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    BitGo to sue Galaxy Digital for $100M over dropped acquisition

    In a Monday blog post, BitGo referred to Galaxy’s actions as “improper” in claiming a breach of contract to drop an agreement to acquire the digital asset custodian. BitGo has enlisted the services of law firm Quinn Emanuel to pursue legal action against Galaxy for not paying a “$100 million reverse break fee it had promised back in March 2022.”Continue Reading on Coin Telegraph More

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    Apple sets Sept 5 deadline for employees to return to office – Bloomberg

    The company, which told its employees of the new plan on Monday, will require employees to work from the office on Tuesdays, Thursdays and a regular third day that will be determined by individual teams, the report said. The iPhone maker did not immediately respond to Reuters request for comment.Apple (NASDAQ:AAPL) joins several technology and finance companies that have begun mandating a return to office as COVID cases ease.Earlier in June, Tesla (NASDAQ:TSLA) Inc Chief Executive Elon Musk has asked employees to return to the office or leave the company, according to an email sent to employees and seen by Reuters. More

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    Law Decoded, Aug. 8-15: In the eye of Tornado Cash

    Accusations like this don’t come easy — one of the co-founders of Tornado Cash has reported his account suspended at GitHub, while the issuer of the USD Coin (USDC) stablecoin, Circle, froze over 75,000 USDC worth of funds linked to the problematic addresses. By the end of last week, Dutch Fiscal Information and Investigation Service arrested a 29-year-old developer suspected of being involved in money laundering. Continue Reading on Coin Telegraph More

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    EV maker Faraday Future to raise up to $600 million in funding

    The company will get an initial $52 million of funds as part of a new financing facility. Its cash balance was $52.2 million as of Aug. 9.EV startups that promised to disrupt the auto industry by using a technology-heavy approach to their vehicle designs are now scrambling to secure fresh lines of cash and cut costs due to rising commodity prices.Chief Executive Carsten Breitfeld said Faraday Future’s manufacturing facility in California was nearing completion and was testing the FF 91 electric vehicle.The electric-vehicle maker said it was in talks with investors in the United States and globally for a “significant additional near-term funding” as it looks to start deliveries in the third or fourth quarter.Separately, Faraday Future said its head of global supply chain, Mathias Hofmann, will temporarily oversee manufacturing operations at its Hanford, California factory, replacing Vice President of Manufacturing Matt Tall, who will leave the company.The EV firm had in July signaled the need for more cash to launch FF 91 model in a regulatory filing just a month after CEO Breitfeld told Reuters that it would be able to launch the car without additional funding.Faraday Future is one of the many EV startups that went public through blank-check mergers, a market that has slowed this year due regulatory scrutiny and the poor share performance of companies listed via that route.The company also said some suppliers had more recently requested accelerated payments and other terms and conditions due in part to its financial condition. More

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    Price analysis 8/15: BTC, ETH, BNB, XRP, ADA, SOL, DOGE, DOT, SHIB, AVAX

    Anthony Scaramucci, founder and managing partner of Skybridge Capital, in an interview with CNBC, advised investors to ride out the current uncertainty in cryptocurrencies and “stay patient and stay long term.” He expects Bitcoin to reward investors immensely with a sharp uptrend over the next six years.Continue Reading on Coin Telegraph More

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    FirstFT: China ratchets up military drills around Taiwan

