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    Food: thanksgiving required as strong harvests scythe wheat price

    Food prices are soaring. In Britain they are rising at the highest rate since 2008, the British Retail Consortium says. Yet there is some good news from an unpromising source. A bumper Russian harvest has made wheat cheaper. The price of Chicago wheat futures is back where it was in January, at $8.03 a bushel, having fallen by two-fifths from its March peak.High yields from the Russian breadbasket — along with a partial resumption of Ukrainian exports — have relieved what threatened to be a devastating squeeze. Russia and Ukraine typically account for a fifth and a tenth of global exports, respectively. The disruption threatened countries such as Egypt, which depends on the combatants for the vast majority of its imports. It has been able to build up seven months of wheat reserves, albeit at higher prices — exacerbated by the strength of the dollar — than budgeted for. War is not the only factor playing havoc with prices. Drought is reducing the yields of many crops. France, the EU’s top grain producer, is heading for its worst maize harvest this century, according to consultancy Agritel. Hot, dry conditions are also afflicting the US Midwest. High gas costs are curbing fertiliser production. That is exacerbating food shortages in Africa. Wheat normally accounts for just a tenth of the price of a loaf of bread. Other spiralling costs are bigger factors behind food price rises. In April, Associated British Foods said it had recovered “huge” input price inflation with a 25p rise in the shelf price of its Kingsmill bread to £1.10. The baker warned that further post-invasion increases were on the cards. Food price inflation normally lags behind global agricultural commodity prices by about nine months, says Capital Economics. A portion of the blame for the rise in CPI food inflation from below zero in 2021 to 12.6 per cent in July can be pinned on last year’s commodity price surge. The consultancy forecasts a further rise in food price inflation to more than 13 per cent. That would be the highest rate since at least 1989. Global food prices will begin to drop in 2023, in the view of Morgan Stanley. The impact of the Ukraine war on energy and fertiliser prices will persist. Even so, the world should be thankful to hard-working farmers in warring Russia and Ukraine for a rare piece of good news.The Lex team is interested in hearing more from readers. What is your take on world food supply? The situation is less dire now than some forecasters predicted. Please tell us what you think in the comments section below. More

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    Goldman Sachs sees 75 bps ECB rate hike in September

    “Given today’s stronger-than-expected inflation data -together with hawkish commentary and upside risks to near-term growth – we now expect the Governing Council to hike by 75bp at the September meeting,” the U.S. bank said in a note on Wednesday.The bank’s economists also raised where they expect rates to peak, to 1.75% in February 2023, from 1.50% previously. Markets have ramped up bets on such a move since last Friday, when some sources told Reuters policymakers could discuss a 75 basis-point move, and hawkish policymaker commentary at the Jackson Hole symposium.Other banks including Nordea and Danske Bank have also said they expect a 75 basis-point hike. More

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    Snap restructures ad business amid worst sales growth rate in its history

