More stories

  • in

    Senator Ted Cruz invokes Canadian unrest to advocate for Bitcoin again

    Cruz said he is very bullish on Bitcoin because it is highly decentralized and cannot be controlled by any government or entity. He went on to cite the example of an ongoing issue in Canada where the government has enforced emergency laws as a retaliation to the Freedom Convoy trucker’s protest against COVID-19 mandates.Continue Reading on Coin Telegraph More

  • in

    France in favour of cutting off Russia from SWIFT – Ukrainian minister

    (Reuters) – Ukrainian Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba said on Saturday French Foreign Minister Jean-Yves Le Drian had supported cutting off Russia from the global SWIFT payment system in a phone conversation with him.France was also ready to supply weapons and military equipment to Ukraine, Kuleba wrote on Twitter (NYSE:TWTR). More

  • in

    Economists fear forecasted Fed policy ‘too little too late’ on inflation

    The Federal Reserve will fail to control inflation if it delivers only six quarter-point rate rises this year as markets expect, according to almost half of leading academics polled by the Financial Times.The survey, conducted by the Initiative on Global Markets at the University of Chicago Booth School of Business in partnership with the FT, suggests the US central bank risks moving too slowly in shifting monetary policy away from its ultra-loose settings in place since the start of the pandemic. The outlook has now been significantly clouded by the Russian invasion of Ukraine.A majority of the 45 economists polled said the federal funds rate will increase to a minimum 1.5 per cent by the end of the year — a jump that translates to at least six quarter-point rate rises, given low expectations that the Fed will make an aggressive half-point increase at its policy meeting in March.That compares to 42 per cent who predict the Fed will deliver only four or five quarter-point adjustments this year, well short of what most of the respondents believe is necessary to damp demand and tame inflation. Just over 40 per cent of the economists warned that lifting the federal funds rate by 1.5 percentage points this year is “too little too late”. However, 39 per cent said raising interest rates by that magnitude was “just about right” without severely slowing the economy. Only 5 per cent worried it would pre-empt a recession, with the housing market and business investment taking the largest hits.“They let themselves get a bit more behind the curve than they should have,” said Alan Blinder, a former Fed vice-chair. “That implies going faster or more aggressively than you would have if you started earlier.” 

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

    The survey results were collected during a tumultuous period — between February 21 and February 24 — leading up to and including the Russian invasion of Ukraine.Despite the sharp escalation in geopolitical tensions, market expectations for the future path of Fed policy have not wavered significantly, with six quarter-point rate rises still pencilled in for this year. While several Fed officials have since acknowledged potential economic costs tied to Russia’s attacks, they appear steadfast in their plans to withdraw monetary support.“If we were in a more normal situation with inflation, this is a time when you would see the Fed say we are going to be easier with policy because we want to take out some insurance against bad things that may happen, but that is hard to do when inflation is running so high,” said Karen Dynan, an economics professor at Harvard University, who previously worked at the central bank. She added that the developments in Ukraine further “reinforce” the upside risks to inflation.

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

    When asked what it would take for the Fed to pause its rate-rising cycle, geopolitical tensions tied to Ukraine ranked fourth as the top reason, behind financial market instability, labour market weakness and falling inflation.Of the respondents, 40 per cent saw it as “somewhat” or “very” likely that annual core inflation exceeds 3 per cent by the end of 2023. That is well below the current rate of 5.2 per cent, but far above the Fed’s longstanding 2 per cent target. The median estimate for year-end 2022 is 3.5 per cent. “If the next five payroll numbers look like 500,000 [jobs added] with inflation going to 8 per cent because of oil prices, that is straightforward for the central bank,” said Robert Barbera, director of the Center for Financial Economics at Johns Hopkins University. “The issue is if the real-economy effects of this war-footing actually end up hitting activity.”

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

    The chief concern among the economists is not about the Federal Open Market Committee moving too forcefully to tame inflation and in turn causing a recession, but moving too slowly.“At this point, the committee has not seemed to be erring on the side of being too hawkish on inflation,” said Kenneth West, a professor of economics at the University of Wisconsin. A combined 40 per cent believe the federal funds rate will need to be at or above 2 per cent this year in order for the central bank to achieve both stable prices and maximum employment, with half of that segment suggesting it should exceed 2.5 per cent.As a complement to its efforts to cool the economy, the central bank is also expected to reduce its balance sheet, which has more than doubled to $9tn in roughly two years as the Fed hoovered up Treasuries and agency mortgage-backed securities in a bid to support an economy beset by the pandemic.Just over a third of the economists believe the balance sheet will shrink below $7tn by the end of 2023, with the majority predicting it will remain above that level.Deborah Lucas, a professor of finance at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, said the pace will depend chiefly on the liquidity of the Treasury market and financing costs for the federal government. More

  • in

    No immediate impact from Russia sanctions on bond index rebalancing – JPMorgan

    The indexes are key performance benchmarks for international investors in emerging market debt, so membership can help a country sell bonds and reduce its borrowing costs.In a note published to clients, JPMorgan said there was “no immediate impact from sanctions on the February 28, 2022 rebalance of the JPMorgan Emerging Market indices.””An updated Index Watch will be published detailing any potential Index composition changes at the March 31, 2022 rebalance due to updated sanctions directives.”At the end of February, Russia had a 4.92% weighting in the JPMorgan EMBI+ bond index. It had a 1.56% weighting in its EMBI Global index and 1.63% in its EMBI Global Diversified index.The U.S. government broadened restrictions on trading of Russian government debt on Tuesday to punish Moscow for ratcheting up its conflict with Ukraine.The U.S. Treasury prohibited participation in the secondary market for Russian government bonds that will be issued after March 1, in a move aimed at curbing Russia’s ability to access external funding. More

  • in

    West moves closer to cutting Russia's SWIFT access, says Lithuania

    “Our goal is that the decision is taken as early as possible. I cannot give a particular date. From what I’m hearing it seems that there is no strong opposition left,” Simonyte told a news conference in Vilnius.Canada, the United States, Britain and the European Union on Friday said they could act to exclude Russia from SWIFT in a further round of sanctions aimed at halting Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. More