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    FomoETH, a new Crypto Startup begins its presale for a new concept mobile app – NFTagram

    In such aspects, a revolutionary project combining both the blockchain network and the NFTs, sounds quite amazing right? Yes, the FomoETH is one such which integrates both the blockchain technology along with the NFT together. The FomoETH actually serves as a democratic platform that focuses more towards its holders and supporters of the platform.Another aspiring fact is that, the native token of the FomoETH will be in operation upon both the Ethereum (ETH) blockchain as well as the Binance Smart Chain (BSC). Moreover, the 2 main attributes around which the complete project revolves around will be the FomoETH token and their NFT project, the NFTagram.Regardless, the FomoETH allows its holders and users to decide and vote for their opinions and proposals for the betterment of the project, making it completely democratic in all aspects. While there is also rewards distributed in both BSC and Ethereum network for the holders. …Continue reading on CoinQuora More

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    As Omicron surges, Biden to expand testing and warn unvaccinated

    WASHINGTON (Reuters) – The Biden administration will open federal COVID-19 testing sites in New York City this week and buy 500 million at-home rapid tests that Americans can order online for free starting in January as it tries to tackle the Omicron variant sweeping the country.Striking a more dire tone about the risks of remaining unvaccinated, President Joe Biden will lay out the initiatives on Tuesday in a speech that aims to persuade Americans to protect themselves from the fast-spreading variant, a senior administration official said. The measures include activating some 1,000 military medical personnel to support hospitals. “We will also note that if you are unvaccinated, you are at high risk of getting sick. This variant is highly transmissible and the unvaccinated are eight times more likely to be hospitalized and 14 times more likely to die from COVID,” the official said.With the holiday travel season already begun, new COVID-19 cases are surging in the United States, prompting local and federal officials to again confront just how far to go to combat the virus. Federal officials said that Omicron now accounts for 73% of all new cases, up from less than 1% at the beginning of the month.Health officials in Texas said on Monday the state recorded what ABC News reported is believed to be the first known U.S. death related to Omicron.The highly contagious variant was first detected last month in southern Africa and Hong Kong, and has raced around the globe and been reported in 89 countries, the World Health Organization said on Saturday.Lines for COVID-19 tests wrapped around the block in New York, Washington and other U.S. cities over the weekend as people clamored to find out if they were infected before celebrating the holidays with family.Facing criticism that testing resources are inadequate, Biden will announce on Tuesday that the federal government will buy 500 million at-home rapid tests and make them available to all Americans in January. Americans can access a new website to have them delivered, but officials are still working on how many tests a household can request.The administration will also open multiple federal testing centers starting in New York City ahead of Christmas, a senior administration official said. More federal sites will be opened across the country in areas of high need and when requested by local and state officials, the official said. ‘TAKING ACTION NOW'”Testing in this country is a lot better than it was, but there’s more to do and we’re taking action now,” the official said. The free tests are in addition to a plan to have health insurers provide free tests for Americans with coverage that is also expected to begin in January. Biden will note that the Omicron variant is so contagious that it will infect vaccinated Americans but that they will be far less likely to get seriously sick. So-called breakthrough infections are rising among the 61% of the country’s fully vaccinated population, including the 30% who have gotten booster shots.Still, Biden will tell Americans that those who are vaccinated and follow guidance around using masks, especially while traveling, should feel comfortable celebrating the holidays as planned.New COVID-19 cases rose 9% in the United States in the past week but are up 57% since the start of December, according to a Reuters tally.The number of hospitalized COVID-19 patients has increased 26% this month, with hospitals in some areas already strained by the Delta variant that emerged earlier this year.There have been almost 51 million infections and 809,268 coronavirus-related deaths reported in the country since the pandemic began, the most of any country. More

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    Tumultuous year in bond markets draws to a close