    (Reuters) – Snap Inc (NYSE:SNAP) said on Wednesday revenue growth in the third quarter is running at the slowest rate in the company’s history, as high inflation, rising interest rates and a deteriorating economy continues to ravage the advertising industry.As a result, the parent company of Snapchat said it will cut 20% of all staff, restructure its advertising sales unit and shut down projects including mobile games and novelties like a flying drone camera, in order to focus on improving sales and the number of Snapchat users. Snap had more than 5,600 employees at the end of last year.Investors have viewed Snap as an early indicator for trends affecting other social media platforms including Facebook (NASDAQ:META) owner Meta Platforms, Pinterest (NYSE:PINS) and Twitter (NYSE:TWTR), as the company is usually first to report quarterly earnings or provide business updates.Snap’s warning in May that it would miss its revenue targets due to worsening economic conditions sparked a selloff of social media stocks.Shares of Santa Monica, California-based Snap closed down 2.5% at $10 on Tuesday after The Verge first reported Snap’s plans for layoffs, and AdAge reported the departure of two top advertising executives.Revenue growth so far in the third quarter is up 8% over the previous year, which is “well below what we were expecting,” Chief Executive Evan Spiegel wrote in a memo to employees that was also released publicly on Wednesday. If that growth rate holds, it would be the slowest revenue growth Snap has had since becoming a public company in 2017 – a far cry from triple-digit growth rates it has recorded in previous quarters.Two of Snap’s top ad sales executives – Chief Business Officer Jeremi Gorman and Vice President of ad sales Peter Naylor – are leaving to join Netflix (NASDAQ:NFLX) and build the streaming service’s ad business.Gorman, a long-time advertising executive who previously worked at Amazon (NASDAQ:AMZN), was instrumental in building Snap’s ad business, said Jasmine Enberg, principal analyst at research firm Insider Intelligence.Gorman and Naylor’s departures come after Snap reported a disappointing second quarter and is facing more competition from TikTok, she said.”Snap is clearly going through a tough time,” Enberg said. ‘FACE THE CONSEQUENCES’Despite reducing spending in some areas, Snap must now “face the consequences of our lower revenue growth and adapt to the market environment,” CEO Spiegel wrote in the memo.Senior vice president of engineering Jerry Hunter will be promoted to chief operating officer and will be responsible for improving coordination between engineering, ad sales and product teams, Spiegel said. Snap and other social media platforms including Meta have all suffered from privacy updates that Apple (NASDAQ:AAPL) introduced on iPhones last year. These have made it difficult for digital ad sellers and advertisers to target ads to relevant audiences and measure their sales results. Closer collaboration between engineering and sales could potentially help Snap improve targeting and measurement of its ads.The restructuring of the ad sales division also includes three new president roles that will oversee the Americas, Europe, Middle East and Africa, and Asia-Pacific regions. Snap will also discontinue investment in its Pixy flying drone camera, just a few months after debuting in May. More

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    Singapore court rules in favor of Bithumb founder in acquisition case

    According to the South Korean publication Aju Daily, on Aug. 26, after three years of proceedings, a court in Singapore found Kim guilty of selling BXA coins without the permission of his partner Lee and ordered him to return the proceeds gained from the sale of coins to Singapore-based consortium BTHMB. Continue Reading on Coin Telegraph More

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    Introducing BudBlockz (BLUNT): The Future of Crypto

    BudBlockz and the new global cannabis industry
    BudBlockz is the world’s first asset-backed NFTs of cannabis products, farms, and dispensaries. As the legalization of marijuana continues in the United States and beyond, the company is creating a secure ecosystem to buy, sell and trade virtual and physical cannabis products. It is underpinned by the $BLUNT crypto token, which will be available for all partners to use in a growing global sector that is forecast to surpass $200bn within the next 10 years.While the legalized marijuana industry is growing at a rapid pace, it is one that’s faced by a range of banking issues due to the product type. BudBlockz is building on the great work already achieved by others in the field and is taking huge steps towards the international betterment of the cannabis industry for farms, dispensaries, consumers, suppliers, and investors alike. The decentralized payment of the BLUNT token will support businesses in legal jurisdictions while simultaneously promoting access to those based in restricted jurisdictions through private token ownership.The BLUNT token is set to have a total supply of 420,000 digital coins with an initial price of 0.015 in the private sale. The Budblockz roadmap has been planned and will complete five phases over the coming months. To make the token as accessible as possible, a range of popular digital currencies will be accepted when purchasing BLUNT token, such as; BTC, ETH, USDT, USDC, SOL, BNB (BSC), ALGO, XLM, DOGE, SHIB, LTC.BudBlockz will also open several dispensaries of its own in several legal territories, utilizing the $BLUNT token as a medium of exchange to further promote the ongoing development of a truly universal cannabis community.Blockchain beyond cryptocurrency
    While BudBlockz has a clear focus on the marijuana community, its features are not limited to supporting cannabis users. By utilizing blockchain technology to facilitate encrypted peer-to-peer purchasing, its potential to support a range of sectors as the reliance on digital tech – particularly blockchain tech which has a CAGR of over 88% – is huge.Built with Ethereum, the blockchain tech supports a range of innovative ideas through a decentralized NFT marketplace, eCommerce, and digital trading. Those attributes, along with fractional shares, could quickly support sectors like NFT art and online selling outside of marijuana products. Moreover, it is an opportunity for investors to tap into two of the fastest-growing markets in marijuana and cryptocurrency.While the likes of Potcoin (POT) and Cannabiscoi (CANN) have laid the foundation, BudBlockz and the BLUNT token are already gaining a lot of headlines ahead of a launch later this year. Expect to see it become one of the most important tokens for the cannabis industry along with many others in 2023 and beyond.Learn more about BudBlockz (BLUNT)Official Website: https://budblockz.ioTelegram Group: https://t.me/BudBlockzDiscord Server: https://discord.gg/s7hBFgvTmNAll BudBlockz Links: https://linktr.ee/budblockzContinue reading on DailyCoin More

