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    Chainmonsters Reveals Demo Details and UI Changes

    However, what catches attention is the fact that the game is gearing up for a demo release. The official blog post mentions that Chainmonsters demo would soon be released that the team is working hard on it. Chainmonsters: What are the UI Changes?The developers have made quite a few changes – some more visible than others. The whole point behind the tweaks is to deliver a better user experience.Here’s a quick rundown:For more details, you can check out the official blog.When Will Chainmonsters Demo Be Released?The official blog post mentions that the team is in the final stages of putting together the game demo. Further, the post says that the release date will be announced towards the end of this month.“We are in the final stages of working on the game demo, polishing every small detail and will announce the release date end of August,” reads the post.Further, the blog says, “We want to generate as much interest and exposure as possible with the demo launch so in the past few months we prepared a battleplan.”Some features of the demo have also been unveiled. There will be some daily activities that the devs want to test. That would include daily quests and PvP challenges. To incentivize participation, players will be given exclusive items, NFTs, cosmetics, and more. The items would be given away through a leaderboard system as well as weekly raffles. Crystal skins, Amber skins, and Kickstarter rewards have already been promised. On the FlipsideWhy You Should CareFor the fans of Pokemon and Axie Infinity, Chainmonsters is a great blockchain game. It closely resembles classic Pokemon games and so far, the gameplay looks interesting. A demo release will check off an important milestone in the game’s roadmap. You may also like: The Most Similar Blockchain Game to the Original Pokémon Games Has Launched a Closed Beta – ChainmonstersContinue reading on DailyCoin More

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    Price analysis 8/12: BTC, ETH, BNB, XRP, ADA, SOL, DOGE, DOT, MATIC, AVAX

    In comparison, Ether (ETH) has managed to hold on to its recent gains on news that the Goerli testnet had successfully activated proof-of-stake, clearing the path for Ethereum’s mainnet transition planned for Sept. 15 or 16. Data from Santiment shows that Ether whale transactions have increased along with possible whale accumulation.Continue Reading on Coin Telegraph More

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    Colombia forecasts 2022 trade with Venezuela could hit $1.2 billion

    CARTAGENA, Colombia (Reuters) – Colombia’s trade with Venezuela could hit $1.2 billion this year, its commerce minister German Umana said on Friday, after the country’s new President Gustavo Petro pledged to revive trading relations with its South American neighbour. Relations broke down in early 2019 after Caracas objected to members of the Venezuelan opposition trying to send trucks loaded with food and medicine across the border from Colombia.But on Thursday the two countries each named their ambassadors to the other, days after leftist Petro was sworn in as Colombia’s president.Growth of trade will depend on the recovery of Venezuela’s economy, which collapsed between 2015 and 2020, Umana said, acknowledging improvements seen over the last two years.”If the border is opened, if the smuggling issues are resolved … we’re going to see trade of $1 billion or $1.2 billion this year, not the forecast $600 million,” he told reporters on the sidelines of the Colombian Business Association’s annual conference in the port of Cartagena.Trade could grow to $4.5 billion by 2026, Umana added.Colombia’s new Minister of Mines and Energy Irene Velez earlier said that the government in Bogota would grant no new gas contracts and could import gas from Venezuela if reserves from an existing 180 projects are insufficient to carry it through the transition to cleaner, renewable energy. Turning from fossil fuels to renewables was a key Petro campaign promise.”If, having exceeded those gas reserves … we still needed to fill our energy matrix, it could be done with that connection that we could have for gas transportation with Venezuela,” Velez told local radio station Blu Radio.Colombia counts on some eight years of proven gas reserves, according to energy ministry data in May, which Velez said would allow time to transition from fossil fuels. Venezuela could help Colombia meet its gas needs, while Colombian products head over the border, Umana said. More

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    Key Ukrainian adviser says new, $5 billion IMF loan would reassure other creditors