    LONDON (Reuters) – It’s been an extraordinary year for bonds after long-dormant inflation jumped and central banks began unwinding unprecedented stimulus sparked by COVID-19.The European Union became a major borrower and sold debt worth 140 billion euros, Britain and Italy joined the fast-growing green bond market and junk debt had a stellar year.Here’s a look at some of 2021’s eye-popping moves.UP AND AWAY Ten-year Treasury yields are up around 50 basis points, set for their biggest annual rise in absolute terms since 2013. U.S. bond returns are down 3%, making Treasuries one of 2021’s worst-performing major bond markets. At 1.42%, 10-year yields appear at relatively modest levels given inflation has reached almost four-decade highs near 7%. But with the Federal Reserve accelerating likely policy tightening in 2022, yields are forecast to push above 2% next year. (Graphic: US 10-year Treasury yields set for biggest annual fall since 2013, https://fingfx.thomsonreuters.com/gfx/mkt/lbvgnlebkpq/UST2012.png) EUROPE FOLLOWSItaly’s bond yields are poised to end 2021 with their second biggest annual rise since the 2011 euro debt crisis, as the European Central Bank dials back its bond-buying stimulus. Ten-year borrowing costs are up around 40 bps this year to 0.95%, not quite as stark as the 78 bps jump in 2018 when markets worried about Italy’s commitment to the euro.Germany’s 10-year Bund yield is up just 20 bps this year, highlighting a divergence between euro area and U.S. monetary policy as well as Omicron-triggered uncertainty.(Graphic: Negative returns for most major bond markets in 2021, https://fingfx.thomsonreuters.com/gfx/mkt/myvmnalbapr/returnsdec21.PNG) GOODBYE YCC, HELLO RATE HIKESAustralia’s central bank in November abandoned an ultra-low target for bond yields in a policy known as yield curve control, a step towards unwinding pandemic-era stimulus. Expectations for tighter policy have pushed up three-year bond yields 82 bps this year to 0.92%, which would mark the biggest annual rise in 12 years. In Britain, where the Bank of England this month delivered a surprise rate hike, two-year bond yields have seen the biggest annual jump since 2006.(Graphic: Britain’s two-year bond yield, https://fingfx.thomsonreuters.com/gfx/mkt/zdvxoxbqkpx/GB2012.png) HEAVY HITTERThe European Union completed its transformation into a major borrower after it began issuing bonds to finance a post-pandemic recovery fund, worth up to 800 billion euros ($902 billion).The EU has raised 91 billion euros in bonds and bills for the fund this year, after raising another 50 billion euros for the SURE unemployment scheme it started funding last year. It also sold the world’s largest green bond, raising 12 billion euros from record demand. ESG BOOM Green bond issuance is set for yet another record year, roughly doubling from last year to nearly $500 billion, according to Refinitiv data. Britain, Italy, Spain and the EU issued green bonds for the first time.Increased green bond issuance has eased scarcity, shrinking the “greenium” investors have to pay to get hold of corporate green bonds.Issuance of sustainability-linked bonds, linked to company-wide goals rather than specific projects, surged 11-fold to $91 billion, according to Refinitiv. (Graphic: European ESG bond issuance share, https://fingfx.thomsonreuters.com/gfx/mkt/zgvomnddqvd/afme%20chart.png) POPULAR With inflation surging, investors have piled into inflation-linked bonds for protection.Such bonds were the second best performer in fixed income markets this year, according to BofA indexes.Key market gauges of longer-term inflation expectations have also jumped, including in the euro area and in Britain. (Graphic: Inflation forwards rise as price pressures surge, https://fingfx.thomsonreuters.com/gfx/mkt/egpbkoxlnvq/inflation2021.png) JUNK BONDS, HIGH RETURNSThe lowest-rated junk bonds, at Triple C and below, are set to return nearly 10% in both the U.S. and the euro markets, BofA indexes show, as investors snapped up assets offering any real return while inflation runs hot. Attractive funding costs pushed junk companies to issue $646 billion of bonds, according to Refinitiv, a second record year running, even as investment-grade issuance declined. In contrast was Asia, where property firm Evergrande’s woes battered Chinese high-yield bonds. The dollar-denominated market is headed for a 30% loss this year, according to BofA.(Graphic: Evergrande woes crush China HY, https://fingfx.thomsonreuters.com/gfx/mkt/dwvkrzmmkpm/china%20hy%20returns.png) More

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    Dutch vow to be EU’s locomotive rather than brake

