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    China-linked stocks climb on bevy of stimulus measures

    The People’s Bank of China (PBOC) has lowered interest rates and reduced the amount of cash banks must hold as reserves by 50 basis points.Reuters also reported that top Chinese cities Shanghai and Shenzhen are planning to lift key home purchase restrictions in the coming weeks, while more fiscal measures are expected to be announced before the country’s week-long holidays starting Oct. 1.The U.S. listings of Chinese e-commerce giants Alibaba (NYSE:BABA) Group rose 0.7% before the bell, while JD (NASDAQ:JD).com and PDD Holdings were up 3% and 1.6%, respectively.Chinese electric-vehicle maker Nio (NYSE:NIO) gained 4%, while gaming company Bilibili (NASDAQ:BILI) rose 2.8%.Exchange-traded funds tracking the China market also jumped as domestic stocks notched their best week since 2008.The iShares MSCI China ETF rose 1% premarket, after notching its highest close since March 2023 on Thursday, while tech-focused KraneShares CSI China Internet ETF rose 1.9%.Still, many analysts question whether the stimulus measures are enough to renew the interest in China, formerly one of the world’s top growth stories, as deflationary pressures, weak consumer demand and a severe downturn in the property market have kept investors cautious.”Chinese equities, China-plays and other pro-cyclical assets are likely to post further tactical gains,” said analysts at BCA Research. “However, the implications for the Chinese economy remain unclear at the current juncture.”Shares had rallied on Tuesday after the PBOC launched its biggest easing measures since the pandemic, but retreated on Wednesday as investors questioned whether the measures were sufficient.Pledges from policymakers for necessary fiscal stimulus to meet this year’s 5% growth target, however, appeared to allay certain concerns. More

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    Factbox-Big banks start to add October cut to ECB forecasts

    Market pricing now reflects around an 80% chance of such a rate cut, which would follow reductions at the ECB’s June and September meetings. Euro zone business activity contracted sharply and unexpectedly in September, surveys showed, as the bloc’s dominant services industry flatlined and a downturn in manufacturing accelerated, while inflation in France and Spain for September came in very soft. Sources told Reuters that ECB policy doves are preparing to fight for an October rate cut – though this would likely meet resistance from more conservative peers – a turnaround from the aftermath of the ECB’s September meeting when they saw an October move as unlikely. Here are the latest forecasts from some brokerages. Rate cut Brokerage estimates (bps) Terminal Oct ’24 Dec rate/ end ’25 forecast ’24 Goldman 25 25 2.0% (June 2025) Sachs Deutsche – 25 2.0%-2.5% (mid-2025) Bank HSBC 25 25 2.25% (April 2025) BNP 25 25 2.25% (end-2025 Paribas forecast) RBC 25 25 2.25% (April 2025) 25 25 2.0% (June 2025) JP Morgan Barclays – 25 2.50% (end 2025 forecast) Citi – 25 likely under 2% UBS IB – 25 2.25% (end-2025 forecast) ING – 25 2.25% (end 2025 forecast) BBVA (BME:BBVA) – 25 2.75% (November 2025) SEB – 25 2.00% (end 2025) More

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    Analysis-Flush with multinational money, Ireland struggles to close infrastructure gap

