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    US adds 528,000 jobs in surprise gain for labour market

    The US economy unexpectedly added 528,000 jobs last month, as payroll growth soared even in the face of tighter monetary policy and waning fiscal support, easing fears of a recession.The data, which showed the unemployment rate edging down to 3.5 per cent from 3.6 per cent, showed an acceleration in the pace of job creation compared to June, when the economy added 398,000 jobs. Economists had expected job growth to slow to 250,000 last month.The data were released by the US labour department at 8.30am eastern time on Friday, and will allay concerns of a downturn in the world’s largest economy just months before midterm elections that will determine control of Congress.Gross domestic product data released last week showed the second consecutive quarterly contraction in output in the US. Economists at the National Bureau of Economic Research — the arbiters of what constitutes a recession in the US — have not said whether a recession is under way, but any big slump in job creation may exacerbate those concerns. Senior Biden administration officials have dismissed worries that the US is already in a recession, saying the economy remains in good shape and is simply in transition to a slower footing after the boom it experienced last year.

    Jay Powell, the Federal Reserve chair, has cautioned against reading too much into the GDP figures and noted that he still thought interest rates could rise further without triggering a painful slump, but has warned that the path to reaching that outcome was getting “narrower”.On Thursday, the US labour department separately released data showing that the number of people applying for unemployment benefits last week reached 260,000, its highest level in more than six months, raising additional alarm bells about the direction of the jobs market. “We’re not in a recession right now. Are the risks of recession going up? Yes,” Loretta Mester, president of the Cleveland Fed, said at an event in Pittsburgh on Thursday. She said she expected interest rates in the US would need to rise to “a bit above four [per cent]” to tame inflation. More

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    Snickers maker apologises for advert suggesting Taiwan is a country

    Videos and pictures of an event promoting a limited edition Snickers bar that was said to be only available in the “countries” of South Korea, Malaysia, and Taiwan went viral on Chinese microblogging platform Weibo (NASDAQ:WB) on Friday.Mars Wrigley on its Snickers China Weibo account published an apology and said the relevant content had been amended. More

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    Sri Lanka considering restructure of local and sovereign debt – president

    COLOMBO (Reuters) – Sri Lanka is considering a restructure of local and sovereign debt, President Ranil Wickremesinghe said on Friday, as the island nation battles its worst financial crisis in its independent history. The country is due to restart bailout talks with the International Monetary Fund (IMF) in August in the hope of securing $3 billion in funding.The government is working with its financial and legal advisers Lazard (NYSE:LAZ) and Clifford Chance to finalise a plan to restructure overseas debt, including about $12 billion owed to bondholders.”Have we got to look at local debt? That has far-reaching consequences,” Wickremesinghe told a conference in Colombo. “The financial advisors are looking at both things.” Sri Lanka’s central bank governor said on July 7 the country would not seek to restructure local debt. The IMF has also previously warned countries of issues restructuring local debt, pointing to the impact on domestic banks. “Restructuring domestic debt is like surgery – you only do it if you must, and you avoid it if it might do more harm than good,” officials at the IMF said in a blog post in December. PROTESTS EASEHit hard by the pandemic, which decimated the vital tourism industry, and by tax cuts pushed through by the government of then-President Gotabaya Rajapaksa, Sri Lanka is experiencing its worst economic crisis since independence from Britain in 1948.Snaking fuel queues and soaring inflation have become the norm for ordinary Sri Lankans. Months of unrest toppled Rajapaksa in July after protesters occupied key government buildings in Colombo.Some protesters began vacating a protest site in the commercial capital Colombo on Friday, despite police declining to enforce an order to remove them.Lawyers for the government told the Supreme Court on Friday it would not seek to remove protesters from the site – known as Gota Go Gama, or village, in mocking tribute to Rajapaksa – until Aug. 10, a lawyer involved in the hearing told Reuters. Police had earlier given protesters until 5 p.m. (1130 GMT) on Friday to vacate the site. Some protesters, however, were seen taking down tents at the site, opposite the country’s Presidential Secretariat, ahead of the Supreme Court decision. “We are not dismantling because of the police order,” Gayan Madushanka, a 26-year-old protester, told Reuters. “For the moment we are leaving this place to continue the struggle which took place all over the country. The struggle will not end.” More

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    Analysis-East Europe's party is over as double-digit inflation bites

