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    UAE to Launch World’s First Hospital in the Metaverse

    Metaverse HospitalAugmented reality and virtual reality metaverse technologies will serve to create immersive remote consultations with doctors. Thumbay Group executives believe it will also help health tourism, as the prospective patients can check the facilities before choosing the health provider.”We are already working on it and expect it to launch before October this year. This will be a complete virtual hospital where people will come with an avatar and consult with the doctor. To cater to medical tourism, we will allow patients to see what the hospital looks like in the metaverse if they travel and come to Thumbay healthcare facility,” said Dr. Thumbay Moideen, founder and president of Thumbay Group.
    Virtual reality in the health system can become a way for long-term care patients or people with permanent disabilities to experience the surrounding world. Moideen explained that by giving patients AR and VR headsets, health workers can help the patient to feel at home.”For example, a Sri Lankan person has been with us for a long period of time who was paralyzed after a car accident, and all of his sensory motions are gone, but only his brain is functioning.He can experience and virtually visit his room in Sri Lanka through AR and VAR technology. This motivates long-term care patients and gives them hope that they can go back to their country.”Adoption of Hitech in HealthcareThe UAE’s public and private sectors are seeing massive adoption of the metaverse. Last January, the UAE Ministry of Health and Community Protection (MOHAP) launched the healthcare customer service center in the metaverse.In the MetaHealth environment, customers can request information, submit documents, pay fees, and chat with real people, with the real faces of users being displayed in the virtual room instead of avatars.Apart from embracing the metaverse, Akbar Moideen Thumbay, vice-president of Thumbay Group, said the group is integrating artificial intelligence into their hospital system. Using VR technology and cameras, it will be possible to identify the patient from the car number plate and the face.”When a patient arrives at the reception, his file is already open. The process of showing identity or insurance card will be eliminated. This will be implemented throughout the Thumbay university hospital. If a patient goes to the pharmacy, cameras will recognize his face, and the system will indicate to the pharmacist that the patient has come to collect his medicine,” he added.Continue reading on DailyCoin More

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    MATIC Could Crash 20% To Revisit The $0.381 Support Level

    Polygon (MATIC) has been recovering extremely well over the last three weeks which suggests that the crypto has some bullish momentum. On the other hand, it is still important to acknowledge the fact that things could turn sour again for MATIC with liquidity sweeps followed by a reversal.MATIC recently saw a 33% retracement after a 100% upswing that was triggered on June 18. The pullback happened after MATIC formed three equal highs at $0.626. The correction then stabilized at the $0.477 support level.Currently, market makers have been successful in pushing the price of MATIC up by 43% in an attempt to collect the buy-stop liquidity just above the $0.626 level, but this run-up is experiencing some resistance at the $0.595 level.While market makers have been doing a good job at pushing the MATIC price higher, a reversal could still be in the cards. The equal highs that formed around $0.595 can be seen as a double top formation that could signal the end of MATIC’s uptrend.The upside for MATIC is capped around the $0.626 level either way. The only way for MATIC to retest the $0.686 resistance barrier is a four-hour candlestick close that flips the hurdle into a support level.
    MATIC / USDT 4-hour chart (Source: FXStreet)On the other hand, if MATIC were to close a four-hour candlestick below the $0.477 support level, it could flip the resistance barrier and invalidate the bullish thesis.If this were the case, MATIC could crash 20% to revisit the weekly support level at $0.381.According to CoinMarketCap, MATIC is trading at $0.5775 after an 11.35% increase in price over the last 24 hours.Disclaimer: The views and opinions expressed in this article are solely the author’s and do not necessarily reflect the views of CoinQuora. No information in this article should be interpreted as investment advice. CoinQuora encourages all users to do their own research before investing in cryptocurrenciesContinue reading on CoinQuora More

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    ETH Price Action Suggests Possibility of Reaching $1,400

