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    NFT Project Raises $1M in 30 Seconds for Humanitarian Aid in Ukraine

    Web3 allows the fluid collaboration between artists and collectors to get funds where they are most needed, the project description reads. The NFT collection contains artworks of 37 artists, of whom some are from Ukraine. The NFTs quickly sold out, raising over a million dollars in 30 seconds. Thirty-seven artworks contained 200 editions, each costing 0.05 ETH; thus, the auction raised 370 ETH in total. The secondary sale is currently available on OpenSea.The founder of the initiative, NFT advocate Andrew Wang promised to provide detailed information on the fund transfer. During the sale, Reli3f trended #1 on the OpenSea NFT marketplace.UkraineDAO has also been successful in raising funds for Ukraine. 1,000 ETH was donated in 24 hours, and the DAO has currently raised almost $4 million.On the FlipsideEMAIL 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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    DiveWallet Gets Ready for Its Token Launch on the Spark Launchpad

    DiveWallet is a cross-chain wallet that aims to make the crypto market more accessible and give more security to traders. While the wallet will be available in Q3 2022, the project will soon launch its native token on the Spark Launchpad.The debut on the Spark Launchpad – happening on March 5th – is one of the milestones in the roadmap of DiveWallet. The works began with the whitepaper’s publication, followed by the first development operations. The private saleAfter the website went live, the private sale alloca …Continue reading on CoinQuora More

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    Tribal partners with Visa to expand credit options for businesses

    The partnership with Visa allows Tribal to issue business credit cards in local denominations and currencies across Latin America, including Mexico, Brazil, Colombia, Argentina, Chile, Peru, Panama, Uruguay and the Dominican Republic. A Tribal spokesperson informed Cointelegraph that the company’s initial focus is on providing this credit facility to the countries of Colombia, Peru and Chile.Continue Reading on Coin Telegraph More

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    U.S. officials: Sanctions likely to spike Russian inflation, hit purchasing power

    WASHINGTON (Reuters) – Fierce economic sanctions imposed by the United States and its allies on Russia’s central bank and other key sources of wealth are likely to drive Russian inflation higher, cripple its purchasing power drive down investments , U.S. officials said on Monday as new sanctions took effect.Russia’s central bank has been trying to move hundreds of billions of dollars to safe havens since the latest sanctions were first announced on Saturday, the officials said, adding Monday’s actions will hinder its ability to access funds. More

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    Markets pare rate hike bets again as West gets tougher on Russia

    LONDON (Reuters) – Investors further scaled back bets on Monday for interest rate hikes from major central banks this year as the West ramped up sanctions against Russia for invading Ukraine, unleashing fresh uncertainty about the world economic outlook. Aggressive rate-hike bets priced in by markets from the likes of the U.S. Federal Reserve, Bank of England and European Central Bank had already come off in the past week. But they eased further on Monday, with money markets increasingly confident that the ECB will move later rather than sooner since tougher Russia sanctions which include blocking some banks from the SWIFT global payments system and an oil price surge will hurt the euro zone economy.Markets now fully price in a first, 10 basis point rate hike from the ECB at its September meeting, having positioned for a June move following the ECB’s hawkish pivot earlier this month. They anticipate 30 basis points worth of tightening in total by year-end, or the equivalent of three, 10 bps hikes. That’s down from 35 bps late last week and as much as 50 bps just a couple of weeks ago. A related graphic: ECBratehikes: https://fingfx.thomsonreuters.com/gfx/mkt/gkplgaxrdvb/ECBratehikes.JPG “It is logical for curves to shave off the likelihood of rate hikes in Europe and the U.S,” said ING senior rates strategist Antoine Bouvet. “It is too early to assess the economic impact of the current crisis but the impact on growth will be negative, we just don’t know by how much.”Shares in European banks most exposed to Russia fell sharply on Monday while the wider euro zone banking index slid 6.7% to three-month lows. Banking stocks had benefited in recent weeks from rate-hike expectations. Trade in U.S. futures suggested the Fed was on track to begin its rates lift on in March with a 25 bps rate hike. But the probability of a more aggressive 50 basis-point rate was more like 10%, versus over 20% last week, according to CME data. A Bank of Canada meeting on Wednesday could prove a gauge of how central banks in the West are assessing the potential impact of Russia’s attack on Ukraine on their growth and inflation outlook.Canada’s central bank is widely expected to lift rates by 25 basis point in its first hike since October 2018, with just over six rate moves in total priced in by year-end. The Bank of England is also expected to lift rates by 25 bps in March, although bets on a more aggressive 50 bps hike have come off the table.Major central banks have a tricky path to navigate since high inflation calls for tighter monetary policies while oil prices above $100 could hurt consumption and economic growth going forward. ECB chief economist Philip Lane has told fellow policymakers that the Ukraine conflict may reduce the euro zone’s economic output by 0.3%-0.4% this year, four people close to the matter told Reuters on Friday.”It becomes very tricky for them to navigate, especially the ECB, whereas for the Fed this will be more an inflation issue than a growth issue, so they will continue to tighten – maybe not 50 bps but 25 bps – they don’t want to be the source of theatrics in this environment,” said Salman Ahmad, global head of macro at Fidelity International. A related graphic: US rates: https://fingfx.thomsonreuters.com/gfx/mkt/mopandjxqva/US%20rates.JPG More

