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    Will US and UK central banks raise interest rates despite the threat to growth?

    Will the Federal Reserve raise interest rates for the first time since 2018?The US Federal Reserve is widely expected to raise interest rates by 0.25 percentage points at its meeting next week for the first time since slashing borrowing costs to zero at the start of the coronavirus pandemic. In testimony before Congress earlier this month, Fed chair Jay Powell said the US central bank was prepared to begin a series of interest rate increases beginning in March, despite Russia’s invasion of Ukraine and the ensuing economic fallout. Currently, the US futures market is fully pricing in a quarter-point raise in March, with another five expected over the remaining six meetings this year. That would leave the Fed’s key interest rate at roughly 1.5 per cent by December. The hope is that higher interest rates will help quell inflation, which in February rose by 7.9 per cent year on year — the fastest pace in 40 years. While it may dampen some inflationary pressures, tighter monetary policy cannot deflate prices driven higher by external shocks such as the conflict in Ukraine, which has sent energy and other commodity prices soaring. Powell is also expected to address concerns about US economic growth. High energy prices raise costs for companies and individuals. Tightening monetary policy too quickly in that environment could — in the worst-case scenario — tip the US into a recession.“In the case of inflation versus recession, I don’t care how bad inflation is, the Fed doesn’t want a recession because then that reverses all they’ve done with employment and the recovery,” said Andy Brenner, head of international fixed income at NatAlliance Securities. “Inflation is going to get worse before it gets better. But the Fed is limited in how quickly it can raise rates,” he added. Kate DuguidHow will the Bank of England respond to the Ukraine conflict?Investors expect the Bank of England to raise interest rates for the third time since the pandemic next week, despite the threat to growth posed by Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.UK inflation hit a 30-year high of 5.5 per cent in January, well before the impact of the dramatic rise in oil prices sparked by the outbreak of war and western sanctions on Moscow was felt. Given a sizeable minority of the BoE’s rate-setting committee voted for an extra-large half percentage point rate rise last month, “there is a degree of momentum for another increase”, according to Philip Shaw, chief economist at Investec.“We are taking the view that at this point, the [BoE] is more concerned about higher inflation than the risk of economic weakness, particularly with interest rates still very low by historical standards,” Shaw said.The BoE would hardly be swimming against the tide. The European Central Bank last week announced a faster reduction in the scale of its asset purchase programme, while the Fed is expected to raise rates.Beyond Thursday’s meeting, the prospects for further rate rises are likely to depend on the extent to which oil price rises feed through to other areas of the economy, particularly wages. Markets are currently braced for a further five interest rate rises before the end of 2022.The BoE “may well raise rates gradually until there are signs that the economy is slowing, that inflation pressures may be ebbing or that it is clear that pay growth remains relatively modest”, said Shaw. Tommy StubbingtonWill the gold price hit an all-time high?Increased volatility across global financial markets since Russia’s invasion of Ukraine has encouraged investors to look again to gold as a haven asset, its traditional role in periods of turmoil.The gold price peaked at nearly $2,070 this week, trading within touching distance of an all-time high of $2,072.50 hit in August 2020, according to Refinitiv data. But it later retreated below $2,000 — a key resistance level — despite fighting intensifying across Ukraine, leading to questions about the longevity of the precious metal’s rally.Gold’s ascent was supported by heavy buying from exchange traded fund managers. Gold-backed ETFs have seen a marked increase in demand so far this month, with investors adding 96.2 tonnes to their total holdings at a cost of more than $6.1bn by March 9.That has taken net investor inflows to almost $11bn so far this year, pushing the value of assets held in gold ETFs to $240.5bn, according to the World Gold Council, a trade body which represents gold producers.Geopolitical tensions have historically provided only a shortlived boost for gold. But Suki Cooper, precious metals analyst at Standard Chartered bank in New York, said a deeper shift in investor sentiment appeared to be unfolding as a result of the war in Ukraine and worries about the impact of inflation on other asset classes.Goldman Sachs last week raised its forecast for the gold price to $2,500 over the next six months, up from $2,050 previously. Goldman said it expected to see demand for gold increase this year from ETF investors, consumers in Asia and central banks.Moscow is set to buy all of Russia’s gold output this year after the Kremlin was blocked from accessing any foreign currency reserves held in offshore centres. This sanction on Russia is likely to encourage other central banks and governments to reconsider the place that gold holds in their foreign exchange reserves.“Central banks globally have both strong diversification and geopolitical reasons to shift [more] reserves into gold,” said Mikhail Sprogis, an analyst at Goldman. Chris Flood More

