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    President Biden sends CFTC nominations to Senate

    In a Friday announcement, the White House said it had sent Citi managing director Caroline Pham’s and Summer Mersinger’s names to the Senate for confirmation. Mersinger previously served as chief of staff to commissioner Dawn Stump — who is expected to leave the agency this year — as well as the director of the Office of Legislative and Intergovernmental Affairs. She and Pham will be taking the places of recently departed Commissioner Dan Berkovitz, whose term expires in April 2023, and that of Stump, with a term ending in April 2027, respectively. Continue Reading on Coin Telegraph More

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    Toronto market posts weekly decline as Fed spooks investors

    TORONTO (Reuters) – Canada’s main stock index closed slightly higher on Friday but was still down for the first week of the year as the potential for faster-than-expected U.S. interest rate hikes weighed on investor sentiment.The Toronto Stock Exchange’s S&P/TSX composite index ended up 12.25 points, or 0.06%, at 21,084.45 on Friday. For the week, it was down 0.65% after the Federal Reserve on Wednesday struck a hawkish note in minutes from its latest meeting. “The story is still tied to the Fed and rising interest rates coming sooner than expected,” said Sadiq Adatia, chief investment officer at BMO Asset Management.Wall Street extended its weekly decline as investors remained worried about the U.S. interest rate outlook even after a weaker-than-expected December payrolls report.Domestic data showed the Canadian economy adding twice as many jobs as expected in December, supporting expectations for the Bank of Canada to begin hiking rates in the coming months.”What you have been seeing is a bit of rotation going on … the high-flying tech names have been selling off,” Adatia said.Higher interest rates reduce the value to investors of the future cash flows that technology and other high growth sectors are expected to produce.The Toronto market’s technology group fell for a fifth straight session, down 1.4%, but that was offset by gains for the heavily weighted financials group and energy stocks.Financials ended 0.4% higher, while energy climbed 0.9% as oil held on to much of this week’s rally.U.S. crude prices settled 0.7% lower at $78.90 a barrel on Friday but were up nearly 5% for the week as the market weighed unrest in Kazakhstan and outages in Libya.Apparel manufacturer Canada Goose Holdings (NYSE:GOOS) Inc was among the biggest decliners, falling 6.3% after UBS slashed its target price on the stock. More

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    Hawkish Fed gives value stocks a second wind

    NEW YORK (Reuters) – Investors are recalibrating their portfolios to account for a more hawkish Federal Reserve, as signs that the central bank is ready to pull out the stops in its fight against inflation has shaken up markets in the first week of 2022. Yields on the benchmark 10-year U.S. Treasury are on track for their biggest weekly gain since September, 2019, while technology and growth stocks have tumbled and investors snapped up shares of banks, energy firms and other economically sensitive companies. The action is broadly reminiscent of how markets started 2021, when the rollout of vaccines for the coronavirus boosted expectations of a U.S. economic reopening. Yields slipped later in the year while the rally in economically sensitive shares slowed and investors returned to the big technology and growth stocks that have led markets higher for the last decade. This time around, investors must factor in a Fed that is expected to raise rates at least three times this year as it battles surging consumer prices. This could weigh on tech and growth stocks, as higher borrowing costs could erode their future earnings. The S&P 500 Value index has gained around 1% for the year to date, while the S&P 500 Growth index has fallen around 4%. The broader index was recently down around 1.7% for the year. Bob Leininger, a portfolio manager at Gabelli Funds, expects that trend to continue and is focusing more of his portfolio on financials, energy, and aviation stocks such as Boeing (NYSE:BA) Co in anticipation of a broad resurgence in global travel. “The Fed is serious about ending quantitative easing,” he said. “This is the year that we will start to see quantitative tightening and that will favor value stocks.” While investors typically view a hawkish Fed with caution, equities have nevertheless tended to rise during past rate-hike cycles. The S&P 500 has risen at an average annualized rate of 9% during the 12 such cycles since the 1950s and showed positive returns in 11 of those instances, according to data from Truist Advisory Services. Expectations that the Fed will raise interest rates at least three times in 2022 will “cut down on speculation” in the market, said Lew Altfest, chief executive of Altfest Personal Wealth Management. That will likely weigh on both deep value-oriented sectors like travel and energy that saw outsized gains in 2021, while at the same time hurting high-growth technology shares, he said. Altfest is focusing on companies such as banks, which he expects to benefit from higher interest rates and trade at comparatively lower valuations, while also maintaining positions in giant technology-focused companies. The S&P 500 bank sector was recently up more than 7% year-to-date and trades at a trailing price to earnings ratio of 11.5, compared to a 26.1 price to earnings ratio for the broader index. Banks “just look more rational,” Altfest said. Investors will get a closer look at bank earnings in the week ahead as several large banks, including JPMorgan (NYSE:JPM) and Citigroup (NYSE:C), are expected to release their quarterly results. Some believe the heavy weighting of tech-focused stocks in the S&P 500 could slow the broader index if those names stumbled: Microsoft (NASDAQ:MSFT), Apple (NASDAQ:AAPL), Nvidia (NASDAQ:NVDA), Alphabet (NASDAQ:GOOGL), and Tesla (NASDAQ:TSLA) accounted for nearly a third of the S&P 500’s almost 29% total return last year, according to data from UBS Global Wealth Management. Though many of the big tech stocks have gotten hit in recent days, the pain has been much worse in smaller tech names that rallied during the early stages of the pandemic. The ARKK Innovation ETF, which was the best performing equity fund of 2020, is already down some 11% year-to-date.Others, however, are betting investors will inevitably return to tech stocks, which have handily outperformed other parts of the market for years. Ross Frankenfield, managing director at Harbor Capital Advisors, has beefed up his allocation to larger cap financials but expects momentum to shift back to mega-cap tech stocks later in the year as it becomes clear that economic growth will stagnate in 2023. “There is a good near-term case for value stocks, but over the long run we think there will be a tailwind for mega-cap growth stocks again once earnings are harder to come by,” he said. More

