More stories

  • in

    US Senators Ask for Crypto Regulations To Undermine Sanction in Russia

    In the wake of the Russian invasion of Ukraine, the global crypto donation to Ukraine has been on an overwhelming growth. Also, talks about sanction compliance from the crypto industry are now more significant. The Treasury Department of the US faced questions by four US senators regarding the crypto industry.In an official letter, the senators inquired about the department’s progress in monitoring and enforcing sanctions compliance by the crypto industry. What the senators’ focus on is, criminals or indecent states may use digital assets to hide cross-border transactions for illegal needs.As such digital assets and payment systems may evade the US and other global sanctions, the senato …Continue reading on CoinQuora More

  • in

    Running a siege economy: Russia prepares to endure pain of sanctions

    Russia has pledged to stand its ground against what it calls “hostile actions” but has accepted that its economy will take a significant hit from the extensive sanctions imposed by the west in response to its invasion of Ukraine. Economists expect the sanctions to push Russia into a deep recession while driving inflation even higher this year, but do not think the economy will fail to function as long as the political will in the Kremlin exists to soften the impact of the measures. Danny Glaser, former assistant secretary at the US Treasury overseeing sanctions and now at risk advisory company K2 Integrity, told a podcast for the think-tank OMFIF that the speed of the west’s response was a “revolution” that aimed to “tank the Russian economy”.But he warned that US, UK and EU sanctions may not change President Vladimir Putin’s military aims and the question would be “how much pain is Russia willing to endure”. Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said on Wednesday the Russian economy was facing “serious pressures and a serious blow”.Authorities are trying to minimise opportunities for capital to flee Russia, with restrictions imposed on foreigners selling assets and locals transferring money abroad. Once the initial crisis period of adjustment is over, the sanctions are expected to have a chronic impact on Russia, by limiting growth, imports and the opportunity to spend oil and gas revenues. Russia’s economy will become much more insular but energy exports will still generate a trade surplus. Western policymakers intend the measures against Russia to have a similar impact to sanctions imposed on Iran by then-president Donald Trump in 2018 after the US withdrawal from the 2015 nuclear agreement, although they are not on the same scale or cover the same breadth of sectors. Those measures were focused on reducing Iran’s revenue from oil exports, the country’s economic lifeline, to zero. Iran is still completely cut off from the world’s financial system, including the Swift payments network that now excludes some Russian lenders. Its economy has suffered significantly. IMF figures suggest that gross domestic product per capita sank 15 per cent across 2018 and 2019 and that Iranians will not regain 2016 levels of living standards until at least a decade later. Inflation, which hit 48 per cent at the end of 2018, is forecast to remain well above 25 per cent. But in a sign of the potential impact on Russia, Iran’s oil exports to friendly countries continue and the economy has not collapsed. Supermarket shelves are usually full, and petrol stations rarely suffer fuel shortages. Wealthier Iranians, many of whom have political ties to the leadership in Tehran, have maintained their luxurious lifestyles.“With a nuclear agreement, Iran can have 15 per cent economic growth,” said Saeed Laylaz, an Iranian analyst. “Without an agreement, if oil prices remain high and Iran can continue to sell 1mn barrels a day [of oil] or so, and with rises in taxation, it can run the economy and have [modest] growth.”

    You are seeing a snapshot of an interactive graphic. This is most likely due to being offline or JavaScript being disabled in your browser.

    Iran’s diversification of its economy and its reliance on trade with its neighbours as well as China have allowed officials in Tehran to claim that it has survived and won what it terms “the economic war”. Even if it must accept lower prices for its oil as the markets begin to shun its crude, economists expect Moscow to be able to run a similar siege economy, using hard currency from oil and gas sales to buy imports from countries and companies willing to supply Russia. The Institute of International Finance said the sanctions would have a “dramatic effect” on Russia’s financial system, and the decline in the rouble, even with capital controls in place aimed at stopping money fleeing the country, will raise inflation and lead “to a sizeable contraction of output this year”.Goldman Sachs said sanctions on the central bank, hampering its defence of the rouble, would raise inflation to 17 per cent by the end of the year. That figure is consistent with the central bank’s more than doubling of its interest rate to 20 per cent, a rise necessary to attract deposits to Russian banks. It cut Russia’s growth forecast for 2022 from 2 per cent before the sanctions to -7 per cent, with public and private domestic spending expected to fall 10 per cent or more. But Clemens Grafe, central and eastern Europe economist at Goldman Sachs, said the immediate crisis for Russia would dissipate in six to nine months when it had earned enough from oil and gas sales to offset the sanctions placed on the central bank’s foreign exchange reserves. Then it could operate a much more domestically focused economy, using income from energy to buy imports, most probably from China, with economic life for Russians surviving amid a weakened state.

