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    Czech finance minister seeks to keep 2022 budget deficit below $14.1 billion

    The war in Ukraine has led to a downturn in growth in the central European country, as well as more spending on defence and aid for hundreds of thousands of refugees. Fast-rising energy bills are also pushing the government to seeks ways to aid households and companies, costing tens of billions.Stanjura is set to put forward an amended budget next month that he has already said would push the deficit above 300 billion crowns, from a planned 280 billion crown gap.Asked on Czech Television’s Sunday debate show whether a budget gap of around 330 billion was likely, Stanjura said: “I will try so that the deficit will be as low as it can be, and that it will be below 330 billion.”After taking power in December, the centre-right government pledged to cut deficits fuelled by pandemic spending and wage and pension hikes by the previous administration.The deficit hit a record 420 billion crowns in 2021, pushing the overall fiscal gap to 5.9% of gross domestic product, almost twice the European Union-mandated ceiling of 3%.Stanjura told Reuters this month he aimed to keep the 2023 budget deficit target below this year’s original plan and bring the fiscal gap within EU limits by 2024.($1 = 23.4240 Czech crowns) More

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    G7 aims to hurt Russia with price cap on oil exports

    G7 leaders meeting for a summit in the Bavarian Alps on Sunday are seeking a deal to impose a “price cap” on Russian oil as the group works to curb Russia’s ability to finance its four-month war in Ukraine.The goal would be for a broad range of countries going beyond the G7 to impose a ceiling on the price paid for Russian oil in order to limit the benefit to the Kremlin war machine of the soaring crude price. It would also cushion the impact of higher energy prices on western economies. The idea has been strongly promoted by the US. Although Germany has long had reservations about it, recent comments by German officials suggest that Berlin is coming around to the idea. Charles Michel, the president of the European Council, said leaders would discuss the oil price cap in the hours ahead, stressing the need for a “clear vision” and awareness of the possible knock-on effects. Such a deal would require the support of all 27 EU member states and officials would need to resolve difficult questions about how it would work and fit in with US, British, European and Japanese sanctions regimes.The EU in May agreed to a phased-in ban on seaborne Russian oil shipments, while permitting temporary carve outs for crude delivered via pipeline. The measures are expected to cut Russian oil exports to the EU by 90 per cent by the end of this year.The G7 leaders are meeting as the fallout from the war in Ukraine casts an ever-larger shadow over the global economy. The blockade of Ukrainian ports has pushed up food prices and Russia’s decision to cut gas supplies to Europe is threatening an energy crunch.As inflation soars and central banks respond with more aggressive interest rate rises than markets expected, economists across the world are downgrading their growth forecasts with some even warning of recession. The meeting, in the luxury Bavarian resort of Schloss Elmau, is being hosted by German chancellor Olaf Scholz. He has been joined by the leaders of the US, UK, France, Italy, Japan and Canada. Argentina, South Africa, Senegal, Indonesia and India have been invited as “partner” countries.G7 leaders announced on Sunday that they would ban imports of Russian gold, part of efforts to ratchet up sanctions against Moscow. “We need to starve the Putin regime of its funding,” said UK prime minister Boris Johnson. “The UK and our allies are doing just that.”A German official said that on Ukraine the G7 would aim to convey a “message of unity” and “signal support” for Kyiv. Ukraine’s president Volodymyr Zelenskyy will join the summit by video link on Monday.Johnson on Sunday reiterated the need to maintain consensus in the face of Russian aggression in Ukraine, warning that there could be “fatigue” among “populations and politicians”.Questioned on whether he was concerned about support for Ukraine weakening, Johnson replied: “I think the pressure is there and the anxiety is there, we’ve got to be honest about that.”The idea of an oil price cap comes at a time when experts are worrying that sanctions against Russia risk backfiring. Despite western restrictions on Russian oil imports, Russia’s revenues from oil exports have not necessarily declined because the price of crude has risen so sharply.Michel said: “We want to make sure that the goal is to target Russia and not to make our life more difficult and more complex. We need to make sure if we take such a decision there is a clear vision, a clear common understanding, of what are direct effects and what could be the collateral consequences.”He said the EU was ready to take a decision with its partners but stressed he was “careful and cautious” on the topic. A senior German official said “intensive discussions” were under way as to how a price cap would be implemented and work with western and Japanese sanctions.“The issues we have to solve are not trivial, but we’re on the right track towards coming to an agreement,” he said.

