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    Armstrong tweets in public airing of Coinbase's internal discontent

    Coinbase chief operating officer Emilie Choi, chief product officer Surojit Chatterjee and chief people officer LJ Brock were the targets of the call for removal for “executing plans and ideas that have led to questionable results and negative values.” The author listed eight of their failings in detail. They included the unsuccessful Coinbase NFT platform, rescinding job offers to new employees, mismanagement, creating a toxic workplace and apathy. The petition concluded:Continue Reading on Coin Telegraph More

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    Here’s how blockchains are helping to advance the global energy grid

    While much of the debate has centered around the negative environmental impacts of Bitcoin (BTC) mining, the drive to maximize earnings from mining and integrate blockchain technology with the energy grid has also introduced new developments that have the potential to be beneficial in the long term. Continue Reading on Coin Telegraph More

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    Crypto Biz: Stablecoins are paving the way for mass adoption of crypto, June 2–8

    But, if you look beyond all the fear, uncertainty and doubt, stablecoins are providing liquidity to millions of people who don’t have access to dollars because of capital controls or sanctions, or because hyperinflation is destroying their local currency. This week’s Crypto Biz newsletter looks at the role of stablecoins in fueling e-commerce. We also do some prodding of our own to see if a major payment platform is prepping its own stable asset. Continue Reading on Coin Telegraph More

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    Finance Redefined: Number of DAOs surge, Solana launches $100M DeFi fund

    Optimism, an Ethereum layer-2 protocol that Vitalik Buterin recently praised for its governance model, lost 20 million tokens due to a mix-up of layer-1 and layer-2 addresses. A leaked 600-page copy of a United States crypto draft bill also grabbed the community’s attention, as it proposes heavy regulatory scrutiny for DeFi and DAOs.Continue Reading on Coin Telegraph More

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    Dashed peak inflation hopes spell more pain for stocks and bonds

    NEW YORK (Reuters) -Blistering inflation is threatening to reignite twin declines in U.S. stocks and bonds, leaving investors with few places to hide from a Federal Reserve that appears headed for its most aggressive policy tightening in decades. Friday gave a hint of what investors may see in coming weeks. The benchmark S&P 500 index fell nearly 3% while yields on the benchmark 10-year Treasury hit their highest level since early May after stronger-than-expected inflation data ramped up forecasts for more aggressive Fed rate hikes later this year. Bond yields move inversely to prices.”Today, the inflation data was disappointing. Many hopes for a peak are now dashed,” said Ryan Detrick, chief market strategist at LPL Financial (NASDAQ:LPLA). “The fears over inflation and the potential impact of profits in Corporate America are adding to the worries for investors here.”Stocks and bonds have fallen in lockstep for most of the year as tighter Fed policy lifted yields and dried up risk appetite, pummeling investors who had counted on a mix of the two assets to buffer declines in their portfolios.Those moves partially reversed over the last few weeks on hopes that a potential peak in inflation would allow the Fed to turn less aggressive later this year.But with markets now betting policymakers will hike rates by at least 50 basis points in their next three meetings, expectations of a less hawkish Fed are fading and investors believe more declines are on the way.”Given that price pressures in the U.S. show little sign of easing, we doubt that the Fed will take its foot off the brakes anytime soon,” analysts at Capital Economics wrote on Friday. “We therefore suspect that more pain is yet in store for U.S. asset markets, with Treasury yields rising further and the stock market remaining under pressure.”The S&P is down 18.2% year-to-date, again approaching the 20% decline from record highs that many investors consider a bear market. Yields on 10-year U.S. government bonds – a benchmark for mortgage rates and other financial instruments – have more than doubled.Phil Orlando, chief equity market strategist at Federated Hermes (NYSE:FHI), has beefed up cash positions in the portfolios he manages to 6% – the largest allocation he has ever held – while cutting holdings in bonds. In equity markets, he is overweight the sectors expected to benefit from rising prices, such as energy.”You have a very difficult picture for financial markets for the next several months,” he said. “Investors (have) to accept that the consensus view was wrong and inflation is still a problem.”Orlando sees fears of stagflation – a period of slowing growth and high inflation – as a key market driver. Overall, 77% of fund managers expect stagflation in the global economy over the next 12 months, the highest level since August 2008, according to a survey by BoFA Global Research taken before Friday’s inflation data. HAWKISH VIEWSFriday’s white-hot print – which showed consumer prices rising 8.6% in May – is pushing some Wall Street banks to raise forecasts for how much the Fed will need to hike rates to stanch inflation in coming months, potentially maximizing the pain for investors. Barclays (LON:BARC) now sees policymakers delivering their first 75- basis-point increase in 28 years when they meet next week, while Goldman Sachs (NYSE:GS) strategists forecast 50-basis-point hikes at each of the next three meetings. Prices of Fed funds futures contracts on Friday reflected better-than-even odds of a 75-basis-point rate hike by July, with a one-in-five chance of that occurring next week – up from one-in-20 before the inflation report. The Fed has already raised rates by 75 basis points this year.[FEDWATCH]Meanwhile, few investors expect falling equity markets to knock the Fed from its inflation-fighting path. A BoFA Global Research poll taken before Friday’s CPI number showed that 34% of global bond investors believe the central bank will ignore equity weakness entirely, only pausing if markets become dysfunctional.Pramod Atluri, fixed income portfolio manager at Capital Group and principal investment officer on Bond Fund of America (BFA), is among the bond investors who have dialed back duration – which is a portfolio sensitivity to changes in interest rates – over the last few weeks.”I thought there was a reasonable chance that inflation had peaked at 8.5%, and we would be on a steady downward trend through the rest of this year. And that has not played out,” Atluri said. “We’re now back to a point where we’re wondering if two 50- basis-point hikes and maybe a third 50-basis-point hike is enough.” More