    The same four parties. The same premier. Probably mostly the same ministers. Yet the fourth ruling coalition led by liberal Mark Rutte has struck a decidedly different tone when it comes to the Netherlands’ place in the EU. The new coalition agreement suggests The Hague will no longer act as a brake on the EU but as a locomotive. Rutte, who often relished his casting as Europe’s Mr No, now intends to be in the vanguard of European integration.The Hague’s newly hatched enthusiasm for Europe bears the imprint of D66, the left-liberal pro-European party that was the big winner in the election. The big losers were the more Eurosceptic Christian Democrats. Rutte’s authority was weakened by the benefits scandal that brought down his third government and, chameleon-like, has an opportunity to reinvent himself. But the new Dutch position is also a reflection of how geopolitical uncertainty, the pandemic and Britain’s Brexit mess have “reinforced the need for solidarity and collective action” within the EU, says Catherine de Vries, professor at Bocconi University. The parsimonious Dutch who like to lecture other EU governments about fiscal discipline are turning on the spending taps. The incoming government will boost expenditure on housing, education, childcare and defence. It is creating a fund to finance decarbonisation worth a cumulative 4.3 per cent of gross domestic product and another one for rural diversification (including closing down polluting intensive farms) worth 3.1 per cent. Extra borrowing will push Dutch debt just above the 60 per cent EU limit. It is hardly the same category as Italy (155 per cent) or Greece (206 per cent), but the limit no longer seems sacrosanct. The agreement amounts to a “farewell to frugality”, according to Marcel Klok, senior economist at ING. The four coalition parties now say they are open to the “modernisation” of the EU’s fiscal rules as long as its promotes fiscal sustainability and economic convergence. It is vague, but in line with the slightly more flexible approach promised by the new German coalition government. After Britain’s departure from the EU, The Hague acted as ringleader of the so-called frugal states opposed to big EU spending, greater risk-sharing or any watering down of the bloc’s fiscal rules. Rutte’s fourth administration also wants to become an advocate of deeper integration, such as ending national vetoes in foreign policy, strengthening the role of the European parliament and creating EU-wide carbon and digital taxes. Where a sub-set of EU capitals wants to pursue an initiative, the Dutch want to be in the vanguard.The new Dutch stance is its second readjustment to post-Brexit Europe. The first was its leadership of an informal group of free-trading, economically liberal, fiscal hawkish governments, dubbed the New Hanseatic League, who needed to team up to defend their interests in place of their powerful British ally. The group shrunk to a hard core of frugals to try to block the EU dishing out recovery fund grants financed by common debt.

    The New Hanseatic League made sure small countries were listened to in the EU, says de Vries. But the Dutch started to ask “could you gain more by being constructive and not being some naysayer”. However, she cautions that the strong strain of Euroscepticism in Dutch politics has not disappeared.Pepijn Bergsen of Chatham House doubts there will be a fundamental Dutch shift on EU fiscal policy, but says the new coalition deal reflects a “slowly shifting consensus” on other areas of EU policy.The coalition agreement is peppered with references to EU “strategic autonomy” and how it should use its economic power strategically through investment screening, level-playing field instruments and smart industrial policy.“The Netherlands used to be this last stalwart of neoliberal, free trade, light-touch government thinking,” says Rem Korteweg of Clingendael, the Netherlands Institute for International Relations. “Even the Dutch are moving to a more confrontational, even protectionist-light approach to international economic affairs.” The Dutch are sounding a little less Dutch and a little more French. More

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    Why Erdogan’s unorthodox Turkish economic experiment is not working

    As recently as this weekend, Turkey’s president Recep Tayyip Erdogan reiterated his unorthodox theory that lower interest rates will generate a “new economic model” for his country. The president has said that cutting rates will bring down inflation and raise investment, employment and exports, enhancing Turkey’s independence from other countries. Yet his economic experiment of lowering interest rates in the face of inflation, rather than raising them, has plunged his country into crisis with a collapsing currency, soaring prices, companies struggling with the costs of inputs and deep hardship, particularly among the poorest. This indicates that Erdogan’s notions are deeply flawed — as does standard economic theory, which suggests higher interest rates are needed to defend a currency by deterring capital outflows, bearing down on domestic spending and demonstrating the authorities are serious in seeking to prevent an inflationary spiral.Inflation in Turkey is heading towards 30 per cent after the lira lost more than half its value against the US dollar this autumn — despite a rebound late on Monday after Erdogan announced measures to compensate holders of lira in banks in the event of further currency depreciation.Yet the economics community has itself questioned the role of hot money flows into and out of emerging economies and traditional theories, led by professor Hélène Rey of the London Business School, who noted in 2013 that emerging markets were often at the mercy of capital flows driven by the policies of the US Federal Reserve and other major central banks. The IMF has even sketched out a model in which higher interest rates could lead to higher inflation. The working paper by former IMF chief economist Olivier Blanchard and colleagues noted that large capital inflows into an emerging economy — often brought about by high interest rates — can lead to “credit booms and rising output” and inflation. But although the IMF — the high priest of economic orthodoxy — publishes papers such as this, those circumstances do not apply to Turkey. The country has run persistent deficits on its current account as imports regularly exceed exports, and suffers from stubbornly high inflation: the annual rate has been in excess of 10 per cent for almost all of the past five years. This suggests an underlying price growth problem that is embedded in the system and which policy has done little to eliminate. Earlier this month the OECD in Paris said Turkey’s inflationary pressures had been further boosted this year by subsidised loans to domestic companies since the start of the pandemic, which helped fuel export-led “buoyant growth”, leaving its 2021 output higher than the OECD had expected before Covid-19 hit.The OECD also warned that Turkey was likely to be “subject to potential further pressures from wages, import costs and producer prices”. Professor Dani Rodrik of the Harvard Kennedy School said that for years Erdogan had ridden a wave of capital inflows that were attracted to Turkey by slightly higher interest rate margins. “One of the myths of financial globalisation is that it enforces macro[economic] discipline,” Rodrik said, suggesting that financial markets would ensure countries ran credible and sustainable policies that attracted foreign cash. “In Turkey, it was the opposite. Turkey’s economic experiment ran much longer than it should have, thanks to the more elastic supply of finance. The economic costs will be larger as a result.”Both Rodrik and the IMF argue that, even if higher interest rates helped attract inflows that raised spending and domestic inflation, the correct response by Ankara would have been to offset the effect with tighter policy, accepting slower growth in order to shore up longer-term stability and prevent precisely the crisis of confidence that Turkey has suffered in recent weeks. Instead, Erdogan did the opposite, aided by a handpicked central bank governor. Turkey cut its short-term policy rate from 19 per cent in September to reach 14 per cent on December 16, in a series of expansionary moves.The intention was to gradually lower the value of the Turkish lira and boost exports by increasing the competitiveness of smaller manufacturing companies, while also shifting spending from imports to domestic goods and services.