    Under the oil price-capping scheme, Europe would limit the availability of shipping and insurance services that enable the transport of Russian oil around the world, mandating that the services would only be available if the price ceiling was observed by the oil importer. A similar restriction on the availability of US financial services could give the scheme added impact.Scholz has stressed that the concept would require widespread buy-in around the world to be effective. It would also require the EU to amend its ban on insuring Russian crude shipments — introduced in conjunction with the ban on seaborne oil imports — something that needs the buy-in of all 27 EU member states. The UK would need to come on board, given it is the home of the Lloyd’s of London insurance market. The EU and UK already agreed to co-ordinate on an insurance ban, but London has not yet finalised its scheme.At their summit, the G7 leaders will also discuss how to avert a global “hunger crisis”, amid rising food insecurity caused by the Ukraine war. They will also discuss a German proposal for a “climate club” in which participating countries will co-ordinate their efforts to decarbonise their economies. Additional reporting from Jasmine Cameron-Chileshe More

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    ETH Climbs for the Last 2 Days, Looks to Continue Trend

    The biggest altcoin by market cap, Ethereum (ETH), experienced an uptick in the last 24 hours, according to CoinMarketCap.At the time of writing, the price of ETH gained just over 1% in the last 24 hours to take its price up to $1,242.47. This adds to its phenomenal performance over the weekly chart as its price gained approximately 26.29% over the last 7 days. ETH has also strengthened in price against BTC by 1.19%. As things stand, 1 ETH token is around 0.05807 BTC.As a result of the positive price movement over the last 7 days, ETH’s total market cap has climbed back up to $151.14 billion. ETH has also made its way to CoinMarketCap’s trending list at number 11.Daily chart for ETH/USDT Source:CoinMarketCapLooking at the daily chart for ETH/USDT, the price of ETH is at the level that it dropped from a couple of weeks ago after a 2-candle rally, with today’s candle looking like it will also close positively. ETH’s price is also above the 9 EMA level.4 hour chart for ETH/USDT Source: CoinMarketCapThe 4-hour chart signals that the bullish move seen in ETH’s price may continue given several bullish flags. The first bullish flag is the 9 EMA positioned above the 20 EMA. The next is the price of ETH being positioned above both the aforementioned EMA lines. Lastly, The RSI is looking to cross above the RSI SMA line, which is another good sign.Given that the RSI is at around 39.77 on the daily chart for ETH, there is still plenty of buying room before ETH heads into overbought territory. If ETH breaks the current resistance level on the 4 hour chart, the next target will be $1,600.Disclaimer: The views and opinions expressed in this article are solely the author’s and do not necessarily reflect the views of CQ. No information in this article should be interpreted as investment advice. CQ encourages all users to do their own research before investing in cryptocurrencies.Continue reading on CoinQuora More

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    Russia slides towards default as payment deadline expires

