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    Romanian Central Bank Approves Elrond Acquisition of EMI Institution Twispay

    Electronic money or e-money has been designed as a digital alternative to cash for automating financial transactions in areas such as payments and ecommerce. Elrond seeks to enhance the utility of this proven and regulated value transfer framework and take it to its natural conclusion by complementing it with a blockchain technology that is fast, scalable and inexpensive.Elrond made a strategic first move to establish itself as a bridge between traditional finance and the crypto space when it went public with its intention to acquire Twispay, institution that can operate within the entire EEA (European Union, Iceland, Liechtenstein and Norway) under the passporting rules.Since the announcement in October 2021, the two parties have engaged in conversations with the National Bank of Romania, supported by financial and tax consultancy from Deloitte and legal assistance from Reff & Associates | Deloitte Legal. After several rounds of constructive discussions and a conclusion about blockchain technology’s important role in the evolution of finance, the National Bank of Romania has officially decided in favor of Elrond acquiring Twispay.“This landmark decision from the Romanian Central Bank opens the door for EU citizens, and soon for everyone everywhere, to significantly benefit from value flowing with near-instant settlement times, at 100x fewer costs, with full transparency, and higher reliability.”
    said Beniamin Mincu, Elrond Network.The decision comes at a time when the EU Parliament is seeking to limit the use of energy intensive Proof of Work blockchain networks due to their climate impact. Elrond is maintaining its “carbon-negative” status by offsetting more CO2 than its already energy efficient network is accountable for.Besides the entitlement to issue electronic money, under the European framework, the e-money institutions are also entitled to provide payments services under the second Payment Services Directive (PSD2). Moreover, the EU Commission’s proposed European Regulation on Markets in Crypto-assets stipulates that licensed e-money institutions will be entitled to issue stablecoins which can be offered to the public in the Union or admitted to trading on a trading platform for crypto-assets. The proposal regulation of crypto-assets and the related activities is closely linked with wider Commission policies on blockchain technology, since crypto-assets (including stablecoins), as the main application of blockchain technologies, are inextricably linked to the promotion of blockchain technology throughout Europe.This puts Elrond in a strategic position to offer a sustainable infrastructure for a completely new payment rails that is faster, cheaper, transparent, and open to people all around the world. Other important use cases that will be explored within the applicable regulatory framework may include new stablecoins, crypto enabled debit cards, as well as benefits of DeFi, NFTs and other Web3 technologies that will enhance trust and efficiency for existing financial systems.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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    GSR partners with Chainlink to integrate price data for smart contracts

    In an announcement, Sergey Nazarov, the co-founder of Chainlink, said that “high-quality market data is vital to the growth of the multi-chain ecosystem.” According to Nazarov, GSR launching its data service will enable the firm to access the ever-growing blockchain economy and assist in the innovation of smart contracts.Continue Reading on Coin Telegraph More

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    U.S. Household Net Worth Jumps to a Record on Equities, Housing

    Household net worth increased by $5.3 trillion, or 3.7%, after a more moderate gain in the third quarter, a Federal Reserve report showed Thursday. The fourth-quarter advance pushed net worth to more than $150 trillion.The value of real estate held by households rose by $1.5 trillion and the value of equity holdings climbed $2.5 trillion.While the omicron variant and related surge in Covid-19 infections dented economic activity in the final weeks of 2021, there was little effect on wealth in the quarter as the S&P 500 rose to new highs. More recently, stocks have slid on concerns about the economic impact from Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.Meantime, mortgage rates have risen to levels not seen since 2019, which could eventually lead to a cooling in the rapid price gains seen in the housing market. In an effort to tame inflation, the Fed next week is expected to raise interest rates for the first time since 2018.Not everyone has benefited from the surge in home and equity prices. Survey data indicate just a little more than half of Americans own stocks, and millions of Americans rent. Separate data out Thursday showed rent of primary residence climbed in February by the most since 1987.While pandemic aid programs like the advance child tax credit payments have since ended, elevated savings remain a key source of support for household spending. Net private savings grew at an annualized pace of $2.4 trillion in the fourth quarter, though the pace has been settling back since the start of 2021. Business debt outstanding increased at an annualized rate of $1.2 trillion from the prior quarter in the October-December period to a total of $18.5 trillion.Federal debt rose at an annualized rate of 10.8% to $25.3 trillion. Government debt has surged over the past two years amid trillions of dollars in federal aid to workers, businesses and local governments during the pandemic.Consumer credit outstanding not including mortgage debt rose an annualized $302 billion in the fourth quarter.©2022 Bloomberg L.P. More