    KYIV (Reuters) – Securing a new $5 billion loan from the IMF would help reassure Ukraine’s other creditors that the war-torn country’s macroeconomic situation was under control, President Volodymyr Zelenskiy’s chief economic adviser told Reuters on Friday.Fresh financing from the International Monetary Fund for around 18 months could serve as the anchor for a larger package of $15 billion-$20 billion to help Ukraine weather the economic crisis caused by Russia’s invasion, the adviser, Oleg Ustenko, said.He said Ukrainian officials were in touch with the global lender about the potential request, adding that the goal should be to move forward as quickly as possible.Ustenko’s comments came just over two weeks after Ukraine’s central bank governor, Kyrylo Shevchenko, told Reuters that he was seeking as much as $20 billion from the IMF over two or three years – an amount that would have put Ukraine well over the fund’s “exceptional access limit” for lending. The large size of that request had triggered intense debate within the IMF because it would have also raised questions about the sustainability of Ukraine’s debt.The revised plan would be modeled on a financing package https://www.imf.org/en/News/Articles/2015/09/14/01/49/pr15107 agreed in 2015, after Russia’s invasion of the Crimea region of Ukraine, that included $17.5 billion in IMF funding but helped leverage total funding of $40 billion.”An IMF program of $5 billion would be in line with earlier funding levels and might be a catalyst for funding from other courses, including the EU, (the U.S.) Treasury and other individual countries,” Ustenko told Reuters.Ukraine’s previous $5 billion loan program was canceled in March as the IMF approved $1.4 billion in emergency financing with few conditions in the early weeks of Russia’s invasion.Ukrainian authorities pledged to work with the Fund to design a new economic program “aimed at rehabilitation and growth, when conditions permit.” Ukraine, grappling with the internal displacement of some 7 million people by Russia’s invasion on Feb. 24, is scrambling to marshal resources to deal with energy shortages, rising inflation, and a worsening humanitarian crisis as winter approaches.It faces a 35%-45% economic contraction in 2022 and a monthly fiscal shortfall of $5 billion, with only a third of some $29 billion in Western aid pledges having materialized thus far, economists say.This week, Ukraine’s overseas creditors backed its request for a two-year freeze on payments on almost $20 billion in international bonds, but Ukraine must still make $635 million in principal payments on prior IMF loans beginning in mid-September.Ustenko said Ukraine hoped to move forward quickly with negotiations with the IMF with an eye to reaching a preliminary agreement before those payments were due.RISKS, PRECEDENTS Proponents of the new program argue that Ukraine had made good progress on tackling deficits and addressing corruption before the war, and the new lending would allow it to stabilize the economy. But critics say a large new loan could put the Fund at risk, as Russia could still win the war and refuse to make good on Ukraine’s debts.Mark Sobel, U.S. chair of the OMFIF financial policy think tank and a former senior Treasury official, said the Fund was set up to be a “first responder to severe systemic global economic crises” and it should act to help Ukraine pay pensions and other obligations.Martin Muehleisen, a former IMF strategy chief now affiliated with the Atlantic Council, said even a loan of $5 billion would raise debt sustainability questions in the midst of a war and set worrisome precedents, shifting it clearly to Western priorities. “The IMF was used by the U.S. and its allies for strategic purposes during the Cold War. Tying the fund closer to the West’s political objectives may again be called for, but it would conflict with the IMF’s aspiration to be a truly global organization,” Muehleisen said. More

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    Uzbekistan blocks access to foreign crypto exchanges over unregistered trading

    In a statement from Aug. 10, the National Agency of Perspective Projects (NAPP) projects informed that “various electronic platforms” provide services for trade and exchange of crypto-assets without obtaining the required license in violation of the existing legislation and thus access to them was restricted. Continue Reading on Coin Telegraph More

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    Soft landing hopes for U.S. economy brighten outlook on stocks

