developing and climate-affected countries for developed countries to help pay for loss and damage were “very fair”. “I am following very closely the discussion on loss and damage,” said Georgieva. “It worries me that it seems to be still in a very early stage when we are only 50 days away from COP27 [the next UN climate summit].”Georgieva said the IMF was in a “desperate push to replenish” its Catastrophic Containment and Relief Trust after the Covid-19 pandemic had “sucked away” the trust’s money. “The question is how we can pay for institutions like ours to create this funding capacity,” Georgieva said. “When an innocent bystander is hit by exogenous shock, by external shock, we can then step forward and make the debt go away.” More

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    UK market meltdown? Nothing to see here, Treasury minister says

    The pound slumped 3.6% on Friday below $1.09, a new 37-year low against the dollar, while gilts suffered their worst day in decades as the market digested finance minister Kwasi Kwarteng’s announcement of a borrowing-funded drive for growth.”Let’s be clear, the interest rates payable on government gilts is about the same in the United Kingdom now today as it is in the United States,” Chris Philp, Britain’s deputy finance minister, told Sky News when asked about the market moves.”You mention the dollar, that’s been strong against a number of currencies, including the yen and the euro.”The pound has fallen more than 11% against the dollar over the last three months, making it the worst-performing major currency recently. It fell to its lowest since January 2021 against the euro on Friday.Kwarteng scrapped the country’s top rate of income tax and cancelled a planned rise in corporate taxes – all on top of a hugely expensive plan to subsidise energy bills for households and businesses.The Resolution Foundation think tank, which focuses on living standards, said the plans pointed to an extra 400 billion pounds of borrowing over the next five years.”(The reason) we’re doing this isn’t for intraday moves in the currency market, Philp said. More