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    Paxos secures approval from Singapore’s financial regulator

    In a Thursday announcement, Paxos said it had received a license from Singapore’s financial regulator allowing the firm to provide blockchain and crypto services under the country’s Payment Services Act. The stablecoin issuer said the regulatory approval would help support its partners in expanding services into Asia.Continue Reading on Coin Telegraph More

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    Finding the sweet spot in Northern Ireland

    The war in Ukraine puts all aspects of life into perspective, including the post-Brexit chill in relations between London and Brussels.The sapping disagreement over the treaty on post-Brexit trade in Northern Ireland has meant that areas of obvious common interest to both sides, like UK participation in the €95bn Horizon Europe science programme, have been stalled.The disputes are both technical (how to operate the Irish Sea border with minimum impact) but also fundamentally political, both locally in Northern Ireland and at an EU-UK level where trust has been destroyed by UK threats to renege on legal Treaty commitments.The Ukraine crisis doesn’t suddenly make that problem go away, but it does surely put into perspective a disagreement that has consumed far too much time and space in trying to reach a post-divorce modus vivendi between the EU and UK.The good news is that Liz Truss, the UK foreign secretary who took over the Northern Ireland file from Lord David Frost, had dropped the deliberate diplomatic boorishness consistently deployed by her predecessor to such damaging effect. Truss, to her credit, has managed to lower the temperature of the debate.The bad news, as became very clear when I went to Belfast last week with the cross-party UK Trade and Business Commission, is that when it comes to technical issues, the two sides are still a long way from finding mutually agreed solutions.The independent commission is co-chaired by Hilary Benn and the Virgin Group chair Peter Norris, and was set up to try to find pragmatic solutions to post-Brexit challenges after the government decided to disband the Brexit select committee that Benn had chaired.During a full day of meetings which drilled down into the technical rather than political aspects of the Northern Ireland protocol, the Commission met small business owners, large food retailers and a broad range of business groups that are all wrestling daily with the protocol.While there were gripes and grumbles — of which more later — at the same time the business groups that spoke to the commission were consistently far less apocalyptic about the protocol than some of the Unionist and Conservative backbench political rhetoric on this issue.Yes, there are problems, but from milk processors to manufacturers, the emphasis was overwhelmingly on getting closer to that ‘best of both worlds’ situation, with access to both UK and EU single markets. No one was talking about scrapping the protocol.As Victor Chestnutt, the President of the Ulster Farmers’ Union, put it. “We can’t be left as second class UK citizens and second class EU citizens . . . we want to land in a sweet spot where we have the best of both worlds. What we need is a softening of actions to land in that spot.”As with GB businesses trading directly with the EU, it is small businesses that are clearly hardest hit, having less time, people and cash flow to deal with the new bureaucracy, which they clearly resent, but equally they are ultimately managing, painful though it be.More needs to be done to help them, but there are no magic wands. The protocol leaves Northern Ireland in the EU single market for goods, and that means border and customs controls.There was still some wishful thinking on show. One small business owner suggested using VAT returns and Intrastat declarations that monitors intra-EU goods trade to separate out goods remaining in NI and those going into the EU.But this misses the basic point of a border — you need to know what is crossing it, in real time. Still, there should be ways to reduce burdens, including more digitisation of customs processes.Overwhelmingly the biggest fears about the protocol stemmed from a concern about what might happen if the EU demanded the introduction of full export processes on goods travelling from Great Britain to Northern Ireland.It’s easy to forget that the protocol is currently operating on so-called ‘grace periods’ which were initially designed to give businesses six to nine months to adapt to the new Irish Sea Border but are now effectively operating on a “until further notice” basis.One big UK supermarket chain has estimated that imposing full controls on mixed loads of products heading to Northern Ireland, could mean 7mn additional documents a year to maintain its current delivery levels. That is clearly not sustainable.Even with the current ‘easements’, as Stuart Lendrum, of the Iceland chain told the commission, there is additional costs and paperwork, but as supermarkets are demonstrating, this is ultimately manageable with the current arrangements.It’s the future that worries them. Particularly the issue of handling the divergence of UK food and product standards from EU ones, which is inevitable over time. If UK goods heading to NI have to comply with divergent EU standards, that creates a world of pain.For example, the EU is phasing out a food whitening compound called titanium dioxide. That begs the question: will products heading from GB into NI need to comply with that new standard? You can see how quickly that would scramble a supply chain set up to deliver food to a UK network of supermarkets.Disaggregating GB products for the NI market alone, making sure they comply with all EU rules, becomes as bureaucratic as exporting to the EU. UK businesses might choose to follow the EU standard on titanium dioxide, but that won’t apply to all areas of divergence. Over time, the businesses warned, this is only going to get harder and harder to manage.For example, last month the UK authorised the emergency use of neonicotinoid pesticide treatment to protect sugar beet crops. The EU has different rules. Which begs another question: will products