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    U.S. market fallout from Russia-Ukraine strife may be brief, some strategists say

    (Reuters) -As the S&P 500 hovers near correction territory, Wall Street is gauging the further effect of the conflict between Russia and Ukraine on asset prices, with some strategists warning investors to keep their cool and focus on longer-term market trends. Worries over geopolitical strife and a more hawkish Fed have combined to take the S&P 500 down nearly 10% from an all-time high hit in early January. The benchmark index was recently off around 0.7% on Tuesday after President Joe Biden announced new sanctions against Russia for what he called the beginning of an invasion of Ukraine.Still, some analysts maintained the longer-term impact of the geopolitical strife could be fleeting, and urged investors not to overreact to recent market moves. “We do not see any reason to panic at this stage,” said Charles Henry Monchau, chief investment officer at Bank SYZ in Geneva, Switzerland. “While most Western media comments sound alarming, we might actually get close to ‘peak fear’ on this crisis and there is a high probability that tensions will start to abate from here on.” Monchau has maintained his exposure to equities while also allocating a portion of his portfolio to gold, a popular haven during times of political or economic uncertainty. How the worsening confrontation in Eastern Europe could affect the Fed’s actions has been a topic of debate. While some have worried that rising oil prices – which stand around their highest level since 2014 – could push up inflation and force the central bank to become even more aggressive, others believe the market uncertainty could mitigate the central bank’s hawkishness.Markets are currently pricing in around 165 points of interest rate increases by next February. [FEDWATCH]”Overly restrictive monetary policy could result in an outright policy error especially if the business cycle continues to deteriorate,” wrote Dubravko Lakos-Bujas, chief equity markets strategist at JPMorgan (NYSE:JPM), in a note to investors. “The Russia/Ukraine crisis could force a reassessment of the Fed tightening path resulting in central banks turning less hawkish, while policymakers may consider additional fiscal stimulus.”Research from Capital Economics showed that interest rates have typically fallen in the six months after major geopolitical crises, with some exceptions, including the OPEC oil embargo.While risks between higher inflation and slower growth appear balanced for now, “a marked escalation of the crisis might tip the balance in favour of later or slower interest rate hikes,” wrote Jennifer McKeown, head of the global economics service at Capital Economics.That tipping point could come sooner in the euro zone, which is reliant on Russia for energy imports, she said.Jim Reid, of Deutsche Bank (DE:DBKGn), pointed to the bank’s data on how markets have behaved in past geopolitical crises. Selloffs in the S&P resulting from geopolitical events have typically been short-lived, with the index falling some 6% to 8% on average, taking three weeks to reach a bottom and another three weeks to recover to prior levels. “Ultimately, the underlying economic context tends to dominate, so if you believe the template, much might depend on what you thought momentum was before the sell-off,” Reid wrote in a Monday note. Analysts at Truist Advisory Services said a recent tumble in investor sentiment may bolster the case for buying stocks. The most recent survey from the American Association of Individual Investors showed the percentage of investors who believe stocks will be higher in six months dropped to 19.2%, its lowest level since May 2016. The S&P 500 was higher three months later 94% of the time with an average gain of 6.7% after similar past readings, Truist analysts wrote in a note on Tuesday. “Historically, military/crisis events tend to inject volatility into markets … but stocks tend to eventually rebound unless the event pushes the economy into recession,” they said. Still, most analysts were expecting the conflict to continue roiling markets in the short term. The conflict “just prolongs the uncertainties that are in the market,” said Peter Cardillo, chief market economist at Spartan Capital Securities in New York. “These uncertainties mean negative sentiment and so even positive news is just put on the back burner.” More

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    U.S. imposes sanctions on two Russian banks – Treasury Dept

    (Reuters) – The United States imposed sanctions on Russia’s VEB Bank and Promsvyazbank on Tuesday, according to statement from the U.S. Treasury Department, after Moscow formally recognized two regions of eastern Ukraine as independent.”Today’s actions, taken in coordination with our partners and allies, begin the process of dismantling the Kremlin’s financial network and its ability to fund destabilizing activity in Ukraine and around the world,” Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen said in the statement. More

