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    German govt expects inflation, wages to rise further

    The government predicts a national inflation rate (CPI) of 3.3% for 2022 after 3.1% in the previous year as higher energy costs and a scarcity of semiconductors and other intermediate products continue to push up overall prices, the ministry said.”The federal government is closely monitoring the development of the inflation rate and the key factors driving prices, especially those linked to energy markets and supply chain disruptions,” the ministry said.Confirming a Reuters report from Friday, the government cut its economic growth forecast for 2022 to 3.6% from 4.1% seen in October, pointing to headwinds for the economy in the first quarter due to renewed restrictions in the coronavirus pandemic.In the further course of the year, the government expects the economic recovery to pick up speed again as infection numbers are likely to fall in spring which will allow authorities to lift restrictions for hospitality and retail.”Industry should also be able to expand its production noticeably again as soon as the supply bottlenecks gradually resolve over the course of the year,” the ministry added.The economic recovery and higher inflation will likely lead to “somewhat stronger wage growth” this year after negotiated wage agreements last year turned out to be very moderate due to the economic slump in the pandemic, the ministry said.But labour unions are unlikely to push through excessive wage demands which would exceed the kinds of pay hikes seen before the pandemic, the ministry said, adding: “There are currently no signs of a wage price spiral.”Central bankers are watching wage developments in the euro zone and Germany, its biggest economy, very closely. They are looking for any hints as to whether rising consumer prices lead to higher wages which could mark the start of a wage price spiral and lead to higher inflation also in the medium term. More

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    FirstFT: Amazon abandons influence campaign