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    Soaring inflation fuels bets on sharper Fed rate hikes

    (Reuters) -Stubbornly hot U.S. inflation is fueling bets that the Federal Reserve will get more aggressive about trying to cool price pressures and even potentially ditch its own forward guidance by delivering a jumbo-sized interest rate hike in coming months. Fed policymakers had already all but promised half-point interest rate hikes at their meeting next week and again in late July, following May’s half-point hike and the start of balance sheet reductions this month. That would be more policy tightening in the space of three months than the Fed did in all of 2018.On Friday, traders of futures tied to the Fed policy rate began pricing in an even bolder path after U.S. Labor Department data showed sharply higher food and record gas prices pushed the consumer price index (CPI) up 8.6% last month from a year earlier. A separate University of Michigan survey showed longer-term inflation expectations rising to their highest since 2008.Prices of Fed funds futures contracts now reflect better-than-even odds of a 75-basis-point rate hike by July, with a one-in-four chance of that occurring next week — up from one-in-20 before the inflation report — and a policy rate in at least the 3.25%-3.5% range at year end.Yields on the two-year Treasury note, seen as a proxy for the Fed’s policy rate, topped 3% for the first time since 2008.”We believe that today’s inflation data – both the CPI and UMich inflation expectations – are game changers that will force the Fed to switch to a higher gear and front-load policy tightening,” wrote Jefferies’ Aneta Markowska, who joined economists at Barclays (LON:BARC) on Friday in forecasting a 75-basis-point rate hike at the Fed’s June 14-15 meeting. Most economists still expect a half-point hike next week, and more of the same at subsequent meetings through at least September if not further.Core CPI, which strips out volatile energy and food prices, rose 6% in May, down slightly from April’s 6.2% pace but far from the “clear and convincing” sign of cooling price pressures that Fed Chair Jerome Powell has said he needs to see before slowing rate hikes.”Any hopes that the Fed can ease up on the pace of rate hikes after the June and July meetings now seems to be a long shot,” wrote Bankrate chief financial analyst Greg McBride. Economists at Deutsche Bank (ETR:DBKGn) concurred, and said they now forecast rates to rise to 4.125% by mid-2023. Fed policymakers at the close of next week’s meeting will release their own best guesses of how high they’ll need to lift short-term rates. They’ll also provide forecasts of how much unemployment – now at 3.6% – may need to rise before the economy slows enough to reduce inflation.In recent weeks some had expressed the hope that by September their own rate hikes, along with easing supply chain pressures and an expected shift in household spending away from scarce goods and toward services, would have started to ease price pressures and allowed them to downshift to smaller rate hikes. Friday’s inflation report suggested the opposite. Used car prices, which had been sinking, reversed course and rose 1.8% from the prior month; airline fares rose by 12.6% from the prior month and 37.8% from a year earlier. Prices for shelter – where trends tend to be particularly persistent – rose 5.5%, the biggest jump in more than 30 years. The Fed’s current policy rate target is now 0.75%-1%. Fed officials want to get it higher without undermining a historically tight labor market and sending the economy into recession, but accelerating inflation will make that a hard task.”These are ugly numbers. … I’d say we’ll probably be in a recession in the fourth quarter of this year with confirmation in the second quarter of 2023,” said Peter Cardillo, chief market economist at Spartan Capital Securities. More