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    London Stock Exchange acquires cloud-based technology provider Tora in $325M deal

    Tora’s crypto trading solution is called Caspian. According to its whitepaper, Caspian “aggregates prices, bid/ask information, orders, positions, accounts and executions from multiple crypto exchanges and other sources, presenting the information on a single platform.” It then enables users to send order information to crypto exchanges individually, or to multiple exchanges all at once, using its Smart Order Router technology. The software, itself, is aimed at institutional clients and offers order execution, portfolio management, compliance, risk management and reporting tools.Continue Reading on Coin Telegraph More

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    Brazil central bank chief says higher interest rates, positive fiscal are supporting FX

    BRASILIA (Reuters) -Brazil’s central bank chief Roberto Campos Neto said on Tuesday that higher interest rates to combat double-digit inflation are supporting financial inflows, strengthening the Brazilian currency.Addressing a conference hosted by investment bank BTG Pactual, he also said positive fiscal figures are helping to attract investment to the country, among other reasons that explain the recent exchange rate behavior.In the year, the real has already risen more than 10% against the dollar, the best global performance for the period, easing pressures on consumer prices after inflation reached 10.4% in the 12 months through January.”In the exchange front, I think there are several variables. There is a variable that is the higher interest rate itself, which brings flows because of the interest rate differential,” said Campos Neto.Conducting an aggressive monetary tightening to tame inflation, the central bank has put interest rates at 10.75% from its record-low 2% last March, already signaling the need for extra adjustments ahead.According to the central bank chief, a “relevant” part of the movement in foreign exchange comes from the shift in global flows, with investors moving from more leveraged companies to businesses that perform well in environments of higher inflation.He pointed out that established and large companies in emerging markets operate with this profile and policymakers have seen inflows to the Brazilian stock market.Local banks also ended unwinding their so-called ‘overhedge’ position due to new regulation in the country, a move that pressured the currency over the last two years.Campos Neto said that inflation in Brazil would begin to fall faster between April and May, noting that this does not mean that it will reach its peak in these months. More

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    NFT collector sues OpenSea for $1M over hack

    Bored Ape Yacht Club NFTs are one of the most sought-after digital collectibles. The lowest-priced NFT in the collection is currently over $200,000.McKimmy alleges that OpenSea was aware of the bug but failed to act. In January, hackers were able to buy a number of NFTs on the platform for less than their market value.On February 7, 2022, McKimmy’s rare Bored Ape #3475 was sold for $26 (0.01 ETH) without his knowledge. The buyer quickly flipped the item for nearly 99 ETH or about $308,445 at that time. McKimmy spent 55 ETH to purchase the NFT in December 2021.Although OpenSea refunded $1.8 million to users who were affected by the frontend vulnerability, McKimmy said he was not satisfied with the resolution. In his legal complaint, registered in a Texas federal court, he said:OpenSea has been at the center stage of several legal disputes and scams, the latest being a well-orchestrated phishing attack targeted at its users. This week, 17 users of the NFT marketplace reportedly lost $1.7 million to hackers in a phishing scam.Continue reading on BTC Peers More

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    Analysts say Bitcoin 'bottom is in’ as BTC bounces back to $38,000

    Data from Cointelegraph Markets Pro and TradingView shows that the price of BTC has traded in a range between $36,360 and $38,330 on Feb. 22 as a swirl of positive and negative developments sent mixed signals to traders who base their trading activity on news headlines. Continue Reading on Coin Telegraph More

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    Grayscale launches campaign to encourage public comments on Bitcoin ETF application

    In a Tuesday Twitter (NYSE:TWTR) thread, Grayscale CEO Michael Sonnenshein announced the launch of an advocacy campaign for U.S.-based investors to speak their minds to the SEC before any final decision is reached on the Bitcoin (BTC) investment vehicle. Since the NYSE Arca filed with the regulatory body on Oct. 19 to list shares of Grayscale’s Bitcoin ETF under the ticker GBTC, the commission has delayed its decision on Dec. 15 and again on Feb. 4.Continue Reading on Coin Telegraph More