    Top Stories Today is a short-form audio digest of the day’s top headlines. Find the latest episode here.Amazon has abandoned its much-maligned campaign of paying employees to share positive messages on social media.The company set up its fulfilment centre ambassador scheme in 2018 in an effort to defend the $1.47tn group against growing hostility over safety and conditions at its warehouses.It quietly shut down and removed all traces of the influence campaign at the end of last year, people with direct knowledge of the decision told the Financial Times.Senior Amazon executives, these people said, were unhappy with the scheme’s poor reach. The campaign also backfired when a number of spoof accounts gave the false impression some Amazon workers had gone rogue. Amazon declined to comment on the programme’s closure.Improving perception of Amazon’s workplace among policymakers and the public has become of paramount concern as the company battles global regulators and tries to expand its workforce to maintain delivery speeds.Thanks for reading FirstFT Americas. Here’s the rest of today’s news — GordonFive more stories in the news1. US and EU close to agreeing financial sanctions on Russia US officials said there was growing “convergence” with the EU on financial sanctions aimed at crippling Russian banks in the event of an invasion of Ukraine. Meanwhile, top executives of some of Italy’s largest companies are due to hold a video meeting with Vladimir Putin today despite the rising tensions. Thanks to all readers who voted in yesterday’s poll. More than half of you thought Putin would invade Ukraine.Go deeper: Russian state media are broadcasting a stream of accusations against Ukraine, painting Kyiv as an aggressor backed by a belligerent west, with the alliance threatening Moscow and driving it unwillingly towards conflict.2. US warns of fragile chip supply Semiconductor inventories held by manufacturers have plummeted from 40 days in 2019 to an average of just five as the global chip shortage wreaks havoc on industry, the US commerce department warned.3. Jes Staley pressed JPMorgan to keep Jeffrey Epstein Jes Staley, then-head of JPMorgan Chase’s investment bank, pushed the US lender to keep Jeffrey Epstein as a client — despite the disgraced financier’s 2008 conviction for soliciting sex from a minor — before the bank cut him off in 2013, according to two people involved in the discussions.4. Citi plans £100m revamp of Canary Wharf tower Citigroup will undertake a three-year overhaul of its 42-storey London skyscraper costing more than £100m, in what the bank described as a vote of confidence in the City of London after Brexit and the future of the office post-pandemic. Citi’s 9,000 London staff will be relocated until 2025.5. Banks push back against Beijing’s overseas listing rules Asia’s top banking lobby group, which includes Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley and JPMorgan, have warned Beijing that an overhaul of the regime for Chinese businesses listing overseas may deter them from advising on initial public offerings, which would imperil a funding source for the country’s leading companies. Coronavirus digestPfizer and BioNTech have enrolled the first participants in a clinical trial of a vaccine tailored to the Omicron variant.Boris Johnson is preparing for the release of a report into so-called partygate, a series of rule-breaking events at the heart of government. Israel’s vaccine advisory panel has recommended a fourth dose of a shot for all adults, a world first.The IMF downgraded its 2022 global economic growth forecasts, warning that the recovery will run into “multiple challenges” including higher inflation. In his latest column, Martin Wolf says all the risks to the global economy are on the downside.From workers off sick to long lines for tests and more patients in hospital, a new wave of Covid-19 is hitting Mexico.The new variant has exposed dysfunction in America’s public health institutions. “The underlying theme is inflexibility, both with resources and ideology,” says one expert.The day aheadUS interest-rate decision The Federal Reserve is today expected to confirm its plans to aggressively raise interest rates to counter rampant inflation. Financial markets have priced in a 25 basis point rise in March and three subsequent rises this year. In Canada, there is an outside chance the central bank will raise interest rates to 0.5 per cent after its latest meeting.Boeing and Tesla earnings US aerospace manufacturer Boeing is expected to report another quarterly loss, reflecting a hit from the pandemic and supply chain issues. In contrast, Tesla is expected to report higher quarterly revenues after the company shrugged off supply chain problems to deliver a record number of vehicles in the final quarter of 2021. Economic data The US trade deficit in goods is expected to have narrowed to $96bn in December, from $97.8bn in November, the commerce department will say. Meanwhile, sales of newly built homes are forecast to rise 2.2 per cent to an annualised pace of 760,000 in December. Markets US stock markets are expected to open higher after an extremely volatile start to the week. Yesterday was another choppy day on Wall Street, with the Nasdaq ending 2.3 per cent lower and the S&P 500 dropping 1.2 per cent.Join us for the FT’s Future of Business Education: Spotlight on MBA the ultimate guide to educating global business leaders. This event offers both young professionals and seasoned executives an ideal opportunity to find out how to enhance their skill set and accelerate their careers through an MBA. Register today.What else we’re readingWhen an activist investor attack is no bad thing Activist investor demands — like those at Unilever and Peleton — can spur self-satisfied executives to action, pressure boards into dealing with incompetent managers and question poorly thought out mergers and acquisitions. All of this is badly needed right now, argues Brooke Masters.Kazakhstan unrest shows Erdogan that Putin is still in charge The decision of Kazakhstan’s president to ask Vladimir Putin for help suppressing protests that rocked his country dealt a blow to Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s dreams of forming a bloc made up of Turkey and “brotherly” nations in the former Soviet Union.Former Farc captive runs for Colombian presidency The last time Ingrid Betancourt campaigned for Colombia’s presidency, she was kidnapped by Marxist guerrillas and held in the jungle for more than six years. Two decades later, the former congresswoman and senator is making another bid for the country’s leadership.

    If Ingrid Betancourt wins she will become the first female president in Colombia’s history  © Daniel Munoz/AFP/Getty

    What powers economies There is no way of knowing how the world really works without understanding the fundamental importance of energy in human affairs, writes Vaclav Smil in How the World Really Works. Pilita Clark reviews the Canadian scientist’s new book. Want more on energy policy? Sign up to our Energy Source newsletter.SportFrom a cross-channel Caribbean swim to a Kenyan safari marathon, our How to Spend It team have complied 11 ultra sporting challenges for 2022. More

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    Explainer-How low can the Fed's balance sheet go? Here's what officials will be watching

