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    Economic instability from Ukraine war will abate over time, UK's Johnson

    In a speech in the northern town of Blackpool, Johnson said now was not the time to stop supporting Ukraine and even though prices for gas, oil, grain and fertilisers had risen, the West could not force Kyiv to accept peace terms dictated by Russian President Vladimir Putin.”And I know there are some who, they argue, not in this country perhaps but elsewhere, that the price of supporting the Ukrainians is now too high and they should be encouraged to accept whatever terms Putin may ask. I do not believe that option is really open to us,” he said.”Over time I believe the economic consequences of the war in Ukraine will abate.” More

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    Instant view: ECB ends bond buys, signals rate hikes; yields rise

    With price growth surging last month to a record-high 8.1% and broadening quickly, the ECB is rolling back stimulus measures it has had in place for most of the last decade.It aims to stop rapid price growth from seeping into the broader economy and becoming perpetuated via a hard-to-break wage-price spiral.MARKET REACTION: The euro briefly slipped after the ECB decision before turning higher while money markets ramped up bets of more policy tightening from the central bank by the end of 2022. Benchmark 10-year German bond yields rose to fresh eight-year highs at 1.41%.REACTION:TD SECURITIES:”ECB institutionalized dovishness wins out by essentially saying that it “intends to” hike by 25bp in July. The ECB did throw a bone to the hawks by opening the door to a 50bp hike in September if high inflation is sustained.” ANDREW KENNIGHAM, CHIEF EUROPE ECONOMIST, CAPITAL ECONOMICS:”The failure to provide any new details about a possible backstop QE programme means peripheral bonds will remain vulnerable to a sell-off.””The most significant thing about the statement is what it does not say. There is no new detail whatsoever about the putative “spread-fighting tool” which is intended to prevent peripheral spreads widening too far.””All eyes now turn to the press conference, beginning at 13:30 BST (14.30 CET). We suspect she will be unable to provide more detail about a possible backstop programme which in turn means that investors are likely eventually to test the ECB’s resolve.”BAS VAN GEFFEN, SENIOR MACRO STRATEGIST, RABOBANK:”They did add an explicit caveat that they may consider a bigger hike to be warranted in September, depending on the inflation outlook by then. So basically they are putting more weight on the updated projections in a three months from now.””So in the longer term, that does make it look a bit more hawkish perhaps, which I would say explains that seesaw in market.”HETAL MEHTA, SENIOR EUROPEAN ECONOMIST, LEGAL & GENERAL INVESTMENT MANAGEMENT: “The central bank will hope that it will not need to construct another programme to support Italy. Persistently low yields over the last eight years have allowed the Italian Treasury to refinance existing debt at lower funding costs, significantly reducing its debt servicing costs and making its high debt burden more manageable. Higher ECB interest rates and Italian borrowing costs call into question Italian debt sustainability.”ANNA STUPNYTSKA, GLOBAL ECONOMIST, FIDELITY INTERNATIONAL:”We believe it will be difficult for the ECB to execute a rapid return of policy rates into positive territory given the growth and fragmentation constraints and the tightening path will be less steep and shorter than what is currently implied by market pricing. While a new spread management tool might help prevent spread fragmentation, it will not be a silver bullet as will likely bring a new set of issues for the ECB, including moral hazard.” ROBERT ALSTER, CEO, CLOSE BROTHERS ASSET MANAGEMENT CIO:“Holding rates at minus 0.5% despite record inflation, the ECB looks late to the party compared to the Fed. The ECB does appear to be joining the ‘hike-brigade’ but we do not expect Europe to attempt to overtake the Fed. Rather, the ECB is simply following the US lead, and we do not expect more aggressive tightening whilst the war in Ukraine continues to weight on sentiment.”SAM COOPER, VICE PRESIDENT OF MARKET RISK SOLUTIONS, SILICON VALLEY BANK:“Euro direction will be dictated by the timing and the pace of future interest rate hikes beyond July, in particular any hints that we could observe increases in 0.50% installments rather than 0.25%. Focus will now turn to ECB President Lagarde at the upcoming press conference, any deviation from market expectations could send further shockwaves to the euro and the wider FX market.”ARNE PETIMEZAS, SENIOR ANALYSTS, AFS GROUP, AMSTERDAM:”I think it is pretty weak. I don’t understand why they don’t end negative rates at one go in July. Instead they fix July at 25bps. They also make the same mistake of lowballing inflation in their new forecasts. 50bps in September is thus very likely. The ‘sustained’ and ‘gradual’ language suggest they see more hikes in 2023 than is currently priced in by OIS. It would be better if they acted more forcefully in the near term instead of pushing things out to the future, which as we all know is very uncertain.” More

