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    Russian and Ukrainian weapons compete at Saudi defence show

    For Maxim Potimkov of Ukraine’s state arms exporter and importer, standing alone amid his country’s armoured vehicles, sales were the farthest thing from his mind.”I came for this show because there has to be someone here and we have so much equipment here,” he told Reuters. “There was expected to be 50-plus people from Ukraine.”Potimkov, from Kyiv, was travelling to Ukraine from a trade show in the United Arab Emirates when Russia launched its invasion last week, and he had to cancel his plans. Now back in the Middle East, he staffs a booth to promote Ukraine’s Kozark 7 and Kozark 2M tactical armoured vehicles and anti-drone systems.Meanwhile, in an adjacent hall, Russian weapons makers were displaying Moscow’s hardware, including anti-aircraft weapons and air defence systems. Russian industry representatives, when approached by Reuters, declined to discuss economic sanctions imposed by the West in response to the war. Hundreds of visitors at the defence show in Riyadh, including regional government, military and corporate officials, surveyed this exhibition of might from nations around the world even as residents of the Ukrainian coastal city of Mariupol experienced the dread power of such hardware at first hand.Efforts to evacuate people from Mariupol – which has endured days of Russian shelling that has trapped people without heat, power and water – failed for a second day in a row on Sunday after a ceasefire plan collapsed.Many arms-producing nations vie for influence and contracts from wealthy Gulf Arab countries, especially Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates, which have moved to diversify their defence partners and want to develop their own industries..Saudi Arabia leads a military coalition, which includes the UAE, that has been battling the Iran-aligned Houthi movement in Yemen for seven years. More

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    Will the Ukraine crisis alter the ECB’s monetary policy stance?

    Russian invasion creates a dilemma for the ECBChristine Lagarde, the president of the European Central Bank, will have her first chance to outline how seriously Russia’s invasion of Ukraine has upended the outlook for the eurozone economy when she presents new forecasts on Thursday.The ECB is widely expected to postpone any major policy decisions when its governing council meets in Frankfurt this week, preferring to maintain as much flexibility as possible while assessing the economic fallout from the war in Ukraine.The crisis creates a dilemma for the ECB. While on the one hand economists have slashed their growth forecasts for the euro area this year and expect the ECB to do the same, the disruption to the supply of energy and other commodities is expected to drive up inflation.Consumer prices are already rising at their fastest rate in the 22-year history of the single currency — jumping 5.8 per cent in the year to February — and most economists expect it to remain well above the ECB’s 2 per cent target at least for the rest of this year.“The invasion of Ukraine has dramatically complicated the picture further for the ECB: energy prices and inflation will be pushed higher, while growth will weaken,” said Dirk Schumacher, head of European macro research at Natixis.He predicted Lagarde would take a “neutral stance” on the potential of the ECB raising interest rates this year, neither signalling that it was likely nor ruling it out.UBS economist Reinhard Cluse said he did not expect the ECB to shift to an “outright dovish” position and predicted it would keep its inflation forecast for the next two years slightly below its 2 per cent target, allowing the central bank to maintain its generous stimulus for at least a few more months. Martin ArnoldDid US inflation continue rising in February?US inflation is expected to have accelerated further in February, according to forecasts compiled ahead of Thursday’s report on consumer prices. Led by higher energy costs, economists polled by Reuters forecast that the consumer price index rose by 7.9 per cent in the 12 months to February — the highest rate since the early 1980s. It registered 7.5 per cent in January.The rising cost of heating oil and gasoline, which has been exacerbated by the conflict in Ukraine, is expected to have driven energy prices up 4.7 per cent, according to Barclays analysts. Rents are also projected to have increased, in pace with the prior month. The rise in food prices is expected to have slowed slightly, but could pick up again in the coming months as people return to restaurants following the Omicron coronavirus wave. Still, the inflation report is forecast to show that some consumer prices have moderated — most notably in new and used cars. The Manheim Used Vehicles Value index, a leading indicator of used car prices, fell in February for the first time in six months. Yet none of this is expected to change the Federal Reserve’s course of action at its March meeting. The US central bank is still forecast to raise interest rates by 0.25 percentage points for the first time since cutting its key rate to zero at the beginning of the pandemic. Kate DuguidWhich companies are exposed to the economic fallout of the war in Ukraine?European banks, brewers and car manufacturers with exposure to Russia and Ukraine are among the companies to have tumbled in value since Moscow invaded its neighbouring country.Shares in Renault, which owns Russia’s biggest car company Avtovaz, have dropped by more than a quarter since the close of trade on February 23.Meanwhile, Austrian bank Raiffeisen — whose Russian business has €22.9bn of assets — has shed more than two-fifths of its market value over the same timeframe. France’s Société Générale, another bank with substantial operations in Russia, has fallen by a third. In the brewing sector, Denmark’s Carlsberg, which this week halted production at its three Ukrainian breweries and whose Baltika brand accounts for roughly a quarter of Russia’s beer market, has slumped 15.5 per cent.Declines have also extended to the energy sector. Shares of the Finnish state-owned group Fortum — which said it would stop all new investment projects in Russia — have fallen more than a quarter since Russian President Vladimir Putin ordered the full-scale invasion of Ukraine. European equities have dropped broadly in recent days, but their declines have proved less severe in relative terms. An MSCI gauge tracking European stocks, priced in dollars, is down by a tenth since February 23. George Steer More