    ESZTERGOM, Hungary (Reuters) – In the weeks that followed Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, western Europe’s big economies began to falter. But further east it was still boom-time thanks to double-digit wage hikes and generous state handouts in some countries.Not any more.A sharp slowdown in retail sales and plunging confidence indicators show that the cost of living crisis has caught up with Europe’s eastern wing, where people now face a harsh reality check as stubborn double-digit inflation erodes their incomes while food price rises top 15%-22% and energy costs soar.As household consumption takes a hit, analysts are downgrading their GDP forecasts and the risk of a Europe-wide recession looms.Families have started to tighten their belts. Poles are taking shorter holidays, Czechs are saving on restaurant bills while some seek second jobs, and in Hungary – where food inflation alone was an annual 22.1% in June – people are cutting down on grocery bills and purchases of consumer durables as a slide in the forint currency pushes up import prices.”I went into the bakery one day and a loaf of bread cost 550 forints. I go in the next day and it costs 650. For God’s sake!”, exclaimed Lajos, a 73-year-old man shopping at a market in the northern city of Esztergom on the Danube river. Standing by his bicycle, grey-bearded Lajos, who did not give his family name, said the surge in food prices had consumed some of his monthly pension and he would not be able to pay higher utility bills, which will rise after the government last month scrapped price caps for what it called higher-usage households.So he is making his own plans.”I can heat with gas but also wood … as I have a tile-stove. So with my wife we will move into one room, heat up the stove, put on some warm sweaters and watch TV like that.”Across Hungary, retail sales growth slowed to an annual 4.5% in June from 10.9% in May, with furniture and electronic goods sales down by 4.3%, suggesting the impact of huge tax breaks and fiscal transfers from Prime Minister Viktor Orban’s government before April’s elections has now faded. Polish retail sales growth also slowed to an annual 3.2% in June from 8.2% in May, while Czech adjusted retail sales excluding cars and motorcycles dropped by 6.0% year-on-year in June after a fall of 6.6% in May, data showed on Friday.”Households have reacted to the rising cost of living in a meaningful way, and the consumption of things has started to slow,” said Peter Virovacz, an analyst at ING in Budapest.According to a survey by the National Bank of Hungary on Friday, commercial banks expect demand for loans to decline and credit conditions to tighten in the second half.BELT-TIGHTENINGThe slowdown in domestic demand, rising interest rates, government spending cuts and companies’ rising costs look set to dampen economic growth in Central Europe in the second half of this year and slow them down sharply in 2023. Citigroup (NYSE:C) said Hungary’s economy could grow by close to 5% in 2022 but that there were downside risks to its 1% forecast for next year. “The risk of prolonged high energy prices keeping inflation in double-digit territory even in 2023 and our updated Euro Area in-house forecasts point towards downside risks,” it said.The Hungarian central bank still projects 2.0%-3.0% growth for 2023, and it will release new forecasts in September. The Polish economy is expected to grow by 3.8% this year and 3.2% in 2023, according to government projections.The Czech central bank, the first to call a halt to its rate-hike cycle on Thursday, predicts recession at the turn of the year as it sees the economy contracting 0.4% in the fourth quarter of 2022 and 1% in the first quarter of 2023.”Our base scenario includes a mild recession – a technical recession – we have two quarters in a row with a quarterly decline there… That would be a healthy recession, which also allows for cutting inflation,” Governor Ales Michl said. While the summer is still expected to see a boom in the tourism sector, Poles have started to save on trips according to travel website Noclegi.pl.”We can see that what characterizes this season is the shortening of trips, on average by one day, and postponing the booking until the last moment,” said Natalia Jaworska, an expert at Noclegi.pl. Poles have also begun to save on food.Data from various restaurant payment services, like Sodexo (EPA:EXHO), have shown falling spending in restaurants in the Czech Republic as well. The STEM polling agency’s latest survey in June found 80% of Czech households were cutting back or limiting their purchases because of fast-rising energy bills.Czech consumer confidence hit a new low in July, according to the statistics office’s monthly survey, while a survey by think-tank GKI showed the Hungarian consumer confidence index in July plunged to its lowest level since April 2020 during the first wave of the COVID-19 pandemic.Martin Hulovec, a 43-year-old Czech film producer, said he was not worried about his income right now, but he was less optimistic about the future.”The hard times have not arrived yet for me to deal with it immediately… but it will come,” Hulovec said.”I will certainly seek more energy savings… I will definitely not buy new stuff for the kids, clothing or sport equipment. You can find that secondhand for half the price.”And he too will be switching on the heating less when winter comes. (Reporting and writing by Krisztina Than, Addditional repoting by Jason Hovet and Robert Muller in Prague, and Anna Wlodarczak-Semczuk in Warsaw, Editing by Hugh Lawson) More

