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    Bitcoin Smashes $68k, Gears Up For $69k, Analyst Says

    Bitcoin takes the crypto world by storm as it breaks its $68k resistance level. Furthermore, this current position of the crypto enables Bitcoin to record a new all-time-high (ATH) price. As a result, crypto analysts and investors cannot stop forecasting about the bullish future of Bitcoin.This made Cameron Winklevoss, a Bitcoin enthusiast, react:In the tweet posted by Cameron Winklevoss, he is so bullish that he expects Bitcoin to hit the skyrocketing price of $69,696.9. Indeed, this trading price can actually drive Bitcoin traders and investors crazy.Furthermore, the post has been retweeted almost 115 times with 1400 likes. Also, it has gathered different opinions across Twitter (NYSE:TWTR) and the crypto world. Some agree while some don’t, and others have no comment at all.Regardless, Bitcoin has already established its reputation inside and outside the crypto world. This means that even if the price of Bitcoin went up or down, its investors would not easily give up on the crypto. At the time of writing, Bitcoin trades at a skyrocketing price of over $68k with a huge market cap of almost $1.3 trillion.Continue reading on CoinQuora More

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    Global banking regulators to move ahead with crypto, climate rules

    The Swiss-based committee of banking regulators from the world’s main financial centres said it will launch a public consultation later this month on a set of principles for the “effective management and supervision of climate-related financial risks at internationally active banks”.The committee said its members also agreed on the need for “conservative” risk-based set of minimum capital requirements standards for cryptoassets.”Accordingly, the committee will further specify a proposed prudential treatment, with a view to issuing a further consultative document by mid-2022,” the committee said in a statement. More

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    Britain proposes global competitiveness objective for financial regulators

    LONDON (Reuters) – Britain proposed on Tuesday to require financial regulators to safeguard the global competitiveness of the financial sector as a formal objective in their work after Brexit.”The government intends to provide for a greater focus on growth and international competitiveness through the introduction of new secondary objectives for the Prudential (NYSE:PUK) Regulation Authority and the Financial Conduct Authority,” the finance ministry said in proposals put out to public consultation. More

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    Bitcoin Hits Record, Brainard Interview, API & STEO – What's Moving Markets

    Investing.com — Bitcoin surges to a record high, a day after the Federal Reserve grumbles after the financial stability risks of crypto. Lael Brainard has been interviewed by President Joe Biden for the top job at the Fed, according to reports. Stocks are grinding higher ahead of producer price inflation data for October, and there are two key releases from the U.S. for the oil market to digest. Here’s what you need to know in financial markets on Tuesday, 9th November. 1. Bitcoin hits all-time highBitcoin surged to a new all-time high of $68,493, supported by a monetary policy backdrop that has turned more friendly in recent days as central banks have backed off raising rates.While there have been few triggers specific to Bitcoin itself, risk assets have flourished since Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell emphasized that the Fed hadn’t yet put the U.S. on a glidepath to higher rates, despite starting to wind down its bond purchases.Other digital coins have also ridden the recent rally, notably Ethereum, which has gained over 70% in the last two and a half months.Bitcoin’s latest highs come a day after the Federal Reserve highlighted stablecoins – rather than Bitcoin itself – as one of the chief risks to U.S. financial stability.2. Competition for PowellJerome Powell has competition. Bloomberg reported on Monday that Fed governor Lael Brainard was interviewed by President Joe Biden for the central bank chair during her visit to the White House last week.Brainard is widely seen as an inflation ’dove’ and her recent public statements have shown no hurry to raise interest rates. Her interview comes after vocal and repeated interventions from Democratic lawmakers such as Senator Elizabeth Warren opposing Powell’s reappointment for a second term.Powell’s current term ends in February, and both vice-chair Richard Clarida and Randall Quarles, the Fed’s head of banking supervision, will step down in the two months prior to that – something that will give the Democrats the chance to shape the Fed’s board more to their taste. While that could mean lower rates for longer, it may also mean a less indulgent line on financial stability issues.3. Stocks grind higher ahead of PPI dataU.S. stocks are set to continue their drift ahead of the latest update on the inflation front at 8:30 AM ET (1330 GMT), in the form of October’s producer price index.By 6:20 AM ET, Dow Jones futures were down 36 points, or 0.1%, while S&P 500 futures were flat and Nasdaq 100 futures were up 37 points.Stocks likely to be in focus later include brokerage Robinhood (NASDAQ:HOOD), which fell in premarket after announcing a data breach, and AMC Entertainment (NYSE:AMC), whose numbers late on Monday showed how far it still has to go to get back to pre-pandemic levels of business.DR Horton (NYSE:DHI) heads the list of early earnings reporters, while Wynn Resorts reports after the bell.4. Covid-19: more cases, more treatmentsAnother stock likely to be in focus later is Regeneron (NASDAQ:REGN), which announced trial results for its antiviral Covid-19 pill on Monday showing a high (82%) degree of efficacy in reducing serious illness.It’s the third such drug to show such effects, after ones developed by Merck (NYSE:MRK) and Pfizer (NYSE:PFE), and adds to the growing list of remedies that can reduce the risks arising from economies staying open and active.However, the start of the northern hemisphere winter means that the near term still promises to be challenging: new infection rates have stopped falling in the U.S., and far exceeded previous record peaks in central and eastern Europe.The three parties likely to form Germany’s next government issued published a draft bill earlier Tuesday that would impose the so-called ‘3G’ system across almost all of public life for adults. That system requires people to show either proof of vaccination or naturally-acquired antibodies, or a negative test result.5. Oil rises ahead of STEO, APIOil prices edged higher again, ahead of two key releases from the U.S. later in the day. First will be the government’s Short-Term Energy Outlook, which will update its forecasts for prices and output in the U.S., followed by weekly inventory data from the American Petroleum Institute.Crude stocks are expected to have risen for a seventh straight week, by some 1.90 million barrels, against a backdrop of surging prices that have started to hurt demand. Some reports have suggested that the STEO may be used by the government to justify sales of crude from the Strategic Petroleum Reserve – although the causal link between the two is far from clear.By 6:30 AM ET, U.S. crude futures were up 0.4% at $82.22 a barrel, while Brent crude was up 0.3% at $83.70 a barrel. More