    NEW YORK (Reuters) – Optimism is seeping back into the U.S. stock market, as some investors grow more convinced that the economy may avoid a severe downturn even as it copes with high inflation.The benchmark S&P 500 has rebounded about 15% since mid-June, halving its year-to-date loss, and the tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite is up 20% over that time. Many of the so-called meme stocks that had been pummeled in the first half of the year have come screaming back, while the Cboe Volatility Index, known as Wall Street’s fear gauge, stands near a four-month low. In the past week, bullish sentiment reached its highest level since March, according to a survey from the American Association of Individual Investors. Earlier this year, that gauge tumbled to its lowest in nearly 30 years, when stocks swooned on worries over how the Federal Reserve’s monetary tightening would hit the economy.“We have experienced a fair amount of pain, but the perspective in how people are trading has turned violently towards a glass half full versus a glass half empty,” said Mark Hackett, Nationwide’s chief of investment research.Data over the last two weeks bolstered hopes that the Fed can achieve a soft landing for the economy. While last week’s strong jobs report allayed fears of recession, inflation numbers this week showed the largest month-on-month deceleration of consumer price increases since 1973.The shift in market mood was reflected in data released by BoFA Global Research on Friday: tech stocks saw their largest inflows in around two months over the past week, while Treasury Inflation-Protected Securities, or TIPS, which are used to hedge against inflation, notched their fifth straight week of outflows. “If in fact a soft landing is possible, then you’d want to see the kind of data inputs that we have seen thus far,” said Art Hogan, chief market strategist at B. Riley Wealth. “Strong jobs number and declining inflation would both be important inputs into that theory.”Through Thursday, the S&P 500 was up 1.5% for the week, on track for its fourth straight week of gains. Until recently, optimism was hard to come by. Equity positioning last month stood in the 12th percentile of its range since January 2010, a July 29 note by Deutsche Bank (ETR:DBKGn) analysts said, and some market participants have attributed the big jump in stocks to investors rapidly unwinding their bearish bets. With stock market gyrations dropping to multi-month lows, further support for equities could come from funds that track volatility and turn bullish when market swings subside. Volatility targeting funds could soak up about $100 billion of equity exposure in the coming months if gyrations remain muted, said Anand Omprakash, head of derivatives quantitative strategy at Elevation Securities.    “Should their allocation increase, this would provide a tailwind for equity prices,” Omprakash said.Investors next week will be watching retail sales and housing data. Earnings reports are also due from a number of top retailers, including Walmart (NYSE:WMT) and Home Depot (NYSE:HD), that will give fresh insight into the health of the consumer.Plenty of trepidation remains in markets, with many investors still bruised from the S&P 500’s 20.6% tumble in the first six months of the year. Fed officials have pushed back on expectations that the central bank will end its rate hikes sooner than anticipated, and economists have warned that inflation could return in coming months.Some investors have grown alarmed at how quickly risk appetite has rebounded. The Ark Innovation ETF, a prominent casualty of this year’s bear market, has soared around 35% since mid-June, while shares of AMC Entertainment (NYSE:AMC) Holdings, one of the original “meme stocks”, have doubled over that time.“You look across assets right now, and you don’t see a lot of risks priced in anymore to markets,” said Matthew Miskin, co-chief investment strategist at John Hancock Investment Management.Keith Lerner, co-chief investment officer at Truist Advisory Services, believes technical resistance and ballooning stock valuations are likely to make it difficult for the S&P 500 to advance far beyond the 4200-4300 level. The index was recently at 4249 on Friday afternoon. Seasonality may also play a role. September – when the Fed holds its next monetary policy meeting – has been the worst month for stocks, with the S&P 500 losing an average 1.04% since 1928, Refinitiv data showed.Wall Streeters taking vacations throughout August could also drain volume and stir volatility, said Hogan, of B. Riley Wealth.“Lighter liquidity tends to exaggerate or exacerbate moves,” he said. More

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    When Will World Shift to Rate Cuts? More Investors Say 2024 or Later