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    Ethereum miner balance reaches four-year high weeks before the Merge

    The Merge is being touted as one of the biggest upgrades for the Ethereum blockchain as it would help the network move to a more energy-efficient way of verifying transactions and eliminate PoW mining completely. With the Merge date approaching, Ether (ETH) miner’s balance has touched a new four-year high.Continue Reading on Coin Telegraph More

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    National self-sufficiency isn’t the answer to the energy shock

    The world economy these days seems bent on serving up one apparent justification after another for regarding international trade with deep suspicion. On top of the US-China tensions, Covid lockdowns, snarled-up shipping and Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine, the latest grist to the reshorers’ mill is the massive global energy shock and the threat of interruptions to cross-border supply. The disruption has triggered instincts to race towards energy self-sufficiency. One essentially irrelevant idea from Liz Truss, UK prime minister presumptive, involves dealing with Britain’s impending fuel crisis by flogging the ageing horse of the North Sea’s oil and gas deposits to increase output.It’s natural for governments to be involved in the politicised business of energy supply, given its economic indispensability and the scale of infrastructure needed. What is now called “friendshoring” and applied to goods like electric vehicles has long been at work creating alliances over fossil fuels. Jimmy Carter emphasised human rights during his presidency, but the 1980 Carter Doctrine threatened military force to protect “American interests” — that is, oil — involving unsavoury friendships in the Gulf.There’s a great deal of path dependence in energy supply. Given the financial and political cost of drilling wells, laying pipelines, creating nuclear power stations, building gas terminals, covering the countryside in wind turbines and so on, governments are reluctant to incur the costs of diversifying against as yet unrealised risks. Over the decades, a solid political consensus can easily grow around a particular model which works well until it suddenly doesn’t.Germany’s big bet on Russian gas supply dates back to the “Ostpolitik” era of detente with the Soviet Union in the 1970s. Back then the logic of engagement with Moscow, though still debatable, was clear. But it was a massive error to continue relying on Russian gas after the rapprochement between Moscow and western Europe had been reversed by Vladimir Putin in the 2000s, and particularly after his invasion of Crimea in 2014.Germany’s efforts since March in building liquefied natural gas terminals and looking for other sources of oil and gas have been impressive, as have its efforts to reduce demand, but it has decades of established practice to overthrow to relearn the lessons of the past. As a salient example, Berlin Brandenburg airport, newly opened after decades of delays, depends heavily for its kerosene jet fuel on the nearby Russian-owned Schwedt oil refinery. Authorities have been warningthat a complete German embargo on Russian oil will threaten the airport’s operations. By contrast Berlin’s former airport, Tegel, was more resilient even during the cold war: a diversification rule meant aeroplane fuel arrived by a variety of means including truck and train.But it’s also vital to note the dangers in attempting to eliminate the risk from unreliable foreign suppliers by trying to do everything at home. Churchill’s often-cited assertion about energy security back in 1913, that “safety and certainty in oil lie in variety [of suppliers] and variety alone”, might equally apply to types of energy and modes of supply as countries.In France during the decades after the second world war, a policy elite seeded with engineering expertise through the “Corps des Mines” educational cadre developed an energy supply consensus based on large-scale domestically-generated nuclear power, which fitted well with the prevailing economic doctrine of state-directed autonomy. It looked like a good bet, and produced decades of domestic supply and power exports. But over-dependence on a single source is always risky. In recent years under-investment in and mismanagement of nuclear facilities by the utility EDF has reduced output, forcing France to import power from neighbouring countries and leaving its economy vulnerable to the global energy shock.The reality is that governments have to manage rather than avoid international relationships in energy supply, including electricity generated from renewable domestic resources like wind and solar. It’s long been the case in Europe and the US that making the widespread adoption of solar power affordable depended on imports of equipment from low-cost producers in Asia. The Biden administration has got itself into a horrendous tangle over blocks on imports of solar equipment after US producers complained about unfair competition.The same is true of other renewables like wind power, particularly offshore wind, where Chinese companies have come in to provide equipment and run generating facilities in Europe. There are, of course, hazards involved in relying on Chinese suppliers and operators, including those with close links with the military. But given the interdependencies involved, the answer is to undertake a realistic assessment of risks and continue to widen the range of energy sources, not to embark on a widespread reshoring campaign.It’s pretty easy to see that Germany’s political and industrial establishment made historical mistakes in relying on single suppliers like Russia. It’s harder and more expensive to fix the problem by diversifying trading partners, sources and modes of supply rather than continuing to pick individual winners or trying to bring all energy generation [email protected]