    DUBLIN (Reuters) – The glum faces of Ireland’s finance and spending ministers after hearing the country received an unexpected 14 billion-euro windfall in Apple (NASDAQ:AAPL) back taxes earlier this month made one thing clear: Money alone is not the answer to Ireland’s problems.While France, Britain, Germany and others all struggle to find money for government spending, Ireland’s latest cash infusion is widely seen as an awkward gift on the eve of an expected election.The problem is it has shone an unwelcome spotlight on government failure to turn a much larger recent multinational-driven corporate tax boom into real progress with intractable problems in housing, health and transport.The ministers will use Tuesday’s budget to lay out a general plan for how the 14 billion – equivalent to 15% of annual spending – will be invested with water, energy and housing projects likely beneficiaries.But they are already being goaded by the opposition about their record: a metro system first mooted in the 1990s that has yet to break ground, and a long-delayed new children’s hospital set to be one of the world’s most expensive. Their fear is that the hard, slow work economists say is necessary may be a hard sell to voters in an election that polls currently suggest the coalition government is set to win – particularly as their rivals gleefully point out what the money could buy. LEGACY OF THE CRASHThe challenges facing Dublin have their roots in the economic crash 15 years ago, when austerity brought capital spending to a standstill. Despite recent sharp increases in the capital budget, Ireland’s central bank estimates public investment will only recover to 2008 levels in real terms by 2026.Analysts say the failure of institutional capacity to keep up with the demands of a fast-growing economy and population – from a complex planning system to under-resourced regulatory bodies and the European Union’s lowest number of judges per capita – has compounded the problem.”We’re out of practice and any muscle you don’t use for a long period of time is going to be harder to get working again,” said Gerard Brady, chief economist at business lobby group Ibec.”Growth is only a problem if you don’t plan for it and don’t resource the systems to deal with it.”Brady said Ibec members operating across Europe say that while Ireland has the same bureaucratic processes for industrial projects, it takes much longer to get through them. Former European Central Bank chief Mario Draghi’s recent EU competitiveness report called out Ireland for some of the longest timelines for completing solar and wind energy projects, for example.’DELAY, DELAY, DELAY’At the Construction Industry Federation’s annual conference this week, money was barely mentioned.At a time when some EU countries are contemplating spending cuts and tax hikes, Ireland is an outlier with an economy set to grow by 2% this year and a budget surplus heading for around 3% of national income for the third successive year.Instead the engineering, housebuilding and construction executives were calling for action to tackle persistent deficits in energy, water and planning – constraints the National Competitiveness Council recently warned risked choking off economic growth.Despite public spending on homes swelling to the second highest proportionately in the EU, Ireland has its highest ever rate of homelessness, house prices are rising at almost 10% a year, and sky-high rents have long outstripped income growth.A tight labour market only adds to the conundrum with minimal unemployment in the construction sector, few apprentices and warnings from the country’s fiscal watchdog that Ireland’s attractiveness to foreign labourers has waned markedly.Ireland is not alone in facing a tight labour supply: An Ifo survey this year found 36% of German firms are suffering from a shortage of qualified workers. A CBI survey last year found more than two-thirds of UK businesses suffered labour shortages in the previous 12 months.The Irish central bank last week warned of major challenges scaling up to the more than 50,000 homes needed every year until 2050 from the 33,000 units built in 2023 and said clear policy changes were required.Long-promised government planning reforms aimed at restructuring and better resourcing the national planning body, introducing statutory timelines for decision-making and streamlining court challenges, are due to become law shortly, though some critics say they could make things worse.Everyone agrees change needs to happen quickly, however.”Unless you fix things, you could end up allocating loads of money to projects and not getting them over the line because of planning. Just delay and delay and delay,” said Owen Sisk, a senior executive at Sisk, Ireland’s largest provider of construction services.”If you could deal with that, you could unlock a lot.” More

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    Bitcoin price today: Just shy of $67,000 amid risk-on mood, China stimulus