    A growing number of fund managers now expect a broader policy shift in 2024 or later, according to a Bank of America Corp (NYSE:BAC). survey released Friday. Roughly a third of respondents foresee that timeline, up from about a quarter last month. At the same time, the poll of 75 investors shows managers are increasingly divided on whether government-bond rates have peaked, although a rising share say that is the case for 10-year yields. Correspondingly, Treasuries are becoming a more attractive hedging instrument for some respondents, while dollar positioning fell moderately from last month‘s 7-year high.Markets have been whipsawed by economic data the past couple of weeks. The gap between 2- and 10-year Treasury yields touched its lowest since 1982 this week after US inflation data for July came in cooler than expected. Those figures also sent the dollar plunging and stocks soaring as traders trimmed bets that the Federal Reserve will stick to its aggressive rate-hiking path. Meanwhile, the central bank hasn’t wavered from its stance on combating high inflation. “Despite the palpable relief in markets at a move in the right direction on inflation (at least in the US), investors are wary of how long it will take to get back towards target (and how much tightening that entails),” the survey said.The survey was conducted from Aug. 5 through Aug. 10, polling 75 fund managers across the UK, Europe, Asia and the US with a combined $1.25 trillion under management.Some other key findings of the survey were: ©2022 Bloomberg L.P. More

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    Ukraine’s first Black Sea cargo shipment caught up in complex trading networks

    When the Razoni left Odesa at the start of this month, the first ship to sail from Ukraine with a cargo of food since Russia’s full-scale invasion was hailed by UN secretary-general António Guterres as carrying two commodities in short supply — “corn, and hope”.But the world’s most closely monitored vessel has since proved an imperfect symbol of the path towards solving the global food crisis.After navigating through the mines in and around the Ukrainian Black Sea ports, the Razoni never arrived at its originally stated destination, Tripoli in Lebanon. The shipment’s buyer rejected the 26,500 tonne corn cargo on quality grounds and the vessel remained stranded until new buyers were found and 1,500 tonnes of the grain were unloaded in Turkey. On its way to its next stated destination, Egypt, the vessel on Friday stopped transmitting from its transponder, which broadcasts position and route information, with its last signal sent earlier that morning from the north-west coast of Cyprus and its subsequent location unclear. The Razoni’s voyage has put a spotlight on the complex and secretive nature of commodities trading and the layers of middlemen, agents and insurers involved.“[Grain trading] is very complicated. The UN is relying too much on the private sector under a very half-baked initiative,” said Jean-Francois Lambert, a consultant and former commodities-trade banker.Under a deal brokered by the UN and Turkey last month, Kyiv and Moscow agreed to open a humanitarian corridor allowing the passage of cargo ships carrying Ukrainian grain, stranded in the country’s ports because of the war, through the Black Sea to Istanbul. The two countries agreed not to attack vessels or ports covered by the 120-day initiative, with the UN hoping grain exports will reach about 2mn-5mn tonnes a month once the operation is running in full.The UN-led joint committee (JCC) overseeing the deal said the Razoni was chosen as the first vessel based on information provided by the Ukrainian port authorities, including its readiness to sail. The vessel is known in the shipping industry for being one of those that moves regularly between the Mediterranean’s riskier ports, for example in countries affected by conflict. “These are difficult locations,” said Yörük Işık, a geopolitical and maritime analyst based in Istanbul. “Ships that work the region tend to have more adventurous crews. The Razoni is a ship that works in between the more challenging routes.” Its cargo of corn was originally sold by an Austrian commodities trader, VA Intertrading, first noted by price reporting agency Agricensus. Under an agreement commonly known as “free-on-board”, the company said it had loaded the corn on to the Razoni, which had been chartered by the unidentified buyer, in February.

