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    South Korean regulator suggests new strict rules for token issuers

    The suggested rules could enforce strenuous regulations on individuals or platforms that mint non-art NFT’s for trading purposes, as well as decentralized finance projects.In the Nov 23 report, the FSC mentioned items it put forward in the Act on the Protection of Cryptocurrency Users that has been received by the National Assembly for consideration. It established policies for token issuers who plan on having their tokens traded on Korean exchanges and also recommended punishments for all those the FSC has deemed to be making “undue profit through market manipulation or trading on undisclosed information.”The report first touched on businesses like ICO operators, decentralized autonomous organizations (DAOs), and non-fungible token (NFT) minting services. These entities are required by the FSC to submit a whitepaper, obtain a recommendation from a recognized token evaluation service, obtain a legal review of the project, and also communicate regular business reports to users.In the past, NFTs were not regarded as assets to be regulated by the FSC. However, that perception was changed earlier this week. The FSC also considers privacy tokens, such as Monero (XMR), and stablecoins like Tether (USDT) as cryptocurrencies, but does not regard central bank digital currencies (CBDC) as same.According to the proposed law, defaulters could face a penalty of at least 5 years in prison plus a fine three to five times the amount of “unfair profit” made. Unfair profit can be regarded as any profit made while the businesses were operating outside the guidelines of the law.The new proposal is a measure adopted by the FSC to tackle what it identified as deficiencies in the ability of the Special Reporting Act to thoroughly protect investors. The Act is what drove most of the country’s crypto exchanges to pack up due to strict requirements to remain in operation.An industry insider opined that the proposals were positive and “the new law, once passed, will further promote industry development and help protect digital asset investors.”Continue reading on BTC Peers More

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    Bitcoin overtakes PayPal on value transferred, sets sights on Mastercard: Report

    A Thursday report from market intelligence platform Blockdata titled “When might the Bitcoin network process volumes like Mastercard & Visa?” points out that the Bitcoin network processed about $489 billion per quarter in 2021, which is greater than PayPal’s $302 billion. After just 12 years in existence, Bitcoin processes about 27% of Mastercard’s $1.8 trillion per quarter and 15% of Visa’s $3.2 trillion.Continue Reading on Coin Telegraph More

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    New German government rolls out crypto-friendly policies in coalition agreement

    A coalition was agreed upon by three German political parties this week that will see the Social Democrats (SDP), the Green Party, and the right-friendly Free Democrats (FDP) take charge from December this year.Quoting a rough translation of the 177-page agreement published on Nov 24, the coalition is in support of a new “dynamic in relation to the opportunities and risks from new financial innovations” such as crypto assets and blockchain businesses:It took two months of negotiations before the coalition was formed after the German federal election on Sept. 26. It signals the end of Angela Merkel’s 16-year reign as Chancellor and she will be replaced by the SDP’s Olaf Scholz.Meanwhile, the European Council which oversees the EU’s political agenda adopted two proposals named the ‘Regulation on Markets in Crypto Assets (MiCA) framework and the ‘Digital Operational Resilience Act’ (DORA).The purpose of MICA, which was initially drafted by the European Commission in September 2020, is to create a “regulatory framework for the crypto-assets market that supports innovation and draws on the potential of crypto-assets.”Although it still needs to be approved by the European Parliament, it will subject crypto assets issuers to more stringent requirements if enacted. Interestingly, non-fungible tokens (NFTs) and utility tokens are not inclusive in the scope of the regulation.A Reddit user “BelgianPolitics” labeled the progressive regulatory proposal as the “most important one to date for the entire crypto industry.” in a comprehensive post on the r/Cryptocurrency subReddit on Nov. 26.His analysis provided a detailed rundown of the proposed laws in MICA and it attracted about 900 comments at the time of writing. The author highlighted the significance of the proposals stating that:Continue reading on BTC Peers More

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    Tanzania reportedly makes plans to launch CBDC

    According to a Friday Bloomberg report, Bank of Tanzania Governor Florens Luoga said on Thursday that Tanzania was planning to follow Nigeria’s example in rolling out its own CBDC. Luoga reportedly said that the central bank had “already begun preparations” for a digital shilling, Tanzania’s currency since 1966. Continue Reading on Coin Telegraph More

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    Axie Infinity virtual land slot sells out for 550 ETH

    The game takes place in the world of Lunacia, which is inhabited by Axies. It is a 301 x 301 square grid where each section represents a tokenized plot of land called Terra, which players can also buy, sell or rent out to other players at will. The land that was sold yesterday is classified as Genesis, which is the rarest form of virtual real estate available in the Axie Infinity ecosystem.Continue Reading on Coin Telegraph More

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    ECB sticks to ending emergency support in March despite new COVID threat

