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    German cabinet backs tax relief plan to support recovery

    The Fourth Corona Tax Relief Act comprises a tax exemption on bonuses for care workers up to an amount of 3,000 euros, and a batch of tax relief measures for businesses in a package that is worth a total of some 11 billion euros ($12.51 billion) through to 2025.Finance Minister Christian Lindner told reporters the package was “a contribution to the stabilisation of the economic recovery, and a contribution to the strengthening of the economy.”The German economy ended last year on a weak footing, contracting by 0.7% in the fourth quarter, slowed by restrictions introduced in the autumn to fight a fourth COVID-19 wave as well as supply chain disruptions.The government wants the new package to support a recovery.The bill includes provisions to allow companies to deduct some investments in 2022 more quickly from their taxes, and to offset losses against previous profits to a greater extent than before and thereby to reduce their taxes for previous years. ($1 = 0.8790 euros) More

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    Britain's financial sector wants more time for new 'duty of care'

    LONDON (Reuters) – Banks and financial advisers in Britain have called for more time to introduce a new ‘duty of care’, a landmark change in consumer protection to combat mis-selling and scams.Last year the Financial Conduct Authority proposed a tougher and more comprehensive standard of care on firms, requiring them to put consumers’ interests at the centre of their business to deliver “good outcomes”.The watchdog said it would finalise the new rules by the end of July 2022, and give industry nine months to prepare for their introduction.”It needs to be at least two years to allow firms enough time to comply,” UK Finance, an industry body for banks, said in a statement on Wednesday.PIMFA, which represents financial advisers and investment firms, agreed said that nine months was insufficient time to change systems and processes, and that at least two years would be needed. “This is an industry which has undergone an enormous amount of regulatory change recently which, in combination with the ongoing impact of COVID-19, means resources are already stretched,” PIMFA CEO Liz Field said in a statement.There is also uncertainty over how the Financial Ombudsman Service, which handles complaints against financial firms, will interpret the new duty, potentially opening the floodgates to claims, Field said.In tweaked proposals late last year, the watchdog ditched plans requiring firms to “take all reasonable steps” in protecting customers.A proposal to allow consumers to go to court for breaches of the new duty was also scrapped.”Significant issues nonetheless remain, with attendant risks of stifling innovation, differentiation and competition, leading to product restrictions and financial exclusion,” UK Finance said.The FCA’s cost benefit analysis on the proposed new duty finds costs to firms in the billions of pounds but does not quantify the benefits, UK Finance added. More

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    Crypto firm Fireblocks buys payments tech platform for $100 million

    NEW YORK (Reuters) – Fireblocks, an infrastructure provider for cryptocurrencies, has acquired First Digital, a stablecoin and digital asset payments technology platform.Fireblocks and First Digital said on Wednesday they had reached a cash and equity deal, without disclosing financial details, but two sources close to the deal said the purchase price was $100 million.Fireblocks last month raised $550 million from institutional investors, pushing its valuation to $8 billion.The First Digital acquisition will expand Fireblocks’ existing payment capabilities allowing payment service providers (PSPs) to accept crypto payments.PSPs and large merchants are eager to meet customer demand for crypto and digital currency payments, but offering these services often entails challenges such as high wallet integration costs and manual anti-money laundering screening.Fireblocks said the addition of First Digital will enhance solutions it already offers to address those issues.”What First Digital brings is an awesome product and extensive leadership and know-how in the payments domain,” Fireblocks Chief Executive Michael Shaulov told Reuters in a telephone interview. “Specifically the product they’re bringing to the market, I think is very applicable to the mass market.”First Digital will also launch a business unit within Fireblocks that is “purely focused on payments and enabling our customers to accept and remit using several kinds of cryptocurrencies,” Shaulov said.First Digital’s payment capabilities include stablecoins, cryptocurrencies pegged to a fiat currency like the U.S. dollar.First Digital Chief Executive Ran Goldi said the deal was a natural fit, given the companies had been partners for two years. He added that over the past six months First Digital “saw lot of interest from companies that three years ago said we were ahead of our time.” Through First Digital, merchants who work with supported payments service providers can simply add an option to accept crypto payments, and the funds are settled in either local currency or crypto. All First Digital employees will be absorbed by Fireblocks under the deal. More