    Grafe lowered his long-term trend growth forecast for Russia from 2.75 per cent a year to 1 per cent. “The import restrictions will make it increasingly difficult to keep productivity growth at past levels,” he said, predicting a “similar reduction to that we observed given the reduction of foreign direct investment post 2014”.With imports sharply reduced and foreign currency gains from trade used to shore up the rouble, Russia’s trade surplus will be its lifeline to run a siege economy. Putin’s ministers have recognised the public will have to endure pain as sanctions drive down living standards, but they are sending the message that they are determined to tough it out. Additional reporting by Najmeh Bozorgmehr in Tehran More

  • in

    Vertical integration: industries are stacking up in the face of supply chain disruptions

    Tesla, says founder Elon Musk, is “absurdly vertically integrated”. He has a point. Tesla makes the machines that make its electric vehicles; its factories churn out the batteries that power them. Another joint Tesla EV and adjacent battery plant in Germany received approval this week. But Musk is not alone. Retailers, crypto and financial services are all stacking up their operations, securing more of the value chain and aiding procurement.Ruptured supply chains over the past year have encouraged more companies to integrate. Frustrations over securing delivery slots prompted Loctek, a Chinese furniture manufacturer, to order its own $32mn ship earlier this year. Container shipping giant AP Moller-Maersk, which halted Russian deliveries this week, has recently unveiled $6bn worth of acquisitions in land-based logistics, undaunted by previous flops. American Eagle Outfitters, the preppy apparel purveyor, last year snapped up delivery start-up AirTerra and Quiet Logistics, which does ecommerce fulfilment.Ideally, an end-to-end delivery solution for exporters or a more seamless delivery for consumers helps customers. Retailers look to replicate Amazon’s success. They gain full control over deliveries and, ultimately, sell logistics services to third parties.Tech is one industry adopting a spoke style of vertical integration to keep audiences engaged. Think super apps. PKO Bank Polski, Poland’s biggest bank, which provides a suite of financing and other car-leasing services, launched an online sales platform for used and new cars. Other traditional banks segue into cryptocurrencies, underpinned by blockchain or other infrastructure also applicable in areas such as trade finance.For sure, risks attach. Perhaps the biggest is regulatory. Amazon discovered this when it came under scrutiny for prioritising merchants that used its services, putting others at a disadvantage. Competition watchdogs rightly fret about excessive market power.Certain businesses can also drag on earnings, especially those involving hardware; hence Worldline’s move to ditch its terminals business. Still, more not less vertical integration will follow. As a corollary to the break-up of remaining conglomerates such as GE and Toshiba, vertical stacking fits with a de-globalising world. More

