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    Okcoin Adds Banking Industry Veterans to Leadership as Institutional Demand Continues to Grow

    “Onboarding a wide range of institutions onto Okcoin’s platform at scale requires a deep understanding of financial markets, and we’re pleased to have hired three banking industry veterans to lead the effort,”
    said Simon Ren, Executive Vice President of Institutional Business at Okcoin.”Tom Gould, Iskandar Vanblarcum, and Paul Goldman each possess the investing prowess and business acumen to elevate Okcoin’s institutional offering on a global level.”
    Tom Gould, Head of Sales, North America: Gould most recently served as Head of US Sales for LMAX Exchange, part of the LMAX Group. Prior to this, Gould held roles as Director of E-Commerce FX Sales at Bank of America (NYSE:BAC) and Director of eFX Sales at Credit Suisse (SIX:CSGN).Iskandar Vanblarcum, Head of Sales and General Manager, Europe: Vanblarcum joins Okcoin from London Stock Exchange Group/Refinitiv/Thomson Reuters, where he was Head of FX New Business. Before this, he was Managing Director in FX Sales at Barclays (LON:BARC) Capital.Paul Goldman, General Manager, Australia: Goldman was formerly Head of Sales at the Nasdaq-listed cryptocurrency exchange EQONEX. He has also served as Head of Sales at Ceevo, Director of eFX Sales and Margin FX Business Management at HSBC, and Director of FX Sales and eFX Business Management at Macquarie Group (OTC:MQBKY).Gould, Vanblarcum, and Goldman join Okcoin at a time of surging demand for regulated digital asset services; 62% of global institutional investors with zero exposure to cryptocurrencies expect to make their first investments in crypto within the next year, according to research by Nickel Digital Asset Management. To serve existing and forthcoming clients, Okcoin offers bundled trading products including exchange liquidity, OTC trading, wallet services, robust sub-account management, post-trade settlement, and an API for Earn, the platform’s decentralized finance (DeFi) and staking feature.Okcoin has also been the prime venue providing institutions first to list assets, early investment access to unique crypto assets on a regulated exchange, such as: MiamiCoin, Stacks, Avalanche, NEAR, and Star Atlas (NYSE:ATCO).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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    BOJ offers to pump $18 billion into green finance scheme

    The combined 2.05 trillion yen ($17.94 billion) in loans will be disbursed on Friday and mature in January 2023, the central bank said in a statement.The BOJ launched a new lending scheme this year under which it offers zero-interest loans that can be rolled over until 2030 to banks that boost green and sustainable loans.The green plans come as other major central banks use their institutional heft to take on climate change. The BOJ said in November that 43 financial institutions, including three megabanks, qualified to tap the scheme.($1 = 114.2600 yen) More

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    Japan PM Kishida calls for BOJ efforts to hit inflation target

    TOKYO (Reuters) -Japan’s government hopes the central bank keeps up efforts to achieve an inflation target of 2% and works closely with it on economic policy, Prime Minister Fumio Kishida said on Thursday.Before becoming prime minister in October, Kishida had warned of the drawbacks of the Bank of Japan’s (BOJ) ultra-loose monetary policy, such as the strain prolonged low interest rates inflict on bank profits.”Japan’s economy can restore healthy growth by ensuring the BOJ’s monetary policy and the government’s fiscal policy work hand in hand,” Kishida told a seminar.”That’s why it’s important for the two sides to coordinate and communicate closely together.”Future policy decisions could be swayed by developments in the global economy and the COVID-19 pandemic, he added.”But for the time being, it’s important for the two sides to coordinate policy” based on an understanding outlined in a joint statement of 2013, Kishida said.The document clarified the role the government and the central bank would play in pulling Japan out of deflation, while specifying the inflation target for the first time.In November, Japanese policymakers, including the central bank’s governor, Haruhiko Kuroda, re-affirmed the commitment made under the joint statement. More

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    China to roll out policies to help exporters amid economic headwinds

    China’s surprisingly resilient trade performance this year has provided a crucial buffer to the slowing economy, but analysts expect exports to come under great pressure in coming months as the COVID-19 pandemic eases. Demand for Chinese goods is expected to fall as global lockdowns ease and people spend more on services. Authorities will step up the support to the trade sector, including implementing previously flagged tax and fee cuts and speeding up the export tax rebates, said the State Council. Premier Li Keqiang said in November that China is studying a new combination of tax and fee cuts to help small businesses. The yuan exchange rate will be kept basically stable and banks are encouraged to conduct deals in the forward market to help exporters better cope with currency fluctuations risks, it added. Behind rosy headline figures, Chinese exporters have been grappling with thinning profit margins as the Chinese currency appreciates, raw material prices rise and logistics costs surge.The government will also take measures to ease the stress in the international logistics market as it cracks down on illegal fee charges and unreasonable price hikes, it added. More

