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    Plagued with a series of exploits, NFT trading volume tumbles to 12-month lows

    Along with the general cryptocurrency market, coupled with the growing epidemic of NFT exploits, interest in NFTs appear to be on the decline. According to data from prominent NFT trading sites like OpenSea, the NFT market has not been able to maintain the exponential growth it experienced in the 2021 bull market. Trading volumes recently dropped headlong and are already at their lowest levels since July 2021.Pierre Yves Gendron’s Dune data revealed that OpenSea’s trade volume peaked in January at $5.8 billion. The world’s largest NFT trading marketplace has not been able to sustain this growth as sales rapidly decreased throughout Q1 and Q2 of 2022, falling to $3.1 billion in May.June saw the highest decline in the history of OpenSea, falling 74% to $826 million. The exchange has made $456.9 million this July, and with just three days left in the month, the downward trend continues.The daily trade volume for OpenSea shows a more pronounced decline in interest and activity. Throughout May and in the first few days of June, transactions on the trading platform consistently exceeded 150,000 per day, but they have not been able to surpass 75,000 for over a month now.It is obvious that total trade volumes are still declining despite the rising competition in the space. The top two exchanges after OpenSea, X2Y2 and LooksRare, have also seen negative movement in their recent trading volumes.According to statistics provided by cryptuschrist, X2Y2 currently manages about $27 million in daily trading volume, whereas LooksRare sees about $9 million.It is also worth mentioning that there have been allegations of heavy wash trading on both exchanges since they incentivize trading through tokens. Market manipulators typically perform wash transactions in a bid to make a profit from these tokens.Meanwhile, cyber-attacks against NFT collections have been on the rise in 2022. A new TRM Labs research revealed that these exploits cost the NFT community over $22 million in May alone.TRM Labs claims to have received over 100 allegations of Discord channel hacking in the previous two months through its Chainabuse reporting platform. Its investigator Monika Laird said:Continue reading on BTC Peers More

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    Ethereum developers round-up Merge testnet details, ETH surges 14%

    According to the July 27 announcement, Prater, the Goerli version of the Beacon Chain will be merged with the testnet between August 6 and 12 in an upgrade called Paris.However, a prior upgrade called Bellatrix slated to happen on August 4 needs to occur to prepare Prater for the Merge with Goerl. More

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    Royal Caribbean's loss narrows as cruise bookings rebound

    Shares in Royal Caribbean (NYSE:RCL) climbed 5% to $36.64 in premarket trading as the cruise operator also said it returned its entire fleet back to operations.The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention earlier this month stopped reporting coronavirus levels for cruise ships in a move considered the next step toward a full return to normalcy for embattled cruise operators.The industry has been steadily cruising toward full occupancy after a near 18-month shutdown, with demand from loyal patrons proving a silver lining for cruise operators that are dealing with higher fuel prices and record debt levels.Affluent guests have also shrugged off the inflation pinch to splurge on watches and at spas as well as casinos on the ships, partly making up for the blow from cruise operators’ occupancy constraints.The cruise operator’s revenue was $2.18 billion for the second quarter, compared with estimates of $2.11 billion, according to IBES data from Refinitiv.Net loss narrowed to $521.6 million, or $2.05 per share, from $1.35 billion, or $5.29 per share, a year earlier.Excluding one-off charges, Royal Caribbean lost $2.08 per share, smaller than estimates of $2.20.Royal Caribbean still said the spread of COVID-19 in Europe and the Russia-Ukraine war have lowered its occupancy levels on cruises around the continent, which carry higher-than-average ticket prices.The owner of Celebrity Cruises and Silversea Cruises brands forecast total revenue of around $2.9 billion to $3 billion for the third quarter, compared with estimates of $3.03 billion.It also forecast per-share earnings to be between 5 cents and 25 cents for the third quarter, compared with estimates of 92 cents, due to higher fuel and food costs. More

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    Mastercard tops profit estimates on travel spending boom

    Pent-up demand and the easing of COVID-19 curbs have led to the strongest summer travel season in three years, a boon for card companies that can charge more for overseas transactions.Mastercard (NYSE:MA) said cross-border volumes jumped 58% on a local currency basis in the April-June quarter, helping drive up gross dollar volumes on its network by 14% to $2.1 trillion.The surge mirrored similar results at Visa Inc (NYSE:V) and American Express Co (NYSE:AXP), indicating consumers were still spending on travel and other high-end pursuits in the face of decades-high inflation and the threat of a possible recession.”Increasing inflationary pressures have yet to significantly impact overall consumer spending but we will continue to monitor this closely,” Chief Executive Michael Miebach said in a statement. Net revenue jumped 21% to $5.49 billion and was higher than estimates of $5.26 billion, according to Refinitiv IBES data.Mastercard earned a profit of $2.56 per share on an adjusted basis, compared with the $2.36 expected by analysts. The company’s shares rose 1.7% in premarket trading. Operating expenses, excluding one-time costs, were up 9%. More

