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    Rouble weakens as investors take stock of new Western sanctions on Russia

    MOSCOW (Reuters) – The Russian rouble weakened on Wednesday, reversing gains made the previous day and heading back towards 80 to the dollar as investors took stock of Western sanctions imposed on Russia for ordering troops into separatist regions of eastern Ukraine. The United States, the European Union, Britain, Australia, Canada and Japan responded to President Vladimir Putin’s recognition of separatist enclaves in the Donbass region of eastern Ukraine with plans to target banks and elites while Germany froze a major gas pipeline project from Russia.British Foreign Secretary Liz Truss, announcing more measures on Wednesday, said Britain would stop Russia selling sovereign debt in London.By 1045 GMT, the rouble was 0.9% weaker against the dollar at 79.51 and had lost 0.9% to trade at 90.23 against the euro.Russia was celebrating the Defender of the Fatherland public holiday on Wednesday, with many traders away from their desks, but some trading went on. The initial round of new sanctions stopped short of targeting major financial institutions, meaning their impact could be rather symbolic.The United States broadened restrictions on trading of Russian government debt, prohibiting participation in the secondary market for bonds issued after March 1, a move that analysts said might have a moderate impact near-term but could be a step towards a harsher measure.Russia’s finance ministry on Wednesday said it would offer only new series of OFZ government bonds from now on, in response to Washington’s move.Russian dollar bonds extended their losses, with longer-dated issues dropping more than 4 cents to trade in their low 90s, Tradeweb data showed. Some of Ukraine’s dollar bonds fared even worse with the 2032 issue dropping 5.5 cents to trade at 66.37 cents in the dollar.The premium demanded by investors to hold Russian and Ukrainian debt over safe-have U.S. Treasuries also widened sharply to 391 basis points and 1280 bps respectively – both at their widest level since 2015Brent crude oil, a global benchmark for Russia’s main export, was down 0.5% at $96.41 a barrel.Russia’s dollar-denominated RTS index was down 0.4% to 1,222.2 points. More

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    UK should bring forward tax rises to fight inflation, IMF says

    The IMF said on Tuesday that Rishi Sunak should bring forward planned tax increases to limit the risk of persistently high inflation, even though it would tighten the financial squeeze on Britain’s households.In its annual assessment of the UK economy, the fund said the chancellor should spare poorer households and impose higher income and wealth taxes on richer people. The advice would help prevent the need for tougher action in the months ahead to bring down inflation, it said. The fund’s gloomy assessment comes as the UK economy faces a rise in inflation to 7 per cent in the coming months, with households facing their biggest squeeze on living standards for 30 years.The fund added that in the short term the Bank of England should not increase interest rates rapidly or it could risk tipping the economy into recession. With inflation forecast by the fund and the BoE to hit 7 per cent in April, when the government’s energy price cap rises 54 per cent, the IMF said the central bank should be “steadily adjust[ing interest rates] towards a neutral setting”, which it said was between 1 per cent and 1.5 per cent.But even with a tightening of monetary policy of this amount, the risk was that inflation would remain too high for too long and become ingrained into UK price setting and wage demands, the IMF said. It said indicators of wage settlements, corporate pricing intentions, survey and market-implied inflation expectations all “flashed red at present” but added that the BoE had a difficult task in balancing the risk of snuffing out the recovery if it raised rates too quickly and letting high inflation become embedded in UK life. “At present, the data suggest that the latter risk is of greater concern,” the IMF staff concluded. Giving evidence to the Treasury select committee of the House of Commons, Andrew Bailey, governor of the BoE, took a similar position on the threats of persistently high inflation. He said there was “very clearly” a risk that high price rises and high wage increases could continue. After facing criticism for telling people not to ask for high wage increases, Bailey said: “It’s not just wage setting, it’s also price setting . . . it’s both. There is very clearly an upside risk there. The upside risk . . . comes through from the second-round effects.”With this fear and the balancing act faced by the BoE, the fund staff said Sunak could help bring inflation under control with earlier than planned tax increases.