  • in

    FirstFT: Russia captures first major city in Ukraine

    Vladimir Putin’s forces over-ran their first major Ukrainian city last night after eight days of fighting that has displaced more than 1mn people. The reported seizure of Kherson, a provincial capital of more than 250,000, would mark a significant breakthrough for Russia’s southern campaign, which has made steady territorial advances unlike its northern and eastern offensives.Intense fighting was also reported further east along the coast in Mariupol, which has been heavily bombarded in recent days as Russian forces and pro-Moscow separatists from Donetsk enveloped the Sea of Azov port.But the long armoured column that had been advancing on Kyiv has stalled in the face of unexpected resistance, logistical hurdles and shortages of fuel and food. Residents in the capital said they heard four huge explosions just before dawn.Russia yesterday acknowledged heavy casualties for the first time, disclosing 498 deaths and 1,597 injuries. The invasion has carried a heavy human toll, creating a fast-growing refugee crisis of a scale not seen on the European continent since the fall of Nazi Germany. The UN estimates that more than 1mn mainly women and children have fled Ukraine, mainly to the neighbouring countries of Poland, Hungary, Slovakia and Moldova.Military briefing: How Russia is tightening its grip on Ukraine’s southern coastline and encircling the strategically important port of Mariupol. Plus, the Russian soldiers who expected to be greeted as liberators but had a rude awakening. Markets briefing: Global commodity prices are on track for their biggest weekly rally in more than five decades as the war in Ukraine triggers “exceptional moves” in raw materials from oil to wheat.Financial services: Citigroup said yesterday it risked losing about $4bn because of its exposure to Russia at its first investor day for nearly five years.Business: The corporate retreat from Russia marks the end of an era, says a professor of Russian history at the London School of Economics.Explainer: Will the west place an embargo on Russian oil and gas supplies? Western leaders are weighing the previously unthinkable.Sanctions: UK cabinet minister Michael Gove is drawing up plans to seize British property owned by Russian oligarchs with links to Putin. Roman Abramovich, meanwhile, has put Chelsea football club up for sale. Opinion: The FT’s Gillian Tett shares what she learnt from dinner with Volodymyr Zelensky. London legal firms can no longer hide behind “the law” to justify continuing morally dubious relationships, argues Cat Rutter Pooley.Track troop movements on our regularly updated map of the conflict and follow our live blog for the latest developments. Sign up to receive my colleague Valentina Pop’s essential newsletter, Europe Express, for the latest analysis and reaction. Thanks for reading FirstFT Americas. Here is the rest of the day’s news — GordonFive more stories in the news1. Trump ‘engaged in a criminal conspiracy’ The former president and his allies may have “engaged in a criminal conspiracy to defraud the US” in their attempt to block the certification of Joe Biden’s presidential victory, the congressional committee investigating the attack on the US Capitol building has concluded.2. CNN makes a $350mn bet on streaming WarnerMedia has raced to launch the CNN Plus streaming service before its planned takeover by Discovery, placing a wager of about $350mn on the news channel’s digital future that was not originally disclosed to its incoming owner.3. Ex-Goldman partner’s credibility questioned in 1MDB trial Tim Leissner, the government’s star witness in the 1MDB trial, came under scrutiny yesterday during the criminal trial of an ex-colleague charged in connection with the affair. Lawyers for defendant Roger Ng sought to focus on discrepancies between answers that Leissner gave to prosecutors and statements he had previously made to the FBI.4. Peloton founder sells stock worth $50mn John Foley made his largest stake sale since stepping down as chief executive of Peloton to MSD Partners, which manages $20bn in assets on behalf of Michael Dell, the founder of Dell Technologies, and other outside investors.5. Turkish inflation pushes past 54% Turkish prices rose at their fastest rate in 20 years as a currency devaluation fed inflation. Food prices climbed 64.5 per cent last month and transportation jumped 75.8 per cent, pushing the consumer price index to its highest level since March 2002.The day aheadAntony Blinken in Brussels The US secretary of state travels to Brussels for meetings with Nato and G7 allies, before moving on to Poland, the Baltic states and Moldova. Meanwhile, a second round of talks between Ukraine and Russia is expected to take place today in Belarus.Jay Powell testifies to Senate committee The Federal Reserve chair is to give a second day of testimony on Capitol Hill. Yesterday he told the House Financial Services Committee that he would support a “series” of interest rate rises from March despite the economic uncertainty surrounding Ukraine. PMI surveys The Institute for Supply Management releases its non-manufacturing activity index for February and the Commerce Department is expected to report a rise of 0.7 per cent in factory orders for January, following a decrease of 0.4 per cent in the previous month. Earnings The Singapore-based technology company Grab will share fourth-quarter and full-year earnings — its first set of results since listing on the Nasdaq exchange in December. Broadcom Inc releases first-quarter results. They are expected to have been driven by strong demand for chips used in data centres and 5G powered devices.What else we’re reading Cathie Wood didn’t come this far to quit A year ago, the founder of Ark Invest managed more than $60bn in assets. Now she faces the toughest battle of her career, as she fights against market momentum and tries to halt huge losses and outflows.Investors can no longer afford to ignore geopolitical risk The idea that business can hold itself apart from politics is wrong, writes Helen Thomas. The legions of analysts and lobbyists employed by them in all sectors suggest large companies appreciate that they do not operate in a vacuum.South Korea’s raucous politics The presidential election winner will take the helm of the world’s 10th-largest economy and a manufacturing powerhouse in East Asia. But he will also inherit an unhappy balancing act between the US and China and an unresolved conflict with North Korea.‘Greedy work has been made less greedy’ In the latest part of our series “Economists Exchange”, Sarah O’Connor speaks to Claudia Goldin, an economics professor at Harvard University, over whether Covid-19 might make top jobs more compatible with family life.How the influencer industry really works Conservative estimates suggest there are upwards of 3.5mn people engaged in the influencer industry. And according to the German data firm Statista, the market was worth $13.8bn in 2021. In Get Rich or Lie Trying, Symeon Brown takes a critical look at this and other forms of online “hustle”.ObituaryThe critic Clement Crisp, whose distinguished prose graced the arts pages of the Financial Times for six decades, has died at the age of 95. “To read him was to quote him”, writes Alastair Macauley in this appreciation of his life.

