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    German economy minister aims to tighten antitrust laws

    The move comes amid his concerns that energy companies are not passing on to consumers a recent cut in tax on fuel that was enacted to help offset soaring inflation. The ministry foresees reducing hurdles to confiscate profits and giving the cartel office additional powers to intervene, according to the document dated June 11.”Although such a tightening of competition law cannot have a short-term effect in the current situation, it can give the state the necessary strength to intervene more effectively in the future,” the paper said. More

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    Average Network Returns for Traders in Negative Territory

    On June 11, Santiment posted on Twitter (NYSE:TWTR) that crypto’s biggest and top assets are seeing some trader pain once again.Top Market Cap 30-Day MVRV Comparison (Source: Santiment)The major price pullback that altcoins have experienced in the last few days, as well as the mild drop in Bitcoin’s (BTC) price has resulted in the average network returns of traders dipping into negative territory.The most hyped coin for the month, Cardano (ADA), has posted neutral 30-day returns. At the moment, ADA is worth $0.5078 after a 16.64% drop in price over the last 24 hours. The alleged Ethereum-killer also saw a 9.94% drop in price over the last week. ADA’s market cap is also down by 14.57% and currently stands at $17,230,896,286, according to CoinMarketCap.Meanwhile, the market leader, BTC, and the native token for the Binance ecosystem, Binance Coin (BNB), are seeing negative returns. BNB saw a 12.19% drop in price and now trades at $254.14.However, the second biggest cryptocurrency by market capitalization, Ethereum (ETH), has entered into an opportunity zone. ETH price is currently worth about $1,467.96 at the time of writing, after an 11.89% drop in drive over the last 24 hours. The crypto also saw an 18.09% price decrease over the last seven days.With regards to market cap, ETH currently stands at $177,717,213,533, which is a 11.92% drop over the last day. ETH also saw a 24-hour trading volume of $27,009,416,858, which is 53.31% more than yesterday.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 cryptocurrencies.Continue reading on CoinQuora More

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    Economic thinking is at a crucial inflection point

    Soaring energy prices have encouraged another form of inflation, this one rhetorical. Comparisons of our current challenges with the world’s economic and political struggles in the 1970s are now a dime a dozen.The comparisons are apt as far as they go. Oil prices quadrupled in 1973 and doubled again in 1979. While they have “only” about doubled in the last two years, European gas prices have jumped five to 10-fold since before the pandemic. Overall inflation is the highest in decades, and many fear we face a repeat of the 1970s scourge of stagflation.The similarities end with the effects for political and economic thinking. Once the turmoil of the 1970s had discredited the mixed economies of the postwar era, it paved the way for the market-liberalising transformations pioneered by Margaret Thatcher and Ronald Reagan.Back then, economic failure produced something approaching a consensus that “government is the problem”, as Reagan put it. But today the opposite is the case. Energy prices, the rising cost of living and worsening tensions in labour relations are fuelling calls for the government to come to the rescue. The economic ailments that in the 1970s led the state to withdraw are today dragging it back where, for almost half a century, it has feared to tread.

    The market-friendly governing philosophy that triumphed in the 1980s is on the defensive. Government-administered prices are now the order of the day, from car and heating fuel to electricity and, of course, carbon emissions. The pressure for windfall taxes on fossil fuel companies seems irresistible, and governments across Europe are digging deep into their coffers to help hard-pressed households. Even direct cash payments to households, with few strings attached or none, are in vogue, in an echo of the North American experiments with universal basic income in the 1970s.This raises two questions. Why this difference in the political consequences of seemingly similar economic crises? And is today’s turn to a more interventionist state permanent or a flash in the pan?The simplest answer to the first question is that when things feel intolerable, people blame the status quo and demand change. In the 1970s that meant deregulating a rigid economy. Today it may mean re-regulating an unchained one. But the return of the state predates today’s sudden rise in inflation and its main causes — the pandemic, energy price jumps and Vladimir Putin’s attack on Ukraine. Confidence in the post-1980 socio-economic model was already fraying under pressure from, as it were, both the past and the future. The populism of Donald Trump, Brexiters and others (including some on the left) represents a nostalgia for a previous social settlement remembered (rightly) as more controlled and (wrongly) as more prosperous. Meanwhile, the rise of the climate agenda responds to a widely held conviction among voters that current economic arrangements imperil their future. There are enormous differences between these two stances, of course. For one thing, a decarbonised economy is possible, whereas returning to the 1950s is not. But however realistic their goals, they both presuppose a more interventionist and controlling state. This helps to explain the changing conceptions of how to run the economy among centrist politicians and the guardians of economic orthodoxy. A greater emphasis on securing social cohesion and actively reshaping the structure of the economy is more than a temporary response to emergencies.For now, 2022 feels like a 1945 or 1979 kind of moment — a historical hinge point or paradigm shift. Yet the transition to a new economic governing philosophy could still be derailed. The pandemic years made for state interventions unlike any seen in decades — with rapid recoveries in incomes and jobs being proof of their success. But a revisionist view is taking hold that aims to discredit the policies that produced a historically speedy recovery. In this narrative, the current inflationary surge overshadows the triumph of a labour market that makes it easy to find better jobs. So thoroughly have we forgotten what a good labour market looks like that we risk thinking it is an aberration. Certainly, central bankers have been browbeaten into adopting a more hawkish attitude than is wise.The current economic debate is about much more than managing cost of living pressures. The question is whether we will finally put the last 40 years behind us and settle on something [email protected] More

