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    BTC Most Resilient Blockchain After New ATH Mining Difficulty

    The Bitcoin network has succeeded in distancing itself from the chaos regarding planned attacks on blockchain networks after it established a new mining difficulty all time high of 31.251 trillion. This is the first time in history for the 30-trillion mark to be exceeded.Satoshi Nakamoto ensured the security of the BTC through a decentralized network of BTC miners that has the responsibility of confirming the legitimacy of transactions and minton new blocks.Given the community support from developers to holders to traderds to miners that has spanned across 13 years, the BTC network was witness to a historic 10-month-long rally as it achieved mining difficulty of 31.251 trillion.Mining difficulty is there to protect the BTC ecosystem against any network attacks like, for example, double-spending. This happens when perpetrators reverse already confirmed transactions over the BTC blockchain.The greater the mining difficulty, the more computational power is required from miners to confirm transactions over the BTC network. This means that BTC’s very high mining difficulty makes it almost impossible for malicious actors to represent more than 50% of the hash rate.The BTC network currently demands 220.436 million terahashes/second (TH/s), according to blockchain.com. All of this only confirms the fact that BTC is the most resilient blockchain network.BTC might also come to the rescue regarding the LUNA/UST chaos currently ensuing in the crypto markets as Do Kwon’s plans for reviving LUNA and UST includes purchasing and redistributing BTC based on requirement.Continue reading on CoinQuora More

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    EOS Falls 12% In Selloff

    The move downwards pushed EOS’s market cap down to $1.2675B, or 0.10% of the total cryptocurrency market cap. At its highest, EOS’s market cap was $17.5290B.EOS had traded in a range of $1.2730 to $1.3800 in the previous twenty-four hours.Over the past seven days, EOS has seen a drop in value, as it lost 37.28%. The volume of EOS traded in the twenty-four hours to time of writing was $371.7024M or 0.37% of the total volume of all cryptocurrencies. It has traded in a range of $1.1156 to $1.9911 in the past 7 days.At its current price, EOS is still down 94.40% from its all-time high of $22.98 set on April 29, 2018.Bitcoin was last at $28,945.7 on the Investing.com Index, down 5.01% on the day.Ethereum was trading at $1,982.30 on the Investing.com Index, a loss of 6.10%.Bitcoin’s market cap was last at $552.1451B or 44.57% of the total cryptocurrency market cap, while Ethereum’s market cap totaled $239.5017B or 19.33% of the total cryptocurrency market value. More

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    Etherscan and CoinGecko Release Simultaneous Security Alerts

    An alert has been issued by both Etherscan and CoinGecko simultaneously relating to an ongoing phishing attack on their platforms.After a number of users reported unusual MetaMask pop-ups that prompted them to connect their crypto wallets to the website, the firms launched an investigation, and have now released some information regarding the attempted phishing attacks.According to the information released, the attack attempts to gain access to users’ funds by requesting to integrate their MetaMask wallets with the websites.Etherescan further revealed that the attackers have also been able to display phishing pop-ups through third-party integrations, and has advised crypto investors to not confirm any transaction requests received by MetaMask.In an effort to identify the root cause for the attack, one member of the crypto Twitter community, @Noedel19, connected the ongoing phishing attacks to the compromise of CoinZilla – a marketing and advertising agency. The Twitter user suggested that any website that integrates with CoinZilla Ads has been compromised.Coinzilla has not yet given an official confirmation regarding its service being compromised. However, @Noedel19 is confident that all companies that have ad integration with CoinZilla are still at risk of similar attacks.In an effort to implement damage control, Etherscan has disabled the compromised third-party integration on its website.CoinGecko has also posted a tweet with the text “Security Alert: If you are on the CoinGecko website and you are being prompted by your Metamask to connect to this site, this is a SCAM. Don’t connect it. We are investigating the root cause of this issue.”Continue reading on CoinQuora More

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    Crypto.com Reverses Trader’s LUNA Transactions From May 12