    The original cryptocurrency is back to levels not seen since July, boosted by a stock market rally fueled by upbeat U.S. labor market data and economic stimulus moves from China.The more immediate boost came from China, where authorities are reportedly considering injecting up to 1 trillion yuan into the country’s largest state banks to help revive the struggling economy.Risk-correlated assets, including crypto and equity markets, gained momentum after China announced plans for further economic stimulus, and U.S. jobless claims fell by 4,000 to a four-month low of 218,000. Moreover, China’s Politburo committed to ramping up fiscal spending and implementing “forceful” interest rate cuts to boost the economy.Bitcoin’s rally started last week after the U.S. Federal Reserve made its first interest rate cut since the Covid pandemic, reducing rates by 50 basis points instead of the expected 25. Traders are now betting on another cut at the Fed’s upcoming meeting on Nov. 7, with many expecting another 50 basis point reduction, according to the CME FedWatch Tool.As Bitcoin’s price climbs, U.S. spot bitcoin exchange-traded funds saw total daily net inflows of $365.57 million on Thursday, the largest since late July. Leading the surge was Ark Invest and 21Shares’ ARKB, which attracted $113.82 million in inflows, followed by BlackRock’s iShares Bitcoin Trust (NASDAQ:IBIT), the largest spot bitcoin ETF by net assets, with $93.38 million. Fidelity’s Wise Origin Bitcoin Fund (NYSE:FBTC) also recorded $74 million in inflows, reversing weeks of flat or negative flows as Bitcoin’s price had been struggling.Elsewhere, risk appetite made a comeback after months of caution, with dog-themed memecoins leading the charge in the broader crypto market. Even lesser-known dog-themed tokens built on the less popular Bitcoin Runes protocol saw gains, signaling that investors are becoming more willing to take riskier bets. More

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    FirstFT: Hurricane Helene hits Florida

    Save over 65%$99 for your first yearFT newspaper delivered Monday-Saturday, plus FT Digital Edition delivered to your device Monday-Saturday.What’s included Weekday Print EditionFT WeekendFT Digital EditionGlobal news & analysisExpert opinionSpecial featuresExclusive FT analysis More

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    Civic, Rentality Verify Licenses and Age Onchain, Setting New Standard for Car Rental Security

    The Civic ID Verification Pass provides real-world benefits to users who can verify their identity and age quickly and rent a car directly from a car owner, without intermediariesCivic, a leader in tokenized identity on the verifiable web, joins forces with Rentality, the first web3 car rental platform, to securely and efficiently verify drivers’ licenses and enforce age minimums on the Base network. This advanced verification process using blockchain introduces a new standard for security and compliance in car rentals, and peer-to-peer marketplaces. Through the Civic ID Verification Pass, Rentality users can verify their driver’s license virtually to rent a car. This technology reduces friction, enhances trust between both parties, and removes the logistical burdens of physical verification.To rent a car through Rentality, users simply need to connect their wallet, register for an account, choose their preferred car, location, and confirm prices. Then, they can verify their driver’s license by obtaining a Civic ID Verification Pass, which is a non-transferable token that is retained in their wallet. Civic ID Verification Pass is already integrated into the Rentality sign-up process and can be obtained with a selfie video and scan of their driver’s license. Users can pay with various cryptocurrencies. Rentality is already operating in Miami and will soon expand to other regions. Users can visit rentality.xyz to rent or lease their car.About Civic TechnologiesCivic is a leading provider of identity management tools for web3, empowering people to easily and privately manage their identities across chains with an on-chain representation of their reusable identity. The company’s flagship product, Civic Pass, is an integrated permissioning tool that helps business customers enable secure access to their on-chain assets. Users may also manage their identity, presence and reputation with a dashboard. Civic aims to be the most trusted on-chain identity tool in the world, used by billions every day. Civic was co-founded in 2015 by Vinny Lingham and Jonathan Smith.About Rentality.xyzRentality is pioneering the car rental industry as the first Web3 car rental platform. Their platform offers a seamless, transparent, and cost-effective solution for car rentals, utilizing blockchain technology. Rentality integrates a unique bonus system, their own token, and NFTs tied to real-world vehicles. These vehicles will be available for rent on Rentality’s platform, enabling NFT owners to potentially earn from rentals. The platform has already launched in Miami and is rapidly expanding, with leading hosts in the region joining us. They aim to extend their services across all states, providing a comprehensive and innovative solution for both renters and hosts. And that’s just the beginning of what they offer.ContactCivic [email protected] article was originally published on Chainwire More

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    China’s bumper stimulus leaves consumers wanting more

    Save over 65%$99 for your first yearFT newspaper delivered Monday-Saturday, plus FT Digital Edition delivered to your device Monday-Saturday.What’s included Weekday Print EditionFT WeekendFT Digital EditionGlobal news & analysisExpert opinionSpecial featuresExclusive FT analysis More