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    European stocks fall as pressure builds on Russian financial system

    European stocks and Wall Street futures dropped, oil rallied, the rouble plunged and the dollar strengthened after new sanctions imposed on Russia heightened tensions across financial markets. The Stoxx Europe 600 share index fell 1 per cent, taking it almost 10 per cent below its January peak. The Stoxx banks sub-index fell 6.7 per cent as traders responded to uncertainty about western allies locking some Russian lenders out of the Swift payments system. Germany’s Xetra Dax lost 2.2 per cent.The moves came after Russian president Vladimir Putin put his country’s nuclear forces on high alert and western powers imposed sanctions on Russia’s central bank in response to the invasion of Ukraine. Futures markets implied the US S&P 500 share index would drop 1 per cent in early New York dealings while the technology-focused Nasdaq 100 would fall 0.9 per cent. Global equities had rallied on Friday as traders reacted to punitive measures against Russia steering clear of the nation’s energy exports. But after financial sanctions against Russia were ratcheted up over the weekend, fund managers de-risked their portfolios, closing out strong bets on the global economy and future central bank policy while loading up on low-risk and easily tradeable assets. “Investors are reducing their active bets,” said Michael Metcalfe, head of macro strategy at State Street. “Right now is a time to take stock, reduce positions and try to assess all the possible outcomes that could arise” from the geopolitical situation, he added. Brent crude, the international oil benchmark, rose 4.2 per cent to $102.3 a barrel. Futures linked to TTF, Europe’s wholesale natural gas price, rose 14 per cent to €105 per megawatt hour.The dollar index, which measures the currency against six others, rose 0.4 per cent. The yield on the two-year US Treasury note dropped 0.09 percentage points to 1.5 per cent, reflecting a significant rise in the price of the debt. “It’s a flight to safety and cash is king at these times,” said Tatjana Greil Castro, co-head of public markets at credit investor Muzinich & Co. “Asset managers will have concerns about clients wanting to take money out and you want to pre-empt that by having liquidity to meet potential redemptions.”The rouble dropped as much as 29 per cent to almost 118 against the US dollar on Monday morning, later trimming some of its declines. Russia’s central bank more than doubled interest rates to 20 per cent on Monday and banned foreign selling of local securities in a bid to stem the fallout from sanctions.A FTSE index of emerging market stocks also outperformed on Monday, trading flat, as investors backed out of a popular trade based on betting against developing economies that remain affected by high rates of coronavirus. “If investors have sizeable positions away from their target benchmark, these positions may feel too risky at the moment,” Metcalfe said. “One of the active bets many have had is to be underweight [emerging markets] so slightly perversely they have to buy back.”