    Video: Nuclear is back in vogue – what about its waste? | FT Rethink More

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    Exclusive-Crisis-hit Sri Lanka strikes preliminary loan pact with IMF – sources

    COLOMBO (Reuters) – Crisis-hit Sri Lanka has reached a preliminary agreement with the International Monetary Fund (IMF) for a bailout, four sources with direct knowledge of the plan have told Reuters.The debt-laden country has been seeking up to $3 billion from the global lender in a bid to escape its worst economic crisis since independence from Britain in 1948. Sri Lankans have faced acute shortages of fuel and other basic goods for months, leaving it in political turmoil and inflation which is now soaring at almost 65%.The sources, who declined to be named ahead of an official announcement planned for Thursday, did not say how much money Sri Lanka might get but optimism around the news sent the country’s bonds to their highest level in two months.The IMF said its team, that has been in the country for a week, had extended its stay by a day and that a news conference would be at the Sri Lankan central bank on Thursday.”The IMF Mission in Colombo has been extended by one day because discussions are still ongoing with the authorities,” the IMF said in statement.The government did not respond to requests for comment, although Sri Lanka’s new President Ranil Wickremesinghe had told its parliament during a budget presentation on Tuesday that talks with the IMF had reached the final stage.Staff-level IMF agreements, as they are known, need to get formal approval of its management and executive board before recipient nations get any funding.The IMF team held talks with government officials, including the treasury secretary, late into the night on Tuesday to address concerns on the political front, the sources said.Many of the more technical issues had been agreed to beforehand they added, although political analysts and investors expect the IMF will now also need to see signs that India, China and Japan that have lent to Sri Lanka remain supportive. Colombo’s main share index jumped 2.6% on news of the preliminary loan pact, continuing its best month since January last year.Government bonds, which are now in default, jumped as much 3.7 cents on the dollar too although most remain at just a third of their face value and have yields of around 50% on expectations that much of the money will have to be written off. Sri Lanka’s debt crisis https://fingfx.thomsonreuters.com/gfx/mkt/znvnewdjbpl/Pasted%20image%201661948557583.png CRISIS Sri Lanka was plunged into full-blown crisis last month when then-president Gotabaya Rajapaksa fled amid a popular uprising against its economic collapse.Rajapaksa was replaced by Prime Minister Wickremesinghe, who also heads the finance department and has held several rounds of talks with the IMF team.The country also needs to restructure nearly $30 billion of debt. Japan has offered to lead talks with the other main creditors including India and China.It will also need to strike a deal with international banks and asset managers that hold the majority of its $19 billion worth of sovereign bonds, that are now classed as in default.”I think there will be quite a few prior actions that will be necessary (before the IMF’s money is disbursed),” said Carlos de Sousa at Vontobel Asset Management, one of the funds that bought Sri Lankan bonds. He cited progress such as plans for an immediate VAT increase but cautioned that the IMF would also want to see greater independence given to Sri Lanka’s central bank, as well as progress on the India, China and Japan issue. “That will probably take a bit longer,” de Sousa added. “We are not there yet.”Sri Lanka’s debt had soared to unsustainable levels in the run up to the crisis. Years of populist tax cuts had depleted finances. The COVID-19 pandemic then hammered its tourism sector and slashed remittances from workers overseas.The damage was compounded further by a ban of fertilisers that hit the farming industry and then over the last year by soaring oil and food prices. Mark Bohlund, senior analyst at Redd Intelligence, said the agreement puts pressure on the main creditors to come up with financing assurances so the IMF can approve the program and funds can be disbursed.”I’m optimistic that the financing assurances can be found relatively quickly,” he said, noting Sri Lanka’s geopolitical importance for the creditors. Sri Lanka’s depleted reserves https://fingfx.thomsonreuters.com/gfx/mkt/mopanemymva/Pasted%20image%201661948160452.png More