    “The authorities could bring forward some fiscal tightening from 2023-24 to 2022-23 to help contain demand in the short run with the benefit of also reducing the drag on growth in outer years”, while using contingency funds to help the poorest, the IMF concluded. But it added that this should be dropped if a new virulent coronavirus wave hit the economy, with the government again implementing the exceptional support offered during the pandemic. The recommendation of what the IMF staff called a “rotation” from monetary to fiscal tightening to contain inflation was controversial when it was put to the IMF board earlier this month. Shona Riach, the UK’s lead official on the IMF board, ignored the recommendation to bring forward tax increases in her formal response, while the account of the board meeting showed that “a few directors questioned the political feasibility of this suggestion”. More

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    Shiba Inu To Launch 99,000 Digitized Lands in Its Shiberse

    The incoming Shiba Inu’s Shiberse metaverse will hold over 99,000 digitized lands inside it. The lands will be in the form of digital real estate properties that would be available for purchase. The announcement came as a surprise in a recent Shiba Inu AMA event.The official launch of the digitized lands will last for a minimum of 10 days. Leash holders of the SHIB lands will be granted the first access to view, bid, and make purchases inside the Shiberse. This means that the Leash holders will have the option to become the rightful owners by simply purchasing the lands.In addition, 35,000 plots of land will be released at the initial stage of the launch for auction. After the first batch of the lands gets sold out, the rest of the lands will be available to the public in stages. Apart from the Leash holders, traders will be allowed to navigate through the second batch of the lands to make a pu …Continue reading on CoinQuora More

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    BoE's Bailey sees clear risk of inflation sticking at high level

    LONDON (Reuters) – Bank of England Governor Andrew Bailey said on Wednesday a risk “very clearly” existed that inflation, which is running at a 30-year high, gets embedded in Britain’s economy if a cycle of higher prices keeps pushing up wages.”It’s not just wage setting, it’s also price setting … it’s both,” Bailey told lawmakers. “There is very clearly an upside risk there. The upside risk … comes through from the second-round effects.”Bailey said there were also risks that inflation comes in lower than the BoE’s forecasts over the next three years and he urged investors not to get carried away with bets on future interest rate hikes. The BoE became the world’s first major central bank to raise borrowing costs after the coronavirus pandemic in December and it pushed its benchmark Bank Rate up again this month to 0.5% from 0.25%.Four of its nine monetary policymakers voted for a bigger increase to 0.75%, which would have been the first half-point rise since BoE independence in 1997.British inflation hit its highest since 1992 in January at 5.5% and the BoE expects it to peak at about 7.25% in April when a 54% rise in regulated household energy tariffs takes effect.Bailey was asked by some members of parliament’s Treasury Committee to explain comments he made earlier this month about the need for constraint in pay deals, even with inflation running so high.One lawmaker, Angela Eagle from the opposition Labour Party, asked Bailey to state his pay which he said he could not remember precisely before confirming it was 575,538 pounds ($783,422) a year including his pension plan.INFLATION RISKSBailey said inflation would accelerate if everyone tried to get pay rises that exceeded inflation, and that the losers would be the workers with the weakest pay-bargaining power.Investors are fully pricing in another 25 basis-point rate hike at the BoE’s next scheduled meeting which concludes on March 17, followed by another in May, and see rates at nearly 2% by the end of this year.Bailey said the BoE top monetary policymakers did not have a big disagreement on the level that Bank Rate needed to reach eventually, even if they were divided this month about the pace of the increases.”It’s important not to put too much emphasis on … whether we took a different view on the level that we expected to get to, as opposed to the pace by which we get there,” he said.Silvana Tenreyro, an external member of the BoE’s Monetary Policy Committee, said that the BoE’s forecasts showed inflation in three years’ time would be only just above its 2% target if rates did not rise at all, implying that only “really modest” tightening was needed. MPC member Jonathan Haskel, who was part of the minority that voted for a rise in Bank Rate to 0.75%, said it was “a very, very finely balanced decision”.Deputy Governor Ben Broadbent said the surge in energy prices – which has been the inflation rate’s biggest driver – was likely to be twice as big in 2022 than in any year in the 1970s, when high inflation plagued many economies.”This is the most challenging period for monetary policy since inflation targeting began in 1992,” Broadbent said in an annual report to the Treasury Committee.($1 = 0.7346 pounds) More

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    London's Heathrow records lowest annual passenger numbers since 1972