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    UK's new N.Ireland trade rules will not break law, minister says

    “The legislation that we will outline tomorrow is within the law; what we are going to do is lawful and it is correct,” the Northern Ireland Secretary told Sky News.When Britain left the EU, Prime Minister Boris Johnson agreed a protocol that effectively left Northern Ireland in the EU’s single market and customs union to preserve the open border with Ireland specified in the Good Friday peace agreement.Any unilateral move by London to override the treaty will inflame a simmering argument with the European Union.Ireland’s Sinn Fein, the nationalist party that won a historic victory in the Northern Ireland Assembly election last month, said on Sunday Britain would “undoubtedly” break the law by imposing unilateral changes to the protocol.Lewis said however the protocol needed to be changed because it was “fundamentally undermining” the Good Friday agreement.He said it was disrupting the lives of people in Northern Ireland, was stopping government institutions functioning, and was not respecting the UK’s own internal market.Lewis declined to say how the protocol would be changed, but said the government would set out the legal basis on which it was bringing forward the legislation.Sinn Fein president Mary Lou McDonald said London could work with Dublin and Brussels to improve the application of the protocol. “There is a willingness here, there is a willingness to engage by the European Commission, but the British government has refused to engage,” she told Sky News from Dublin. “It has not been constructive, it has sought a destructive path, and is now proposing to introduce legislation that will undoubtedly breach international law.” More

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    UNFCCC weighs blockchain use cases to fight climate change with Cointelegraph

    During the DigitalArt4Climate press conference, Cointelegraph editor-in-chief Kristina Cornèr took over the stage to understand the various blockchain initiatives that actively fight climate change. Starting off the conversation was Anna Dart, a digital avatar by DigitalArt4Climate who shared the idea of bringing together artists to inspire climate change:Continue Reading on Coin Telegraph More

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    wBTC and ETH On-Chain Collateral Face Potential Liquidation

    Recent data shows that 2 of the top 20 cryptocurrencies by market cap face liquidation of some of their on-chain collateral should their prices drop to a certain level.According to data released from Parsec Finance, a portion of both Ethereum’s (ETH) and Wrapped Bitcoin’s (wBTC) on-chain collateral will be liquidated if their prices drop lower.To be exact, should ETH’s price fall to around $1,150, then nearly $500 million worth of on-chain collateral will face liquidation. On the other hand, wBTC will have more than $300 million worth of on-chain collateral should its price reach near $21,600 or face liquidation.As things stand, ETH is ranked number 2 on the top 20 cryptocurrencies by market cap and wBTC is ranked number 11, according to the crypto market tracker CoinMarketCap. The total market cap for ETH is around $176.77 billion and wBTC has a total market cap of $7.52 billion.Both coins experienced a dip in price over the last 24 hours as well as over the last 7 days. Ethereum’s price now stands at $1,453.49 after a double digit, 12.89% fall in price over the last day and a 18.99% drop in price over the last week.Meanwhile, wBTC’s price has dropped 6.35% over the last day and 7.92% over the last 7 days. Its price now stands at $27,399.68.Both ETH and wBTC are following the same trend as the rest of the crypto market at the moment, which has seen the majority of the top cryptocurrency’s experience a price slump over the last week and day, including the current market leader, Bitcoin (BTC), which has seen a daily drop of 6.52% and a weekly drop of 7.97%.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 cryptocurrencies.Continue reading on CoinQuora More

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    Do Kwon Denies Cashing Out $2.7 Billion Before Terra Crash