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    BOJ's Kuroda warns weak yen hurting households more than before

    TOKYO (Reuters) -A weak yen may be hurting Japanese households more than in the past, as the country’s increasing reliance on more expensive raw material imports pushes up the cost of living, Bank of Japan (BOJ) Governor Haruhiko Kuroda said on Thursday.Kuroda’s remarks are the most direct acknowledgement to date of the potential disadvantages of a weak currency, highlighting a growing concern among policymakers of the hit to Japan’s fragile recovery from a steady rise in input costs.”The yen’s depreciation might have an increasing negative impact on household income through price rises,” Kuroda told a gathering of business leaders at a conference in Tokyo.He repeated his view that overall, the benefits of a weak yen outweigh the drawbacks – yen declines make Japanese goods more competitive overseas, and boost yen-based profits that companies earn overseas.Still, he said, a weak yen can hurt households and domestic retailers by pushing up import costs, a trend that may be intensifying due to Japan’s increasing reliance on imports.”A quantitative analysis by the bank’s staff shows that the effects of the yen’s depreciation in terms of pushing up prices of durable goods have increased in recent years,” Kuroda said.Japanese policymakers have traditionally favoured a weak yen over a strong one, and until 2011 had intervened in the market to stop a strong yen from hurting the export-reliant economy.Kuroda, himself a former top currency diplomat, had up till now focused on stressing the benefits of a weak yen, countering critics who saw recent yen falls as adding pain to an economy already hit by rising fuel and commodity prices.While a weak yen inflates the value of profits Japanese firms earn overseas, the boost it gives to exports has fallen as more companies shift production overseas, Kuroda said, pointing to structural changes in the way yen moves affect the economy.”The yen’s depreciation basically has a net positive impact on Japan’s economy,” Kuroda said. “That said, the yen’s fall has positive and negative effects, and due attention should be paid to the fact its effects will materialise in various ways.”Kuroda also stressed the BOJ’s readiness to maintain an ultra-loose policy to lift consumer prices toward its 2% target.While rising global fuel and raw material costs pushed wholesale inflation to a record annual 9% in November, consumer inflation is stuck around zero as weak consumption keeps firms from raising prices of their goods.Growing doubts over the benefits of a weak yen, however, may complicate the BOJ’s communication. Keeping ultra-low interest rates – when other major central banks eye rate hikes – may push down the yen further against other currencies, analysts say. More

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    China hopes U.S. could create conditions to expand trade cooperation

    BEIJING (Reuters) – China hopes the United States could create conditions for both sides to expand trade cooperation, the Ministry of Commerce said on Thursday, when asked about the latest in the implementation of the Phase 1 trade deal. Trade teams from both sides are maintaining normal communication, Gao Feng, ministry spokesman told an online press conference. More

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    US financial conditions remain easy even as Fed pulls back on stimulus