    Clement Crisp talking to dancers Noelle Christian, Alexandra Balashova and Phyllis Bedells in 1969 © Royal Academy of Dance/ ArenaPAL More

  • in

    Russia halts deliveries of rocket engines to the U.S

    “In a situation like this we can’t supply the United States with our world’s best rocket engines. Let them fly on something else, their broomsticks, I don’t know what,” Rogozin said on state Russian television.According to Rogozin, Russia has delivered a total of 122 RD-180 engines to the U.S. since 1990s, of which 98 have been used to power Atlas (NYSE:ATCO) launch vehicles.Roscosmos will also stop servicing rocket engines it had previously delivered to the U.S., Rogozin said, adding that the U.S. still had 24 engines that would now be left without Russian technical assistance.Russia has earlier said it was suspending cooperation with Europe on space launches from the Kourou spaceport in French Guiana in response to Western sanctions over Ukraine.Moscow has also demanded guarantees from British satellite company OneWeb that its satellites would not be used for military purposes. OneWeb, in which the British government has a stake, said on Thursday it was suspending all launches from Russia’s Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan.Rogozin said Russia would now focus on creating dual-purpose spacecraft in line with the needs of Roscosmos and the Defence Ministry. More

  • in

    Commodity prices soar to highest level since 2008 over Russia supply fears

    Global commodity prices are on track for the biggest weekly rally in more than 50 years and Europe’s natural gas prices have hit a new record, as the war in Ukraine triggers “exceptional moves” in raw materials from oil to wheat.The S&P GSCI index, a broad barometer for the price of global raw materials, has jumped 18 per cent this week, leaving it on track for the sharpest rise on records dating back to 1970, according to Refinitiv data. It is now at its highest level since 2008.US oil prices hit the highest level since 2008 on Thursday. Everything from wheat to aluminium and coal has also soared, in a move that will have profound effects on global businesses and consumers. “Events in Russia and Ukraine are unleashing exceptional commodity price moves, which could have structural implications on long-term supply . . . but we also believe there are credible threats of demand destruction as commodity prices melt up,” said Dominic O’Kane, analyst at JPMorgan.West Texas Intermediate, the US oil benchmark, rose as much as 6 per cent to above $116 a barrel, while aluminium continued its relentless march higher, hitting another record. Wheat was trading at levels last seen in 2008.In Europe, wholesale natural gas prices reached almost €200 per megawatt hour while thermal coal — used in power plants — surged beyond $400 a tonne. The huge gains will further push up inflation that central banks are struggling to control, raising the cost of living across the globe.

    You are seeing a snapshot of an interactive graphic. This is most likely due to being offline or JavaScript being disabled in your browser.

    Russia is a leading global supplier of oil, gas, metals and grains. Western sanctions on Moscow have directly avoided natural resources, which in theory leaves them available for trade, but banks, insurers, shipping companies and trading partners are effectively boycotting the country to reduce legal and reputational risk.“It is becoming clearer that the Russia-Ukraine conflict is having an impact on the demand for Russian oil,” said Warren Patterson, analyst at ING. “Buyers are increasingly reluctant to commit.” Brent crude rose 3 per cent to $116.28 a barrel. Russia exports 5m barrels of oil per day — about 5 per cent of global supply.As a result of the self-sanctioning, traders are rushing to find other sources of supply in markets that are already tight because of rising demand as economies have fired up following the easing of coronavirus lockdown restrictions. That is overturning long-established trade flows and further fuelling inflationary pressures.“This rally will stoke a torrent of inflationary pressures as the building blocks of the global economy get ever more costly,” said Ehsan Khoman, head of emerging markets research at MUFG. “We believe commodities are now marching to levels where demand destruction — through still higher prices — will become prevalent.Tom Marzec-Manser, head of gas analytics at ICIS, a consultancy, said that while European buyers with long-term contracts with Gazprom were still drawing maximum gas from Russia under those agreements, some companies with more flexible shorter-term contracts had started to look for alternative sources of supply resulting in a huge increase in demand.“We are seeing a response to market participants with short-term and medium-term contracts with Gazprom and its affiliates saying we need to remove these from our supply mix where possible and as quickly as possible,” he said.With exports from Ukraine and Russia at a virtual halt, wheat soared, with Chicago futures at the highest levels since 2008, when a rise in grain prices triggered protests and riots in Africa, Asia and Latin America.Wheat prices have risen almost 40 per cent this month. Russia and Ukraine account for just under 30 per cent of global wheat exports, sending the grain to countries in the Middle East, north Africa and Asia. “[The] last time we ran out of wheat we had the Arab spring. When people don’t get their bread they get very angry,” said Cullen Gunn, chief executive of Kilter Investments, a fund manager that specialises in agriculture investments in Australia.All of Ukraine’s loading ports are closed and, while Russian Black Sea ports are open, vessel traffic has virtually ground to a halt. With many Ukrainian farmers recruited to fight, and fertilisers and pesticides in short supply, there are worries about this year’s crop because the country’s spring planting normally starts next month.The war in Ukraine has also rattled the coal market, with benchmark coal prices in Asia soaring above $400 a tonne. “Buyers in markets including Europe, Japan, South Korea and China are scrambling to address their exposure to Russian supply,” said Rory Simington, an analyst at Wood Mackenzie.Earlier this week shipping companies MSC and Maersk, which handles shipments for Russian aluminium producer Rusal, suspended cargo bookings to and from the country.Nickel rose more than 5 per cent to an 11-year high of $27,390 a tonne on Thursday. Additional reporting by Nic Fildes in Sydney More