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    Alibaba Cloud Launches Three New NFT Solutions for Creators

    The Alibaba Cloud NFT SolutionsAlibaba Cloud launched its NFT solutions to enable artists and creators to monetize their NFT projects with ease. Alibaba’s NFT solutions come with three different products. The first product, the Alibaba Cloud Elastic (NYSE:ESTC) Compute Service (ECS) and Auto Scaling, was launched to help developers and creators build NFT marketplace web servers with ease and high elasticity. The next is a Digital Marketing Service which integrates SMS to help creators build efficient marketing channels to reach customers. Alibaba’s SMS selects the best route in real-time when users send promotional, notification, and verification messages to customers worldwide.The third is a Global Delivery Service – Alibaba Cloud Content Delivery Network (CDN) and Server Load Balancer (SLB). This is a high performance NFT delivery service on Alibaba Cloud nodes, which supports up to 100,000 queries per second.On The FlipsideWhy You Should CareAlthough Alibaba did not state if its solutions would support crypto, it would focus on driving the adoption of NFT and digital art.Read about Alibaba’s first move into NFT below:Alibaba Goes With The Trend: Creates an NFT MarketplaceThe impact of the ban on Alibaba Cloud can be found below:Widespread Crypto Mining Disruption Affecting Operations Across Europe and Parts of Asia Using Alibaba CloudContinue reading on DailyCoin More

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    NBA Players Get Involved in a $1.4M NFT Rug Pull

    Professional athletes Michael Carter-Williams, Jerami Grant, Gary Harris, Marcus Zegarowski, Terrence Ross, Dennis Smith Jr., and Lance McCullers Jr. got involved in a huge NFT rug pull.The news about the rug pull surfaced in a series of tweets by an account under the name “ZachXBT”. The first twee said that the athletes got involved in a $1.4 million NFT rug pull via Players Only, an NFT launchpad.The second tweet said that Players Only was launched back in early December 2021 via Doge Pound launchpad. It also stated that the launchpad advertised itself as “NFTs for sports fans from the players” with utility, such as metaverse/IRL events, merch, autographs, and giveaways — all of which each athlete founder would be closely involved.As mentioned in the third tweet, the supply was set to 10,000 and was decreased to 4,456 NFTs but still brought in $1.4m. The tweet also mentioned that the team went as far as saying that every holder will get to win something.Each of the athletes tweeted multiple times to hype up the project upon launch. According to the fifth tweet, which says, “Right after minting concludes, the funds get transferred away to each of the athletes, Doge Pound, and the other team members Brooks/Drew.”ZachXBT further narrated what had happened:The author also mentioned that there were people who claim to did not get anything from what was promised to them.The same concept went on for the next two tweets, yet the last tweet said, “It’s clear the athletes haven’t put anywhere near $1.4m into the project. So many holders haven’t received items/events from giveaways they had won while athletes profited 5-6 figs each. It’s sad to see athletes from @NBA @MLB screw over fans like that w/o being reimbursed.”Continue reading on CoinQuora More

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    Power restored in crisis-hit Sri Lanka, UN unveils $47m aid plan

    COLOMBO (Reuters) -Striking power sector workers returned to work in Sri Lanka on Thursday after the president promised to listen to their concerns, ending widespread blackouts and bringing some respite to an economy hit by its biggest crisis in decades.About 900 out of around 1,100 engineers of the state-run Ceylon Electricity Board (CEB) went on strike at midnight, stalling operations at eight hydropower plants and triggering power cuts across the island nation.The CEB Engineers’ Union is opposed to government plans to amend power sector legislation to remove restrictions on competitive bidding for renewable power projects, among other changes.The engineers resumed their duties after receiving an undertaking from President Gotabaya Rajapaksa that their concerns would be taken into consideration in new legislation that was debated in parliament on Thursday, a union leader said.”Situation is largely back to normal. All power plants are functional and the engineers are back at work,” the union’s Joint Secretary Dhammika Wimalaratne told Reuters.Sri Lanka’s 22 million people are already suffering the country’s most serious financial turmoil in seven decades, with severe shortages of fuel, medicines and other essentials amid record inflation and a devaluation of its currency.In response to a request from the government, the United Nations on Thursday said it had launched a plan to provide $47.2 million of assistance between June and September to 1.7 million people worst-hit by the crisis.Overall, the UN estimates that in total nearly 5.7 million people need immediate life-saving assistance.”Multiple factors are impacting Sri Lanka’s food security situation; if we don’t act now, many families will be unable to meet their basic food needs,” UN Resident Coordinator in Sri Lanka Hanaa Singer-Hamdy said in a statement.The country was crippled by long power cuts earlier this year after it was unable to import fuel needed to generate electricity, though the situation has improved as monsoon rains have bolstered hydropower generation.The government, pushing renewable energy as a potential solution for its power woes, says it needs to amend legislation to speed up the approval and implementation of projects.On Thursday, power outages were reported in at least 10 regions, some lasting as long as six hours, Janaka Ratnayake, chairman of the power regulator Public Utilities Commission of Sri Lanka, said. More