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    Global cargoes are way up on pre-pandemic levels

    Hello from London, from where aeroplanes are flying over our heads to take delegates from around the world to Glasgow and make pledges on stemming climate change. Today we look at the supply chain again. Just when you thought things could not get any worse, measures of global suppliers’ delivery time in manufacturing dropped to a new survey low in October, according to the closely watched global IHS Markit poll. The survey started in the late 1980s, so this is quite something. But what we want to emphasise here is a positive of sorts — that things ought to have been far worse. Supply chain stress reflects high demand tooThe supply chain snags we’re witnessing right now are bad news. They threaten the global economic rebound, not only because they limit how much businesses are able to produce, but also because they generate inflationary pressures, effectively making consumers poorer.Yet, there is a part of the story that is largely missing: the fact that we are producing and trading more than ever before. The reason: a shift in demand from spending on services to purchases of consumer durables during the pandemic. The real story, as Neil Shearing, chief economist at Capital Economics, puts it, “is how well the supply chain has held up given the huge shift in demand towards goods”. Today we want to show you exactly how much more we are producing and trading using fresh company data that analysts Container Trades Statistics kindly shared with us. More than 80 per cent of exports, in volume terms, reach their destination via container ships. So we’ll start by looking at what’s happened to volumes, as measured using twenty-foot containers. In the 12 months to September, more than 14m more twenty-foot containers — or their equivalents (most containers are 40ft) — crossed our oceans compared with the same period last year. This year’s figure is up by about 10m on the same period in 2019. Average monthly global cargo shipping figures even hit a new high of 15m in the 12 months to September. This is not a small increase; each container can carry up to 22 tonnes of goods. “The pace of the post-pandemic industrial expansion has been unprecedented,” said Alexandra Hermann, economist at Oxford Economics.Manufacturers who were in a hurry, meanwhile, boosted global international air cargo volumes. In September, cargo tonne-kilometres, a measure of freight traffic calculated multiplying tonne of freight by the distance travelled in kilometres, were up 9.4 per cent compared with the same month in 2019, according to Iata numbers. While it remains much more expensive to take goods by plane, soaring shipping prices have made air travel look more affordable. In September, the average price to move air cargo was three times more than by sea, down from 12.5 times before the crisis.It makes sense that, during lockdowns when many services were shut, trade volumes rocketed. But why are we still buying so many goods when gyms, leisure centres and restaurants have reopened in most countries? The answer is that the expected normalisation in consumer spending habits has not happened yet. As of September, the real value of spending by US consumers on services was still below that of the same month in 2019. In contrast, spending on durable goods, such as furniture, and non-durable goods, such as food, was up by 19 per cent and 14 per cent respectively.Across most large economies, visits to bars, restaurants and entertainment centres remain down on pre-pandemic levels, according to Google Mobility Data. Use of public transport and travel to workplaces has also not returned to “normal” in most countries, despite the easing of most Covid-19 restrictions. The result is that, in October, the share of EU businesses reporting lack of demand as a factor limiting production dropped to the lowest since the EU business survey was launched in 1985. At the same time, the number of months secured by current orders — a measure of how full order books are — increased to a record high. This means even if consumers return to spend on services, rather than goods, it would take some time before businesses have refilled their shelves. Inventories are so low, Shearing told us, that “you get to the point that shortages can feed one another”. This has played out in the UK, for instance, where a shortage of truck drivers triggered a fuel crisis. “We do not see a full easing in disruptions before the second half of 2022,” said Hermann. While she expected some of the strains on production capacity to ease naturally as consumers spent more on services, limits on expanding manufacturing capacity and the fleet of container ships remain “key constraints”.Trade linksGood news in supply chains. Automobile and garment factories are whirring back to life (Nikkei, $, subscription required) in Vietnam and Malaysia as Covid cases fall across south-east Asia. Bad news in supply chains. Mexico’s once-booming car manufacturing sector is having a rough time due to chip shortages. This Twitter thread points out that, in a lot of instances, supply chain snags start with cheaper parts. The latest edition of Bloomberg’s Odd Lots podcast delves into why the lumber price, after soaring, fell like, err, timber. Mining company BHP intended to focus its future portfolio on minerals that had “upside potential” for decarbonisation such as copper and nickel, said chief executive Mike Henry (Nikkei, $) at the Nikkei management forum. The Financial Times has a nice read on the families and friends delighted to see the reopening of the travel corridor between the US and Europe. Francesca Regalado and Claire Jones More

