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    South Korean financial majors want to create virtual assets exchange in 2023: Report

    According to the local coverage, Samsung Securities had been studying ways to develop and operate a securities token trading platform but was unable to recruit the necessary personnel to proceed last year. Mirae Asset Consulting, an affiliate of Mirae Asset Securities, South Korea’s largest investment banking and stock brokerage by market cap, is hiring personnel for cryptocurrency and nonfungible token (NFT) research and development as well. Continue Reading on Coin Telegraph More

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    Data shows Bitcoin and altcoins at risk of a 20% drop to new yearly lows

    The worsening conditions are not exclusive to crypto markets. The price of WTI oil ceded 3.6% on Aug. 22, down 28% from the $122 peak seen on June 8. The United StatesTreasuries 5-year yield, which bottomed on Aug. 1 at 2.61%, reverted the trend and is now trading at 3.16%. These are all signs that investors are feeling less confident about the central bank’s policies of requesting more money to hold those debt instruments.Continue Reading on Coin Telegraph More

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    NFT lending protocol Bend DAO proposes emergency changes amid credit crisis

    Next, the auction period for NFTs on its platform would be reduced from 48 to four hours. Then, the requirement for the minimum bid price of NFTs on Bend DAO to be pegged to 95% of the floor price on popular digital collectibles trading platform OpenSea would be removed. Interest rates on loans are to be reset from the current 100% to 20%. Finally, the BendDAO treasury would be empowered to cover the bad debts and use revenue.Continue Reading on Coin Telegraph More

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    Fed teases master accounts for crypto banks: Law Decoded, Aug. 15-22

    For crypto, these guidelines hold a prospect of “the most stringent review,” to which non-federally insured institutions that do not have a holding company subject to Fed oversight would be exposed. It is still unclear whether the crypto banks will finally get access to master accounts under the new guidelines and how long they shall wait for it. Continue Reading on Coin Telegraph More

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    FirstFT: China slashes 5-year mortgage rate

    China has slashed its mortgage lending rate for the second time this year as the country’s central bank seeks to limit the fallout from a liquidity crisis in the property sector. The five-year loan prime rate was lowered to 4.3 per cent from 4.45 per cent yesterday, exceeding the median forecast from economists polled by Bloomberg and equalling a rate cut in May that was the largest on record. The reduction in the benchmark loan prime rate will cut borrowing costs on new mortgages nationwide and boost the country’s debt-laden real estate sector, which accounts for almost a third of annual economic output. Mainland China shares bounced in response to the central bank’s move — with the CSI 300 gauge of Shanghai and Shenzhen-listed stocks closing up 0.7 per cent yesterday. At the close of US markets, however, US stocks suffered their biggest decline in two months, with tech shares falling sharply on worries about the gloomy economic outlook and concerns that members of the Federal Reserve will adopt a hawkish tone at a symposium this week.Thank you for reading FirstFT Asia. — EmilyFive more stories in the news1. Activists say Singapore’s repeal of gay sex ban is not enough LGBT+ activists have dismissed Singapore’s decision to repeal a law banning sex between men as “window dressing”. While the Asian city-state declared on Sunday that it would scrap the colonial-era law criminalising gay sex, it also announced plans to amend the constitution to “protect” the definition of marriage as a heterosexual union from legal challenge.2. China intensifies measures to deal with heatwave Chinese authorities have stepped up emergency measures to deal with extreme heat and a crippling drought in the south-west of the country that has forced cities to dim lights and left electric vehicle drivers struggling to recharge cars. At least 50 mobile generators have been dispatched to help stabilise the local power supply, the State Grid Corporation of China said.

    © China map graphic

    3. Russia accuses Ukraine in killing of Putin supporter’s daughter Russia’s FSB security service has blamed Kyiv for the car bombing that killed the daughter of a prominent supporter of Vladimir Putin’s, accusing a Ukrainian woman of planting the car bomb before fleeing to Estonia. Ukraine denied any involvement in the attack.4. Kishida tests positive for Covid as public support declines Fumio Kishida, Japan’s prime minister, has tested positive for Covid-19, the government said yesterday. Coronavirus cases across Japan have remained at record-high levels, eroding the approval rating for the Kishida administration which had remained steady since he took office last October. 5. Singapore office rents set to hit pre-pandemic levels The return of workers to the office this year, coupled with lockdowns in China and restrictions in Hong Kong that have forced foreign companies to consider alternative locations, pushed rents for prime office space in the city centre to S$10.74 (US$7.71) per square foot in the second quarter, according to real estate group JLL.The day aheadUK hosepipe ban comes into force South West Water will introduce a ban covering Cornwall and parts of Devon, the first such restrictions in 26 years, while Thames Water’s will affect 15mn customers across the south of England. A ban for Yorkshire households begins on Thursday.S&P Global/IHS Markit composite PMI Purchasing managers’ index data for services and manufacturing is set to publish in the Eurozone, France, Germany, Japan and the US. The reading from the eurozone is forecast to drop from 49.9 in July to 49.5 in August. What else we’re readingThe rise and rise of Korean pop culture Today, Korean culture is so widespread in the west that K-pop idols are invited to the White House, K-pop stars are global ambassadors for luxury brands, and Korean series break viewership records. But this wasn’t always the case. This is how the global spread of Korean pop culture accelerated.Soaring fertiliser prices threaten to spark Africa food crisis The price of nitrogen-based fertilisers has hit record highs in line with natural gas costs in the wake of the war in Ukraine. Growers have cut usage in response, threatening to reduce food production and deepen a global food crisis and raising the prospect of social unrest on the continent.How a 20-year-old student made $110mn riding the meme stock wave He may not have succeeded in his bid to become the youngest US president at the age of 18, but last week Jake Freeman emerged as one of the youngest investors to generate a nine-figure windfall by trading the meme stock frenzy.A war over Taiwan could go nuclear The single most important question about a potential war over Taiwan between the United States and China is whether such a conflict could remain non-nuclear. Policymakers and the US public can no longer ignore the fact that a new nuclear age has dawned, writes Michael Auslin, an author and Hoover Institution fellow at Stanford.Why staff are being sent to bond with nature According to a recent global survey, most workers are unable to explain their own companies’ climate commitments. Could environmental retreats — from sleeping in the woods to hugging trees — solve the disconnect?Food & drinkHave you cracked for the canned wine craze? These six brands of tinned vintages are way better than you think. More

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    Prosecutors want to claim NFTs as securities, alleges legal team of former OpenSea employee

    In a Friday filing with the Southern District of New York court, Chastain’s legal team from Greenberg Traurig filed a motion to dismiss the indictment against him, which included allegations of wire fraud and money laundering related to an NFT insider trading scheme from June to September 2021. The lawyers argued that the charges against the former OpenSea employee were invalid in part “because the NFTs at issue are neither securities nor commodities” and the tokens were not legally considered the platform’s property.Continue Reading on Coin Telegraph More