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    Monero ($XMR) Price Updates, Recent Developments, Future Events, Community

    Monero ($XMR) is a privacy-focused cryptocurrency specifically developed as a means of allowing users to conduct anonymous and untraceable transactions through the utilization of a variety of different cryptographic technologies. Additionally, Monero undergoes regular protocol changes to the mining algorithm it has and is constantly being improved upon.The technology responsible for ensuring that all of this works efficiently is known as Ring Signatures, which are used as a means of mixing the digital signature of an individual making an XMR transaction with those of other users prior to recording it on the blockchain.Price UpdatesMonero ($XMR) has seen a rapid growth in value, which is one of the main reasons why it has become one of the most popular privacy-oriented cryptocurrencies out there.When we go over the performance of the token throughout the last week, its 7-day low was on March 7, when the token decreased in value to $153.75, while its 7-day high was on March 9, when the token increased in value to $206.51.The seven-day price chart for Monero ($XMR). Source: CoinmarketcapGoing over the token’s 24-hour performance, its low was at a value of $172.32, while its 24-hour high was at $197.04.The 24-hour price chart for Monero ($XMR). Source: CoinmarketcapRecent DevelopmentsOn January 6, 2022, we saw the release of the Monero GUI 0.17.3.1 ‘Oxygen Orion.’ There were numerous improvements made through this update, such as a fix of the startup crash on Apple (NASDAQ:AAPL) Silicon, a fix to the wizard password not resetting after wallet creation, update translations, and minor bug fixes and UI improvements. Additionally, a GitHub user known as reemuru shared a lightweight browser extension that provides a simple UI for a Monero wallet. Monero also saw the launch of P2Pool v1.8.Cake Technologies also released Monero.com v1.0.2/1.0.3/1.0.4 and Cake Wallet v4.3.6/4.3.7/4.3.8. Hash Strongman also added a Monero module to the Learn Crypto Course, and there were 4 MoneroKon 2022 planning meetings throughout February.There was also the launch of RINO wallet, which is now in a public beta. It is essentially a multisig, enterprise-grade Monero wallet.On March 3, PrimeXBT listed Monero (XMR) for live trading. Future EventsIn terms of future events and developments, Exodus Wallet is planning to add support for Monero on the Trezor blockchain by the end of June 2022.Monerujo, the first Monero mobile wallet app, announced that their SideKick project got fully funded, and we can expect an official release going forward.Additionally, Haveno announced that they would become more decentralized and a key contributor to Monero’s development.On the FlipsideCommunityTwitter (NYSE:TWTR) user @McKibbinUSA shared excitement over the growth of the $XMR token, where he posted an image buying the cryptocurrency: “Someone just bought some #Monero $XMR!”.As cryptocurrency enthusiasts turn to privacy tokens as a means of conducting transactions a lot more anonymously, Monero ($XMR) is one of the leading tokens which has a lot of room for growth.EMAIL NEWSLETTERJoin to get the flipside of cryptoUpgrade your inbox and get our DailyCoin editors’ picks 1x a week delivered straight to your inbox.[contact-form-7]
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    Russia’s invasion to have ‘enormous impact’ on world food supplies