  • in

    Why the EU should end Russian gas imports now

    In my FT column this week, which went online last Sunday, I argued for a policy of financial shock and awe against Russian president Vladimir Putin, with massive immediate sanctions rather than a gradual scaling up of measures. By the time it appeared in print on Monday morning, half of it felt outdated. The west’s unity around imposing sanctions on Russia for its invasion of Ukraine, and the scale of those sanctions, have been astonishing. Here is the FT’s overview of the sanctions decided as of Monday — but remember this is a moving target.The scale of financial sanctions will have effects far beyond finance. The Russian middle class will soon find itself unable to buy many consumer goods they have come to take for granted. They may find it virtually impossible to fly anywhere — even domestic aviation may be curtailed as sanctions cut Russian airlines off from everything from leased aircraft to engine servicing manuals.But we can do more. How could sanctions be tightened? Most simply, existing sanctions — asset freezes and travel bans, exclusions from the Swift interbank messaging system or a ban on correspondence banking relationships, restrictions on transactions with Russian institutions including the central banks, and export controls — can all be extended to more people, companies and sectors. This could be necessary even just to keep the sanctions pressure where it is intended to be, as there inevitably turn out to be loopholes that need plugging.The big question, however, is whether to end the exemption from financial sanctions for energy sales, in particular oil and gas. Note that current sanctions are already complicating such trading; some western utilities are voluntarily boycotting Russian oil, and a Russian oil producer has apparently experienced three failed tenders.But an official oil and gas embargo would be a sanction of an entirely different order. As I wrote in my column, this is not a technical decision about financial plumbing but a political decision about whether to do without Russian-produced energy commodities in the first place. And this is, above all, a question the EU needs to answer. (Everything that follows applies to the US too. But while the US imports some Russian oil — a small but not insignificant 7 per cent of its total oil imports — Europe is much more reliant on Russian energy imports, on which more below.)There are a few who argue that Europe should go “cold turkey” on Russian gas imports. Many more think that an oil and gas embargo is not just very costly for Europe, but strategically ill-timed because some sanctions powder should be kept dry. I think that is a mistake. The west, and especially the EU, should expand sanctions to the energy trade, and do so now. Here are five reasons why.First, this is the moment of maximum impact. A large amount of Russia’s official foreign reserves have been frozen. But as long as oil, gas and other commodity exports keep flowing out, Moscow will get hard currency — and you can bet it will not make the same mistake twice. It will quickly ensure that its export earnings are paid and kept in a form beyond the reach of western governments. Before the pandemic, Russia’s total exports exceeded $400bn, with roughly half of that being energy exports. With energy prices much higher today, Putin’s regime could easily be receiving a billion dollars in energy export earnings for every day it bombs Ukrainian homes. Stopping these earnings now, when much of the financial war chest has been disabled and before there is time to build up a new one, will both maximise the impact of such a move and reduce any circumvention of sanctions already imposed.Second, it is better for the west to be the one inflicting the blow, at the time of its own choosing and preparation. Europe’s Russian energy links amount to a mutual vulnerability: either side can hurt the other by cutting off flows of cash or gas, at the cost of hurting itself. There is no doubt the gas weapon is one Putin will use again when he sees fit. Russia has interrupted gas flows several times for geopolitical gain in the past two decades. And this winter’s energy price crisis was in part caused by Moscow. In what in hindsight seems likely to have been part of weakening western preparedness ahead of invading Ukraine, Russia’s gas deliveries to Europe were about one-third lower than earlier levels, as Matthew Klein’s newsletter demonstrates. And surprise, surprise: “Storage sites owned or controlled by Gazprom had particularly low storage levels at the start of the heating season,” according to the International Energy Agency.If the west does not take the hit now of cutting off energy links, it will remain