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    Banking Giant DBS to Launch Crypto Trading for Retail Clients

    DBS, Singapore’s leading bank, announced its plan to launch a retail crypto trading desk by the end of the year. Likewise, the bank is working on expanding its crypto exchange beyond its current base of institutional clients. This was stated by the bank’s CEO Piyush Gupta in its fourth-quarter earnings call. Gupta did not have a clear answer when asked about the bank’s roadmap for rolling out digital assets trading to retail investors. But, he said that DBS did initiate some work so that it could increase its current investor base. Furthermore, he explained that their focus in the first half was to make digital assets more convenient for customers. And, they plan to do this by enabling instant online deposits and transactions without relying much on banking intermediaries.CEO Gupta said:Moreover, Gupta added that they were looking toward the end of the year to take something to the market. Also, DBS expects to improve its crypto trading platform in the first half or in the first three-quarters of 2022.DBS has always been a front-runner in all matters digital. It was the first bank in the country to launch a digital asset exchange. The multinational bank has been foraying into the crypto space in recent years, making a massive move in 2020. In December 2020, DBS had set up its own crypto exchange. It had also launched a crypto trust solution in May 2021.Continue reading on CoinQuora More

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    UK tax masters seize three NFTs in tax evasion fraud

    The tax master has lauded itself as the first U.K law enforcement agency to seize NFTs.As reported by BBC, the three suspects used several sophisticated means to evade paying taxes. They created fake identities and 250 fake “shell” companies to bypass £1.4 million ($1.8 million) in value-added taxes (VAT).HMRC secured a court order to seize $6,765 worth of cryptocurrencies along with three digital collectibles from the suspects.Commenting on the seizures, HMRC deputy director Nick Sharp (OTC:SHCAY) said that they should serve as a warning to those planning to hide money from the tax authorities. He stated:NFTs took the center stage in 2021, growing to become more of a trend among major brands and the general public. Billions of dollars have flowed into the sector and this has caught the attention of regulators. Late December, SEC commissioner Hester Peirce told CoinDesk that “given the breadth of the NFT landscape, certain pieces of it might fall within our jurisdiction.”Continue reading on BTC Peers More

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    Red Bull Racing scores $150M sponsorship with Bybit

    The company announced that the partnership aims to broaden the F1 team’s fan engagement through its capabilities as a crypto exchange. Bybit will act as an issuer of fan tokens and as a tech incubator for Red Bull Racing as part of the deal. This means that the exchange will help the team distribute its digital asset collections and support its other initiatives, such as developing talent through the Red Bull Technology Campus in Milton Keynes.Continue Reading on Coin Telegraph More

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    Q&A: The White House eyes company profits in inflation battle