    (Reuters) – As the Federal Reserve gears up to cull its bond holdings sooner and faster than it has previously, officials say a new tool, combined with lessons from the past, should help smooth the process and avoid the market upheaval its earlier effort ultimately triggered. Still, Fed leaders will have to tread carefully as they figure out how much they can realistically shrink their roughly $9 trillion portfolio, and some analysts believe they will need to employ more aggressive measures than last time. It’s a critical question facing the Fed as it looks to right-size https://www.reuters.com/markets/us/fed-signals-readiness-shrink-balance-sheet-why-thats-big-deal-2022-01-06 its asset holdings, which roughly doubled in less than two years as it amassed Treasuries and mortgage-backed securities to help lower borrowing costs and cushion the economy and markets from the coronavirus pandemic.With unemployment back to near pre-pandemic levels and inflation running very high, officials say the same amount of support is no longer needed. But it is unclear how small the balance sheet will get https://graphics.reuters.com/USA-FED/BALANCESHEET/byprjmwezpe/index.html. As officials feel their way down to a smaller balance sheet, they will need to keep a close eye on markets, and the economy, to know if they’ve gone too far. WHAT COULD GO WRONG?The last time officials tried to reduce their bond holdings, from the end of 2017 to autumn 2019, they only managed to shrink the balance sheet by about 15% or so before they ran into trouble. That was because the level of reserves, or deposits that banks hold with the Fed, got too low, which led to a spike in short-term borrowing costs in September 2019 https://www.federalreserve.gov/econres/notes/feds-notes/what-happened-in-money-markets-in-september-2019-20200227.htm. Officials are more ambitious this time, with some eyeing a level below where it was before the global health crisis began in early 2020 – a reduction of greater than 50%. But some economists say it’s not yet clear whether the Fed will be able to get that far, or if it can go even lower thanks to other central bank facilities now in place. NEW TOOL COULD HELPA new tool set up last year, known as the standing repo facility https://www.reuters.com/article/us-usa-fed-standing-repo/fed-establishes-standing-repo-facilities-to-support-money-markets-idUSKBN2EY2OS, can serve as a backstop for banks in need of cash and may help to prevent another surge in short-term rates. Financial firms could instead borrow from the facility if they are running low on reserves.But analysts and economists say it will only work if banks feel they won’t be criticized for turning to the Fed for the temporary cash loans. Bill Nelson, chief economist at the Bank Policy Institute and a former Fed economist, compared the new program to the discount window, the long-standing emergency lending outlet many banks are reluctant to use because they don’t want to be viewed as being at risk. With the SRF in place, some firms should feel more comfortable holding Treasury securities with the understanding that “if they needed to, they could convert them to cash,” Nelson said. But that depends on the Fed making it clear that using the facility is a “normal course of business,” he said.   EXTRA CASH ‘SLOSHING’ AROUNDOver the past year, financial firms have been dealing with too much cash – a trend that is evident in the high popularity of another Fed tool that lets firms park cash with the central bank overnight. Usage of the program, known as the reverse repo facility, has averaged $1.5 trillion a night over the past three months. That suggests the Fed can probably afford to reduce its balance sheet by at least that much before it starts to encounter scarcity issues, says Tiffany Wilding, a PIMCO economist and a former analyst at the New York Fed. “There’s more money sloshing around in the system now than banks want,” Wilding said. But usage of the reverse repo program may not go straight down as the Fed shrinks its holdings, said Nelson, so officials will need to move carefully. WILL THE FED HAVE TO SELL BONDS OUTRIGHT?That’s a big unknown, and while Fed officials have not ruled anything out, they’ve generally shied from discussion of actively selling assets rather than allowing the reduction to occur passively by letting bonds roll off the portfolio as they mature. It’s not clear that the portfolio’s maturity schedule will allow the Fed to shrink its holdings as fast as some would like, however.Some analysts, like Zoltan Pozsar at Credit Suisse (SIX:CSGN), argue that the Fed may be pressed into bond sales https://www.reuters.com/business/finance/fed-could-resort-outright-asset-sales-reduce-balance-sheet-credit-suisse-2022-01-24 this time because of the size of the inflation threat, the run-up in risky assets during the Fed’s quantitative easing phase and a flattening Treasury yield curve.This time, “outright asset sales, if inflation, exuberance, or a curve inversion so dictate, are not at all unlikely,” Pozsar wrote in a report. HOW WILL THEY KNOW THEY’VE GONE TOO LOW? The balance sheet levels seen before the pandemic may not be a good gauge for how low holdings can get this time around. One factor is that “banks’ demand for reserves varies over time,” Lorie Logan, an executive vice president in the Markets Group of the New York Fed, said earlier this month during an interview https://www.mercatus.org/bridge/podcasts/01102022/lorie-logan-monetary-policy-operations-fed%E2%80%99s-new-standing-repo-facility-and with the Macro Musings podcast. To figure out if reserves are falling too low, the Fed will keep an eye on money markets, Logan said. As she and other New York Fed officials explained in a recent blog post https://libertystreeteconomics.newyorkfed.org/2022/01/how-the-fed-adjusts-the-fed-funds-rate-within-its-target-range, the relationship between the effective federal funds rate (EFFR), or the Fed’s main target rate, and the interest rate that the Fed pays on reserve balances (IORB) is important. The two rates trade further apart when reserves are abundant, as they were between 2013 and 2014. And the rates trade closer together when reserve balances are declining, as they were between 2017 and 2019. More

