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    U.S. SEC chair Gensler says investors should beware of crypto returns that seem “too good to be true”

    The Wall Street watchdog’s comments come a day after the world’s largest cryptocurrency fell 15% on Monday, its sharpest one-day drop since March 2020.”We’ve seen again that lending platforms are operating a little like banks. They’re saying to investors ‘Give us your crypto. We’ll give you a big return 7% or 4.5% return.’ How does somebody offer (such large percentage of returns) in the market today and not give a lot of disclosure?” Gensler said during an industry event.”I caution the public. If it seems too good to be true, it just may well be too good to be true.” More

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    How will the ECB contain fragmentation risk in euro area bond markets?

    LONDON (Reuters) – As the European Central Bank rushes to exit stimulus and raise interest rates to tame inflation, bond markets are testing its ability and willingness to act against the strains that are starting to hit weaker countries in the bloc.The premia investors demand to hold bonds from Italy, Spain and Portugal relative to safer German debt — spreads in market parlance — have risen to the highest since 2020.With ECB key rates seen rising by 75 basis points within the next three months, Italian and Spanish 10-year borrowing costs have hit eight-year highs. So far the ECB says it sees no need for new tools to help these weaker, highly indebted economies cope with higher interest rates. But the spread widening has left investors wondering when the ECB might step in to contain so-called fragmentation risks and what it could do.”There is no easy fix,” said Frederik Ducrozet, head of macroeconomic research at Pictet Wealth Management. “We are here today because of the lack of decision in the past six months.” Here are some options for the ECB:1/ DO NOTHINGWith inflation at record highs, this appears to be the current stance.The 10-year Italian/German yield spread is at 250 bps, which markets previously viewed as an ECB pain threshold. But sources told Reuters after last Thursday’s ECB meeting that policymakers did not think current conditions amounted to “fragmentation” and there was no debate around a new programme.”The very fact that the topic was not even approached in any shape or form just told the market that the pain threshold is a lot further away than what we thought previously,” UBS strategist Rohan Khanna said.Graphic: What is the ECB’s pain threshold on the Italy/German bond spread? – https://fingfx.thomsonreuters.com/gfx/mkt/znpnegdlqvl/IT1406.PNG 2/ BE SMARTThe only tool the ECB has laid out so far is channelling reinvestments from maturing bonds bought for pandemic-era stimulus back into the markets experiencing stress.But as spreads widened in April and May it did not gear reinvestments towards southern European debt.Societe Generale (OTC:SCGLY) estimates that over the coming year, the ECB will receive 300 billion euros ($314 bln) from redemptions from its emergency PEPP scheme. But it does not see that as containing spread-widening. Even if the ECB reinvests the entire flow from German and French bonds into Italy — around 12 billion euros per month — that will be less than the ECB’s net purchases in Italy of almost 14 billion euros monthly since March 2020, SocGen added. Graphic: ECB net purchases of bonds under PEPP – https://fingfx.thomsonreuters.com/gfx/mkt/byvrjaonave/YBCHART1406.PNG 3/ REMEMBER SMP, OMT? The ECB does have other tools at hand, including the Outright Monetary Transactions (OMT) scheme, an unused crisis-time tool allowing for unlimited purchases of a country’s debt.But economists doubt it will be deployed as it requires countries to sign up for a European Union bailout which usually contains unpopular conditions.Others say the Securities Markets Programme (SMP) is more likely to be revived. This facility would enable the ECB to buy bonds without adding to stimulus already sloshing around the system.4/ BRING BACK QE If rapid spread widening raises financial stability risks for the bloc, the ECB could just resume asset purchases. But given it has just ended bond-buying, that move seems unlikely. Note, however, that on March 18, when the COVID-19 outbreak sent Italian/German bond spreads briefly above 300 bps, the Bank of Italy stepped up bond purchases on behalf of the ECB.Later that day, the ECB launched its PEPP emergency scheme, calming markets. “The obvious one would be (restarting) APP (Asset Purchase Programme) but it’s difficult to do when you are hiking rates,” said State Street (NYSE:STT)’s head of EMEA macro strategy Timothy Graf. Graphic: ECB asset purchases are ending soon – https://fingfx.thomsonreuters.com/gfx/mkt/xmvjowgykpr/ECB1406.PNG 5/ SOMETHING NEWPerhaps that’s why talk of a new tool has gained ground, something allowing the ECB to target bond-buying specifically at weaker states, deviating from the usual principle of purchasing assets relative to the size of an economy. However, such flexibility or deviating from the so-called “capital key” could prove a sticking point, especially from Germany’s constitutional court.The ECB “knows that whatever they come up with, they might end up in the German constitutional court,” said Andrew Mulliner, head of global aggregate strategies at Janus Henderson. Graphic: Fighting inflation ECB’s number one priority – https://fingfx.thomsonreuters.com/gfx/mkt/jnvweogrkvw/inflation1406.PNG More

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    MicroStrategy Risks Margin Call as Bitcoin Drops Below $21,000, Shares Plunge