    Elsewhere, shares in BP dropped 6.1 per cent after the British group said at the weekend it would divest its near 20 per cent stake in Russian state oil provider Rosneft. In Asia, Hong Kong’s benchmark Hang Seng Index fell as much as 1.6 per cent to its lowest level in almost a year before paring losses to close down 0.2 per cent. More

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    One man's plan to orange pill a nation: Bitcoin Senegal

    Following an eight-year stint in France, during which Nourou earned his Masters degree, Bitcoin Chaincode qualifications, and a deep understanding of legacy financial markets thanks to work in investment finance, he was primed to orange-pill Senegal.Continue Reading on Coin Telegraph More

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    Putin’s war shakes loose the pieces of the international trade order

    We’re doing something new, trialling an experiment with audio newsletters read by Microsoft Azure Al. Click here to listen to Trade Secrets and please do share your feedback by completing a short survey, or dropping us a line at [email protected]. Thank you.I wish I’d been wrong last week that the first wave of sanctions weren’t enough to deter Vladimir Putin. But if anything it seems I wasn’t optimistic enough that Germany, with its Nord Stream 2 suspension, was finally twigging it had been far too lenient on Russia. Over the weekend a whole swath of international and particularly European, and particularly German, verities about international relations and trade have been hurled overboard. The disinvestments, asset freezing and travel bans, the Swift payment restrictions, the seizure of Russian central bank assets, let alone the defence spending commitments and arms shipments: all breathtaking.We’ll see in the days ahead what impact this battery of policies has, though the market reaction this morning suggests “a lot”. The still-missing bit is restricting Russian gas exports to western Europe, which are excluded from the US financial sanctions. Germany and other countries continued, bizarrely on the face of it, to buy gas through the pipelines in the days after the invasion.Russia can keep going for quite a while on the hard currency from gas exports even if its central banks’ assets are frozen, so to that extent this shoots a big hole in the sanctions package. However, what it also does is severely deter Russia from switching off the gas to blackmail western Europe in case it bankrupts itself. You aren’t much of a monopolist if you don’t have the power to cut production.Below, in a special extended Trade Secrets, we look at how the Ukraine invasion will effect the global trading order, and particularly Europe’s role in it, and the intersection of national security and trade by recalling a recent rather embarrassing incident where the US sided with Russia against Ukraine at the World Trade Organization to punch holes in international law there. Charted waters looks at how regulations have hit cross-border M&A in the pharma sector. Next Monday, the newsletter will be in the extremely capable hands of Trade Secrets alumnus Claire Jones while I take a short break. In the meantime, I’d like to hear your thoughts on any and all trade subjects: as ever, it’s [email protected], the new world order and the EU’s roleI’m writing this from Germany. There’s no better place to observe how a new European and international order is being changed in a crisis. Before the invasion, the 1970s Ostpolitik line of engagement rather than confrontation with Russia had a powerful pull. I found a hugely entertaining interview in the New York Times in 1982 headlined “Helmut’s Pipeline”, in which the NYT’s resident conservative William Safire berated the then chancellor Helmut Schmidt of the Social Democratic party for making Germany dependent on Soviet Russian gas. You can still argue engagement with Moscow was the right idea during the cold war, but it was horrendously ill-suited to Putin’s aggressive Russian nationalism, indeed imperialism. Now Olaf Scholz, an SPD chancellor only a couple of months into office, has overturned decades of German certainties.The EU is changing at lightning speed, its member states arming Ukraine and themselves. It’s particularly impressive given that the EU’s initial response to a new challenge (the eurozone sovereign debt meltdown and the migration crisis) tends to be slow, halting and often wrong-headed.What else is changing in the international order? Suddenly, as a club of rich democracies, the G7 has a role again in coordinating sanctions efforts. China, whose presence was deemed necessary for any serious conversation about global governance, is in a rather uncomfortable position in lining up with Russia.Seizing the moment, Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelensky is applying for membership. A few member states (including, predictably, Poland) immediately weighed in on its behalf.Before this weekend I’d have regarded Ukraine joining the EU to