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    Swiss Crypto Bank Now Offers Live Chat Assistance

    “We see that thousands of aspiring traders globally are showing interest in our products, and with our growing clientele, the demand for on-the-spot service is increasing,”
    stated Anthony Barone, spokesperson for Swiss Crypto Bank.”Although we offer telephonic and email support 24/5, with the growing requests from clients every day, we decided to launch our brand-new live chat feature, for faster and easier communications with the team. Garnering a satisfied client base through our dedicated assistance has been our aim right from the beginning.”
    Assisting customers throughout the journeySwiss Crypto Bank is an established crypto-centric broker that boasts optimal trading conditions with ultimate security. Besides its new live chat widget, the brand offers a diverse range of financial instruments like forex, commodities, indices,cryptocurrencies and shares to help traders expand their investment portfolios. In addition, the broker also provides competitive spreads, low margins, attractive commissions, and dedicated customer support.”As a business with years of experience in the online trading market, we always make sure to stay one step ahead of our rivals. That’s why we are also pioneers in providing a fully managed account with crypto staking. Add that to our advancement of the live chat widget, and you’ll see why we are confident our brand takes trading to new levels,”
    explained Barone.EMAIL 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]
    You can always unsubscribe with just 1 click.Continue reading on DailyCoin More

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    American Express: Crypto Rewards Possible; Card Still Unlikely

    During a recent Yahoo! (NASDAQ:AABA) Finance interview this Tuesday, American Express CEO Stephen Squeri shared his thoughts on the company’s future with cryptocurrency.The American Express CEO has been known to be cautious about his approach towards cryptocurrency. In an interview in October 2021, he expressed his rejection of the idea of cryptocurrency being a real currency. Squeri pointed at Bitcoin’s volatility from the fact that its value lowered by 50% in only two months.Moreover, Squeri stated that the two payment methods are just fundamentally different. He claimed the values that occur within a credit card don’t lend themselves well to cryptocurrency.Despite this, he mentioned that the company is closely watching government-based digital currencies and that the Amex card has been involved with stablecoins.Meanwhile, American Express competitors Visa (NYSE:V) and Mastercard (NYSE:MA) have already engaged in crypto-related partnerships.Earlier this month, Mastercard announced a deal with Coinbase (NASDAQ:COIN) Global Inc. This allows customers to use Mastercard credit and debit cards on the crypto exchange’s upcoming NFT marketplace.In 2020, Visa and BlockFi also announced a partnership allowing cardholders to receive 1.5% of their purchases back in BTC.Continue reading on CoinQuora More

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    Germany to host G7 finance meeting May 18-20, Finance Minister tells paper

    “This year, the challenges are particularly great. We are seeing inflation and increased debt,” Finance Minister Christian Lindner told the newspaper.”The G7 countries have a special role as anchors of stability,” he added. “Nationally as well as internationally, we must pay attention to sustainable public finances.”Finance ministers and central bankers from the G7 nations – the United States, Japan, Germany, France, Britain, Italy and Canada – would join the meeting in Koenigswinter, near Bonn.The president of the European Central Bank and officials from the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) were also expected, the paper said.Lindner said fiscal stability was essential to foster for investment and innovation.”This is the only way we can grow out of the crisis worldwide and master future tasks in climate protection and digitisation,” he added. More