    Things for Ethereum (ETH) have been looking a lot better after the crypto hit a recent low below $1,000.From a technical analysis view, bulls have been successful in pushing ETH’s price higher after it fell below the $1,000 point. Currently, ETH is trading over $1,300 and it seems like bulls are ready to push the price even higher.
    Ethereum / TetherUS 1D (Source: TradingView)Looking at ETH’s chart, the ETH/USD pair has formed a bullish flag pattern and is currently trading just below the upper bound of the flag. If ETH’s price were to break through this level, it is very possible that the price could move toward $1,300 in the short term.The RSI on the chart is currently at 48.25. This could indicate that there is some room for upside in the near term. ETH’s support currently lies at $1160 and the resistance lies at $1280.ETH’s MACD is currently in the bullish zone and is steadily gaining more momentum. If the price of ETH were to break through above the $1,300 level, it is very possible for a strong rally toward $1,400 to occur.According to CoinMarketCap, ETH is currently worth $1,244.04 after a 6.59% increase in price over the last day and after reaching a high of $1,262.89. The crypto is also up 17.61% over the last seven days.ETH’s 24-hour trading volume is also up 14.26% and is currently standing at $15,653,869,190.Disclaimer: The views and opinions expressed in this article are solely the author’s and do not necessarily reflect the views of CoinQuora. No information in this article should be interpreted as investment advice. CoinQuora encourages all users to do their own research before investing in cryptocurrenciesContinue reading on CoinQuora More

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    Uncomfortable echoes of the 1970s

    We are going back to the 1970s — a relentlessly awful decade. This is becoming a consensus view in the investment community — and one that will only gain steam now there may be a crisis election à la 1974 — the one which gave us a hung parliament.But look a little closer at the seventies and you will see nothing was relentless — or, for that matter, consistent. The US and UK economies were neither mired in recession nor caught in a nonstop boom, but chopped and changed between the two.It was almost always too hot or too cold. Never just right. You can see that in UK GDP (growth ranged from well over 6 per cent to -2.5 per cent), in inflation (6 per cent to 25 per cent) and of course in house prices — booming into 1973, falling in real terms between 1975 to 1977 and booming again into 1978.You can also see this volatility — and perhaps its cause — in the confused monetary policy in both countries. In the US, Arthur Burns, chair of the Federal Reserve from 1970 to 1978, has come in for a lot of stick for keeping rates too low to prevent inflation.But during his tenure interest rates were generally slightly positive in real terms, that is higher than inflation. You don’t see much of that these days. And in the early 1970s he was at least clear that to “let there be no mistaking our determination on this” when it came to inflation. But there was mistaking. By 1974 his determination was wobbling, and as unemployment began to soar he backed off. This was something, Argonaut fund manager Barry Norris points out, that he later blamed on being “caught up in the philosophical and political currents that were transforming American life and culture” — that is on having priorities beyond inflation.The stop-go cycles came to an end in the UK with Margaret Thatcher’s government raising UK interest rates to 17 per cent and in the US with Paul Volcker taking interest rates to near 20 per cent. But it is worth noting that even Volcker’s first year was not great. Rates went up to 13 per cent and then to 20 per cent — but soon they were back down to 9.5 per cent even as inflation headed back to 14 per cent. Even the great slayer of inflation needed a little practice. Still, one false start on and he had the hang of it, so much so that by late 1981, car dealers were sending him coffins stuffed with the keys of unsold vehicles and he required his own security guard.The point is that the 1970s were not easy to manage. Supply crunches meant it didn’t take much for rising demand to cause inflation but fall-offs in demand quickly led to recession — which led to the too-fast loosening of monetary policy and then more inflation.Central banks could have ended the cycle earlier by forcing severe recession. But, worried about unemployment and inequality, they didn’t want to. Sound familiar? It should. We are very probably entering a similar age of volatility — in central banking thinking, inflation, interest rates and markets.