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    Binance jumps into NFT ticketing after UEFA League fiasco

    In the announcement sent to Cointelegraph, Binance highlighted that NFT tickets will solve the issue of fake tickets and eliminate scalping, preventing disorder in sporting events. Apart from access to events, the NFT tickets will also serve other purposes such as store and match discounts, token giveaways and other experiences with S. S. Lazio. Continue Reading on Coin Telegraph More

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    US enters technical recession after contraction in second-quarter growth

    The US economy fell into a technical recession in the second quarter, with data published by the commerce department on Thursday showing a contraction in the second three months of the year.Gross domestic product fell by 0.9 per cent on an annualised basis in the second quarter, or a 0.2 per cent fall from the previous quarter — the measure used by other major economies. That comes in the wake of first-quarter gross domestic product data showing the US economy shrank by 1.6 per cent.Despite the contraction, personal consumption, which offers insight into the health of the US consumer, grew by 1 per cent, a slowdown compared with 1.8 per cent in the first quarter, but still evidence of strength.The second quarter data was led by weaker business inventory growth. Several retailers have reported their inventories grew unusually rapidly last year, as they restocked their shelves after Covid-19-related supply-chain bottlenecks eased.A technical recession is defined as two consecutive quarters of GDP contraction. However, the US does not use this definition and instead relies on a determination by a group of researchers at the National Bureau of Economic Research, based on a broader range of factors.Nevertheless, two quarters of negative growth in a row could spook markets. Stock market futures were lower and the two-year Treasury yield, which moves with interest rate expectations, plunged. The figures come the day after the Federal Reserve raised interest rates by 0.75 percentage points as part of an aggressive campaign to rein in inflation. The hefty rate increases implemented by the central bank in recent months have begun to slow the economy, and market participants are watching closely to see if this rapid tightening will tip the US into recession.The data are unlikely to change the Fed’s calculus for now, economists say. In his press conference after Wednesday’s policy meeting, chair Jay Powell said he did not believe the US was in a recession and pointed to strength in the economy, including in the labour market.Evidence of a slowdown has yet to appear in US employment data, which is also used by economists to gauge whether a country is in recession. Unemployment is steady at 3.6 per cent, the lowest it has been since before the coronavirus pandemic.“GDP is one measure of economic activity, but as complete as it may seem . . . the labour market is going to be the best gauge as to whether we’re really headed towards a recession and whether businesses are really cutting back on hiring,” said Gregory Daco, an economist at EY-Parthenon.

    “I don’t think the GDP print would or should influence the Fed,” said Eric Winograd, an economist at AllianceBernstein.The Atlanta Fed’s GDPNow forecast, a dynamic estimate of real GDP growth based on the most current economic data, had forecast a contraction of 1.2 per cent. More

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    Gas crisis raises recession risk for inflation-hit eurozone economy