    Following several reports of the claim that Terra founder, Do Kwon, cashed out $2.7 billion ahead of the Terra crash, the crypto developer has shared a post on Twitter (NYSE:TWTR) denying those claims.The claims that Kwon cashed out $2.7 billion in LUNA and UST reserves became widespread when a Twitter thread by @FatManTerra detailed the purported facts of how Kwon and Terra’s influencers artificially maintained the liquidity while draining money.In response, Kwon indicated that he still has most of his LUNA assets, which he acquired during the airdrop. Furthermore, Kwon reaffirmed that TerraForm Labs has been his only source of income since 2020.@FatManTerra was quick to clap back at Kwon, saying: Like last time, Kwon believes that his followers are stupid, thus 0.94 million people will consume this, but 0.06 million won’t.“[Kwon], you sold $2.7b of UST through the MIM pool months before the Terra 2 fork, @FatManTerra responded. “And now, you airdropped yourself LUNA while lying about it. These are completely unrelated.”Furthermore, Terraform Labs and its employees are also being investigated by police in South Korea for suspected Bitcoin (BTC) fraud. With the assistance of an exchange platform, officials were able to freeze the relevant cash. The police began their investigation after receiving a tip from an employee of the company.Continue reading on CoinQuora More

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    Will the Fed signal a slower pace of rate rises this autumn?

    Will the Fed shed light on its plans for later this year?The Federal Reserve on Wednesday will conclude its two-day June policy meeting, at which it is widely expected to raise interest rates by half a percentage point. It will also release its summary of economic projections, which includes a so-called dot plot, showing members’ forecasts for interest rate policy. At the Fed’s May meeting, chair Jay Powell said that if inflation and economic conditions remained broadly in line with the bank’s expectations “we would have 50 basis point increases on the table at the next two meetings,” meaning in June and July. But the chances of another supersized rise in September are unclear and will depend on how much of an effect the continuing aggressive hiking cycle has on inflation. NatWest chief US economist Kevin Cummins expects the median dot — the average Fed official’s view for where interest rates will be by the end of the year — will have risen from 1.875 per cent, expressed in the March report, to 2.625 per cent. But he doesn’t expect it to rise much further from there in 2023 or 2024.Inflation data for May — which showed that consumer prices had continued to rise, at a 1 per cent rate from the previous month and at an 8.6 per cent rate year over year — will probably add pressure to the Fed to aggressively pursue higher interest rates. The futures market on Friday morning in New York was betting that the Fed’s key interest rate would be at 3.1 per cent by year-end, versus 2.8 per cent at the start of the month. Kate DuguidWill the Bank of England opt for an extra large rate rise?A fifth interest rate rise in a row from the Bank of England is all but certain this week. But investors and economists are divided on how large it will be.Market pricing indicates a further 0.25 percentage point increase to 1.25 per cent is the most likely outcome, with an outside chance that the BoE could follow the Federal Reserve in opting for an extra-large half point rise.The dilemma for the BoE is how to tame inflation that soared to a 40-year high in April without choking off economic growth. For now, data showing strong wage growth, along with the government’s recent fiscal support for the economy, should mean that inflation concerns dominate, according to Bank of America’s UK economist Robert Wood.Wood expects a quarter-point rate rise on Thursday but with three members of the BoE’s nine-strong rate-setting committee voting for a larger increase and the central bank shifting to more hawkish guidance for the remainder of the year.However, with growth set to slow further, the “narrow path” the BoE can tread in battling rising prices without triggering a downturn may soon be set to disappear, according to Wood.“We see increasing risks that the BoE has to choose between bringing inflation back to target or avoiding a recession,” he said.The BoE’s previous rate increases have failed to offer much support to the pound, but that could change if the bank makes a more decisive hawkish shift this week, Bank of America said. Tommy StubbingtonWill the Bank of Japan say more about yen weakness?The big question from next week’s Bank of Japan monetary policy meeting is not whether the central bank remains on hold. The overwhelming majority of economists are sure it will do so, intensifying the contrast with other central banks around the world which are now firmly in a tightening cycle.This contrast is the main dynamic that has caused the yen to fall so sharply against the US dollar and other currencies in recent months, and has tipped the Japanese currency close to a 24-year low. With the yen’s eye-catching tumble now looming over next week’s meeting, the focus will be on what Haruhiko Kuroda, the BoJ governor, says about the historically weak currency in his press conference after the policy decision is announced. Speculation around Kuroda’s likely comments shifted on Friday after the BoJ, Ministry of Finance and Financial Services Agency released a rare joint statement aimed at “jawboning” some stability into the dollar-yen exchange rate by referring to concerns over the sharpness of recent moves. But in a separate interview, Masato Kanda, vice minister of finance, said: “If asked whether a move of several yen in a single day is in line with fundamentals, I think many would say that’s not the case.” That comment, said analysts at Nomura, could raise pressure on Kuroda to state whether he is among those who see the recent moves in the yen as now shifting his view that a weak yen is of general benefit to the Japanese economy. Leo Lewis More