be somewhat missing the point apart from as a symbolic move to commit Kyiv to looking westwards. As I argued a few weeks ago (it seems like about a decade now), it was the EU assuming that trade on its own could do the job of foreign policy and signing a politicised “deep and comprehensive free trade agreement” (DCFTA) in 2014 that was the trigger for Putin’s seizing of Crimea.There are still significant issues with meeting a bunch of criteria, even assuming Ukraine will emerge as a free and independent country after the war. The DCFTA hasn’t ended economic dysfunction, and the EU really doesn’t need another corrupt and authoritarian country on its eastern flank. But you can now imagine the EU playing at least a supporting if not a primary security role alongside Nato, coordinating elements of national armed forces even without running its own. The EU does in theory have its own mutual protection clause, but not all member states have signed up and there’s no mechanism to put it into action. If the EU wants to become a fully-fledged security power to match its powers in trade, it’s got a long way to travel yet. Mind you, the rate it’s going it’ll be there by Thursday morning.The US’s unwise alliance with Russia at the WTOHeard the one about how the US backed Russia against Ukraine and punched a hole in the web of international law? In 2016, not long after Putin seized Crimea, Ukraine brought a case to the WTO about Russia blocking trade transit across its territory. Russia argued that its actions were justified under a national security exemption to trade rules and it was illegitimate for the WTO dispute settlement system even to judge what its national security needs might be. Traditionally, governments have been sparing in the use of the loophole, acutely aware that widespread use of a self-judging exemption would basically destroy the WTO system. Although not directly affected by the case, the US came down strongly . . . on Russia’s side, one of those decisions that looked bad at the time and worse now.Why back Putin? Because Donald Trump, absurdly, wanted to invoke national security to block imports of steel and aluminium to the US, including those from staunch foreign policy allies like the EU. A makeshift EU-US deal has put that litigation on hold but similar WTO cases brought by other countries remain pending.The Biden administration continues to maintain some of those tariffs and defend those cases. It says that it’s being reliant on imports at all that’s the problem, even if they’re sourced from allies. But for commodities as generic as steel and aluminium that doesn’t pass the laugh test either.Russia won the case against Ukraine, though importantly the ruling did establish that in principle it was legitimate for WTO dispute settlement to assess the validity of national security concerns. Now, it’s true that WTO rules aren’t of the same fundamental nature as the UN Charter’s protection of peace, security and self-determination. It’s also true that the idea of self-judging national security interests is an established one.But that, in a sense, is the point. It’s not a good look for one of the traditional anchors of the multilateral rule-based system, the US, to cheer on a government like Russia’s and misuse national security loopholes itself. If you’re really going to make trade and strategic policy cohere, national security needs to be invoked transparently and judiciously, not to excuse blatant protectionism.The reshoring crowd will no doubt seize the Ukraine invasion to push their case against whatever imports they and industry lobbyists feel like. But if trade is now a purely unilateral self-determining national security tool you might as well pack up the international order altogether and go back to a system of power relations. Having trade policy try to do national security on its own is a mistake, but then so is allowing spurious national security arguments to dictate trade.Charted watersJoe Biden made regulation of drug prices and curbs on mergers and acquisitions in the pharmaceutical sector a priority when he was elected US president.As Biden prepares to deliver his first State of the Union address to Congress tomorrow, many analysts say that the administration’s efforts to boost the power of consumers at the expense of the pharmaceutical industry have had only mixed success.Nevertheless, the uncertainties over drug pricing and the Federal Trade Commission’s flagging of tougher antitrust scrutiny have had a chilling impact on dealmaking, as the following chart shows.

    Trade linksThe Ukraine crisis has set back hopes of a swift global economic recovery from the pandemic.The US is trying to cut Russia off from semiconductor supply.FT journalists assess the possible damage to supply chains from a prolonged war in Ukraine.Australian winemakers, seeking alternative export markets after being blocked by China, are marketing a new brand in the US advertised by criminal celebrities including Martha Stewart and Snoop Dogg. More