    MicroStrategy Risks Margin Call with Further Bitcoin PlungeFollowing Bitcoin’s sink to under $21,000, MicroStrategy is at its closest point to its CFO receiving a margin call at $21,000 on the company’s massive BTC position.Phong Le, MicroStrategy’s President, said in the May conference meeting, “Bitcoin needs to cut in half for around $21,000 before we’d have a margin call.”The cost of acquisition for MicroStrategy’s 129,918 bitcoin stash stands at an average of $30,700 per coin, at net fees and expenses.MicroStrategy Shares Plunge 23%As the largest holder of Bitcoin, with 129,218 coins, the share prices of MicroStrategy (MSTR) were some of those to have suffered the heaviest losses as the price of Bitcoin crashed under $21,000.On Monday, June 13th, the share price of MSTR slumped by as much as 23%, and MSTR now trades at $152.15 at the time of writing, with prices having dropped 31.37% over the last five days.
    On the FlipsideWhy You Should CareDespite the ongoing bear market, MicroStrategy has vowed never to sell any of its approximately 130,000 bitcoin holdings.Read more about the Bitcoin crash:Crypto Stocks Sell-Off as Bitcoin SinksDespite the crash, MicroStrategy continues to hold its bitcoin. Find out more here:Michael Saylor Dispels Rumors that MicroStrategy Is Selling Bitcoin, Promising Further AcquisitionsContinue reading on DailyCoin More

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    Cricketer AB de Villier, Myria To Launch P2E Cricket Game

    South African cricketer AB de Villiers has announced his partnership with blockchain gaming company Myria to build his mobile-based cricket game. The game is expected to launch in the coming year, with players able to download it for free on the Apple (NASDAQ:AAPL) App Store and Google (NASDAQ:GOOGL) Play Store from Q2 2023.Myria will be the first celebrity-backed cricket blockchain game that integrates blockchain play-and-earn models and additional features such as NFTs. Also, the AB de Villiers-backed game will be exclusively available to mobile users.The Myria team claims the game aims to introduce millions of cricket fans to blockchain gaming. The partnership between AB de Villiers and Myria is expected to build a brand and community around the game.Speaking on the topic, AB de Villiers said:Founded in 2021, Myria offers a comprehensive blockchain gaming development platform that aims to bring a range of blockchain games to life. The gaming company develops its own free-to-play AAA titles while providing a full-stack solution for partner studios to build their games in the Myria ecosystem.“It’s clear that we’ve entered a new era for gaming,” said Brendan Duhamel, Myria’s Head of Blockchain. “Cricket icon and innovator, AB de Villiers, leads the cricket industry to move the enthusiasm people have for cricket into the digital realm. Cricket and crypto share the privilege of gathering communities that are incredibly energized and passionate. AB has placed his trust in Myria’s platform to bring his blockchain-enabled cricket game to life and together we’ll usher in a future of empowered gamers and communities.”While the game is a play-and-earn model, the team believes this is not the only reason players should look forward to playing the game. The cricket game by Myria and AB de Villiers aims to bring fun to blockchain gaming, where earning is not the main reason to play. The game aims to make players genuinely excited to play and create a culture around the game while doing so.Continue reading on CoinQuora More

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    Crypto users take to Twitter to lament the ongoing market downturn

    Inflation, potential interest rate hikes, a looming recession, and yet another DeFi fiasco have all contributed to the current onslaught seen in markets on Monday. As a result, Bitcoin’s (BTC) price plunged to levels not seen since late 2020, several crypto exchanges limited users from withdrawing their tokens, an increasing number of Web3-centric companies announced layoffs, and the floor prices of various nonfungible token (NFT) projects tumbled.Continue Reading on Coin Telegraph More

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    Hungary flags objections to EU implementation of global minimum tax

    Nearly 140 countries reached a two-track deal in October brokered by the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) on a minimum tax rate of 15% on multinationals.The agreement would make it harder for companies such as Alphabet (NASDAQ:GOOGL)’s Google, Amazon (NASDAQ:AMZN) and Meta’s Facebook (NASDAQ:META) to avoid tax by booking profits in low-tax jurisdictions.Individual countries must now hammer out details on how the deal will be implemented ahead of a 2023 OECD deadline. France, which holds the EU’s rotating six-month presidency, has pushed for a quick implementation in the 27-nation bloc, where tax issues require unanimous approval. Poland continues to block a compromise, and now Hungary has also raised reservations.”The drafting of detailed rules for the OECD proposal for a global minimum tax and the adjacent EU council proposal is not progressing at the expected pace,” Hungary’s government said in an emailed reply to Reuters questions on Tuesday.The government said the introduction of the OECD proposal to tax large digital firms was being delayed, while companies creating jobs in Hungary would be taxed immediately. “In addition, competitiveness risks must also be assessed due to the Russia-Ukraine war,” it said.On Monday, Prime Minister Viktor Orban’s ruling Fidesz party proposed a draft resolution by the parliament’s economic committee that says parliament should oppose the approval of the EU’s directives about the global minimum tax, due to “war inflation and the economic crisis due to the war”. More

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    What is MetaPay and how does it work?

    Users could converse more readily anywhere and anytime when wired technology gave way to mobile technology. For example, smartphones are now bringing a flood of other services to the Metaverse. The Metaverse is a three-dimensional virtual place that works as a metaphor for the real-world . The term “metaverse” is derived from “meta” (beyond) and “universe.”Continue Reading on Coin Telegraph More