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    ‘Blockchain Space Relatively Stable,’ Cites Dapp Radar in Report

    Today, decentralized applications store DappRadar issued its Q1 2022 Dapp Industry Report, citing relative stability for the blockchain space.The report highlights several interesting industry trends. It says that despite a bearish crypto market and at least $1.19 billion taken in hacks and exploits in the first three months of 2022, an average of 2.4 million unique active wallets interacted with dapps daily. It also claims that blockchain usage remained stable, losing only 5.8% against Q4, 2021 but gaining 396% from Q1, 2021.Ronin and the Wormhole Solana bridge were the two worst affected by security issues regarding token bridges, asserts the report. It goes on to say that gaming dapps were the pace-setting aspect of the industry, accounting for more than 50.5% of daily active users in Q1 and representing a 5.8% decrease from Q4 2021. Additionally, NFTs were reported to have generated $12 billion in trades in Q1.Modesta Masoit, Head of Finance and Research at DappRadar, stated that the industry was under significant stress but was handling things well and showing the true potential of cryptocurrencies and dapps.The report also claims that DeFi saw a downward trend. It cites the fact that, at the end of March, the DeFi industry’s TVL was estimated at $214 billion, 8.4% lower than December 2021. Even though TVL and usage metrics are decreasing from the previous quarter, the industry appears to be consolidating and evolving to broaden its appeal.The study attributes some of the negative trends to the sanctions imposed on Russia.The Q1 2022 Dapp Industry Report is the latest edition of DappRadar’s regular industry reports. Founded in 2018, DappRadar is a global decentralized applications (dapps) store.Continue reading on CoinQuora More

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    Nexo Launches ‘All-in-One’ Digital Asset Prime Brokerage Platform

    DeFi cryptocurrency firm Nexo has launched Nexo Prime — a prime brokerage tool to allow institutional, corporate, and high net worth investors to manage digital assets on one platform. Nexo Prime will offer the essential tools to trade, borrow, lend, and store digital assets, such as cryptocurrencies.Kalin Metodiev, Nexo CFA and co-founder, recognized that the digital assets market “never sleeps” and pointed out that Nexo Prime can be a solution that will offer “best-in-class” and “around-the-clock” service.“Institutional and corporate demand for digital assets has never been greater, and the market for prime services could [multiply to ten] over the next year,” said Metodiev.Metodiev took pride in the launch, saying:Notably, Nexo Prime offers a suite of solutions covering trading, taking custody, and lending of assets.According to the team, clients will have access to diversified liquidity, over-the-counter (OTC) desk, and other financial services on one platform. Moreover, clients can trade directly through API calls or utilize Nexo’s trading interface. Through the Smart Routing System, all transactions will be cost-effective.The developers also revealed that its custody framework optimizes services from BitGo, Fireblocks, Ledger Vault, and Fidelity Digital Assets. With this, clients get a real-time audit and have instant access to funds, while being assured protection through custodial insurance.Meanwhile, Nexo Prime’s lending framework offers clients liquidity on demand, whether for margin trading or an OTC loan.Nexo Prime Vice President of Development, Yasen Yankov, touched on all features offered by the brokerage platform. According to him, it took the team 18 months to “carefully [build] and [incubate] Nexo Prime.” He shared his pride after launching the platform:“We are today, already a trusted partner to leading trading firms, hedge funds, family offices, and OTC desks.”In other news, Nexo has been selected to become a member of the Crypto Market Integrity Coalition (CMIC). According to Nexo, this solidifies the company’s position as a leader in the blockchain industry.Continue reading on CoinQuora More

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    Analysis-BOJ's bet on career pragmatist sets bank up for post-Kuroda era