    And so to your holiday reading. Your first port of call must be The Price of Time: the Real Story of Interest, by Edward Chancellor. This is not short, which goes against my usual policy — temporarily abandoned during lockdown — of suggesting the lightest books possible.I’m abandoning this approach for one more year — and hopefully one more year only — for the simple reason that on current airport performance there is an excellent chance that you will be waiting a long time to go nowhere this summer. You’ll thank me for your 400-page hardback when WHSmith has closed and you are on your 14th hour of waiting for BA to give up and cancel your flight. The benefits of its size aside, this is the best and most entertaining explanation there is of the history of the only number that really matters in finance — and by extension most other things. And of how much you have to pay to borrow money — or as 18th century economist Ferdinando Galiani described it, the “price of anxiety”.The answer in much of the 1970s — and in pretty much every moment of the last decade has been “not enough.” Which is why the chief executive of Sainsbury’s was caught singing — not quite under his breath — “We’re in the money/Come on my honey/Let’s lend it, spend it, send it rolling along” as he prepared to borrow a vast pile of money for almost nothing to buy a rival in 2018. It’s why cryptocurrencies exist, why growth stocks went to the moon and back and, well, why we are where we are. “We are not thinking about raising rates. We are not even thinking about thinking about raising rates,” Chancellor quotes Jay Powell as saying in the summer of 2020. If only he had.

    On the subject of how we got here, if you have not already, you should read Alasdair Nairn’s The End of the Everything Bubble. You might think it is a bit late — and, yes, you should have read it last year given Nairn’s rather good record of analysing these things — but it is still worth it for a full understanding of quite how the markets got so carried away — and a hint or two as to what you might do next. “Create a liquidity reserve,” he says, for within the volatility there will be opportunities.

    Back to stop and go — with global stocks sticking in bear market territory and recession ahead, it is going to be hard for central banks not to be a bit like Burns and not to stop raising rates a bit too early and start the whole thing all over again.What might it feel like? Some readers will remember the 1970s. Those that don’t should turn to two lovely books on the matter, Crisis? What Crisis? Britain in the 1970s by Alwyn W. Turner and State of Emergency: The Way We Were 1970- 1974 by Dominic Sandbrook.

    The latter is worth more than a skim (this is rare in non-fiction books) for its detail of reminders about how almost nothing is new: turn to chapter five for a reminder of the way in which the TV programme The Survivors reflected the “eco catastrophism” of the time with the story of how the escape of a deadly virus from a Chinese lab caused a global pandemic and precipitated total economic collapse.Then to chapter 16 for the story of the crisis election of 1974 and the hung parliament that resulted — under the circumstances maybe read this chapter first.Next up, a small back-up volume for your bag. A Scottish referendum on breaking up the UK is rather less likely than a crisis election for all of the UK — and even if a way were found for the SNP to overcome the wishes of Scotland’s majority and hold one, a win for the nationalists is very unlikely indeed.However, either way, the nasty rows on the matter are coming back as part of the general round of political volatility you can expect to stick with us for some time, so you might as well have some sense of what really matters.

    With that in mind, Tom Miers’ The Bargain is a good read. It lays out the economic evidence showing that being in the UK is materially good for Scotland — very good — and looks at the political and cultural reasons why we belong together. The book calls for a change in approach. To pretend, says Miers, that “independence is cost free, as the current nationalist leadership does, is simply dishonest”. A little more honesty all round might not hurt.Merryn Somerset Webb is editor-in-chief of MoneyWeek. The views expressed are personal. [email protected] More

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    BOJ to raise inflation forecast, but keep dovish bias on global slowdown risk