made with sugar beet that potentially has higher neonicotinoid residue levels than are allowable in the EU legally be able to be sold in NI, which is part of the EU single market for goods? Last week, there was not a clear answer to this.In short, managing diverging EU-UK standards is going to be a huge and complex challenge.One suggestion from the food industry is that the EU should agree to recognise UK standards as “equivalent” for goods destined for sale in NI only, but given those standards are diverging (and the UK is on record saying it will have fewer border controls than the EU) the consensus was that it’s deeply unlikely Brussels will agree to that.Privately, it was clear from conversations with industry groups there is little confidence that an overarching technical agreement can be reached on this, so the solution will have to be both political and piecemeal, addressing individual issues of particular concern to the EU, as they arise.Because the reality is that the UK government will not crystallise a full blown trade border in the Irish Sea, and Brussels will not formally accept a free-for-all, or reimpose a North-South border — and yet, as the fundamental stand-off continues, the system of easements is basically working.As Benn and Norris write in a post-trip letter to Truss and her EU counterpart Maros Sefcovic, one important way of removing some of the politics from this is to hold “formalised, regular, tripartite meetings between EU, UK, and Northern Ireland business to address and resolve operational issues”.That way issues around products of particular concern — say, the biosecurity issues on citrus products — can be addressed directly while avoiding creating blanket structures that are unworkable for existing supply chains.In summary, the ultimate solution might, in practice, be found by not pressing too hard for a definitive solution: maintain current easements; iron out specific issues; and keep muddling on until the political weather changes a bit.Do you work in an industry that has been affected by the UK’s departure from the EU single market and customs union? If so, how is the change hurting — or even benefiting — you and your business? Please keep your feedback coming to [email protected] in numbersOne of the things that has been perplexing trade specialists and economists is data showing that, by the end of last year, UK exports to the EU had returned to 2019 levels — while imports from the EU had fallen by 30 per cent.That would, on the face of it, seem to be highly counterintuitive, given the raft of business sentiment surveys in 2021 consistently showing companies reporting that Brexit ‘red tape’ is hitting their businesses.There are a number of possible reasons being mooted — for example, that the concerns of small businesses are given too much weight in the public discussion on Brexit impacts, while big businesses are getting on with it.At the same time, post-Brexit supply chains are reorienting, which means that fewer goods from Asia and the rest of the world are being imported into the UK via the EU, to avoid facing two sets of paperwork. This might help partly explain the drop in imports from the EU.But John Springford at the Centre for European Reform, a think-tank, has a different answer. He says that comparing UK exports to the EU in 2019 and 2021 gives a false impression that things are somehow back to normal. They are not.In a new paper for the CER, Springford compares the UK performance with our peers in the global trade arena and finds that the UK is underperforming badly when compared to these countries that have experienced a post-Covid export boom in 2021.Springford uses a basket of these similar, advanced economies (that haven’t endured Brexit upheaval) to create a “doppelgänger UK” that models how the UK would have performed had it remained in the EU.The model, which was cited by the Office for Budget Responsibility in its October 2021 Brexit update, finds that UK exports are 15.7 per cent smaller than the exports of the alternative UK. Looking at UK exports to the EU and to the rest of the world, Springford also finds that both have underperformed relative to other advanced economies.Overall, Springford calculates that the trade “loss” for the real UK, when compared to the doppelgänger, is £12.9bn for the month of December 2021.Given that 65 per cent of UK exports are used as “intermediate” inputs into the production process in the EU and other countries, it would seem logical that erecting such high non-tariff barriers to the trade of those inputs would have an impact.Springford also argues that these figures challenge the Brexiter assumption that the UK would be better equipped to tap faster-growing Asian and US export markets when ‘set free’ from EU membership.“But leaving the single market and customs union appears to have reduced goods exports to the rest of the world as well as the EU,” he says. “This isn’t entirely surprising, since many multinationals used the UK as a base for exporting to both the EU and countries around the world. Now that the UK has left the EU, it’s more costly to do that.”In manufacturing, at least, concludes Springford “Brexit has made ‘Global Britain’ harder to achieve.”And, finally, three unmissable Brexit storiesRobert Shrimsley returns to the war in Ukraine in his column this week by looking at what it means for Boris Johnson’s leadership of the Conservative party. The UK prime minister’s chances at the next election have much improved, he says, but points to the government’s failings on sanctions and refugees as highlighting “his continuing inability to get a grip”.Since the UK voted to leave the EU in 2016, its stock market returns have lagged behind those of international peers. Valuations are cheap on almost every measure, writes our Lex team. But by crunching the numbers they have discovered there is more to the story than just heightened political and economic risks.In October 2018 Theresa May danced on to the stage at the Conservative party conference and promised “a year-long festival of Great Britain and Northern Ireland”. The assumption was that May’s Brexit festival would be jingoistic propaganda but four years later ‘Unboxed’ has become something much weirder as Henry Mance explains. More