    TOKYO (Reuters) – The Bank of Japan’s rare reappointment of a veteran technocrat behind the country’s massive monetary stimulus positions the bank for an eventual exit from governor Haruhiko Kuroda’s radical policies when his term ends next year.Having spent most of his career at the BOJ’s elite monetary affairs department, Shinichi Uchida, 59, was instrumental in drafting Kuroda’s “bazooka” asset-buying programme in 2013 and negative interest policy in 2016.While those policies create an image of him being a proponent of heavy monetary stimulus, Uchida also led the BOJ’s drive to slow its huge bond buying by introducing yield curve control in 2016 – a policy that caps long-term interest rates at zero but also relieved the central bank from buying bonds at a set pace.As its balance sheet became bloated and the financial sector’s pain from prolonged easing became more apparent, Uchida was instrumental in crafting steps to slow the BOJ’s purchases of risky assets and ease the strain on banks from low rates.The reappointment for another four-year term as the BOJ’s executive director, announced this month, will have Uchida, who joined the bank in 1986, oversee monetary policy design well beyond the end of Kuroda’s term in April next year.Uchida’s technical expertise and deep experience mean the dismantling of YCC, whenever it happens, will go smoothly, while his bi-partisan nature mean he will be a help, not a hindrance, to the rollback of Kuroda’s stimulus, say three sources familiar with the matter.”Because he’s created this complex framework, he’s probably the best person to roll it back,” said Mari Iwashita, chief market economist at Daiwa Securities and a veteran BOJ watcher.”That’s his strength, as well as his ability to quickly change tack on policy when he sees fit.”The BOJ has six executive directors that assist the board in making decisions on key matters. The roles are highly sought after and offered to only a handful of top BOJ staff.Uchida’s reappointment is unusual – historically, such positions last only a single four-year term, after which the officials retire from the BOJ for private sector jobs.NEITHER HAWK NOR DOVEHaving spent most of his career at the monetary affairs department, Uchida made his mark with a knack for designing complex policy frameworks and his ability to navigate BOJ leadership transitions.People who know him say Uchida is sharp-minded and worked well under both the dovish Kuroda and his predecessor Masaaki Shirakawa, who was wary of ramping up stimulus too much.”He’s a genius in crafting sophisticated policy ideas,” one of people said. “It’s hard to brand him as a hawk or dove.”That means Uchida is well placed to craft plans to either prolong the lifespan of YCC, or gradually phase it out.To be sure, the BOJ is in no rush to withdraw stimulus as it focuses on underpinning a fragile economic recovery, rather than fret about the prospect of too-high inflation.But some in the BOJ are wary of Japan becoming increasingly isolated in a global shift in central banking towards tighter monetary policy.While Japan’s comparably subdued inflation allows the BOJ to keep rates low for longer than its counterparts, there is near consensus within the bank its next move will be to dial back – not ramp up – stimulus, the sources say.Untangling YCC, a complex patchwork of measures to keep rates low while addressing the side-effects of prolonged easing without upending markets, is no easy task.The BOJ traditionally spends years brainstorming scenarios on its next possible move, a process in which Uchida will likely be deeply involved, the sources say.”If there’s even a slim chance of a policy tweak in the long run, the BOJ needs to be ready,” a second source said. “Uchida will certainly play a key role in the process.” More

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    RBNZ to raise rates by 25 bps on April 13, some call for 50- Reuters poll

    BENGALURU (Reuters) – New Zealand’s central bank will opt for a modest 25 basis point interest rate rise on April 13, but is set to raise by slightly more this year as a whole than previously thought to head off rapidly-rising inflation, a Reuters poll of economists found.The survey puts the RBNZ, which has already raised rates by a quarter point at each of its past three policy meetings, in a slightly more dovish mode than the U.S. Federal Reserve, which is set to lift borrowing costs by a half point this month.All but six of 21 economists polled expected the RBNZ to raise the official cash rate (OCR) by 25 basis points to 1.25% at its Wednesday meeting, taking it above where it was before the start of the COVID-19 pandemic.But more than a quarter of respondents, or six of 21, forecast a bigger half-point increase to 1.50%.Pervasive supply chain disruptions and a tight labour market had already pushed up inflation to a three-decade high of 5.9% in the fourth quarter, almost double the top of the central bank’s 1-3% target range.Along with runaway house prices, there are also growing concerns Russia’s war in Ukraine will push up commodity prices, including food, even faster.”At this stage, it’s a case of pick your poison,” said Sharon Zollner, chief economist at ANZ who forecast a 50 basis point hike on Wednesday. “Yes, aggressive hikes now raise the odds of a hard landing for the economy in the near term, but going too slowly would raise the risks of an even harder landing further down the track. “The RBNZ has a big job to do to rein in runaway inflation, and the sooner they rip into it, the lower the economic cost is likely to be,” Zollner added.FINE LINE But Moody’s (NYSE:MCO) Analytics economist Illiana Jain, who like the majority of respondents expects a 25 basis point move, said: “The RBNZ will need to toe a fine line between controlling decades-high inflation and not stifling economic growth.”Still, economists brought forward their rate hike expectations for the fourth Reuters poll in a row, and a majority, 12 of 21, now expect the OCR to reach 2.50% or higher by the end of this year. That is still below where it was in 2014 after the RBNZ last delivered four consecutive quarter-point rate hikes.More than half of respondents in the latest poll who had a view on rates as far as the end of next year, 9 of 15, forecast the OCR to climb to 2.75% or higher by then.”Inflation is running at its hottest in a generation, and inflation expectations have become unanchored by the lack of urgency by the RBNZ and a belief that higher inflation is settling in,” said Brad Olsen, senior economist at Infometrics.Olsen added the current policy setting is still stimulating the economy and “the OCR must rise, faster and harder … to realign expectations and stop pouring more fuel on an already-accelerating inferno.”The poll also showed inflation would remain well above the RBNZ’s target range of 1-3% until the second quarter of 2023. It was forecast to average 6.2% this year and slip to 2.8% in 2023, a sharp upgrade from 3.3% and 2.1% predicted in January.New Zealand’s economy, which returned to growth in the final quarter of 2021 on the back of increased consumer and government spending as pandemic restrictions were lifted, was expected to grow 3.1% this year and 2.7% next.(For other stories from the Reuters global long-term economic outlook polls package:) More

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    67% of Cardano holders underwater and most bought less than 1 year ago