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    As top U.S. retailers drown in goods, rotation to services picks up inflation slack

    WASHINGTON (Reuters) – Major retailers like Target Corp (NYSE:TGT) and Walmart (NYSE:WMT) Inc may be cutting prices to clear overstocked warehouses, but for hotel operators the revenue is pouring in with daily room rates and occupancy that have broken above pre-pandemic levels.The pace of used car price increases has eased from the chart-topping levels that drove an initial surge of COVID-era inflation; but airline fares as of April were rising at a similarly stratospheric 33% annual rate.The price of restaurant meals is accelerating with no break apparent yet in demand, according to data from reservation site OpenTable.In the battle against inflation, now front of mind for the Federal Reserve and the Biden administration, the expected rotation of spending from a COVID-lockdown splurge on goods to in-person services was supposed to also take the edge off of prices. Services, after all, are more immune to the supply-chain bottlenecks that kept goods off of shelves and fueled price rises through scarcity.Instead, the two sides of American consumption are also seeing a handoff in inflation pressure – at least so far – with the more wage-senstive service industry competing for workers to fill vacancies that remain well above the national job opening rate.For the Fed, as well as Democrats worried inflation will cost them at the mid-term polls in November, the “great rotation” so far is providing no easy fix. Graphic: As goods inflation eases, services step in – https://graphics.reuters.com/USA-FED/INFLATION/lbvgndazapq/chart.png “A rise in consumption back towards services may not help much,” given higher labor demand and higher wage growth in the service industry, said Harry Holzer, a Georgetown University economics professor and Brookings Institution fellow. “Wage inflation there is stronger in a range of sectors from the low end…to the high end” – from restaurant workers to well-paid professionals.New consumer inflation data due Friday is expected to show headline prices continued to rise by 8.3% annually, a multi-decade price shock that has cut Americans’ purchasing power and led to challenging increases in food costs and gasoline nearing $5 a gallon.The Fed uses a slightly different measure for its 2% inflation target, but it is running at 6%, causing the Fed to engineer one of its fastest-ever turns toward tighter monetary policy – all with President Joe Biden’s blessing in hopes prices will ease soon.’OPTIMISTIC FOR THE CONSUMER’Within the headline number, however, the subtext may be even more troublesome.Inflation for goods has eased as expected, with demand falling and growing evidence that the supply-chain problems that bedeviled the global economy last year are improving.Shipping costs and port backlogs are easing, and a New York Fed index of overall supply chain stress eased through May, resuming improvement seen at the start of the year. Monthly e-commerce data from Adobe (NASDAQ:ADBE), released Thursday, showed inflation for goods purchased online eased in May to a 2% annual rate, down from a March peak of 3.6%. Prices fell on a month to month basis for 10 of the 18 categories tracked by the company. Rising online prices were a hallmark of the COVID goods binge. Graphic: Supply chain pressures ease – https://graphics.reuters.com/USA-FED/SUPPLY-CHAIN/gdvzybkljpw/chart.png But services are taking up the slack. Excluding energy-related services, inflation for “core” services has accelerated for eight months straight, and their share of overall inflation has risen also. So far that has not clearly dented consumer spending, though “real” purchases adjusted for inflation may have slipped a bit, according to a Bank of America (NYSE:BAC) Institute study of credit card spending. “As we hunt around the data for bearish signs, we are still struck by strong momentum in service sector spending,” the report said. “Additionally, households’ median checking and savings accounts are higher than pre-pandemic…Overall, we remain cautiously optimistic for the consumer.”The financial buffers built during the pandemic indeed may prove a key factor in the success or failure of efforts to tame inflation, with households by some estimates still sitting on a few trillion dollars of extra cash from pandemic-era transfer payments or spending trimmed during the health crisis. That’s firepower to keep consumption underway – whether meeting the higher mortgage payments home buyers must shoulder as interest rates rise or, as Bank of America noted, funding higher gas prices at the expense of things like consumer durables where demand was expected to wane anyway.FAST ENOUGH?It’s not a clear-cut picture. In a presentation in late May, Pantheon Macroeconomics Chief Economist Ian Shepherdson laid out the case that has placed him among the inflation optimists: A combination of improving supply chains, an expected slowing of home price appreciation, pressure on profits due to rising inventories, and slower wage growth could cause CPI to fall below 3% by early next year.Signs of that, he maintains, could show up in time for the Fed to slow its current half-point pace of rate increases to a quarter point by this fall, and perhaps as soon as the central bank’s July meeting.“If you were building an inflation model from the bottom up, all these variables that you would consider are starting to move in the right direction,” he said.But the pace of improvement will matter. Fed officials have said they want convincing, month-to-month proof inflation is easing before slowing their rate increases. For politicians, $5 dollar gas heading into the summer driving season and ahead of midterm congressional elections is a painful campaign statistic.Change may not happen fast, Citi economists Veronica Clark and Andrew Hollenhorst wrote.They see prices continuing to rise around 8.3% annually in Friday’s upcoming report, “with upside risks and a continued pick-up in services prices. A pick up in services inflation would be a further sign that too-tight labor markets are a key factor driving high inflation” that could prompt the Fed to keep its faster rate hikes intact. More