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    Toppling the dollar as reserve currency risks harmful fragmentation

    During the Crimean War, from 1854-56, Britain, France and Russia fought savage battles on the territory of modern-day Ukraine. Hundreds of thousands died from injury or disease. Yet throughout it all, the British Treasury kept paying its debts to the Tsarist government, and Russia kept paying interest to British owners of its sovereign debt. According to Nicholas Mulder’s new history of sanctions, The Economic Weapon, one British minister declared it obvious for “civilised nations” that public debts should be paid to an enemy during war.Times have changed. In response to Vladimir Putin’s invasion of Ukraine, the US and its allies banned dealings with the Russian government, kicked selected Russian banks out of the Swift payments system and froze the assets of Russia’s central bank. Rather than paying debts to the enemy, today’s standard response is to paralyse the aggressor’s economy — even if you are not involved in the fighting.Freezing the Central Bank of Russia’s reserves was a particularly unexpected, ruthless and effective act. It stripped away Moscow’s means to stabilise its currency. The rouble duly collapsed. But the use of so powerful a sanction has raised fears of unintended consequences for the international financial system. If your dollar-based central bank reserves can be frozen when you need them most, then what is the use in holding them?That has in turn reignited an old debate: whether the US dollar is at risk of losing its place as the world’s reserve currency. But while the freeze on Russia will spur on those who would like to supply an alternative — most notably China, via internationalisation of its currency, the renminbi — they are unlikely to supplant the dollar. The greater threat is of fragmentation in a financial system that, while imperfect, allows all to prosper together.Zoltan Pozsar of Credit Suisse argues that the central bank freeze marks the death of the post-Bretton Woods system, born after Richard Nixon took the US off the gold standard in 1971, and the start of a new monetary order “centred around commodity-based currencies in the east”. If your dollars can vanish at the whim of the issuer, the logic runs, then a reserve must exist outside the dollar-based financial system.China’s $3.2tn in foreign currency reserves, the largest stockpile in the world, suddenly look more like a weakness than a strength. Only by becoming an issuer rather than a holder of reserves can Beijing wrest some of America’s financial power for itself. The way to do that is to persuade others to hold the renminbi.The dollar, however, will be hard to overcome. The might of the world’s pre-eminent economic and military power ensures that US Treasury bonds are stable in a crisis; the US Federal Reserve ensures they are liquid. During any kind of economic turmoil, they are the asset a central bank wants to hold. Indeed, if Russia was suffering a natural disaster or an unexpected collapse in exports, dollar reserves would be exactly what it wanted too.Other alternatives have defects of their own. Russia has a lot of gold. The problem is liquidity: what bank today will lend foreign currency against the security of bullion in a Moscow bank vault? In time, Russia may be able to sell some gold to friendly countries, but in effect the market has already passed its judgment: it does not think Russia’s gold reserves can support the rouble.Cryptocurrency might be valuable to individual Russians right now. As a way to get money out of the country it is anonymous and portable. But for reserves, crypto is of little use: it trades like a risky asset, falling in times of stress, and almost all of the liquidity is on exchanges, where sanctions will bite just as hard as they do with dollars.That leaves the possibility of a rival currency, most obviously the renminbi — which would be attractive to countries that are friendly with China, such as Russia, or for those that fear American censure. But Beijing could use sanctions just as easily as Washington. For many other nations, including big holders of reserves in Asia, being at China’s financial mercy would appeal even less than that of the US.The risk, then, is of fragmentation. In his book, Mulder charts how the rise of economic sanctions and blockade during the interwar years, as a tool to enforce peace, drove the autarkic policies of Nazi Germany and Imperial Japan, ultimately destabilising the international system rather than fortifying it. The world has been drifting for several years towards the formation of rival economic blocs. One way to prevent that is to keep the dollar at the heart of the international financial [email protected] More