    The eurozone is forecast to eke out growth fractionally above zero in the second quarter, but economists expect a steady deterioration in the bloc’s economy over the next year as recession risks loom. Eurostat’s first estimate of second-quarter gross domestic product, out on Friday, is expected to show an expansion of 0.1 per cent from the previous quarter, according to a poll by Reuters. That marks a sharp deterioration from 0.6 per cent growth over the previous three months and would be the weakest performance since a surge in coronavirus infections and restrictions dragged the bloc into a short recession at the start of 2021.Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in February has sent energy and food prices soaring, eroding the spending power of consumers while threatening to unleash an energy crisis that leaves manufacturers and households short of gas over the coming winter. The European Commission’s consumer confidence survey hit a fresh low in July, with a question asking shoppers about their willingness to make major purchases delivering the most downbeat response since April 2020. Political instability in Italy ahead of elections in September adds to concerns about the bloc’s outlook. “It is like watching a car crash in the making, a slow-burn crisis,” said Katharina Utermöhl, senior European economist at German insurer Allianz. “Unlike in the pandemic, there is unlikely to be a marked rebound next year.” One bright spot is tourism and hospitality. The eurozone economy is likely to get a boost from more people taking advantage of reduced coronavirus restrictions to go on holiday or eat out in restaurants this summer, as they spend some of the extra money they saved during the pandemic. But this boost is likely to be muffled by growing household anxiety over the higher cost of living. Most eurozone consumers are feeling the pinch because their pay has not kept pace with inflation, now at a record high of 8.6 per cent, leaving them worse off.“We are only forecasting a small boost to growth from tourism, travel and accommodation this summer as the real income squeeze gains pace, dampening consumers’ discretionary spending,” said Veronika Roharova, head of developed Europe economics at Credit Suisse.Russian energy group Gazprom said this week that flows through its main Nord Stream 1 pipeline to Germany had been halved to about one-fifth of their normal levels from Wednesday because of maintenance, intensifying concerns that Moscow is weaponising energy supplies to Europe. European gas prices jumped 30 per cent in the first two days of this week. They have risen nine-fold in the past year.A prolonged reduction in Russian gas flows to Europe could leave the region unable to fill its storage facilities sufficiently before this winter’s heating season, forcing supplies to be rationed for heavy industrial users.A complete cessation of flows “could force energy rationing, affecting major industrial sectors, and sharply reduce growth in the euro area in 2022 and 2023”, the IMF warned on Tuesday as it slashed its forecast for German growth next year by 1.9 percentage points to 0.8 per cent, the biggest downgrade of any country. Without a shut-off, the fund expects the eurozone to grow 2.6 per cent this year and 1.2 per cent next year.The EU has set a target for most countries to cut gas usage by 15 per cent. The German government this week urged households and companies to save even more and Berlin plans to let energy companies pass on 90 per cent of their higher costs to customers. “We are in a serious situation,” said Robert Habeck, Germany’s economy minister. “It’s about time that everyone understood that.” Government measures to cut fuel, electricity and public transport prices are likely to have kept a lid on inflation. But consumer prices are still expected to have risen to a new eurozone record of 8.7 per cent in July in Eurostat figures published on Friday.Higher prices have been blamed for a string of gloomy economic data. These include the first fall in eurozone business activity for 17 months, as indicated by S&P Global’s latest survey of purchasing managers, and the drop in German business confidence to a two-year low, as measured by the Ifo think-tank’s monthly survey.Meanwhile, consumer confidence fell to a record low this month, according to the European Commission’s monthly survey. Banks are also squeezing the supply of loans to eurozone households and businesses — a trend that is likely to accelerate after the European Central Bank raised interest rates for the first time in more than a decade last week. The worsening outlook has already prompted investors to bet the ECB will stop raising rates much earlier than they had expected only a few months ago.

    Germany’s 10-year bond yield — a benchmark for eurozone interest rates — on Tuesday dropped below 1 per cent for the first time since May after falling from last month’s eight-year peak of 1.77 per cent.“The window of opportunity for the ECB to keep raising rates is closing as the economy is weakening,” said Spyros Andreopoulos, senior European economist at French bank BNP Paribas. The nightmare scenario for the ECB and governments alike would be stagflation, with an interruption to Russian gas supplies sending the eurozone into recession while the energy crisis and a weaker euro continue driving prices even higher. On Wednesday, Goldman Sachs downgraded its forecast for the region, saying a technical recession of two straight quarters of negative growth this year was now more likely to happen than not, even if Russia did not completely cut off energy supplies. A sharper downturn was likely “in the event of an even more severe disruption of gas flows, a renewed period of sovereign stress or a US recession”.Credit Suisse’s Roharova predicted eurozone GDP would fall between 1 and 2 per cent next year if Russian gas was cut off, while inflation would remain well above the ECB’s 2 per cent target for at least another year. “It is possible that inflation remains elevated or falls only gradually even as growth weakens,” she said.Additional reporting by Delphine Strauss More

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    Made in Britain: Broken supply lines drive manufacturing back home