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    Russian banks may issue cards with China's UnionPay as Visa, Mastercard cut links

    Russian-issued Mastercard and Visa cards would be accepted within Russia until their expiry, the bank said,The overseas ban also applies to cards issued by local subsidiaries of foreign banks, the bank said. Its announcement came after U.S. payments firms Visa Inc (NYSE:V) and Mastercard Inc (NYSE:MA) said they were suspending operations in Russia, joining the list of companies that are severing business links with Russia..The central bank added that many Russian banks plan to issue cards using UnionPay, a system it said was enabled in 180 countries. While several Russian banks already use UnionPay, others including Sberbank and Tinkoff could start issuing cards co-badging Russia’s domestic Mir payments system with UnionPay, it added. Thousands of Russians, including holidaymakers, are stranded abroad after many countries closed off their airspace to Russian aircraft while Russia has retaliated with flight bans for many foreign airlines. The central bank advised citizens currently overseas, to withdraw cash before the ban came into force. More

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    Southern Europe grapples with changing face of tourism

    CORFU, Greece (Reuters) – It took one electricity bill to crush Dimitris Diavatis’ hopes that his Greek summer resort could bounce back to its pre-pandemic health this year, even with bookings pouring in.The amount was more than double what he paid this time last year when the hotel was not even open. After two sluggish summers, the irony was not lost on him: “We won’t make a profit in a good year,” he said. “It’ll be eaten up by inflation.”Greece – like the other tourism-dependent economies on the euro zone’s Mediterranean fringe – is seeing signs of a much-needed recovery in visitor numbers in 2022 after two largely lost years. As in Spain, Portugal and Italy, the sector is a huge employer and contributor to state revenues.But across the region, the pandemic has changed the face of tourism. Hotels were already grappling with higher fuel bills and inflation which a further energy price surge in the wake of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine will only make worse.The dislocation of labour markets caused by COVID-19 has left entrenched staffing shortages, while Italian tourist officials concede that pandemic-era holidaying – with its emphasis on hygiene, cleanliness and space – is a big challenge for its ageing infrastructure.Meanwhile, a market for more modest, small-scale vacations is opening up: In Spain and Portugal, a reluctance among many tourists to travel far is accentuating the trend for stays in rural areas in tents, campers or motorhomes.Industry and government officials in Greece are forecasting revenues will reach 80-90% of the record seen in 2019, when 33 million tourists brought in 18 billion euros in revenues, worth a fifth of national output.Yet a bumper season is unlikely to offer much relief to struggling businesses which emerged from a decade-long financial crisis in 2018 only to have the pandemic bring global travel to a halt two years later.So acute is the problem of soaring heating oil, gas and electricity prices that the president of the Greek tourism confederation SETE, Yiannis Retsos, wrote to ministers in January urging them to provide financial support, saying it was “objectively impossible” for year-round hotels to the cover their costs, especially after the quieter winter months.The highly indebted countries of Europe’s south were also bracing for the European Central Bank to remove the stimulus that has kept their borrowing costs down.Although the Ukraine war has left the interest rate outlook uncertain, the southern fringe still badly needs its tourism sectors to get back to work given the economic hit the conflict is set to deliver.Speaking a day after the invasion, which Russia calls a “special operation”, Greece’s Retsos said it was too early to gauge its impact on the tourism sector.More than a week into the conflict, there has been no noticeable increase in cancellations across the region.Russian tourists only make up a very small proportion of the sector in southern Europe – 2% of revenues in Greece in 2019 and around 1% of nightly hotel bookings in Portugal. Turkey – outside the European Union – is a more popular destination.But with European gas prices already at record highs, and this likely to feed into inflation globally, the concern in countries like Greece is the conflict will only worsen an already bleak outlook, further crimping guests’ spending power and increasing providers’ costs.NO END TO COSTSEven hotels that were shut during winter worry they will not be able to shoulder the extra burden, having already agreed prices with tour operators