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    ECB scales back stimulus plan as Ukraine war drives up inflation expectations

    The European Central Bank has scaled back its bond-buying stimulus plan in response to inflation being driven up by the war in Ukraine, while giving itself more flexibility on the timing of a potential interest rate rise this year.“The Russian invasion of Ukraine is a watershed for Europe,” the ECB said in a statement after its governing council’s meeting in Frankfurt on Thursday, adding that it would “take whatever action is needed . . . to pursue price stability and to safeguard financial stability”.Analysts interpreted the move to speed up the ECB’s exit from buying more bonds as a signal that it could raise interest rates in the fourth quarter in an effort to contain soaring inflation — which would be the first such move for more than a decade.However, the ECB also gave itself more leeway to wait longer before raising interest rates after its bond-buying ends. “It is a bit of a mixed message, even though the market has interpreted it as hawkish overall,” said Dirk Schumacher, head of European macro research at Natixis. Investors responded by selling eurozone bonds, pushing Germany’s 10-year yield to 0.27 per cent, the highest in more than three weeks. Riskier eurozone debt was also hit, with Italian 10-year yields climbing 0.2 percentage points to 1.89 per cent. Bond prices fall when yields rise.“A faster winding down of the asset purchase programme will perhaps come as a surprise to market participants who expected an ECB capitulation in the face of weaker growth forecasts,” said Seema Shah, chief strategist at Principal Global Investors.The euro briefly rose after the ECB announcement, before falling 0.6 per cent to $1.1013 against the US dollar.Christine Lagarde, ECB president, said Russia’s invasion of Ukraine had created “a major shock” for the eurozone economy, adding that the central bank was forecasting higher inflation and lower growth over the next three years.Setting out a quicker reduction in its bond-buying plans this year, the ECB said it would reduce asset purchases to €40bn in April, €30bn in May and €20bn in June. Its earlier plan was to steadily reduce net purchases from €40bn a month in April to €20bn a month from October.It could stop adding to its existing €4.6tn bond portfolio in the third quarter “if the incoming data support the expectation that the medium-term inflation outlook will not weaken even after the end of our net asset purchases”.The separate €1.85tn emergency bond-buying scheme launched in response to the coronavirus pandemic would stop net purchases as planned at the end of March, it said. However, the central bank dropped a commitment to end asset purchases “shortly before” it raises interest rates, saying instead that any change to rates would be “gradual” and come “some time” after asset purchases end, which Lagarde said could mean months, or a week later. The war in Ukraine has prompted some economists to warn about the risk of stagflation, in which a supply-side inflationary shock is combined with stagnant growth. This leaves the ECB in a difficult position, torn between the desire to tackle inflation that is expected to stay well above its 2 per cent target until at least next year and wanting to support the economy.The ECB cut its growth forecast for this year to 3.7 per cent, down from 4.2 per cent, and Lagarde said high inflation could put more downward pressure on demand. It raised its forecast for inflation this year from 3.2 per cent to 5.1 per cent. But crucially it predicted inflation would fade to 2.1 per cent next year and 1.9 per cent in 2024 — meaning it still has not fulfilled a key condition to raise interest rates.“Inflation could be considerably higher in the near term,” Lagarde said. “However, in all scenarios, inflation is expected to stabilise around our target by 2024.”Only last month, the ECB governing council agreed it could speed up a “gradual normalisation” of its ultra-loose monetary policy. But the invasion of Ukraine and the sanctions imposed on Russia threw this plan into doubt after economists slashed their growth forecasts and predicted inflation would surge from the record level of 5.8 per cent reached in February.Lagarde said the ECB was working with the European Commission to “provide tools and the means to provide support” for Ukraine and its population, including the more than 2.1mn who have fled the country. EU politicians have called on the ECB to open a swap line with the central bank of Ukraine and those of other countries receiving refugees to help them access euros, but its rules make this difficult.The Eurosystem repo facility that allows the ECB to provide euro liquidity to central banks outside the single currency zone has also been extended until January 15 2023. More