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    ‘The easy part is over’: uncertainty looms after world economy’s Covid rebound

    The world economy rebounded from the historic recession caused by the Covid-19 crisis better than many economists expected in 2021 but faces a harder path ahead in the coming year, forecasters have warned. Progress will depend on the virulence of the pandemic, the ease with which inflation is tamed and the dispersion of the economic damage across countries and industries, they said, warning of a rising risk of monetary and fiscal policy errors as governments and central banks seek to respond. “The easy part of this uneven global economic recovery appears over,” said Daan Struyven, senior global economist at Goldman Sachs.Janet Henry, chief economist of HSBC, said the outcome was unlikely to be a “Goldilocks” scenario — not too hot and not too cold.Most economists agree that the backdrop in most countries of a strong recovery combined with high inflation will make it difficult to balance supply and demand.Simon MacAdam, senior global economist at Capital Economics, said that, although headline inflation rates would certainly fall, there was likely to be persistent underlying pressure on prices due to tight labour markets, especially in the US, and “product shortages and high transport costs” in most countries. Economists at Nomura are confident that monetary authorities will get inflation under control, but it will come at a cost. “By late 2022 we see a very different backdrop, with stagnation a bigger risk than stagflation,” they warned.The OECD expects global output growth to moderate from 5.6 per cent in 2021 to 4.5 per cent this year, with inflation rising from 3.5 per cent to 4.2 per cent, although the peak will come in the early months of the year.Economists agree that the key uncertainties about outlook for the coming year stem from what has happened in the past 12 months. A better than expected recovery alongside a shift in the pattern of spending from services towards goods raised prices and showed that consumers’ willingness to purchase was exceeding companies’ ability to supply. Coronavirus vaccines allowed a rapid relaxation of restrictions and policy stimulus propelled consumer spending, enabling the world to end the year “in a better place than we might have expected a year ago”, Henry said.What happens in 2022 will depend on three linked forces. The virusThe severity of the pandemic matters both for the willingness of people and companies to spend and for government restrictions on mobility, which are again tightening across Europe. “The global economy continues to be whipsawed by the ups and downs of the pandemic,” said Jay H Bryson, chief economist of Wells Fargo. Although households, companies and countries have become much better at adapting to waves of coronavirus, the latest Omicron variant shows that it still has the power to damage consumer and business confidence and economic activity.Tamara Basic Vasiljev, senior economist at Oxford Economics, noted that Omicron had undermined consumer sentiment globally in the past few weeks. But with sentiment still at relatively high levels and household finances strong, she does not expect the hit in economic activity to be large globally. “The global economy will manage to navigate the rough waters presented by the Omicron variant,” she said. The big uncertainty is whether there will be further waves to come. InflationThe second big uncertainty stems from the imbalance between global supply and demand, which created inflation in 2021. Economists expect the headline rate to fall — in part because of the statistical effect of last year’s high rates on the annual calculation, and because oil and energy prices are not expected to rise further.The question is whether the pressure on prices will moderate sufficiently for central banks to avoid taking stiff action to bring inflation down, which could risk stalling the recovery. “As the year goes on, [supply] shortages should ease and their inflationary effects should subside too, albeit with a lag,” said MacAdam at Capital Economics. However, he is concerned that the US labour market is overheating and the Federal Reserve could err by being too cautious. “We doubt that the scale of tightening the Fed has signalled will be enough to pull core inflation down to 2 per cent,” he added. Patchy damageThe third big issue for the global economy in 2022 stems from differences between countries and industries in their ability to recover from the crisis. Spain, Thailand and Indonesia have fallen furthest behind their economies’ expected path due to the pandemic, with Turkey, Taiwan and China furthest ahead, according to Goldman Sachs research.Much of this, Struyven said, was due to the degree to which countries were exposed to sectors that were hit by shifts in demand or benefited from them; for example, manufacturing has experienced very high demand while travel and tourism-dependent locations have suffered great damage. “The services where spending remains particularly depressed in many economies are generally either associated with high virus risk, such as spectator events and international travel, or connected to office-based work, such as ground transportation or dry cleaners,” Struyven said. For countries specialising in these services, gains would depend on “more significant medical improvements” to fight the pandemic. As a result of these fundamental uncertainties, the path of monetary and fiscal policy could result either in further inflationary pressure if too much stimulus is provided, or a dip into stagnation if the recovery receives insufficient support.According to Henry at HSBC, “things are still very far from normal”. More