vulnerable to Putin’s threat to do so at the point that most favours him.Third, within the next year at least, this is the moment the west can free itself from this dependency at the least level of self-damage. Spring is coming, and with it lower heating demand. It is possible to run down stored reserves and there would be time to find alternative sources to refill the stores by next winter. Politically, too, the horror of Putin’s war makes this the easiest time to build political support for the higher energy prices that will prevail. Fourth, it is do-able, if difficult, to go cold turkey. In terms of oil, Europe gets a third of its oil imports from Russia, according to the IEA, but holds stockpiles equivalent to four to five months’ worth of net imports. Its natural gas stores, in contrast, cover less than a month’s worth of net imports. But even that is perhaps two months’ worth of imports from Russia. And there has been a lot of good number-crunching in recent weeks about the possibility of coping without Russian gas. An analysis from Algebris Investments suggests 62 per cent of the energy can be substituted from other sources of gas and postponing the phaseout of nuclear power in Germany. A report from Bruegel, the highly influential Brussels think-tank, shows that the gap can realistically be met with a combination of energy efficiency measures, a rapid rollout of some renewable energy generation and temporarily increasing coal- and oil-fired power output. And fifth, this is the best chance of toppling Putin. Autocracies are brittle things: hard but liable to snap. His power is based on a mix of fear, greed, apathy and each individual’s belief that opposing him is futile because nobody else does. If Putin does lose power, it will only have been because he could no longer offer the elite enough wealth to keep them on board, because the Russian middle class is plunged back into 1980s-style Soviet deprivation, and because the fear lifted when his departure suddenly no longer seemed unimaginable. For all these reasons, this is the right moment to throw everything we have at Putin and his regime. The illusion that “proportionality” and “gradualism” are the right way to impose sanctions on Moscow simply gives succour to an autocratic aggressor. Cutting off the Kremlin’s energy lifeline will take a big policymaking effort: to look for substitutes, to connect up Europe’s gas pipelines and electricity grids, to manage gas purchases and storage in common, and to compensate those countries and groups that are most vulnerable to the consequences. But above all it takes political work: to prepare people and businesses for high energy prices and possible disruption, and to build the political support for the inevitable disruptions, as the sacrifice we must all make to fight for peace and freedom in Europe. Reassuringly, there are signs of this happening. It is, in any case, overdue. If Europe had weaned itself off Russian gas before the current war, it would have been freer to inflict greater sanctions damage now. Klein explains very well the dereliction of duty: “Europeans can and should be blamed for becoming even more reliant on Russian fossil fuel exports since the 2014 invasion of Ukraine.” Let us not make the same mistake twice.Other readablesHere’s a useful rule of thumb for those who, like me, are trying to figure out the energy relations between the EU and Russia and being tripped up by the various units in which gas volumes are measured: by energy content, 1bn cubic metres (1bcm) of natural gas is roughly the same as 10 terawatt-hours, and a little less than 1mn tonnes of oil equivalent. If you can just get your zeroes right, you shouldn’t go wrong as you convert. (Don’t ask about British thermal unit; here is a more complete conversion table).Inequality between US companies — in terms of their productivity, and how much they pay their workers — has long been on the increase, as Free Lunch has previously covered. Now new research finds that the same trends are at work in the UK economy.Numbers newsThe Federal Reserve seems determined to go ahead with monetary policy tightening. Robin Brooks of the Institute of International Finance writes in the FT that the European Central Bank may instead postpone monetary normalisation. More

  • in

    Nifty News: Marketplace exploit on Smol Brains, NFT for trees and metaverse movies

    Security specialist for MetaMask and MyCrypo harry.eth tweeted on Thursday around 1:00 am UTC, confirming a flaw in the code on Marketplace, which allows a user to purchase NFTs for 0 MAGIC (MAGIC). At least 28 Smol Brains and Smol Brains Land NFTs appear to have been taken using this exploit so far at the time of writing.Continue Reading on Coin Telegraph More