    Satellite images appear to show the Razoni calling at the Syrian ports of Tartus, left, and Latakia, right, while its transponders were switched off © Planet Labs

    The buyer, who is reportedly Lebanese, has now sold the grain on. The change of final destination and purchaser during the voyage was “a fairly common commercial process”, said the JCC. Ukraine’s agricultural ministry said all grain shipped from the country underwent quality inspections under international standards and dismissed suggestions that its grains kept at the ports since the outbreak of war were rotten. Apart from the original buyer’s rejection of the Razoni shipment, “so far, there have been no negative reviews”, it said. If the identity of the Razoni cargo’s buyer remains a mystery, the vessel itself is also an enigma even within the grain trading community. Sailing under a Sierra Leone flag, a practice known as a “flag of convenience” where an owner registers a vessel in a country other than their own, the ship is owned by Razoni Shipping Ltd, according to industry databases. However, its contact details are unavailable and the FT has been unable to reach the company or the vessel’s crew. The ship’s agent in Turkey said the captain and most of the crew were Syrian.Mainly operating in the Black Sea and Mediterranean region, the vessel last year made three voyages where its transponders were turned off. After a time they were turned back near Cyprus, according to data from marine platform Sea/.Photos from Planet Labs, a satellite photography platform, appear to show the Razoni calling at Syrian ports during the times it went dark. Trading grain and food with Syria does not contravene western sanctions imposed on the Damascus regime over the country’s long-running civil war. But some vessels avoid openly sailing to the country because of the stipulations of financial institutions, according to grain traders.Questions have also been raised about the Razoni’s insurance. It has no entry in the ship search provided by the International Group of P&I Clubs, a group of 13 mutually owner insurers that provide liability cover for around 90 per cent of the world’s ocean-going tonnage. The list shows which ship is covered by which insurer and is regularly updated, according to a person familiar with the matter. Many ports will not allow vessels to enter if they have no liability cover.Earlier this week, Frederick Kenney, interim co-ordinator for the UN at the JCC, said the organisation was not responsible for checking ship ownership. “We are not serving as a port state control authority,” he said, adding that this was a role for the flag state of the vessel and the countries in which ports were located.The JCC says its role is to ensure the safe passage of vessels carrying Ukrainian food exports between the grain corridor and Istanbul and to check whether vessels had any unauthorised crew or cargo. “We are not involved in conducting food inspection, this is not part of the agreement,” said an official. “We do not monitor where the vessel goes when it departs Istanbul and its destination may change depending on commercial activity that we do not control.” The UN’s aim is to ease the global food crisis by bringing prices down through increasing Ukrainian supplies. The country is the world’s fifth-largest exporter of wheat and a leading supplier of corn and sunflower oil. It accounts for 80 per cent of Lebanon’s wheat imports and is a leading supplier for countries in Africa and the Middle East. Grain prices, including for corn and wheat, have now fallen to prewar levels, partly in anticipation of increased supplies from Ukraine.

    So far 12 vessels, including the Razoni, have set sail from the three Black Sea ports designated under the deal — Odesa, Chornomorsk and Pivdennyi — carrying more than 375,000 tonnes of food commodities, mostly corn. The priority is “to free up space in the Ukrainian ports and get all those vessels frozen there the last few months to leave Ukraine with cargo, so [they] can get new ships in”, said the UN official.Despite the issues with the Razoni voyage, commodities traders using the grain corridor remain optimistic. “It’s a learning curve for everybody. Things will be perfected over time. The Razoni was a leader in getting out of the corridor,” said Gaurav Srivastava, chair of trader Harvest Commodities, which transported corn out of Ukraine on the vessel Riva Wind earlier this week. Many ship owners are reportedly reluctant to send vessels back to Ukraine amid concerns that the war could leave them trapped again. But Srivastava said he would continue to do so. “This is potentially the first step towards having some sort of peace. That as an outsider is the hope,” he said. “That gives us a perspective as a business and that business will get back to normal.” Additional reporting by Ian Smith, Harry Dempsey and Chris Cook in London, Raya Jalabi in Beirut and Ayla Jean Yackley in Istanbul More