    US financial conditions are near the most accommodative on record, even as the Federal Reserve has begun stepping up its exit from coronavirus crisis-era stimulus measures in a bid to battle elevated inflation. Measures of financial conditions have only marginally tightened since last week’s Fed meeting, according to economists at Goldman Sachs, who produce a closely followed index that takes into account the shifts in the US stock market, borrowing costs for companies, moves in the dollar and funding costs for the US government.Despite the hawkish pivot, US stocks have stayed buoyant around record-high levels, while yields on US Treasuries remain stubbornly low compared with their historic norms. The fact that companies have had little trouble listing shares publicly, or tapping lenders for new credit, underscores the extraordinary levels of cash sloshing through the global financial system and presents a puzzle for Fed policymakers seeking to cool down the economy and tame inflation. “The objective is to slow things down and hope that inflation does move lower,” said Laura Rosner-Warburton, senior economist at MacroPolicy Perspectives. “To do that you need financial conditions to be a little bit tighter.”The Fed is highly sensitive to financial conditions, given that it offers a gauge of how shifts in central bank policy and global economic outlooks are filtering out into the real world. Jay Powell, its chair, acknowledged as much last week. He stressed that the economy no longer required such enormous emergency aid, but despite the central bank’s new plans to more quickly reduce its asset purchase programme, financial conditions would still remain “accommodative”.The stimulus is now set to cease altogether by the end of March — a milestone for the Fed, which more than doubled the size of its balance sheet as it sought to bolster financial markets and support the economy during the crisis.An earlier end to the so-called “taper” sets the central bank up to raise interest rates sooner — something officials now believe they could do three times next year in a bid to counter inflation, which is running at the fastest pace in nearly 40 years. That is a far more aggressive approach than just three months ago, when the Federal Open Market Committee and other regional Fed presidents were evenly split on the prospects of just one rate rise in 2022.Another three quarter-point interest rate rises are now pencilled in for 2023, with two more expected in 2024. These interest rate increases would normally presage tighter financial conditions and take some steam out of the economy, pushing up the costs of a mortgage, corporate loan or interest on a credit card bill. One key reason why financial conditions remained so loose was because investors were betting that the Fed might not be able to increase interest rates as much as it hoped if economic growth slows more than anticipated, said Brian Nick, chief investment strategist at Nuveen and a former staffer at the New York branch of the central bank. That prospect came into focus this week after the Biden administration’s landmark $1.75tn social spending bill was blockaded by Democratic senator Joe Manchin of West Virginia. An alarming surge in Covid-19 cases linked to the emergent Omicron variant has also clouded the outlook.“As the spending bill melts down publicly and the growth outlook is somewhat weaker for the first quarter because of Omicron, the Fed may not be pulled into tightening as much as it thinks,” Nick said. “The Fed is going to have a lot of reasons to stay patient if they want to.”Market measures of interest rate expectations already suggest deep scepticism over the Fed’s projected path forward. Secured overnight financing rate futures, which are used by traders to hedge against interest rate moves, imply that the Fed will lift rates fewer than three times next year before ultimately stalling out at about 1.4 per cent in 2024. That is well below the 2.1 per cent level suggested in the “dot plot” of individual interest rate projections published by the Fed this month.Higher inflation readings in the months ahead could yet rattle financial markets, with equities near record territory despite the Fed’s move to tighten policy, some investors warned. That is a particular fear for some, given how low yields on Treasuries are and the fact that short-term funding markets are pricing a relatively shallow hiking cycle. If rates on either popped higher, it could send waves through credit and equity markets.“If inflation stays high, the Fed will have to go faster,” said Steve Kane, co-chief investment officer of fixed income at TCW. “That’s where financial conditions can tighten very quickly and you could really upset the apple cart.”One Fed governor, Christopher Waller, has already made the case for the central bank to raise interest rates in March, several months earlier than futures markets currently suggest. Other senior officials could soon back that move should price pressures continue to show clear signs of broadening out beyond sectors most sensitive to pandemic-related disruptions.“If you start seeing the expedited taper of Fed purchases and a live meeting in March for a potential rate hike [and] financial conditions start to tighten, you will see that translate into significant volatility in markets,” said Erik Knutzen, multi-asset class chief investment officer at Neuberger Berman. More

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    India suspends agricultural futures trading to alleviate inflation fears

    India’s decision this week to ban agricultural trading contracts marks Narendra Modi’s latest effort to ease popular fears about rising inflation ahead of crucial state elections early next year.The country’s consumer price index, which tracks retail inflation, rose to 4.9 per cent in November after bottoming out in September. The wholesale price index, which reflects prices for businesses, has surged to a record of 14 per cent and has remained in double digits for most of the year.The uptick in prices comes as authorities around the world fear a surge in inflation in economies rebounding from early pandemic-induced shocks.The government this week banned trading for one year in several agricultural futures contracts such as soyabeans, wheat and palm oil, in response to concerns about rising food inflation.While retail food inflation has remained modest in recent months, domestic soyabean prices — for example — have nearly doubled this year, according to CNBC-TV18.The ban was introduced ahead of polls in several agricultural states. Uttar Pradesh, India’s largest state that is controlled by Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s Bharatiya Janata Party, and opposition-ruled Punjab will both hold elections in the early months of 2022.Some agricultural groups had called for bans, arguing that speculative trading in futures markets had exacerbated inflation. Indian authorities have taken similar steps to outlaw futures trading in the past despite a lack of evidence that it helps control inflation.“Derivatives are not behind the price rise,” said Kishore Narne, head of commodities at brokerage Motilal Oswal. “It’s more for the optics . . . The government wants to show people that it’s trying to control food inflation.”Uttar Pradesh and Punjab have both been the source of fierce opposition to a series of market-friendly agricultural reforms introduced by Modi last year, which farmers argued would jeopardise their livelihoods. After a year of sustained protests the government repealed the laws last month.The Reserve Bank of India remains relatively relaxed about inflation, however, despite concern from other central banks.Retail inflation of 4.9 per cent remains within the RBI’s target range, and it has left interest rates untouched at a record low of 4 per cent since March 2020.

    RBI governor Shaktikanta Das has emphasised the importance of supporting India’s economic recovery, particularly given the global spread of the Omicron variant. India has reported about 200 confirmed cases of the new coronavirus variant.Das said this month that the RBI would maintain an “accommodative” stance “as long as necessary to revive and sustain growth on a durable basis and continue to mitigate the impact of Covid-19 on the economy”.India’s economy grew 8.4 per cent year on year in the September quarter, though the rebound reflects little actual expansion of the economy after a sharp contraction during a strict lockdown last year. Consumer and business activity has picked up sharply.“The RBI continues to be quite comfortable in its rhetoric on inflation being transitory, driven by one-off factors,” said Priyanka Kishore, head of India at Oxford Economics. “One would think they’re in the realm of fiscal rather than monetary policy at this point.” More