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    Turkey's lira logs worst year in two decades under Erdogan

    ANKARA (Reuters) – Turkey’s lira has logged its worst year since President Tayyip Erdogan came to power nearly two decades ago, despite his appeal on Friday for Turks to trust his unorthodox policies of slashing interest rates in the face of soaring inflation.The lira – by far the worst performer in emerging markets in 2021, as well as in the last few years – shed 44% of its value against the dollar over the year and 19% in the last week alone. [EMRG/FRX]The currency crisis accelerated in recent months, rattling the $720 billion economy, largely due to Erdogan’s “new economic programme” focused on exports and credit despite the lira’s collapse and inflation of more than 21%.To ease the turmoil, the president unveiled a scheme two weeks ago in which the state protects converted local deposits from losses versus hard currencies, sparking a sharp 50% rally in the lira with support from the central bank. On Friday, Erdogan – whose opinion poll ratings are sliding ahead of an election in 2023 – called on Turks to keep all their savings in lira and shift gold into banks, saying the market volatility was largely under control.”As long as we don’t take our own money as a benchmark, we are doomed to sink. The Turkish Lira, our money, that is what we will go forward with. Not with this foreign currency or that foreign currency,” he told a business group.”We have been waging the battle to save the economy from the cycle of high interest rates and high inflation,” he said, reiterating his unorthodox view that high rates lift prices.In response, the lira weakened to as far as 13.63 before recovering to end the day flat at 13.1875.The currency crisis, the second since 2018, has badly eroded Turks’ savings and earnings while the record volatility has upended households’ and businesses’ budgets and future plans. The lira has whipsawed from 18.4 to 10.25 versus the dollar in the last two weeks, capping its worst year since 2001, when International Monetary Fund support stemmed a crisis in Turkey.Erdogan’s conservative AK Party began governing the next year. Subsequent economic gains reversed around 2013 when measures of Turks’ prosperity, equality and employment began sliding. (Graphic: Emerging currencies in 2021, https://fingfx.thomsonreuters.com/gfx/mkt/gkvlgbgjkpb/EM%20currencies%20Turkey%20tumble.PNG) INFLATION RISINGThe currency crash was triggered by the central bank’s 500 basis points of rate cuts to 14% since September, carried out under pressure from Erdogan, who appointed the bank governor in March and has since replaced much of its leadership. Economists and former central bankers have called the easing reckless given inflation is expected to hit 30% in December due to the lira depreciation. Goldman Sachs (NYSE:GS) expects it to reach as high as 40% by mid-2022.The new deposit scheme is intended to reverse a tide of dollarisation. Under it, the state covers the difference between deposit rates and the foreign exchange and gold rate for lira converted into the new instrument.Marek Drimal at Societe Generale (OTC:SCGLY) said it provided some backstop, though “market participants need to see tangible steps to address underlying problems in the economy”. Many economists have warned that if the lira continues to depreciate, the scheme could further stoke inflation and add to the state’s fiscal burden. Some political analysts say Erdogan is betting that protecting deposits, along with a 50% hike in the minimum wage, will halt the slide in his poll ratings and open a window for early elections.PROTECTING SAVINGSFinance Minister Nureddin Nebati said earlier in the week that Turks’ dollar holdings have fallen, but official data showed local holdings of hard currencies, which includes companies, soared to a record $238.97 billion last week. At the same time the central bank’s net foreign currency holdings – its effective buffer against financial crisis – plunged to a near two-decade low of $8.63 billion.The central bank announced five direct interventions to support the lira in early December, including more than $2 billion in the first three efforts.It has announced none since the anti-dollarization scheme was unveiled on Dec. 20, though its reserves drop-off signals it backed some $8 billion in additional state interventions, according to bankers and others.Erdogan’s economic policy has sent real yields deeply negative and amounted to a red flag for foreign investors, who have fled Turkey in the last five years, a period in which the lira has shed some three-quarters of its value.The premium demanded to hold Turkish hard currency sovereign bonds over safe-haven U.S. Treasuries soared by 136 basis points throughout 2021, based on the JPMorgan (NYSE:JPM) EMBI global diversified index. The cost of insuring exposure to Turkish debt based on five-year credit default swaps (CDS) nearly doubled over the year to 566 basis points from 305, IHS Markit data showed. (Graphic: Lira timeline December 2021, https://fingfx.thomsonreuters.com/gfx/mkt/egpbkjkqavq/Lira%20timeline%20December%202021.PNG) More