    LONDON (Reuters) – Russia edged closer to default on Sunday amid little sign that investors holding its international bonds had received payment, heralding what would be the nation’s first default in decades.Russia has struggled to keep up payments on $40 billion of outstanding bonds since its invasion of Ukraine on Feb. 24, which provoked sweeping sanctions that have effectively cut the country out of the global financial system and rendered its assets untouchable to many investors.The Kremlin has repeatedly said there are no grounds for Russia to default but is unable to send money to bondholders because of sanctions, accusing the West of trying to drive it into an artificial default.The country’s efforts to swerve what would be its first major default on international bonds since the Bolshevik revolution more than a century ago hit an insurmountable roadblock when the U.S. Treasury Department’s Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) effectively blocked Moscow from making payments in late May.”Since March we thought that a Russian default is probably inevitable, and the question was just when,” Dennis Hranitzky, head of sovereign litigation at law firm Quinn Emanuel, told Reuters. “OFAC has intervened to answer that question for us, and the default is now upon us.” Whiel a formal default would be largely symbolic given Russia cannot borrow internationally at the moment and doesn’t need to thanks to rich oil and gas revenue, the stigma would probably raise its borrowing costs in future.The payments in question are $100 million in interest on two bonds, one denominated in U.S. dollars and another in euros, Russia was due to pay on May 27. The payments had a grace period of 30 days, which will expire on Sunday. Russia’s finance ministry said it made the payments to its onshore National Settlement Depository (NSD) in euros and dollars, adding it has fulfilled obligations.However, it is unlikely that funds will find their way to many international holders. For many bondholders, not receiving the money owed in time into their accounts constitutes a default.With no exact deadline specified in the prospectus, lawyers say Russia might have until the end of the following business day to pay the bondholders. SMALL PRINT The legal situation surrounding the bonds looks complex.Russia’s bonds have been issued with an unusual variety of terms, and an increasing level of ambiguities for those sold more recently, when Moscow was already facing sanctions over its annexation of Crimea in 2014 and a poisoning incident in Britain in 2018.Rodrigo Olivares-Caminal, chair in banking and finance law at Queen Mary University in London, said clarity was needed on what constituted a discharge for Russia on its obligation, or the difference between receiving and recovering payments. “All these issues are subject to interpretation by a court of law, but Russia has not waived any of its sovereign immunity and has not submitted to the jurisdiction of any court in any of the two prospectuses,” Olivares-Caminal told Reuters.In some ways, Russia is in default already. A committee on derivatives has ruled a “credit event” had occurred on some of its securities, which triggered a payout on some of Russia’s credit default swaps – instruments used by investors to insure exposure to debt against default. This was triggered by Russia failing to make a $1.9 million payment in accrued interest on a payment that had been due in early April.Until the Ukraine invasion, a sovereign default had seemed unthinkable, with Russia being rated investment grade up to shortly before that point. A default would also be unusual as Moscow has the funds to service its debt.The OFAC had issued a temporary waiver, known as a general licence 9A, in early March to allow Moscow to keep paying investors. It let it expire on May 25 as Washington tightened sanctions on Russia, effectively cutting off payments to U.S. investors and entities.The lapsed OFAC licence is not the only obstacle Russia faces as in early June the European Union imposed sanctions on the NSD, Russia’s appointed agent for its Eurobonds. Moscow has scrambled in recent days to find ways of dealing with upcoming payments and avoid a default. President Vladimir Putin signed a decree last Wednesday to launch temporary procedures and give the government 10 days to choose banks to handle payments under a new scheme, suggesting Russia will consider its debt obligations fulfilled when it pays bondholders in roubles.”Russia saying it’s complying with obligations under the terms of the bond is not the whole story,” Zia Ullah, partner and head of corporate crime and investigations at law firm Eversheds Sutherland told Reuters.”If you as an investor are not satisfied, for instance, if you know the money is stuck in an escrow account, which effectively would be the practical impact of what Russia is saying, the answer would be, until you discharge the obligation, you have not satisfied the conditions of the bond.” More

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    THORChain token price up 16% following mainnet launch

    The team announced the mainnet launch on Wednesday, alongside the rollout of a “Rune in a Million Campaign” on Binance that contains a total of $1 million worth of RUNE rewards for users of the exchange. Continue Reading on Coin Telegraph More

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    Small-time investors achieve the 1 BTC dream as Bitcoin holds $20k range

    With BTC recently trading at the $20,000 range for the first time since 2020, small-time investors found a small window of opportunity to achieve their dream of owning at least 1 BTC. On June 20, Cointelegraph reported that the number of Bitcoin wallet addresses containing one BTC or more increased by 13,091 in just 7 days. Continue Reading on Coin Telegraph More

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    Binance CEO Continues To Work Closely With Singapore Regulators