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    Factbox-Surging food prices fuel protests across developing world

    Rising prices for basic food staples is fuelling protests from Indonesia to Iran.European wheat prices have jumped 52% and benchmark palm oil futures went up 25% since January.The trend is growing and is alarming policymakers, with United Nations agencies warning that the price hikes will worsen an existing food crisis in Africa and could cause “catastrophic” child malnutrition.Following are protests in alphabetical order that have erupted over food prices over the past few months.ARGENTINA: Thousands of farmers protested in Buenos Aires on April 23 against President Alberto Fernandez, whose policies to contain food prices to curb rampant inflation have been criticized by the agricultural sector.CHILE:Thousands of students marched through the Chilean capital Santiago on March 25 demanding higher food stipends.CYPRUS:Cypriot farmers dumped tonnes of milk and lit bales of hay outside the presidential palace in the capital Nicosia on May 18, in protest at high prices and production issues.GREECE: Thousands of Greek workers protested in Athens in May Day rallies against surge in energy and food prices. Greece’s annual consumer inflation accelerated to 8.9% in March, hitting its highest level in 27 years.GUINEA: One person was killed in Guinea’s capital on June 2 during protests over fuel price hikes, in the most serious unrest since a military junta took power last year. Gunfire rang out in Conakry overnight as people barricaded streets and set tyres alight in protest over a 20% increase in the price of gasoline, a Reuters reporter and witnesses said.INDONESIA: Indonesian farmers protested in Jakarta on May 17 against rising cost of palm oil export ban. Smallholder farmers’ group APKASINDO estimates at least 25% of palm oil mills have stopped buying palm fruit from independent farmers since the ban started, sending the price of palm fruit 70% below a floor price set by regional authorities.IRAN: Price protests turn political in Iran as rallies spread. The protests began in early May sparked by the government’s subsidy cut decision that caused price hikes in Iran by as much as 300% for a variety of flour-based staples. The government also raised prices of some basic goods such as cooking oil and dairy products.Pensioners protested in Iran on June 6 in a fresh demonstration against soaring living costs, according to Fars news agency and social media reports, in a further challenge to authorities grappling with weeks of unrest. About 1,000 retirees gathered to protest peacefully and were escorted by the police in the city, Fars wrote.KENYA: Activists held a demonstration on May 17 in Nairobi, asking the government to lower costs of living, especially on food prices.LEBANON: Lebanese truck and bus drivers and others blocked roads in January to protest against soaring prices. The protesters accuse politicians of failure to address an ongoing economic crisis since 2019.PALESTINIAN TERRITORIES: Palestinian police made a number of arrests on June 6 as protests against soaring prices for food and other necessities spread a day ahead of a planned strike to demand action from the cash-strapped Palestinian Authority. Official figures released by the Palestinian Central Statistics Bureau put the food prices increase at between 15 and 18 percent.PERU: Peru deployed army on highways in April in response to road blockades spurred by anger over rising food and fuel prices. Peru is facing its highest inflation rate in a quarter century.SRI LANKA: Sri Lankan President Gotabaya Rajapaksa declared a state of emergency in May, following a day of anti-government strikes and protests over a worsening economic crisis. Sri Lanka’s economic crisis, unparalleled since its independence in 1948, has come from the confluence of the COVID-19 pandemic, rising oil prices and populist tax cuts by the Rajapaksas.SUDAN: In March, a protester was shot and killed in the Sudanese city of Madani, medics said, as demonstrators marched across the country to protest a military coup that has been followed by a steep economic downturn. Sudan’s currency has lost more than a third of its value since the military coup in October last year, rapidly driving up prices for fuel, food and other goods.TUNISIA: Tunisia said on May 11 it would raise the prices of some foods including milk, eggs and poultry, following protests by farmers against a jump in animal feed barley prices. More