    As inflation hits a 40-year high, keeping prices down is a key political issue, too. November midterm elections will determine whether Biden and Democrats can maintain slim control of Congress, and the economy is the top issue voters care about, Reuters polling shows. In an interview as year-end corporate earnings roll in, Bharat Ramamurti, the Deputy Director of the White House’s National Economic Council, told Reuters that the administration is looking closely at whether higher profits are due to lack of competition.Questions and answers have been edited for clarity and brevity.REUTERS: The White House continues to take aim at ‘profiteering,’ particularly in the meat-packing industry. How do you define this and do you see this as a worsening problem? Is it related to the pandemic?RAMAMURTI: Corporations by design are trying to maximize the amount of profit that they’re making. I don’t think anything has changed on that front just because of the pandemic. They do that by, if they can, raising prices in the face of higher demand.There’s higher demand for certain products, including certain food products. But also, this is a very concentrated industry – the meat processing industry.The top four meat packers in the beef space, for example, control about 80% of the industry. And what we’ve seen is that, in a market that’s highly concentrated like that, the ability of corporations to raise prices more quickly and to a higher level – and to keep them there for longer – exists. Introducing more competition into that space could eventually help bring down those price levels.REUTERS: How much of a role is a lack of competition playing in the inflation we’re seeing now?RAMAMURTI: There are a number of reasons why we are looking at a higher rate of inflation now. The main one is that we are emerging from a pandemic. The United States is not alone in facing higher inflation. It’s all related to problems in supply.In industries that are marked by high levels of concentration, there can be a more severe effect.REUTERS: Do you expect that you’ll look at other industries?RAMAMURTI: We’ve tried to be very data-driven about this. We haven’t done that level of deep dive into any of these other industries so far.But there are other examples of companies with higher profits and higher margins, which indicates that they have the ability to not just pass along any cost increases that they’re facing in their supply chain to consumers – there’s an additional step where they’re able to raise the price even beyond that, which is reflected in the higher margin.Part of that, of course, is higher demand, but there may be other factors at play as well. And what we want to do is use every available tool that the president has to go right at these price increases. He knows that they are pinching family budgets.We’ll put out more analysis once we’ve done it. [A few days after this interview was conducted, the White House said it was investigating competition in the defense industry.]REUTERS: What would you say to someone who says charging more for goods when demand is high is ‘just how capitalism works?’RAMAMURTI: I would say what the president said, which is that capitalism without competition isn’t really capitalism. It’s exploitation.If you can introduce more competition into those industries, you have more companies fighting for your business. And one of the ways they are doing that is by offering a lower price than their competitors, that’s going to have a downward effect on prices over time. That’s the kind of economy that we want to build. More

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    Exclusive-Lithuania warns banks of cyber attacks, power cuts amid fears of war in Ukraine

    (Reuters) – Lithuania’s central bank has told the country’s banks to prepare for power cuts and cyberattacks as Russia’s standoff with Ukraine risks spilling over into a military conflict, according to a document and two sources familiar with the matter.Russia has amassed over 100,000 troops near Ukraine’s borders, prompting fears of an invasion.Losing electricity and internet access are among “extreme but possible” scenarios that Lithuania’s central bank told finance companies to be ready for in a letter sent to them last week and seen by Reuters.Lithuania, as well as Baltic neighbours Latvia and Estonia, shares a common power grid with Russia run from Moscow. “Increased geopolitical tension in the region leads to increased threats of cyber-attacks, including attacks on critical information infrastructure,” the central bank warned in the letter. The letter did not name any possible hackers. The Lithuanian central bank did not respond to a request for comment.The warning comes as EU regulators more generally have told banks to prepare for potential Russian cyberattacks, and some financial firms conduct cyber war games to test their ability to withstand them.Lithuanian banks should have contingency plans in place for cyber assaults such as ransomware and DDoS attacks, in which hackers try to flood a network with high volumes of data traffic, the central bank said in the letter.It told financial firms to prepare for a breach similar to last year’s massive SolarWinds cyberattack that was linked to a Russian-based agency and targeted hundreds of companies and organisations.’TO SPLIT THE WESTERN ALLIANCE’Russia has said some of its forces surrounding Ukraine are withdrawing, but NATO has urged Moscow to show proof, saying it has seen signs there are more troops on the way.Two Ukrainian banks, including its largest, were hit by a cyberattack on Tuesday, Ukraine’s information security centre said in a statement that suggested it was pointing the finger at Russia.Once ruled from Moscow, but now members of both NATO and the European Union, the Baltic states have tense relations with their former overlord.Estonia blamed Russia for a cyberattack in 2007 that paralysed its internet network. The incident prompted NATO to review its readiness to defend against “cyber-warfare.”Janis Sarts, director of a NATO-affiliated think-tank in Riga, said Russia could use cyberattacks and disruptions to energy supplies in the Baltics and across the West “to try to split the Western alliance and to try to create internal pressures for western governments.” More