    LONDON (Reuters) -London’s Heathrow airport, Britain’s busiest, saw its lowest number of passengers since 1972 last year and suffered wider losses as the coronavirus pandemic slashed demand for business travel and holidays.Passenger numbers fell to 19.4 million in 2021. Heathrow also recorded a pretax loss of 1.79 billion pounds ($2.43 billion) for 2021, taking total loses during the pandemic to 3.8 billion pounds due to the drop in passengers and high fixed costs.Chief Executive John Holland-Kaye said Heathrow expected to meet its target of more than doubling passengers to 45.5 million this year, although demand would be “quite peaky” and focused on British school holidays. Passenger numbers were currently 23% behind forecast, but he said there were signs of recovery, with the airport seeing some of its busiest days in two years as families went skiing during the school break last week.”Summer in particular we think will be quite busy,” he said in an interview. “After two years of staycations, people want to get some guaranteed sunshine.”He said Heathrow was working with airlines to scale-up its operations and reopen Terminal 4 for the summer peak.But while outbound tourism had been boosted by the removal of restrictions in Britain, Holland-Kaye said inbound tourism and business travel remained suppressed, including transatlantic routes, because of testing requirements in other countries.He said he did not expect travel to return to pre-pandemic levels until all restrictions had been removed and passengers were confident they would not be reimposed.Heathrow is awaiting the aviation regulator’s final proposals on what it can charge passengers for the 2022-2027 period, after it criticised the airport’s plan to raise charges by nearly half. Airlines have also voiced their opposition.Holland-Kaye said if the regulator did not rectify “major mistakes” in its initial proposals, there could be a return to the “Heathrow hassle” of 15 years ago.”If we get it right, we can continue to have the seamless journeys that people have been used to, and the price for doing that is less than 2% on the ticket price,” he said.($1 = 0.7359 pounds) More

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    Five key takeaways from the official Indian crypto ads guideline

    The chief advertising watchdog has developed the new guideline after extensive consultation with the stakeholders of the crypto ecosystem as well as the government, ASCI said. The advertising guidelines also mark the first legal framework related to the digital asset market in the country at a time when the government is yet to finalize the crypto bill.Continue Reading on Coin Telegraph More

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    BoE's Bailey speaks to lawmakers about rate hike decision

    GOVERNOR ANDREW BAILEY ON INFLATION UNCERTAINTY”It’s not just wage setting, it’s also price setting…it’s both. There is very clearly an upside risk there. The upside risk…comes through from the second-round effects.””The second-round effects are a real concern. If we get the second-round effects… of course we would need to react to that with higher interest rates… And the consequence of that, I have to point out, and I know I’m unpopular for saying these things, is that it would of course slow activity in the economy and it would increase unemployment”BAILEY ON HIS CALL FOR RESTRAINT WITH PAY RISES”I’m not saying people should not take pay rises. I did make the point earlier it was in the context of large pay rises.My concern is the second-round effects. If everybody tries to get ahead of the shock that we’ve had from outside…then we’ll get the second-round effects and it will get worse.” BAILEY ON MPC’S DIFFERENT VIEWS ON RATES”It’s important not to put too much emphasis on…whether we took a different view on the level that we expected to get to as opposed to the pace by which we get there.”MPC MEMBER JONATHAN HASKEL ON HIS VOTE FOR 0.75% BANK RATE”I have to stress it’s a very uncertain situation and it’s a very, very finely balanced decision.” More

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    Biden team seeks port revival plans as it spends infrastructure cash

    President Joe Biden, facing political pressure as Americans worry about higher inflation and supply chain woes, has tried to clear port backlogs that have slowed the movement of a record number of goods to market as the U.S. economy recovers from the COVID-19 pandemic.The U.S. Department of Transportation on Wednesday requested proposals for $450 million in grants to expand port terminals, piers, rail yards and storage facilities. It’s the highest amount ever offered through the Port Infrastructure Development Program, officials said.Overall, some $17 billion will be spent on the ports effort. Biden officials hope that smoother-functioning infrastructure will get imported goods on store shelves faster and at lower cost. They also hope Buy American provisions in the overall infrastructure bill will lift domestic manufacturing businesses.The Department of Transportation plans to release a broad report this week laying out further recommendations on freight and logistics issues. More