More stories

  • in

    Japan's Kanda: Will 'respond appropriately' to yen moves

    TOKYO (Reuters) – Japan’s top currency diplomat Masato Kanda warned about the yen’s significant weakening overnight following U.S. inflation data, saying he was “concerned” about the currency moves. “We are monitoring yen moves with a sense of urgency,” Kanda, Japan’s vice finance minister for international affairs, told reporters. “We will respond appropriately to currency moves without ruling out any options.”The dollar jumped against the yen as well as euro and other currencies on Tuesday after stronger-than-expected U.S. inflation data suggested the Federal Reserve may need to stay aggressive in raising interest rates.The dollar was last trading at around 144.44.The yen has lost about 20% in value versus the dollar since the start of this year.The Japanese currency hit a fresh 24-year low just shy of 145 yen last week, fuelling worries on higher living costs, prompting policymakers to jawbone investors against yen-selling.However, many market players say Japanese policymakers have few effective tools to correct the weak yen, which is seen as being caused by the diverging monetary policy between Japan and the United States.While the U.S. Federal Reserve is raising interest rates to fight inflation, the Bank of Japan has stuck to powerful monetary easing to support a fragile economy. More

  • in

    Celsius CEO plans to restructure firm to focus on crypto custody: Report

    According to a Tuesday report from the New York Times, Celsius CEO Alex Mashinsky and head of innovation and chief compliance officer Oren Blonstein aimed to revive the company using a project named Kelvin — storing users’ crypto and charging fees on certain transactions. Mashinsky reportedly made the announcement at a Sept. 8 meeting for employees, at which the company discussed possible scenarios for its future after filing for Chapter 11 bankruptcy in July.Continue Reading on Coin Telegraph More

  • in

    OpenNode sets up BTC payment infrastructure in Bank of Bahrain regulatory sandbox

    OpenNode will provide the first Bitcoin (BTC) infrastructure in Bahrain, although the Gulf island nation has been luring fintech companies to its shores for the past several years as it transitions away from an petroleum-based economy. OpenNode CEO and cofounder Afnan Rahman called the agreement with the CBB, “a watershed moment for the people of Bahrain, the Middle East and the Bitcoin economy as a whole.”Continue Reading on Coin Telegraph More

  • in

    Linux to launch Foundation to support digital wallet development

    The OWF is a collaborative effort between companies in the technology and public sector, as well as stakeholders within the blockchain ecosystem, to develop open-source software to support the interoperability of digital wallets; software designed to send, receive, store and monitor digital assets.Continue Reading on Coin Telegraph More

  • in

    Japan Sept factory mood tanks on cost pressure – Reuters Tankan

    TOKYO (Reuters) – Business confidence of Japanese manufacturers retreated in September from a seven-month high, while service firms’ sentiment fell to a five-month low, as unyielding cost pressures hit the corporate sector, the Reuters Tankan poll showed.While Japan’s annual consumer inflation remains far modest than global peers at about 2.5%, wholesale inflation has hovered at a near double-digit pace, squeezing profit margins for companies facing inflation-wary clientele and consumers. The yen’s recent plunge to a 24-year low has amplified the pain of higher import costs for domestic businesses, although the weaker unit benefits some exporters, according to the surveyed firms in the world’s third-largest economy.”We see vigorous demands, but raw material and fuel costs are rising faster than the pace of our price hike,” said a manager at a glass manufacturer in the Aug. 31-Sept. 9 poll, which tracks the Bank of Japan’s (BOJ) closely followed “Tankan” quarterly survey.The Reuters Tankan manufacturers’ sentiment index fell to 10 in September from 13 last month. The service-sector index slipped to 11 from 19 last month, marking the lowest level since April.The situation may remain unchanged in the next three months, manufacturers said, while service companies’ outlook was slightly better in the poll of 495 big- and mid-sized companies, of which 252 responded.(For a detailed table of the results, click)Among manufacturers, metal, electric machinery, oil refinery and ceramics sectors took the biggest hit in the September poll, with their sub-indexes posting double-digit decreases.”Uncertainties stemming from the situation in Russia and Ukraine, along with rising raw material prices, have made our clients cautious about their capital expenditure plans,” said a machinery maker manager.Meanwhile, the sub-index of Japan’s staple automobile industry improved to the highest since March, and that of textiles and paper sectors marked a double-digit growth.”Demand is recovering since Japan, following Europe and North America, shifted its COVID handling policy to one without curbs,” a paper company manager said, yet adding, “worrisome factors such as China’s urban lockdowns and risks of power crunch are lingering.”The impact of a weaker yen, which has lost about 20% against U.S. dollar this year and triggered policymakers’ strong verbal warnings this month, was mixed across sectors.In the poll, companies mainly dealing in domestic customers such as a food manufacturers, construction firms and wholesalers expressed concerns over the rising costs fanned by a softer currency. Still, export-reliant companies, including machinery makers and shipping companies, took comfort in a weaker yen as it increases their market competitiveness and boosts sales. In between, “the ongoing weak yen is positive for sales but negative for raw material costs, so it’s a back-and-forth situation,” a machinery firm respondent said.Among non-manufacturers, some said Japan’s high COVID-19 cases have discouraged consumers to resume face-to-face activities, in spite of the absence of government-imposed restrictions except for ongoing border controls.”The situation is mostly no different from when there were curbs,” said a service firm manager.On the three-month forward outlook, manufacturers expected no change overall to their mood at 10 in December, whereas services firms said their sentiment would improve 3 points to 14, the poll showed.The BOJ is set to release its next quarterly tankan survey results on Oct. 3. More

  • in

    Texas' lawsuit on Google's ad dominance can mostly proceed, judge rules

    OAKLAND, Calif. (Reuters) -Alphabet Inc’s Google (NASDAQ:GOOGL) must face all but one antitrust allegation about its online advertising business brought in a lawsuit by attorneys general for Texas and 16 other states or territories, a federal judge ruled on Tuesday.Google won its motion to dismiss an allegation that a cooperation agreement it struck with Meta Platforms’ Facebook (NASDAQ:META) in 2018 was an unlawful restraint of trade, with U.S. District Judge P. Kevin Castel saying the companies had valid business reasons for the deal. Google failed to convince Castel to dismiss three other counts related to its market power, though the judge found that some underlying claims by the states lacked merit.Spokespeople for Texas’ attorney general’s office and Google did not immediately respond to requests for comment.The antitrust case is one of several against Google and other big tech companies that could go to trial over the next couple of years. More