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    Comedian Stephen Colbert spoofs 'Colbert Coin' in response to rise in crypto scams

    In a Wednesday segment on members of Generation Z falling for scams inside and outside of the crypto space, Colbert referenced the rug pull behind a token inspired by Netflix’s show Squid Game, in which thousands of investors lost more than $3 million. Together with “certified young person” and staff writer Eliana Kwartler, Colbert debuted an “amazing investment opportunity” designed to obtain people’s credit card numbers, first pet names and the names of the street on which they grew up.Continue Reading on Coin Telegraph More

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    Here’s how Terra traders use arbitrage to profit from LUNA and bLUNA

    One of the headline-grabbing stories related to Terra reaching an all-time high in terms of the total value locked (TVL), and the project surpassed Binance Smart Chain (BSC) as the second-largest decentralized finance blockchain after Ethereum. After reaching the $20-billion TVL mark on Dec. 24, Terra’s TVL has come down to around $19.3 billion at the time of writing according to data from Defi Llama, but this is in no way, shape or form a bearish signal.Continue Reading on Coin Telegraph More

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    U.S. Treasury disbursed $2.8 billion in rental aid in November

    WASHINGTON (Reuters) – The U.S. Treasury Department said on Friday it disbursed about $2.9 billion in Emergency Rental Assistance funds to 665,000 renters and landlords during November, putting the program on pace for full-year 2021 obligations of $25 billion-$30 billion.The Treasury also said it disbursed $1.1 billion to communities deemed eligible for more funds as part of a reallocation process started at the end of September. More than three quarters of these transfers were accomplished through voluntary transfers between communities in the same state.Rental assistance funding of $46.5 billion was approved in two COVID-19 aid bills in December 2020 and March 2021. But the locally administered program was slow to ramp up, with some jurisdictions taking longer to launch programs and others facing less demand from renters and landlords.Communities that had obligated at least 65% of their first-round allocation were eligible for additional funds, while those allocating less than 30% stood to lose funds.Many communities were seeking ways to boost their performance to avoid having funding allocations shifted elsewhere. The biggest recipient of a voluntary transfer was Indianapolis, receiving $91.45 million from Indiana’s statewide allocation, according to Treasury data. Milwaukee County received $50 million from Wisconsin’s statewide allocation, while the city of Milwaukee received $61 million and the city of Madison received $35 million.The Treasury said communities seeking funds from the second reallocation round had until Jan. 21 to do so.”Treasury is encouraging states and localities to use other sources of funds, including the $350 billion Coronavirus State and Local Fiscal Recovery Funds, to provide additional support to renters – as several communities are already doing,” the department said.November marked a new high for disbursements and the third straight month above $2.8 billion and 500,000 recipients. More