    Crypto exchange Crypto.com has announced that its users who traded Terra’s native token, LUNA, on May 12 between 12:40 and 13:39 (UTC) did so with the wrong price. Terra’s death spiral is expected to be the reason for the mispricing.Crypto.com stated that they were able to spot the problem very quickly which led to trading being suspended on the platform till further notice. Crypto.com stated that “trading remains halted until further notice.”Market participants interpreted this to mean that the exchange had reversed profitable LUNA transactions by traders attempting to exit the cryptocurrency after it had been in a death spiral for the last few days. Unfortunately, traders are not happy with the compensation, but Crypto.com is trying to rectify this by offering affected users $10 worth of Cronos (CRO), the exchange’s native token.LUNA’s loss in value has led multiple exchanges to delist LUNA and TerraUSD (UST) assets. Crypto.com is one of these exchanges.Another exchange making the same move is Binance, the biggest crypto exchange in terms of trading volume. The firm’s CEO, Changpeng Zhao, stated that “I am very disappointed with how this UST/LUNA incident was handled (or not handled) by the Terra team.”He added that “we requested their team to restore the network, burn the extra minted LUNA, and recover the UST peg. So far, we have not gotten any positive response, or much response at all.”Another exchange making the decision to delist LUNA is OKX. The director of OKX, Lennix Lai, state dthat “seismic crypto market movements like we’ve seen this week tend to deliver some pretty brutal lessons, and we’re seeing a flight away from direct investment in DeFi protocols in the wake of the UST breakdown.”Continue reading on CoinQuora More

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    Sri Lanka eases curfew as new PM begins forming cabinet

    COLOMBO (Reuters) -Sri Lanka lifted a nationwide curfew for 12 hours on Saturday, further easing tight curbs as new Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe made first his cabinet appointments after clashes between pro- and anti-government groups killed nine people.More than a month of predominantly peaceful protests against the government turned violent this week after supporters of former Prime Minister Mahinda Rajapaksa stormed an anti-government protest camp in the commercial capital Colombo, burning tents and clashing with protesters and police. The initial violence and reprisals against government figures also left more than 300 injured.Hit hard by the pandemic, rising oil prices and tax cuts by the populist government, Sri Lanka is in the throes of its worst economic crisis since independence from Great Britain in 1948.Useable foreign reserves have dwindled, and rampant inflation and shortages of fuel have brought thousands onto the streets in protest. The government lifted the curfew from 6 a.m. (0030 GMT) on Saturday until 6 p.m. A 24-hour curfew imposed on Monday had been lifted for a few hours on Thursday and Friday to allow purchase of essential supplies.Rajapaksa stepped down after violence flared on Monday, leaving his younger brother Gotabaya Rajapaksa to rule on as president. Wickremesinghe, a five-time prime minister, was appointed to another term late on Thursday. He appointed four ministers from the Rajapaksas’ Sri Lanka Podujana Peramuna (SLPP), a decision unlikely to satisfy the protesters demanding the removal of the party from power. The appointments, announced by the president’s office, include G.L. Pereis, the SLPP chairman who had held the post before resigning on Monday.Wickremesinghe is the sole lawmaker from his United National Party to hold a seat in parliament, and is reliant on other parties to form a coalition government. The SLPP has pledged to support him. The main opposition has ruled out supporting him, but several smaller parties have said they would back policies by the new prime minister to stabilise the economy. More

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    Europe battles to secure steel following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine