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    Binance Teams Up With Mastercard To Release Crypto Card In Argentina

    Argentina is set to become the first country in Latin America to gain access to the Binance Mastercard. The news was announced in a press release made by Binance on August 4th, as the company aims to attain rapid crypto adoption in retail ‘in a tangible way’.With the card in the process of being launched, Binance users in Argentina that have completed verification with the Documento Nacional de Identidad will have the ability to apply. The service will allow customers to pay in any shop using Bitcoin (BTC), Binance Coin (BNB), or one of a selection of popular stablecoins. Binance has yet to provide a full list of the available Altcoins eligible to be used with the new crypto card.Indeed, peace of mind for crypto enthusiasts shall arrive together with 8% cashback in eligible stores. Furthermore, the Argentina Binance Card will enable users to withdraw funds from any Mastercard supported ATM in the country with zero fees. As General Manager of Binance Latin America Maximiliano Hinz explained: “We believe the Binance Card is a significant step in encouraging wider crypto use and global adoption”.Latin America Has Huge Potential as a Crypto HubThe technology behind the Binance Mastercard automatically converts cryptocurrency to fiat in real time for each transaction made, so merchants won’t have to worry about the trademark volatility of cryptocurrencies. Crypto entities appear to view Latin America as the ideal region to test out crypto-related products, and Binance plans to continue its expansion into the region.Just last week, Honduras announced the ‘Bitcoin Valley’ in Santa Lucia in a bid to attract tourists and accelerate the adoption of crypto. Furthermore, El Salvador has forged a reputation as a loyal ambassador of blockchain technology, and was the first country to introduce Bitcoin (BTC) as legal tender. On top of this, the rise in demand for cryptocurrencies in Brazil has risen beyond all expectations, with fresh start-ups in the country, like Nubank, attaining milestones far sooner than expected.Why You Should CareLatin America has a high level of demand for crypto, as many of the regions citizens are unbanked, and lack infrastructure or economic stability. Binance is among the biggest players in the crypto game, and is looking to provide the necessary infrastructure to facilitate smooth adoption in the region.For more about the Bitcoin Valley, read: Bitcoin (BTC) Valley in Santa Lucia, HondurasFind out about El Salvador’s development in:El Salvador’s debt buybackVolcano BTC bonds launchSantander (BME:SAN) has taken an interest in Latin America. Read more in:Santander’s entrance into the Brazilian crypto marketContinue reading on DailyCoin More

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    Binance and Mastercard will launch prepaid crypto cards in Argentina

    In a Thursday announcement, Binance said the card will allow its clients in Argentina to use Bitcoin (BTC), BNB and other cryptocurrencies to make purchases as well as ATM withdrawals in fiat wherever Mastercard is accepted — roughly 90 million merchants globally and online. Argentine cardholders can also earn up to 8% back in cryptocurrency from certain purchases.Continue Reading on Coin Telegraph More

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    Voyager Gains Approval To Return $270 Million to Clients, Wall Street Journal Reports

    Judge Michael Wiles, who is overseeing of the Voyager bankruptcy case, ruled that the firm had “sufficient basis” to back up its claim that clients should be given access to the custodial account kept at the Metropolitan Commercial Bank.The Federal Reserve and the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp (FDIC) issued an order to the company last week, directing it to stop making “false and misleading” statements about the government’s protection of its clients’ funds.According to regulators, the company only held a bank account at the Metropolitan Commercial Bank, thereby meaning that none of the investors using its platform were covered by FDIC insurance.Voyager filed for bankruptcy on July 6th, after Three Arrows Capital (3AC) defaulted on a $665M loan. In its bankruptcy filing, Voyager estimated that it had more than 100,000 creditors, totaling between $1 billion and $10 billion in assets, and liabilities to the same value.Voyager is one of several firms including Celsius, BlockFi, and Vauld to have struggled as a result of the crypto market’s widespread turmoil.On the FlipsideWhy You Should CareFor more recent developments on Voyager, check out:Crypto Lender Voyager Digital Files for BankruptcyVoyager Rejects Buyout Offer from FTX Due to “Lowball” AttemptContinue reading on DailyCoin More