    Good morning. China announced a fresh round of military manoeuvres around Taiwan yesterday in reaction to the visit of a US congressional delegation, a move that ratchets up Beijing’s efforts to isolate the island nation.The announcement came after Democratic senator Ed Markey and four members of the US House of Representatives from both sides of the aisle landed in Taiwan on Sunday night and met President Tsai Ing-wen on Monday morning.The Chinese defence ministry said the visit flagrantly violated previous agreements and China’s sovereignty and territorial integrity.“[It] sends a wrong signal to the ‘Taiwan independence’ separatist forces, and fully exposes the true face of the US as a disrupter and destroyer of peace and stability in the Taiwan Strait,” the ministry said.Beijing’s fierce reaction to the latest US delegation is raising concerns in Taiwan and elsewhere that the Chinese leadership is trying to impose a new status quo under which foreign politicians and officials are dissuaded from engaging with the island’s government.The People’s Liberation Army’s new “multiple services joint combat-readiness patrols and exercises” come barely five days after it completed week-long drills that followed US House Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s visit to Taiwan. China said last week those drills had succeeded in “obliterating” the median line in the Taiwan Strait, an unofficial buffer zone, and that the PLA would from now on regularly patrol around the island.Since then, PLA aircraft and warships have been conducting daily manoeuvres around Taiwan in numbers far exceeding those before Pelosi’s visit and in areas close to Taiwan where they were not frequently active before the current crisis.According to the Taiwanese defence ministry, 96 Chinese military aircraft were active around the island between last Thursday and Sunday — after Beijing had said its exercises were over, but that it would keep a “close eye” on Taiwan and the US and conduct frequent patrols in the area.Happy Tuesday, and thanks for reading FirstFT Asia. —EthanFive more stories in the news1. Iran denies links to Salman Rushdie attack Nasser Kanaani, Iran’s foreign ministry spokesman, said on Monday that the Islamic republic “definitely and seriously” had no links to the suspect. In 1989, Iran’s then supreme leader Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini issued a fatwa on the author, authorising Muslims to kill Rushdie for his alleged blasphemy.2. Rio Tinto rebuffed in plan to take control of Mongolia copper project Turquoise Hill Resources said Rio’s cash offer did not “fully and fairly reflect” the value of its holding in Oyu Tolgoi. Once an underground expansion project is completed, Oyu Tolgoi will be one of the world’s biggest copper mines, with production in its early years of about 500,000 tonnes per year, just as demand for the metal increases because of the energy transition.3. Hong Kong accounting watchdog launches second probe into Evergrande and PwC The investigation is connected to how the Evergrande subsidiary and PwC classified “restricted bank deposits and other loans”, the guarantees provided on those loans, and the disclosure of related party transactions, Hong Kong’s Financial Reporting Council said.4. Slow wind farm approvals risk green goals, say renewable energy groups The chief executives of Denmark’s Vestas and Ørsted, the world’s largest manufacturer of wind turbines and biggest offshore wind farm developer, respectively, said governments needed to back up their green rhetoric by making it easier to go through an often convoluted planning process.5. Germany must cut gas use by 20% to avoid winter rationing Businesses and households are bracing themselves for Europe’s biggest energy crisis in a generation, with Germany’s top network regulator warning that gas use must be reduced by a fifth to avoid a crippling shortage after Russia’s Gazprom throttled supplies in mid-June.The day aheadEconomic data Minutes will be released from the Reserve Bank of Australia’s August policy meeting. The UK publishes preliminary second-quarter productivity estimates as the country’s productivity slump is scrutinised. The US will release industrial production figures.Perspective: Nervous central bankers are watching Australia closelyApologies for misnaming the Japanese prime minister in yesterday’s day-ahead. He is, of course, Fumio Kishida, not Yoshihide Suga.What else we’re readingAt 75, India is finally ready to join the global party The country is on track to surpass the UK, Germany and Japan to become the third-largest economy by 2032. Its entrepreneurial spirit and an increasingly efficient welfare state may give India the edge in a slowing world, writes Ruchir Sharma.Why the Fed might be at ‘neutral’ already on monetary policy Fed chair Jay Powell has been skewered by his critics for claiming that the federal funds rate was now at “neutral” at his July 27 press conference. But there is a conceivable way that Powell might be right, says Edward Yardeni. Arctic warming four times faster than rest of planet: study Scientists have for a long time known that the Arctic is heating faster than the rest of the planet, but have not agreed on a rate. The warming effect and long-term sea ice decline are considered two main indicators of climate change.

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    Crypto poses serious challenges for regulators Even as the crypto industry craves the legitimacy that regulation offers, it will also try to minimise oversight, says Eswar Prasad. To guard against that, regulators must answer a few basic questions.Business Book of the Year The FT’s annual award has been narrowed down to 15 titles. While subjects range from interest rates to tech, the common theme that emerges is the many challenges facing the global economy. Work & leisureAugust is the traditional month for making yourself scarce at the office. Why are so many still working this August, asks Pilita Clark:At first I thought I was the only one with an unexpectedly active office. But others in the city have the same problem. One friend who had his hopes of a quietly productive August dashed by office busyness blames the rise of hybrid working. More

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    Canadian regulatory council creates new preregistration filing for crypto platforms

    Trading platforms will be expected to agree in the undertaking to comply with terms and conditions relating to investor protection. Filing the undertaking will allow crypto trading platforms to continue operating during the review of their applications for registration with the CSA. The new undertaking is part of the “interim approach” introduced in the guidance on securities law requirements for crypto asset trading platforms released in March 2021 by the CSA and Investment Industry Regulatory Organization of Canada (IIROC). Continue Reading on Coin Telegraph More