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    PrimeXBT Releases Its iOS App, Users Voice Their Support

    Supporters of PrimeXBT rallied as the iOS version of one of the leading digital asset exchanges got released. According to the team, the response within their community in Twitter (NYSE:TWTR), Telegram, and trading groups has been nothing but positive.Aside from the trending topics such as Bitcoin and altcoins reaching new all-time highs, the PrimeXBT team believes that the release of their iOS app is one of the hottest topics in the trading community right now.The team collected reviews of several community members and compiled them into one list that they shared:According to the team, their users who are very familiar with the quality of the exchange will notice how well the app translates their user interface. Additionally, they mentioned how new users can easily pick up on how to use the tools they are offering very easily.The team also insisted that only PrimeXBT offers a range of different services such as forex, crypto, stock indices, commodities, and more. This all comes within the same account and trading portfolio as well.Continue reading on CoinQuora More

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    Japan PM says crafting stimulus package to achieve 'virtuous' growth

    TOKYO (Reuters) -Japan’s Prime Minister Fumio Kishida vowed on Tuesday to put the economy on track by boosting private-sector investment and disposable income to achieve a “virtuous cycle” of economic growth and distribution of wealth.Having taken over the leadership last month and secured a mandate at an election on Oct. 31, Kishida pledged to deliver an economic package that possesses “sufficient” size and substance.”We will let the public and private sector cooperate in achieving virtuous cycle of growth and (wealth) distribution,” Kishida said after meeting with the Council on Economic and Fiscal Policy (CEFP), the government’s top advisory panel.The COVID-19 economic stimulus measures are widely expected to be announced on Nov. 19, and media reports have suggested the package could be worth more than 30 trillion yen ($264.67 billion).Kishida gave no inkling of the size, but stressed his immediate priority was reviving growth, while fiscal reform could wait until later.”We will realise growth and then steadily improve public finances medium term,” Kishida said.The 11 members of the CEFP include Bank of Japan Governor Haruhiko Kuroda and four private-sector business representatives and academics, as well as the prime minister and members of his cabinet. The meeting underscored the need for the government and the Bank of Japan (BOJ) to work closely, after they both reaffirmed last week the central bank’s commitment to achieve its 2% inflation target.Kishida said he aimed to revamp Japan’s medical system and arrange the provision of booster shots so that the country is in better shape to meet the next wave of COVID-19 infections. His predecessor, Yoshihide Suga, had quit after barely a year in office amid constant criticism of the government’s response to the pandemic.At a separate meeting, Kishida said the government will take necessary steps to front-load wage rises for care givers, nurses, kindergarten and nursery teachers, Economy Minister Daishiro Yamagiwa told reporters.($1 = 113.3500 yen) More