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    The Belvedere Museum in Vienna Sells NFTs of The Kiss by Gustav Klimt for Valentine’s Day

    Gustav Klimt’s The Kiss (Lovers) – one of the world’s most famous works of art and the centerpiece of the Belvedere’s collection – will be specially implemented as an NFT project. A high-resolution digital copy will be divided into a 100 x 100 grid, resulting in 10,000 inimitable individual pieces that will be offered as non-fungible tokens, or NFTs.The buying process begins with a “whitelisting” phase on 26 January, 00.00 am Central European Time, when interested parties can register to purchase on the thekiss.art platform. On February 9, buyers will receive authorization to purchase minted NFTs of a piece of the digital Kiss. Minting is an imprinting process through which digital art becomes part of the blockchain – this guarantees that each NFT is unalterable and forgery-proof. From February 9, buyers can complete the transaction. The 10,000 segments of the work will be allocated at random. If the sale is oversubscribed, allocation of the 10,000 NFTs will be decided by lottery. The drop, or official release of the NFTs, will take place on Valentine’s Day, February 14.Buyers can also register as owners of their piece on the platform thekiss.art, where the picture can be viewed in its entirety. This entry can also serve as a declaration of love – just in time for Valentine’s Day.EMAIL 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]
    You can always unsubscribe with just 1 click.Continue reading on DailyCoin More

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    Fed expected to stay on course for first rate rise in March

    The Federal Reserve is set to look past the turbulence that has gripped global financial markets in recent days and lay the groundwork for raising interest rates in March as it attempts to counter rampant inflation.The Federal Open Market Committee is expected on Wednesday to keep its main policy rate at the rock-bottom level it has been at for nearly two years, while signalling its readiness to begin raising the rate more substantively in an attempt to cool down the US economy. The central bank’s statement will be released on Wednesday at 2pm Eastern Time, followed by a press conference with Jay Powell, Fed chair, shortly afterwards. The decision comes during a period of extreme volatility for financial markets. US stocks have whipsawed in recent days as investors face a more hawkish central bank.In the weeks leading up to the January meeting, Fed officials have signalled their support for “lift-off” in March, citing underlying strength in the US labour market and inflation that is running at its fastest pace in roughly four decades.The asset purchase programme, which was put in place to shore up the economy’s defences against the Covid-19 shock and avert a worse financial catastrophe, is also set to be wound down in March.

    With the unemployment rate now below 4 per cent, many policymakers have concluded maximum employment has been achieved, fulfilling one of two goals laid out by the Fed before it said it would move to more significantly tighten monetary policy. The other — inflation that averages 2 per cent over time — was met last year.Expectations have also since changed about the total number of interest rate increases this year, with many Fed officials and Wall Street economists suggesting a more aggressive path may be warranted than anticipated. Some traders have even speculated that the Fed could raise rates by half a percentage point in March, but such a dramatic move does not appear likely.The FOMC and other regional branch presidents just last month pencilled in three quarter-point increases in 2022, with three more in 2023 and another two in 2024. At the time, they forecast core inflation to moderate to 2.7 per cent by the end of the year from the current level of 4.7 per cent, and the unemployment rate to fall to 3.5 per cent. If inflation does not ease, however, the speed at which the Fed scales back its support and moves its main policy rate closer to 2.5 per cent may accelerate. That could translate to interest rate increases at each of the seven meetings after January, economists say, as the Fed seeks bolder steps to damp red-hot demand.

    Debate is also under way about how the Fed will shrink its roughly $9tn balance sheet, after the first substantive discussion last month. No decision has been made about how rapid the reduction will be or when it may begin, but officials appear to agree the process should proceed quicker than the attempt to pare it in 2017, when the balance sheet hovered at about $3.7tn. That “run-off”, or the process of no longer reinvesting the proceeds of maturing Treasuries and agency mortgage-backed securities, began roughly two years after the first interest rate increase following the global financial crisis of 2007.The 2017 episode ended in acute financial market stress — with short-term borrowing costs spiking as it became evident that too much cash had been drained from the financial system. Economists broadly expect this round to begin in July, with some suggesting an earlier start. More