    Consumers around the world will feel the “enormous impact” of Russia’s war on Ukraine through sharply higher food prices and significant disruption to agricultural supply chains, according to industry executives and leading European officials.John Rich, executive chair of Ukraine’s leading food supplier MHP, said he feared for the vital spring planting season, which is critical not only for domestic supplies in Ukraine but also the huge quantities of grains and vegetable oil that the country exports around the globe. “This conflict has had an enormous impact on Ukraine and Russia’s ability to supply the world,” Rich said. The success of the planting season would be decided by “military action in the next week or two”, he added, warning that it would be jeopardised if Russia’s army moved into the west of the country, which has remained relatively unscathed.Together with Russia, Ukraine is a leading grain and sunflower oil supplier to world markets, accounting for just under a tenth of global wheat exports, about 13 per cent of corn and more than half the sunflower oil market, according to UN Comtrade. Prices of the commodities soared after Russia’s invasion, with wheat at one point hitting an all-time high. Rich warned of “spiralling inflation” in the cost of wheat, corn and other commodities — prices of which were rising before the hostilities because of droughts and high demand as economies emerged from the pandemic. “It’s a pretty toxic mix,” he said.Since the conflict broke out last month, MHP has been pursuing humanitarian efforts from Slovenia, distributing food aid around Ukraine where millions of people have been displaced.With MHP drivers criss-crossing Ukraine to deliver food, Rich appealed for donations to continue the relief efforts. “If we fail then the distribution of food will also fail,” he said.

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    The UN Food and Agriculture Organization has warned that up to 30 per cent of crop areas in Ukraine will either not be planted or be unharvested this year because of the conflict.Russia’s ability to export crops remains unclear because of the international sanctions, but the loss of export markets will hit the country’s farmers and lead to production declines, the UN body said in a report released on Friday. Ministers attending a G7 agriculture ministers meeting convened in response to the Russian invasion on Friday called on countries to avoid export bans and keep their food and agricultural markets open.The EU gets half its corn from Ukraine and a third of its fertilisers from Russia. Belarus, Russia’s ally, is another key fertiliser supplier. Fertiliser prices have risen sharply, with the surging price of natural gas, the main ingredient for nitrogen fertilisers, also threatening supplies. “From the EU perspective, this crisis has shown us that we have two sectors in particular where we have vulnerabilities . . . vegetable proteins and fertilisers,” Luis Planas, Spain’s agriculture minister, said in an interview. The supply chains from Ukraine and Russia were “broken” because of the virtual closure of the Black Sea ports.Planas said Spain did not have a food supply issue but flagged “a serious problem with animal feed”, with about 22 per cent of the corn fed to livestock in Spain coming from Ukraine. He called on the EU to ease restrictions on insecticide residues and GMOs to allow for more imports from Argentina and the US.Spain, he said, was “very worried about the price and supply of cereals in our immediate surroundings in the Mediterranean [region]”, including Egypt, Tunisia and Morocco. “We all have in mind the memory of 2011 and the Arab Spring” that was in part caused by high cereal prices, he added.In Brussels, EU member states are set to vote on a support plan for farmers hit by high costs and loss of exports on March 21.

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    Janusz Wojciechowski, EU agriculture commissioner, said the plan included allowing farmers to grow food crops for animals on land left fallow to qualify for subsidies and a change in state-aid rules to permit governments to subsidise farmers suffering from high costs.He also said there was no risk of a food shortage in the EU, warning that the European Commission would take legal action against those such as Hungary that have banned grain exports.Farmers around Europe want concrete plans from governments and Brussels. In Ireland, amid talk of reviving a scheme last used in the second world war where farmers would be asked to grow extra grain, the head of Macra na Feirme, a farmers’ association, called for clarity on subsidies and tax incentives.“We’ve identified that food security is an issue [and] that feed security is an issue. But as farm leaders, we’ve no certainty about what’s on the table to address this,” said John Keane, its president. More

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    Decentralized finance as a new globalization accelerator

    Today, broader access to the financial markets through decentralized finance marks the beginning of the open world. DeFi has been highly positive from the standpoint of wealth accumulation and cheaper financing, giving new meaning to the concept of “finance for everyone.” By removing intermediaries via the use of blockchain technology, DeFi widens the scope of financial transactions while significantly lowering their costs. It is evident that DeFi is the future of finance and other industries. The only question remaining is: How fast will we get there?Continue Reading on Coin Telegraph More

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    Terraform Labs donates $1.1B for Luna Foundation Guard‘s reserves

    UST is an algorithmic stablecoin with a theoretical exchange rate of 1:1 with the U.S. dollar and is in part maintained by swapping of/for LUNA tokens when its market value deviates from its peg. The burning of $1 in UST results in the minting of $1 in LUNA and vice versa. Continue Reading on Coin Telegraph More