    Although the current account deficit has moved into surplus since August, it has come at a huge cost to the credibility of Ankara’s economic policy and the livelihoods of Turkey’s population. The official inflation rate topped 20 per cent in November with prices rising 3.5 per cent that month alone. Many observers consider this an underestimate of the true pace of inflation. Even so, it is expected to jump higher in December when the effects of the crash in the Turkish lira show up in import prices. Worse, the lira’s plunge has boosted the debts of companies and the government, which have increased their foreign currency borrowings. Turkey’s non-financial corporate debt has risen by 20 percentage points of gross domestic product since the pandemic started, the highest among emerging economies, according to OECD estimates.Even interest rate cuts no longer ease financial conditions for companies, because the financial markets now demand greater compensation for the risk. Turkish government bond yields have risen sharply as foreign and domestic investors lost confidence in the lira and sought the safety of hard currencies. With import prices soaring, the economic circumstances threaten to crush domestic demand; a recent 50 per cent rise in the minimum wage will wipe out the cost advantages of the currency depreciation, according to Tim Ash of BlueBay Asset Management. “If [Erdogan] had managed to hold [the line] when there were 10 lira to the [US] dollar, maybe they had a chance but, now inflation is out of the bag, the competitive advantage will go out of the window and we are in a devaluation inflation spiral,” Ash said. More

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    With Biden spending plan blocked, economists lower 2022 growth forecasts