    Before Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, the Azovstal steelworks in Mariupol was a major exporter, its steel used in landmark buildings such as the Shard in London. Today, the vast industrial complex is a symbol of Ukraine’s dogged resistance, bombarded by Russia as the last part of the city still in the hands of Ukrainian fighters.While Azovstal remains under intense assault, its owner Metinvest, the country’s largest steel producer, has managed to resume production elsewhere. These are the first steps towards restarting the country’s iron and steel industry, which — including supply-chain accounts — makes up nearly 10 per cent of gross domestic product and employs half a million people.ArcelorMittal, the world’s second-biggest steel producer, which owns a large plant at Kryvyi Rih in the south, has also been able to restart work after the industry all but ground to a halt when the invasion began at the end of February.Volumes are much lower than they were, however, and while some exports have restarted, there are big logistical challenges, from the disruption to ports to the Russian missile attacks on the country’s railway network. The loss of supplies has been felt all over Europe. Russia and Ukraine are among the world’s biggest steel exporters. Before the war, the two together accounted for about 20 per cent of EU imports of finished steel products, according to industry trade body Eurofer. A worker processes liquid iron in a steel foundry at ArcelorMittal’s Kryvyi Rih steelworks in Ukraine © Ueslei Marcelino/ReutersMany European steel producers relied on Ukraine for raw materials such as metallurgic coal and iron ore. Ferrexpo, the London-listed Ukrainian miner, is a major exporter of iron ore. Other manufacturing companies imported slab, semi-finished flat chunks of steel, as well as rebar, rods used to reinforce concrete in construction projects.Russia’s invasion initially disrupted supplies and forced customers to source products from elsewhere. Yuriy Ryzhenkov, Metinvest’s chief executive, said the company typically exported about 50 per cent of its products to the EU and the UK. “It is a significant problem, especially for countries like Italy and the UK. [Many] of their supplies of semi-finished products were coming from Ukraine.”Italy’s Marcegaglia, one of Europe’s largest steel processing companies and a longstanding Metinvest customer, is among those that has had to scramble for alternative supplies. The company imported on average between 60-70 per cent of its slab from Ukraine.“A situation of almost panic was created [in the industry],” said chief executive Antonio Marcegaglia. “Many raw materials became difficult to find.” Despite the initial concerns over supplies, the company was able to keep production going at all of its plants, finding alternative sources in Asia, Japan and Australia.

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    Other companies found new suppliers too, including in Turkey. But the added cost has been considerable because prices soared after Russia’s invasion. “The problem is the knock-on effect, with prices being pushed up,” said one steel executive in the UK. In parts of Europe, hot-rolled coil, a widely traded commodity used in manufacturing that is often seen as a benchmark for steel prices, jumped from €950 a tonne just before the invasion to more than €1,400 in April, according to price reporting agency Argus Media. It has since fallen back to trade at just over €1,200 at the start of May. “The immediate response to the invasion was a precipitous run-up in prices. People were very concerned about supply,” said Colin Richardson, head of steel at Argus.But he added that, after that: “The market started to slip quite quickly because people panicked and bought an awful lot of material. The supply disruption has not been quite as dramatic as people anticipated.” If initial concerns over supplies have abated as companies including Metinvest and Ferrexpo have managed to keep some exports flowing and customers have found alternative supplies, worries about soaring input prices — for raw materials and energy — have intensified. Eurofer warned this month that steel consumption in Europe could shrink by almost 2 per cent this year as a result of soaring energy prices, ongoing disruptions to supply chains and the shock of the war in Ukraine. A market contraction — which would be the third in four years — looks likely, it said. Despite the disruption from the war, the impact on European industry has been cushioned by relatively high stock levels of steel coming out of the pandemic, said Karl Tachelet, deputy director-general at Eurofer. Some buyers have been able to sit out the current crisis. Coils of cold-rolled steel at ThyssenKrupp’s plant in Duisburg, Germany © Ina Fassbender/AFP/Getty ImagesRepercussions from the war, however, had “manifested [themselves] in other parameters — a very sharp but temporary increase in prices”, said Tachelet. “Also, raw material prices and energy prices have exploded. These are shocks and they create immediate imbalances.” Cost inflation was the biggest worry right now, he added.It is a view shared by ArcelorMittal, which said this month that it expected steel consumption in Europe to decline by 2 to 4 per cent this year because of rising inflation, compared with its previous forecast of zero to 2 per cent growth. Arcelor chief financial officer Genuino Christino said there had been some “tightness on the supply side which has created some difficulties for customers to source [materials]”. He added he thought this would be temporary but that it was “fair to expect there will be some reduction in demand”.The European Commission and the US have both proposed suspending import duties on steel from Ukraine for one year but the big question is whether the country can keep producing — and exporting. “It all depends on the state of the railways,” said the executive of one European steel company that sources iron ore from Ukraine.“We do have alternatives for iron ore and coal. Poland is still a big producer of coal. We can get iron ore from Australia, Brazil. But our priority, as long as it works, is to get our raw materials from Ukraine,” he added, given its proximity. Metinvest’s Ryzhenkov said the company was working with Ukraine’s government to open up new export routes to Europe. “Yes, it’s difficult,” he admitted. While some routes are easier to plan, others require investment in new track and loading terminals. The company, he added, had managed to ship some materials to its facility in Bulgaria, and to customers in Romania and Hungary. It recently completed its first shipment since the war — of iron ore, bound for Algeria — through the Romanian Black Sea port of Constanța. Despite the crisis, Ryzhenkov said he was confident the company would be able to recover. It has also refocused some of its operations in Ukraine to make steel plates for bulletproof vests for the military, as well as anti-tank traps to tackle Russian forces. The company, he stressed, was still “operating and functioning” and able to service interest payments on its debts. Its assets in Europe and the US, which had previously been integrated into its operations, are also gradually adjusting as standalone businesses. Its steel rolling facilities in Europe have started procuring slabs from third parties to replace shipments from Ukraine.Rating agency Fitch said this month that the company should be able to service payments on a $176mn bond due in April 2023 from “existing cash and incremental cash flow” provided there are no material adverse changes in production and shipment levels. Ryzhenkov said: “It will take us some time to rejig the company . . . but it will be able to operate in the long run.”  More