last summer, said Babbis Voulgaris, head of the Corfu hoteliers’ association.Resort owner Diavatis, who also owns a year-round boutique hotel and a waterpark complex on the island, agreed.”This will be a real crisis for us,” he said. “I won’t say it’s worse than the pandemic because at least we’re open. But we didn’t lose money then. Now we’re heading towards losing money.”The Greek government has spent over 42 billion euros in pandemic support measures since 2020 to keep businesses and households afloat and about 2 billion euros since September to subsidise power bills through March. For hoteliers, the support does not go far enough.”In the summer, with the air-conditioners working, the refrigerators, the kitchen, everything – I don’t how when this will end,” said Costas Merianos, who owns a small family-run hotel on Corfu’s Ionian coast.Across the sea in Italy, lockdowns and energy prices have forced many hotels to shut for good, said Marina Lalli, president of the Federturismo industry association.And while Lalli was hopeful tourism could inch closer to 2019 levels this year, Italy faces the additional problem of being “a mature tourist destination with mature hotel structures that need to be renewed,” she said.”In the post-COVID era, tourists are even more attentive to quality, they want a guarantee of cleanliness and want to feel safe.”SOMETHING DIFFERENTGreece said it was opening its tourism season as early as March 1 this year to meet demand but, like in Italy, Spain and Portugal, the season will not begin in earnest until the Easter break in April, a litmus test before the vital summer months.Both Greece and Italy are racing to fill job shortages as the pandemic forced workers abroad for better paying jobs or into different sectors with less uncertain prospects.In Greece, the tourism minister even appealed to refugees fleeing Ukraine, offering them residence and work permits to fill 50,000 job gaps in hospitality.Demand for Spanish holidays was looking very strong this year, according to the vice-president of industry association Exceltur, Jose Luis Zoreda, thanks to Spain’s high vaccination rates and the easing of pandemic restrictions in its big markets, the UK and Germany.”There is a strong, accumulated travel appetite in Europe,” Zoreda said, forecasting an “explosion” of tourism from Easter onwards, but also lower profit margins due to inflation and energy prices.Exceltur, however, also found tourists were seeking a different experience. In 2021, campsite rentals were up 19.2%, flat rentals were up by 16%, rural homes by 11%. Hotel usage fell by 8%, a decline also driven by fewer business trips.In January, new motorhomes and camper vans sales were up 34.1% on an annual basis, according to the Spanish Association of the Caravanning Industry and Trade (ASEICAR).”The ‘all-in-one’ holiday model has been left behind,” Yescapa, an online motorhomes and camper vans rental company, told Reuters.Nico Aro, who rents out a camper van on the island of Tenerife, says he has not been able to enjoy it himself since he bought it last March because requests keep coming in from Italy, France and Belgium. His biggest problem is that he cannot find another one to buy because they are in great demand.”I have benefited from the pandemic,” he said.The appetite for “slower” tourism has also grown in Portugal, where the sector played a crucial role in its recovery from the 2010 debt crisis. Tourism stood at about 15% of GDP in 2019 but fell to 8% in 2020.”There’s an increasing number of people looking for places with fewer people,” said Helder Martins, president of Algarve’s main hotel association. “I don’t believe that they will return to just wanting the sun and the beach.” The centuries-old “schist villages”, built from the stone of a mountainous region clad in pine trees, are roaring back to life after being abandoned over the years by young Portuguese seeking work elsewhere.”This summer is filling up fast,” said Sonia Cortes, who owns a small five-room hotel in the Janeiro de Cima schist village, where construction workers are rebuilding traditional houses.”The beginning of the pandemic was really difficult for those who lived off tourism,” she said. “(But then) those in bigger cities looked for villages like this one where they could feel safe.”There was a 30% increase in the number of night stays at schist villages from 2019 to 2020-21, said Bruno Ramos, who works for an agency promoting tourism there.Still, back in Greece, Merianos, the Corfu hotel owner, has a more sober view of the months ahead.”I’ll be happy if at the end of the season I don’t owe my staff, I don’t owe the state, I don’t owe the energy provider – even if I’m left with 10 euros in my wallet,” he said. 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    S.Korea will implement export controls against Belarus over support to Russia