    (Reuters) – Some economists expect the U.S. economy to grow more slowly next year after a key Democratic lawmaker dealt a seemingly fatal blow to President Joe Biden’s $1.75 trillion spending plan, further clouding an outlook that was facing heightened risk from the rapid spread of the Omicron variant of COVID-19. Goldman Sachs (NYSE:GS) lowered its GDP growth forecast for 2022 as did Mark Zandi, chief economist for Moody’s (NYSE:MCO) Analytics, after U.S. Senator Joe Manchin said on Sunday he could not support Biden’s ambitious “Build Back Better” proposal, which would expand the social safety net and tackle climate change. “If BBB doesn’t become law, the economic recovery will be vulnerable to stalling out if we suffer another serious wave of the pandemic; an increasingly likely scenario with Omicron spreading rapidly,” Zandi wrote on Twitter (NYSE:TWTR) on Monday, adding that he expects real GDP growth to be lower by half a percentage point in 2022 if the proposed legislation doesn’t become law. Democrats are absorbing the legislative setback as the Biden administration faces criticism from health experts amid a surge in COVID-19 infections.One shift that economists say could slow growth is the reduction of an enhanced tax credit that sent families monthly payments of up to $300 per child but which is set to expire on Dec. 31. Lawmakers could pass a modified version of Biden’s spending bill next year or decide to extend the credit retroactively, although negotiations could take weeks, Goldman Sachs researchers wrote in a note to clients. U.S. economic output was expected to slow in the early part of next year from the brisk pace seen at the end of 2021 even before Omicron emerged as a threat to global growth and Biden’s spending plan was derailed. Economists projected earlier this month that growth would slow next year as the lift provided by earlier spending programs faded and the Federal Reserve reduced its monetary policy accommodation in the face of high inflation. The annualized rate of gross domestic product growth was expected to drop to 4% in the first quarter of 2022 from an expected 6% in the final three months of this year, according to a Reuters poll of economists published on Dec. 8.[ECILT/US] Growth for all of 2022 was seen decelerating to 3.9% – still well above pre-pandemic trends – from 5.6% this year.The Fed announced last week that it would double the pace of its bond-buying wind-down in response to strong employment growth and the surge in inflation and signaled it could raise interest rates three times next year. But Zandi said it could prove difficult for the U.S. central bank to roll out three rate hikes if U.S. economic growth is slower than initially expected.Goldman, too, said the apparent demise of Biden’s spending plan adds risk to its expectation for the Fed to deliver its first rate hike in March given that “(m)ost Fed officials likely expected the BBB Act or something like it to become law.”The spike in COVID-19 infections is beginning to affect some businesses in New York City and elsewhere, leading to event cancellations, restaurant closings and delays to return-to-office plans.The impact of the Omicron variant is not yet visible in the high-frequency indicators tracked by Jefferies (NYSE:JEF) economists, though they warned that does not mean it isn’t happening. “It is simply too earlier for it to show in activity data,” Jefferies economist Aneta Markowska wrote in her weekly take on an array of high-frequency data, which showed the investment bank’s “reopening index” edging up last week. Her expectation is that the increase in cases should exert itself more notably come January, when it may in fact trigger a contraction in employment similar to that seen in December 2020. More

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    Japan govt weighs raising FY22 growth forecast to +3.0% or more -Yomiuri

    The projection would be an upgrade from a forecast for 2.2% real GDP growth for the fiscal year starting in April 2022 released at a mid-year review in July.The cabinet was set to approve the new forecast on Thursday, Yomiuri said. The update comes after parliament on Monday approved the 36 trillion yen ($316.73 billion) extra budget for the current fiscal year.Japan has lagged other advanced nations in overcoming a coronavirus pandemic-induced slump, forcing policymakers to maintain massive fiscal and monetary support even as crisis mode policies are dialled back elsewhere.The world’s third-largest economy declined an annualised 3.6% in the third quarter following a resurgence of COVID-19 cases over the summer, which led to fresh restrictions that curbed growth, especially private consumption.The government was likely to lower its forecast for fiscal 2021 growth to about 2.5% from 3.7% expected previously, Yomiuri said, adding it was also likely to delay its forecast for a return to pre-coronavirus levels to beyond the year-end.($1 = 113.6600 yen) More

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    Australia's central bank upbeat on outlook ahead of QE decision

    SYDNEY (Reuters) – Australia’s central bank is optimistic the spread of the Omicron variant will not derail an ongoing economic recovery, giving it the option to end quantitative easing early should the run of activity data stay upbeat.Minutes of the Reserve Bank of Australia’s (RBA) Dec. 7 policy meeting showed its Board remained committed to keeping interest rates at a super-low 0.1%, but was considering how and when to wind up its A$4 billion ($2.84 billion) in weekly bond buying given the economic pick up.”Members observed that the Australian economy was rapidly recovering after the interruption to growth caused by the outbreak of the Delta variant,” the minutes released on Tuesday showed.”The emergence of the Omicron variant was a new source of uncertainty, but it was not expected to derail the recovery.”Options to be considered at the next Board meeting in February included extending bond buying to May at the same or reduced amount, or ending it altogether in February.The decision would depend on how the economy fared, with data on jobs, inflation and spending particularly important.Since the meeting, employment figures for November beat all expectations as jobs surged by a record 366,100, while the unemployment rate dropped sharply to 4.6%.Inflation data for the fourth quarter due in late January is also likely to be on the high side given continued supply constraints and lofty energy prices.All this strength has convinced many market economists the Board would chose to end bond purchases in February.”We think the RBA will again be surprised on the performance of the economy,” said Tapas Strickland, a director of economics at NAB.”NAB sees the RBA ending QE in February with little need for the program given unemployment is at 4.6% and the U.S. Federal Reserve is set to end their QE by March.”One complication is a resurgence in coronavirus cases as lockdowns were lifted, with cases in New South Wales jumping to all-time highs in recent days.The government has so far resisted pressure to re-instate social restrictions, relying instead on urging people to get booster shots of the vaccine. ($1 = 1.4067 Australian dollars) More