    TOKYO (Reuters) -The Bank of Japan is expected to raise its inflation forecast but maintain ultra-low interest rates at this month’s policy meeting, sources say, as fears of a U.S. recession and rising input costs cloud the outlook for its fragile economic recovery.In a quarterly report due at the July 20-21 meeting, the BOJ is likely to project core consumer inflation will slightly exceed its 2% target in the current fiscal year ending in March 2023, up from the present forecast of 1.9% made in April, the sources say.It may also offer a more upbeat view on inflation expectations compared with the current assessment that they are “rising mainly in the short-term horizon,” they say.But with inflation still much more modest than in Western nations, the BOJ sees little need to tweak its dovish policy guidance that keeps it an outlier among a global wave of central banks which are raising rates, say three sources familiar with its thinking.”Price rises are broadening and inflation expectations are heightening. But economic uncertainty is very high,” said one of the sources, a view echoed by a second source.”What’s important is for wages and services prices to rise more, which will largely depend on the strength of the economy going forward,” a third source said.The BOJ is expected to project core consumer inflation will slow to around 1% in fiscal 2023 as the effect of rising fuel costs dissipate, the sources said.The central bank is set to cut this fiscal year’s economic growth forecast from the current 2.9%, mostly reflecting the hit to output from supply disruptions caused by China’s strict COVID-19 lockdowns, they said.Analysts polled by Reuters expect Japan’s economy to expand 2.2%, and core consumer inflation to hit 2.1%, in the current fiscal year.Core consumer inflation hit 2.1% in May from a year earlier, matching a seven-year high hit in April, due largely to rising fuel and imported raw material costs.Recent surveys have shown household and corporate inflation expectations are heightening, with firms projecting inflation to stay around 2% for years to come. But BOJ Governor Haruhiko Kuroda has said such cost-push inflation will not prod the central bank to withdraw monetary stimulus, unless wages and inflation expectations rise more.At this month’s policy meeting, the BOJ is set to keep unchanged its -0.1% target for short-term rates and that for the 10-year bond yield around 0% as it focuses on supporting the tepid economy.Japan has lagged other major economies in emerging from the pandemic’s hit, with consumption only just beginning to pick up after restrictions on economic activity were lifted.A renewed increase in domestic COVID-19 cases is a cause of concern for policymakers, who are clinging to hopes that consumers will boost spending during the summer by tapping savings accumulated during the pandemic.While the BOJ will roughly maintain its view the economy will continue to recover, it will warn of heightening risks such as slowing global growth and the potential hit to consumption from rising living costs, the sources said. More

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    Japan's household spending slips for third straight month

    TOKYO (Reuters) – Japan’s household spending posted a surprise drop in May, falling for the third consecutive month in a worrying sign for the long-term outlook of the world’s third-largest economy.Spending slipped 0.5% in May from a year earlier, government data showed on Friday, dragged down by lower expenditure on vegetables as well as cars, where supplies have been hit by chip shortages and supply chain disruption.The data, which was much weaker than the median estimate for a 2.1% increase in a Reuters poll, showed people dialled back on spending on vegetables to eat at home, while loosening their purse-strings on services such as eating out.Spending also dropped from the previous month, falling 1.9%, weaker than a forecast 0.8% rise.Policymakers have been worried about growing pressure on households which are facing surging prices of food and other daily essentials as well as higher costs of utilities such as electricity.Elderly people such as 76-year-old Mieko Inoue, a pensioner who lives by herself in Tokyo, pointed to Russia’s military campaign in Ukraine as leading to the higher cost of goods in Japan, saying the government is not to blame.”I was already refraining from buying clothes,” Inoue told Reuters on Wednesday, adding she remained hesitant to eat out with friends out of fear of COVID-19.Her case shows it may take time for consumer activity and spending in Japan to fully recover to their levels seen before the coronavirus pandemic.Japan’s economy is projected to rebound on stronger consumption in the second quarter following contraction in January-March.But risks such as the hit manufacturers are taking from China’s COVID-19 curbs and pressure from high raw material and energy prices are clouding the economic outlook. More

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    Reddit announces new blockchain-backed ‘Collectible Avatars’

    Collectible Avatars are a set of limited-edition artwork created by independent artists who are also users of the Reddit website. The new avatars can be purchased with local currencies, however the announcement stated the artwork is stored on the Polygon (MATIC) blockchain. In addition, management of the Collectible Avatars is handled through Vault, Reddit’s blockchain-powered wallet that functions on Ethereum-compatible chains.Continue Reading on Coin Telegraph More