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    Polish budget policy could make it harder to tame inflation – MPC's Litwiniuk

    Last month, the government announced a plan to help borrowers struggling with higher rates on mortgage loans amid the highest inflation in more than two decades. Poland has also lowered taxes on energy to tame the effects of higher prices for consumers. “(Hitting the inflation target) depends on budget policy, if we keep observing more transfers of funds for consumption, it will be very difficult. No rate hikes, even to the level of the real interest rate, will change that,” Litwiniuk told TVN24 television.Pointing to campaigning ahead of general elections planned for 2023, Litwiniuk – a university professor who was appointed to the MPC in January – said Polish inflation may remain elevated until 2025. Poland started a tightening cycle in October, later than central banks in the Czech Republic and Hungary. Its main interest rate currently stands at 5.25%, while inflation hit 12.4% year on year in April compared to the central bank’s inflation target of 2.5% with a tolerance of +/-1 percentage point. The mortgage plan would allow borrowers to make interest-free repayments on some installments and create an aid fund, worth 3.5 billion zloty from commercial banks’ profits. More

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    China looks to spur job prospects for record number of new graduates

    The subsidies are aimed at small firms, while graduates launching start-ups stand to get tax breaks, easier loan terms and even rent-free premises, the general office of the State Council, or cabinet, said in a notice. “China … encourages employers in COVID-hit regions to sign labour contracts with college graduates online,” it said, promising support for smaller and medium-size enterprises that hire more college graduates.China wants to promote healthy development of the online platform economy, it added, referring to a sector that is a big source of jobs, crucial at a time when a record 10.76 million are set to finish college this year.”‘Red lights’ and ‘green lights’ will be set up in order to promote healthy development of the platform economy and drive more jobs,” the notice said, referring to a system of incentives.But the worst COVID-19 outbreaks since 2020 have added to the pressures students face, and put at risk the small firms that are a mainstay of the world’s second largest economy.China’s “dynamic clearance” policy against the Omicron variant of coronavirus has led to full or partial lockdowns in dozens of cities, including a six-week halt citywide in the commercial centre of Shanghai.Small businesses, in particular, suffered in the accompanying disruptions to services and logistics. China wants to add more than 11 million urban jobs this year, rising to as many as 13 million, Premier Li Keqiang said in March. But recently he has called the employment situation “complicated and grim.”Li added, “Stabilising employment is critical to people’s livelihood, and is the key support for the economy to operate within a reasonable range,” in remarks prepared for a teleconference with provincial leaders on Saturday. China’s surveyed urban jobless rate hit its highest in nearly two years in March at 5.8%, while the rate for job seekers aged between 16 and 24 reached 16.0%, the highest since July 2021, official data showed.Policymakers should aim to get the labour market back on track to keep the economy growing, even if the annual GDP growth target could be hard to meet, analyst Julian Evans-Pritchard, of Capital Economics, said in a note on Thursday. More