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    NFTs find true utility with the advent of the Metaverse in 2021

    According to a report by DappRadar, the NFT market has had its best year, generating over $23 billion with the floor market capitalization of the top 100 NFT collections standing at $16.7 billion, as of Dec. 17, even before the year closed out. Continue Reading on Coin Telegraph More

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    Estonia’s new AML laws set to clamp down on crypto industry

    On Sept. 21, the Estonian Ministry of Finance published a draft bill to update the Money Laundering and Terrorist Financing Prevention Act (the AML Act) as part of the government’s effort to prevent money laundering and terrorist financing.Continue Reading on Coin Telegraph More

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    2021 Bitcoin Roundup: What Does On-Chain Data Say About Bitcoin’s Year?

    As the pioneer cryptocurrency, the industry’s growth was centered around Bitcoin. Now, with 2021 winding down, let’s take at what on-chain data says about Bitcoin’s year.Bitcoin Gains in 2021Entering 2021 on the pedestal of a major milestone, Bitcoin continued the uptrend throughout the year. Starting the year at $29.4k, Bitcoin touched $40k for the first time ever in January, then dropped under $30k in the same month.The trend continued, and Bitcoin broke above $50k in February and $60k in March. From a high of $63.5k in April, an extended bearish trend saw Bitcoin drop down under $30K by July.Bitcoin January – June Price Chart: TradingviewIn the next three months, a steady uptrend ensured Bitcoin set a new ATH at $68.8k on November 10. However, those gains will be lost again in the ensuing weeks, as Bitcoin dipped below $45k. July – November Price ChartWhile the volatility of Bitcoin continued to raise eyebrows, Bitcoin ends the year with gains of over 70%. Compared to its 300% gains in 2021, it can be said that Bitcoin underperformed. However, there are some strong points for Bitcoin in 2022.On The FlipsideMore Investors Have Turned to HODLingUnlike the previous trends where investors would short Bitcoin – buy at lower prices and sell higher – in 2021, the number of long-term holders has increased significantly.According to on-chain data, from week 1 to 52, long-term holders added 1.846 million BTC to their holdings. At week 52, their holding totals at 13.33 million BTC – a 16% increase year-to-date.
    On the other hand, short-term holder supply has declined by 1.428 million BTC in 2021. This category now holds a total of 3.01 million BTC – representing a 32% year-to-date. The Bitcoin held outside exchange reserves (Sovereign Supply) is currently at an all-time high of 13.34 million BTC.As long-term holders increased, so did the amount held in futures. Year-to-date, the Open Futures Interest increased by 97% – it now stands at $9.57 billion. However, the futures trading volume of Bitcoin declined by 16% to $36.7 Billion/day.2021 Decisive Moments for BitcoinThe outstanding performance of Bitcoin in 2021 was driven by breakthroughs and adoption of the crypto. Some of the key moments for the world’s largest cryptocurrency in 2021 are;2021 Decisive Moments for BitcoinFollowing China’s ban on mining, approximately 53% of miners were shut off almost overnight. In July, the hash rate of Bitcoin dropped below 68 Ehash/s – its lowest point since September 2019.
    However, the miners sought out other locations – the great mining migration. As a result, the mining hash rate recovered quickly, reaching an ATHs at 182 EH/s. It now finishes 2021 up by 27% from January. In addition, the aggregate miner revenue has risen by 58% year-to-date.Why You Should Care?Although Bitcoin is ending 2021 on a low, the world’s largest crypto reached some significant milestones in the year that could act as a pedestal for greater achievements.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