    S’AGARO, Spain (Reuters) -The European Central Bank still plans to end its emergency bond purchases in March despite threats from a new variant of the coronavirus and rising infections, the ECB’s top two officials said on Friday.Global authorities and investors reacted with alarm on Friday to a new coronavirus variant detected in South Africa, with the European Union and Britain among those tightening border controls as researchers sought to find out if the mutation was vaccine-resistant.But ECB President Christine Lagarde and Vice-President Luis de Guindos both reaffirmed their expectations that the ECB’s Pandemic Emergency Purchase Programme (PEPP) would end in March, with a decision expected next month.”PEPP will end as planned with a size of 1.85 trillion euros ($2.1 trillion) at the end of March,” de Guindos told an event in Spain. “We will discuss the alternatives in December.”Lagarde also said in an interview with the Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung published on Friday that she expected to stop adding to PEPP’s bond stash in early 2022.But Spanish central bank governor Pablo Hernandez de Cos, an influential policy dove on the ECB’s Governing Council, was more cautious.”Today, new information has emerged, which must be taken into account, and the policymaker cannot ignore this information,” he told the Spanish event. Speaking earlier at an event in Milan, Bank of Italy governor Ignazio Visco also said the recent increase in the number of infections pushed back “the post-COVID perspective”. “Uncertainty remains high, mainly reflecting a health situation that has once again become a source of considerable concern,” Visco, also a policy dove, added.Stock markets fell sharply and investors pushed back https://www.reuters.com/markets/europe/new-covid-scare-sparks-rate-rethink-markets-2021-11-26 interest rate hike bets on Friday amid concerns the new variant may be able to evade immune responses and could be more transmissible. [MKTS/GLOB] The ECB has guided for no rate hike next year and some policymakers have called for continued support for the bond market even after PEPP ends.De Cos also said the ECB had other tools to support inflation in the euro zone, such as its regular bond-buying scheme.”Once the pandemic programme ends, let us suppose in March, the rest of the monetary policy tools – our regular programme, the long-term financing operation and interest rates – are at our disposal to achieve a 2% inflation in a sustainable way,” de Cos said at the Spanish event.Inflation in the euro zone hit 4.1% last month but the ECB expects it to fall below its 2% goal in 2023.De Guindos noted the persistent challenges, including supply bottlenecks, but said Europe’s high vaccination rate made the outlook more favourable than earlier in the pandemic.”We’ve got a differentiating factor, which is vaccination,” de Guindos said. “Therefore I think the effect on the economy is going to be more limited, I’m relatively optimistic.”He added the economy had shown an ability to adjust to the pandemic and predicted the euro zone economy would grow by around 5% this year and strongly next year too.($1 = 0.8839 euros) More

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    Investors need to pay attention to the capital cycle

    The writer is editor-in-chief of MoneyWeekNothing says Christmas to a money journalist more than the arrival of the first 2022 outlook reports from the financial institutions. I can therefore tell you with complete certainty that it is nearly Christmas — and that, according to most of those who make a living in the equity markets, you will have no need to spend it worrying about equity markets. There is, they say, more good news than bad. The last few weeks have been pretty volatile, they say, but economies are still growing nicely. Household savings are high, unemployment is low and both those things bode well for consumption in 2022, as does the shift in favour of fiscal policy by governments (they are all big spenders now). Supply chain bottlenecks are also likely to ease in 2022, something that will both allow a gross domestic product-boosting inventory rebuild and ease inflation — which markets aren’t much worried about anyway. We are also, as one note from Invesco puts it, “living in one of the most noteworthy periods of change in history”, with the digitalisation of everything creating extraordinary new industries and medical advances yielding astonishing new ways of treating human diseases. And Covid? By next year it may be that the expanded use of high efficacy antiviral pills will have pushed it some way down everyone’s list of things to worry about. Add all this up and global growth is likely to be over 4 per cent next year — well above the norm for the past decade. That, we are also told, is just the kind of background that is pleasantly supportive of share prices. The analysts at Barclays note that this year has been characterised by nonstop earnings upgrades — companies just keep doing better than we expect them to. That, they say, is likely to keep happening, partly because of the good growth but also because Covid has “crushed competition” — the way in which the pandemic has “disproportionately hurt small and medium-sized businesses” means that there may have been a shift in the share of income going to larger (listed) firms from smaller (unlisted) ones. So there it is: markets are tough enough to shrug most stuff off. You can go and get on with your Christmas shopping. Nothing to worry about here. A lot of this makes total sense. But there are a few problems with it nevertheless. It ignores policy risk. It ignores price. And it ignores the capital cycle. Take policy risk first. It might be that inflation slows next year. But the truth is that no one is entirely certain quite how inflation really works. It is entirely possible that central banks have had a hand in keeping inflation low over the past 20 years. But it is just as likely — even more likely — that low inflation has more been an effect of the wave of globalisation and cheap labour that followed China’s entry into the World Trade Organization in 2001 and the expansion of the EU. If that is true, the idea that central banks can sort it out with the odd 0.25 percentage point interest rate rise is laughable. It may be that they must either accept the inflation or actually raise rates properly above inflation rates to control things. That isn’t in anyone’s forecasts. On to price. Markets are fragile when they are expensive, as they mostly are now — largely because not all market participants really believe everything they write in their outlooks.We all know that future returns are a function of today’s price. And that’s fine when we can kid ourselves that earnings will soon rise so much that valuations will lower themselves without us having to lose any money. But it isn’t fine when confidence takes even the slightest of knocks. That’s something we saw very clearly on Friday with the market panic over reports of a new variant of the Sars-Cov-2 virus. If global markets were cheap and resilient, the fact that we don’t know if the new variant is a bad one (more infectious and more lethal) or a good one (more infectious but milder) would have had no effect on markets. That they are neither had the FTSE 100 down 3 per cent before lunch. Finally, consider the capital cycle. There is a must-have book for every stage of market madness. Right now it should be Capital Returns: Investing through the Capital Cycle, a collection of essays edited by Edward Chancellor. The idea here is simple: you should look at how much capital is flooding into a sector rather than focusing on price alone. The more capital there is, the more likely it is that sector will see oversupply and price collapse. Right now it is easy to see those sectors in which capital seems both free and unlimited (renewable energy being the obvious example), and easy to see where it has been neither for some time (for instance, old energy and mining). This is a combination that should make investing feel both harder (the risks are high) and easier (there are obvious opportunities). So what should the 2022 outlooks really say? That markets are fragile and set to be very volatile. That there might well be good times ahead, but that many prices already discount 20 years of partying. And perhaps that investors should bias their holdings towards cheaper sectors and, in particular, towards the capital-starved ones that it turns out we need as much as we ever did.  More