    BIRMINGHAM, England (Reuters) – In central England, birthplace of the industrial revolution, factories are buzzing anew, hammering out parts for cars, planes and medical machines that used to be made in Asia.After two years of global supply-chain disruption, and with dark clouds on the horizon, manufacturers around Britain’s second city of Birmingham say they are inundated with orders, helped by new and old domestic clients bringing some production back home. For decades, supplier decisions were based largely on price. But the pandemic and mounting geopolitical tensions have undermined the mass outsourcing model, prompting some buyers to build alternative production lines nearer to home, despite it being a lengthy process that can drive costs higher. In Britain, this “reshoring” trend is also being driven by the introduction of full border checks following the country’s exit from the European Union. “It takes a bit of a seismic shock to make companies re-evaluate strategy,” manufacturing boss Tony Hague said. “But price becomes fairly irrelevant if you can’t get the stuff.” In the last two years, his PP Control & Automation, located just north of Birmingham, has won more than 2 million pounds’ ($2.4 million) worth of work that had previously been handled outside Britain, and its order book is up 25% in that time. A survey by industry group Make UK of 132 companies, conducted just before Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, showed that over two-fifths had increased their British supply base, with almost a fifth describing it as a “significant re-routing”. This shift could prove significant in Britain, where the collapse of heavy manufacturing from the late 1970s onwards eroded many skills among the workforce, a gap that’s starting to be filled by robotics, automation and 3D printing. Such reshoring and nearshoring, or bringing production to countries closer to home, is being replicated around the world – though without the complexities of Brexit – in a burgeoning trend that could impact local jobs and economies, as well as the environment. A survey of more than 1,500 global supply chain leaders by AI group Interos, in the first quarter of 2022, found that more than half said they planned to bring suppliers closer to their operations. Freight giant XPO Logistics (NYSE:XPO) told Reuters it was also seeing clients in textiles and automotive move some production from Asia to Morocco, and to Eastern Europe. Nonetheless, while orders may be flowing into British factories, many manufacturers face their own supply-chain disruptions of varying degrees in their procurement of raw materials and parts from abroad, slowing their production.There are perils involved in the costly and time-consuming process of investing in new machinery, finding new suppliers for materials and building out logistics chains, all with a potential recession on the horizon. In an effort to mitigate some of these risks, and protect against a reversal of fortunes should the global disruption subside, some British manufacturers are locking clients into multi-year contracts to justify hiring and investment costs. NO PARTS? NO CARSRowan Crozier at precision-stamping group Brandauer in Birmingham said new customers wanted to de-risk operations. With his order books for tools having doubled over the past two years, he has opened a second site and is getting his biggest clients to agree to five-year to six-year contracts.While in previous years he could not compete with Chinese factories that could churn out products at speed, he says investment in automation, robotics and staff training has changed the dynamic. He says he can now manufacture a high precision progression stamping tool – used to produce electrical connectors which go into printed circuit boards – in-house for around 5-15% above the prices of quality Chinese toolmakers. Six years ago the price gap was nearer to 30-50%. Ten miles away, Tony Sartorius’ Alucast is also receiving calls from customers who moved their production to India, China and Korea in the early 2000s, asking if he can help. He too insists on long-term contracts. “From the back end of the 90s and up until fairly recently, price has been the driving force,” he said. “But if you don’t get your parts, you don’t make your cars, and that’s damaging.”There are certain companies that have always sought to keep their manufacturing in Britain, typically makers of premium and niche products. Pashley Cycles, which produces classic English bicycles that can cost about 1,000 pounds, as well as cargo delivery bikes and cycles for city share schemes such as in London, was less affected than others during the pandemic as it sourced and manufactured so many of its products at home. Pashley’s Managing Director Adrian Williams said he was met with bemusement in years gone by when he tried to buy parts from local factories, which would ask why he was coming to them and didn’t just buy abroad like everyone else. Now, he adds, there is increasing collaboration in the region. OPPORTUNITY KNOCKSPashley and several Birmingham factories work with non-profit organisations such as WMG, an academic department of the University of Warwick, and the Silverstone Technology Cluster, which promotes advanced engineering. Pashley sources parts developed in Britain’s aerospace industry and other high-end sectors. Mark Godfrey-Vallance, principal engineer at WMG, which links suppliers with customers and promotes innovation, said the creation of new supply chains to build products like electric vehicles was also driving a spirit of collaboration. “The opportunities are there and if we don’t grab them in the UK, I can guarantee that people elsewhere will,” he said. John Glen at the Chartered Institute of Procurement & Supply, a global industry body, said European manufacturers had a window to prove they could compete with lower-cost rivals in Asia while the global movement of goods remained fractured. But, as a worldwide economic storm brews, and the prospect remains that supply chains could recover, manufacturers in Britain could be burnt if they don’t secure long-term contracts. For now, though, the mood remains buoyant. UK order books surged between November last year and May this year, before easing slightly in June and July, according to data from the Confederation of British Industry. Although the reshoring of some production is unlikely to increase manufacturing’s input to the British economy from its current 10%, it could boost productivity in a country that has badly lagged on that front since the financial crash of 2007-09.As Hague of PP Control & Automation walked around the busy floor of his factory, which employs 230 people, he said higher labour costs in Britain did not preclude staying competitive. Wages are only one component of the overall cost of a product, with other factors including materials and energy, he added. “If you invest in your people, invest in training, invest in automation, invest in robotics, do all the right things, basically as a UK manufacturer, you can be competitive,” he said. ($1 = 0.8241 pounds) More