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    The city of Lugano will accept Bitcoin, Tether and LVGA tokens as 'de facto' legal tender

    Speaking at the city’s Plan B event on Thursday, Tether chief technical officer Paolo Ardoino said the firm had set up a 3 million-Swiss franc fund in collaboration with Lugano officials to encourage adoption of Bitcoin (BTC), Tether (USDT) and the LVGA token for shops and businesses across the city. Ardoino said the project was aimed at attracting talent from the space to Lugano and making the city a major blockchain hub in Europe.Continue Reading on Coin Telegraph More

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    Dogecoin Foundation registers name and logos as trademarked within in the EU

    Foundation executive board member Jens Wiechers said in the tweet thread, “The issue isn’t (and has never been) use in memes, etc, but attempts by people completely unaffiliated with Dogecoin to register them, which only really makes sense if they want to then extort either the community or the Dogecoin project, devs, foundation, etc. directly.”Continue Reading on Coin Telegraph More

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    1inch Network adds a P2P feature to facilitate secure crypto swaps

    According to the company website, this “opens the door to a whole new world” of possible use cases, including transactions within NFT marketplaces, auctions or reverse auctions. Although other services like Binance Pay or Bybit support P2P payments, the company said that they have “stepped in to fill the gap” in demand for this kind of service.Continue Reading on Coin Telegraph More

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    Sygnum Bank set to release soccer-themed sculptures as AST’s

    Orientated around the final of three international competitions — the 2010 FIFA World Cup hosted by South Africa; the2014 FIFA World Cup hosted by Brazil; and the 2018 FIFA World Cup hosted by Russia — the artwork immortalizes the achievements of legendary players such as Oliver Kahn, Lionel Messi, Ronaldinho and Zinédine Zidane, among others, with the display of their written signatures.Continue Reading on Coin Telegraph More

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    How are cryptocurrency taxes reported?

    To make an investor’s life or the life of a CPA easier, investors who engage in cryptocurrency trading can start by gathering all of their crypto transaction reports throughout the year. Modern crypto tax software tools such as Accointing automate this process to reduce the time spent compiling these documents.Continue Reading on Coin Telegraph More

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    Andreessen Horowitz invests $70M in Ethereum staking protocol Lido

    Andreessen Horowitz’s investment in Lido is intended to further support the adoption of decentralized staking solutions for Ethereum 2.0, a spokesperson for the venture capital firm said. Ethereum 2.0 marks a significant shift in the network’s consensus algorithm by ushering in the adoption of proof-of-stake (PoS) and other upgrades that could enhance scalability and reduce fees. The transition to Ethereum 2.0, which began in November 2020, is still ongoing.Continue Reading on Coin Telegraph More

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    Argentina secures $45bn debt deal with IMF

    Argentina has secured a $45bn deal with the IMF to restructure debt from its record 2018 bailout, just weeks before a deadline for repayments it would struggle to make from fast-dwindling reserves. The IMF said in a statement on Thursday that the new 30-month extended fund facility programme outlined in the agreement would “address the country’s most-pressing economic challenges” and improve public finances.Argentina’s congress and the IMF board must approve the details of the arrangement. Those details were not immediately available, although the fund said it “seeks to durably address persistent high inflation through a multipronged strategy involving a reduction of monetary financing of the fiscal deficit, and a new framework for monetary policy implementation to deliver positive real interest rates”.Both sides have been anxious for a deal to restructure approximately $45bn in debt owed to the international lender from a record $57bn that Argentina originally agreed to borrow from the fund in 2018 under the previous centre-right government of Mauricio Macri. Martín Guzmán, Argentina’s finance minister and chief IMF negotiator, said the deal would be sent to the lower house of Congress as early as next week. If approved, payments to the fund would begin in 2026 and end with full repayment by 2034. Securing a simple majority in congress for the deal will be a major challenge for President Alberto Fernández, whose ruling leftwing Peronist coalition lost key seats during midterm elections last year. The agreement with the IMF, the outline of which was first presented in January, has exposed deep rifts within the governing coalition, a combination of moderates aligned with the president and a radical wing led by Cristina Fernández de Kirchner, the country’s influential vice-president and former leader.

    While the IMF does not require any congressional approval to finalise the deal, Argentine law requires it.Argentina was due to repay the IMF $19bn this year under the terms of the original deal, including a $2.8bn instalment due on March 22, which analysts say it could not afford to make without a fresh deal.Net central bank reserves have fallen into negative territory by some calculations after the government paid more than $1bn in principal and interest to the fund in February. Inflation is running above 50 per cent a year. Presidential spokeswoman Gabriela Cerruti said the main point of disagreement with IMF officials in Washington had been over how fast to raise energy prices, which are heavily subsidised in Argentina, accounting for roughly $11bn last year. For some consumers, electricity and gas prices will rise 150 per cent under the terms of the new deal, she said, which will be unpopular among opposition lawmakers who must approve the deal. “The tariff issue was one of the most discussed and intensely negotiated,” Cerruti told a press conference in Buenos Aires on Thursday.Fernando Iglesias, an opposition lawmaker, described the agreement as “a time bomb”. Economists have expressed scepticism about whether a divided and unpopular government facing elections next year will be able to deliver on its commitments and pass regular fund reviews. More