    SEOUL (Reuters) – South Korea will implement export controls against Belarus for “effectively supporting the Russian invasion of Ukraine”, Seoul’s foreign ministry said on Sunday.The ministry did not detail what measures would be taken, but said they will be applied in a similar way to moves already taken by South Korea against Russia. It condemned Moscow as having launched an “armed invasion” of Ukraine.South Korea said last month it would tighten export controls against Russia by banning shipments of strategic items and join Western countries’ moves to block some Russian banks from the SWIFT international payments system.”The Korean government decided today to implement export control measures against Belarus as well, judging that Belarus is effectively supporting the Russian invasion of Ukraine,” the ministry said in Sunday’s statement.Russia calls its actions in Ukraine a “special operation”. Last month Russia’s Ambassador to South Korea Andrey Kulik expressed regret at the sanctions, blaming “strong outside pressure” on Seoul from the United States and its Western partners. More

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    THORChain ($RUNE): Price Updates, Recent Developments, Future Events, Community

    THORChain is an independent blockchain that was developed through the utilization of the Cosmos SDK, which serves as a cross-chain decentralized exchange (DEX).The main way through which the project stands out is due to the fact that it uses an automated market maker (AMM) model, where the native token $RUNE is the base swap pair. The non-custodial THORChain interfaces allow any user to swap native assets across chains.Price UpdatesThe Terra (LUNA) integration to the THORChain protocol, alongside the upcoming mainnet launch, has led to an increase in the value of the THORChain ($RUNE) token.In the past week, the token experienced a 7-day low on February 28, where it decreased to a value of $3.41. Its highest point was achieved on March 3, when the token increased to a value of $6.01, which represents an increase in value of $2.6 or by 76.25%.The seven-day price chart for THORChain ($RUNE). Source: CoinmarketcapOver the last 24 hours, the token experienced a downward shift in value. Specifically, on March 3, 2022, the token had a value of $6.01, while on March 4, 2022, the token decreased in value to $5.85, which it is currently trading at. This is an indication that the THORChain ($RUNE) token has decreased in value by $0.16 or by 2.66%.The 24-hour price chart for THORChain ($RUNE). Source: CoinmarketcapRecent DevelopmentsOne development that has been extremely exciting throughout the $RUNE community is the integration of Terra (LUNA) within the THORChain protocol. The announcement was posted on Twitter (NYSE:TWTR) on March 1, 2022, by Nine Realms.The result of this integration enabled the platform to support all of the Cosmos-based projects.This also indicates that both $UST and $LUNA are added to the THORChain ecosystem, which in turn gives users a lot more trading and staking options.Furthermore, THORChain also announced that it supports six wallet types and eight blockchains in total on the THORSwap cross-chain decentralized exchange. THORChain is in the process of adding support for Have as well as Monero. THORChain also grew in size, where it saw 1.5 million decentralized permissionless swaps while growing a network from 0 to 73 nodes and enduring a high level of chaos while shipping over 81 major network updates.Future EventsThe THORChain network will be updated through a hard fork, which will be fully tested in the testnet and followed by further testing in Stagenet after the Terra launch and on ChaosNet prior to the mainnet launch.The launch of the upcoming mainnet has been a highly anticipated event since 2021, when the launch was originally planned; however, it was delayed due to different factors. The specific date for the mainnet launch has not yet been disclosed.The requirements that need to be fulfilled prior to the launch of the mainnet include meeting all of the testnet goals, which includes rehearsal of adding and removing chains, removing Bitcoin ($BTC) and Litecoin ($LTC) from the testnet, alongside several test runs with forking the chain itself.On the FlipsideCommunityThe Twitter user @Hey_ImTheNewGuy shared the experience of starting a couple of new LP positions on THORChain, where throughout the span of 4 days, the user gained $900 in fees and rewards.THORChain ($RUNE) will carry on its evolution with the launch of the mainnet as well as through numerous integrations planned going forward.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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    Russian national will use sales of her burning passport NFT to support Ukraine

    Speaking to Cointelegraph on Friday, Allen described herself as “a child of new Russia” and said the country would always be a part of her identity, but she had chosen to cut ties with it based on its recent actions in the Ukraine. Standing in front of the Consulate General of the Russian Federation in New York City, Allen burned her Russian passport — which she said was the only copy she had — and planned to auction the video as a nonfungible token (NFT), with the proceeds going to humanitarian efforts in Ukraine.Continue Reading on Coin Telegraph More