    The CEO of Binance, Changpeng Zhao (CZ), went to Twitter (NYSE:TWTR) to thank the Chief Fintech Officer of Singapore MAS, Sopnendu Mohanty, for inviting him to the Point Zero Forum.Zhao stated in the thread that both he and Mohanty posted that they “believe it is very important for industry players and regulators to communicate deeply.” He also said that “sometimes privately, sometimes publicly. PZF was a great public opportunity.”Topics such as some of the key issues in the crypto space and what steps can be taken to improve the industry were discussed during the conference.He also shone a light on the crypto media, saying that there have been several “misleading media titles about Binance/crypto, Singapore, etc. Many tried to drive a wedge between us.” CZ stated that these titles could not be further from the truth as “Binance and SG MAS work closely and collaboratively together.”CZ shared some examples of these misleading titles, with one of the articles being posted during the conference he was attending. The heading of this article was “Singapore regulator vows to be ‘unreletingly hard’ on crypto.”CZ stated that Mohanty originally said that “SG will be unrelentingly hard on bad players in crypto,” and that the journalist “cut the middle part out, completely changing the narrative.”In related news, the Binance platform’s native token, Binance Coin (BNB), experienced a small drop in price over the last 24 hours. According to the crypto market tracker, CoinMarketCap, the price of BNB is down 0.88%, taking its price down to around $239.11.Continue reading on CoinQuora More

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    Banking body BIS urges decisive wave of global rate hikes to stem inflation

    LONDON (Reuters) – The world’s central bank umbrella body, the Bank for International Settlements (BIS), has called for interest rates to be raised “quickly and decisively” to prevent the surge in inflation turning into something even more problematic. The Swiss-based BIS has held its annual meeting in recent days, where top central bankers met to discuss their current difficulties and one of the most turbulent starts to a year ever for global financial markets.Surging energy and food prices mean inflation in many places is now its hottest in decades. But the usual remedy of ramping up interest rates is raising the spectre of recession, and even of the dreaded 1970s-style “stagflation”, where rising prices are coupled with low or negative economic growth.”The key for central banks is to act quickly and decisively before inflation becomes entrenched,” Agustín Carstens, BIS general manager, said as part of the body’s post-meeting annual report Annual Economic Report published on Sunday. Carstens, former head of Mexico’s central bank, said the emphasis was to act in “quarters to come”. The BIS thinks an economic soft landing – where rates rise without triggering recessions – is still possible, but accepts it is a difficult situation. “A lot of it will depend on precisely on how permanent these (inflationary) shocks are,” Carstens said, adding that the response of financial markets would also be crucial. “If this tightening generates massive losses, generates massive asset corrections, and that contaminates consumption, investment and employment – of course, that is a more difficult scenario.” Graphic: Inflation palpitations – https://fingfx.thomsonreuters.com/gfx/mkt/mopanrqrbva/Pasted%20image%201655895473770.png World markets are already suffering one of the biggest sell-offs in recent memory as heavyweight central banks like the U.S. Federal Reserve – and from next month the ECB – move away from record low rates and almost 15 years of back-to-back stimulus measures.Global stocks are down 20% since January and some analysts calculate that U.S. Treasury bonds, the benchmark of world borrowing markets, could be having their biggest losing first half of a year since 1788.CREDIBILITYCarstens said the BIS’s own recent warnings about frothy asset prices meant the current correction was “not necessarily a complete surprise”. That there hadn’t been “major market disruptions” so far was also reassuring, he added.Part of the BIS report published already last week said that the recent implosions in the cryptocurrency markets were an indication that long-warned-about dangers of decentralised digital money were now materialising.Those collapses aren’t expected to cause a systemic crisis in the way that bad loans triggered the global financial crash. But Carstens stressed losses would be sizeable and that the opaque nature of the crypto universe fed uncertainty. Graphic: Central bank digital currencies – https://fingfx.thomsonreuters.com/gfx/mkt/mopanryagva/Pasted%20image%201656161287732.png Returning to the macro economic picture, he added that the BIS didn’t currently expect a period of widespread stagflation to take hold.He also said that though many global central banks and the BIS itself had significantly underestimated how quick global inflation has spiralled over the last six to 12 months, they weren’t about to lose hard-earned credibility overnight.”Yes, you can argue a little bit here about an error of timing of certain actions and the responses of the central banks. But by and large, I think that the central banks have responded forcefully in a very agile fashion,” Carstens said.”My sense is that central banks will prevail at the end of the day, and that would be good for their credibility.” More