    Cardano’s ADA token has had a bearish week. The price has fallen 11.4% since Monday resulting in more holders being in the red. More significantly, ADA is now 64.7% below its September 2 all-time high of $3.09 and is in danger of falling below a dollar over the next few days should the trend continue.Continue Reading on Coin Telegraph More

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    U.S. Congress votes to strip Russia of 'most favored' trade status, ban its oil

    WASHINGTON (Reuters) -The U.S. Congress voted to impose further economic pain on Russia over the invasion of Ukraine on Thursday, passing one measure to remove its “most favored nation” trade status and another to ban oil imports.The Senate voted 100-0 in favor of the measure removing Permanent Normal Trade Relations (PNTR) status for both Russia and its close ally Belarus. Shortly afterward, it backed the energy measure, also by a 100-0 tally.Senate approval sent the legislation to the House of Representatives, which quickly passed the trade measure by 420 to 3, and the energy legislation by 413 to 9. President Joe Biden supports the measures and will sign them into law, White House press secretary Jen Psaki told reporters.The trade bill clears the way for Biden’s administration to raise tariffs on imports from Russia and Belarus. The energy measure puts into law Biden’s previous executive order banning imports of Russian oil, natural gas and coal.”This package is about bringing every tool of economic pressure to bear on (Russian President) Vladimir Putin and his oligarch cronies. Putin’s Russia does not deserve to be a part of the economic order that has existed since the end of World War Two,” Senator Ron Wyden, chairman of the Senate Finance Committee, said in a statement.The House passed both bills earlier this year, but they stalled in the Senate as Republicans and Democrats argued over when to vote on the energy measure and wording of a provision in the trade bill reauthorizing the Magnitsky Act, which allows sanctions over human rights violations.U.S. law mandates that Congress must approve the change in Russia and Belarus’ trade status. Under a compromise forged late on Wednesday senators agreed to consider both the trade measure and the energy bill. The House had to approve amendments to both measures because of technical changes made in the Senate.Russia calls the assault on Ukraine a “special military operation.” More

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    Exclusive-IDB may investigate chief over possible relationship with staffer, misuse of funds -sources

    MEXICO CITY/WASHINGTON (Reuters) -Inter-American Development Bank directors have met to discuss accusations in an anonymous email that the bank’s president, Mauricio Claver-Carone, carried out an intimate relationship with a staffer, three sources said.One of the sources, a person at the IDB with direct knowledge of the matter, said the directors had debated the possibility of hiring an outside firm to investigate the allegations and asking Claver-Carone to temporarily step aside.The two other sources confirmed that the bank’s 14 directors, its general counsel and its deputy secretary met to discuss the allegations and how to proceed in a two-and-a-half-hour virtual meeting on Tuesday.The directors met again on Thursday to draft a resolution to hire an external firm to investigate the allegations, the bank source said. The directors decided not to propose removing Claver-Carone from his duties, the person at the IDB with direct knowledge said. Reuters was unable to confirm the claims about the alleged relationship, which, if verified, would appear to be against the bank’s rules.The IDB did not comment when asked about both meetings and the allegations. Claver-Carone, a former White House official nominated to the IDB role by President Donald Trump, did not respond to repeated emails or calls seeking comment.Before coming to the IDB in 2020, Claver-Carone served under Trump as senior director for Western Hemisphere affairs at the National Security Council.The IDB is a development bank that, while far smaller than the International Monetary Fund or World Bank, is a key player in Latin America. It was responsible for $23.4 billion in financing and other financial commitments to Latin America and the Caribbean in 2021, according to bank figures. An anonymous email sent to the board of directors and the bank’s ethics officer a week ago accused Claver-Carone of carrying out a relationship with a senior strategist who reported to him, according to the bank source with direct knowledge of the meeting. Reuters has not seen the email. The email also accused Claver-Carone and the staffer of misusing IDB funds, one source said, without giving more detail.The IDB’s ethics code on its website states: “You cannot participate in any employment-related decisions about someone with whom you have an intimate relationship.” The allegations surfaced just weeks after the bank’s annual meeting and just as Claver-Carone is seeking to push through a capital increase for IDB Invest, the bank’s private-sector arm.Raising capital would require backing from the United States, the bank’s biggest shareholder, and its other members at a time when resources are tight due to the COVID-19 pandemic, the war in Ukraine and rising climate shocks. Leading Democrats opposed Claver-Carone’s nomination for the IDB role by Trump, a Republican.The U.S. Treasury Department declined to comment when asked about the IDB meeting.The resolution must be sent to the IDB’s board of governors, most of whom are finance ministers of member countries, to allow the directors to launch an investigation, according to the bank source with knowledge of the meeting.The results would be shared with the governors when it is completed, the bank source said.Claver-Carone, a hard-line Cuba hawk, faced a strong backlash ahead of his election to the IDB presidency in 2020 by some member states, including Argentina and Mexico, that bristled at breaking the bank’s tradition since 1959 of having a president from a Latin American country. Claver-Carone dismissed the push-back https://www.reuters.com/article/us-latam-usa-bank-idUSKBN24Z1DH at the time, saying he had “overwhelming” support, citing public backing from 15 countries and six more privately. More