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    Solana Skyrockets in Inflows as Bitcoin Bleeds With $643 Million Outflows

    It has matched the numbers seen in March, the largest recorded outflows this year. Stronger than expected macroeconomic data has likely pushed this bearish sentiment on the market, according to CoinShares. The market is buzzing with speculation that the U.S Federal Reserve may announce a 25-basis-point interest rate cut in the near future.In addition, some are expecting a potential 50-basis-point rate cut after the unveiling of employment data last week. The Consumer Price Index (CP|) inflation report is expected to be released tomorrow, and the financial markets are keeping an eye on it. If the inflation numbers see a decline, the 50-basis-point rate cut is likely to happen.These macroeconomic discussions have fueled fear and uncertainty on the markets, including the crypto market. The last weekend saw major losses in the prices of top currencies like BTC, ETH, XRP, SOL and others. The Bitcoin price even went below the crucial $52,000 mark before rebounding to the $55,000 price level.However, Solana has managed to deal with this pressure and gain investor interest. While others were bleeding, Solana products witnessed inflows of about $6.2 million. These are the largest of inflows seen for any asset during the past week. It is a positive development for the SOL price as the rise in institutional sentiment can change market sentiment.This article was originally published on U.Today More

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    WTO claims protectionism will widen wealth gap

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    $150 Million in Bitcoin (BTC) in 7 Days: What’s Happening?

    Three large whales have amassed about 2,814 BTC, or roughly $157 million, from Binance since Sept. 1, according to on-chain data. At approximately $55,887 per Bitcoin the average accumulation price is found. Despite price fluctuations, the addresses involved in these transactions demonstrate massive whale interest in the asset. At $55,212, the price of Bitcoin is presently following a descending triangle pattern. Although this pattern is frequently interpreted as bearish, it can also indicate consolidation prior to a breakout. Given the whales’ continued accumulation, it is possible that Bitcoin will soon reverse this negative trend and begin to rise again. Whale inflows additionally indicate that big investors are probably seeing this decline as an opportunity rather than a time to sell. Institutional investors have been pulling back slightly, which is in contrast to their actions and the overall sentiment of the market. Even though institutional player participation has decreased, Bitcoin’s resilience and neutral price performance in the face of these inflows suggest that the market is stabilizing and that there has not been any notable bearish activity.Increased liquidity and a stronger push to break out of the descending triangle could be experienced by Bitcoin if this whale accumulation persists. Given the amount of money being invested in the asset, this would result in increased volatility and the possibility of a sudden upward move.This article was originally published on U.Today More

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    Draghi urges EU to catch up rivals or face ‘slow agony’

    BRUSSELS (Reuters) -The European Union needs far more coordinated industrial policy, more rapid decisions and massive investment if it wants to keep pace economically with rivals the United States and China, Mario Draghi said on Monday in a long awaited report.The European Commission asked the former European Central Bank chief and Italian prime minister a year ago to write a report on how the EU should keep its greening and more digital economy competitive at a time of increased global friction.”The situation at the moment is really worrisome,” Draghi told a news conference in Brussels. “Growth has been slowing down for a long time in Europe, but we’ve ignored (it)… Now we cannot ignore it any longer. Now conditions have changed.”Trade protectionism was increasing, the supply of cheap energy from Russia was gone, the bloc needed to pay more for its defence, and its population was shrinking.In his nearly 400-page report, Draghi said the bloc needed investment of 750-800 billion euros ($829-884 billion) per year, up to 5% of GDP – far higher even than the 1-2% of EU GDP in the Marshall Plan for rebuilding Europe after World War Two. And the bloc must act on several fronts.”It’s ‘Do this’ or it’s a slow agony,” Draghi warned.EU countries had already responded to the new realities, Draghi’s report said, but it added that their effectiveness was limited by a lack of coordination.Differing levels of subsidies between countries was disturbing the single market, fragmentation limited the scale required to compete on a global level, and the EU’s decision-making process was complex and sluggish.The report suggested so-called qualified majority voting – rather than a need for unanimity – should be extended to more areas, and as a last resort that like-minded nations be allowed to go it alone on some projects.While existing national or EU funding sources will cover some of the massive investment sums needed, Draghi said new sources of common funding – which countries led by Germany have in the past been reluctant to agree to – might be required.German Finance Minister Christian Lindner said joint borrowing would not solve EU problems and Germany – the biggest economy in the 27-nation bloc – would not agree to it. Analysts said the EU may well drag its feet on Draghi’s suggestions.”Political difficulties in Germany and France, and longstanding divisions among other EU member states, will likely prevent a significant leap forward in integration that Draghi prescribes,” analysts at Eurasia Europe said.”Furthermore, recent political developments in France, notwithstanding (Michel) Barnier’s appointment as PM last week, make us much more sceptical about the EU’s capacity to deliver meaningful fiscal ambition…”SMARTER REGULATIONDraghi also said EU antitrust regulators should base merger approvals not just on competition within EU borders, but on whether a takeover could boost innovation in sectors, such as technology, where scale is critical to compete. Security and resilience should also carry more weight, he said.The report also featured proposals for 10 economic sectors, including energy, AI, pharma and space. Andrew Kenningham, chief economist at Capital Economics, said there were a lot of sensible proposals, but many were unlikely to be adopted, pointing to previous reports by former Italian prime ministers Enrico Letta this year and Mario Monti in 2010 that had “mostly fallen on stony ground”.EU growth had been persistently slower than that of the United States in the past two decades and China was rapidly catching up. Much of the gap was down to lower productivity.If the EU maintained its average labour productivity growth since 2015, it would only be enough to keep GDP constant in 2050, Draghi said. However, the bloc needs greater wealth to cover decarbonisation, digitalisation and strengthening its defence.Draghi’s report comes as the issues he raised – lack of investment, loss of cheap energy and changing demographics – are casting doubt on the economic model of Germany, once the EU’s growth engine. Volkswagen (ETR:VOWG_p), Europe’s biggest carmaker and one of Germany’s industrial keystones, said last week it was considering its first plant closures there.Draghi said the EU was struggling to cope with higher energy prices after losing access to cheap Russian gas and could no longer rely on open foreign markets.The former central banker said the bloc needed to boost innovation and bring down energy prices while continuing to decarbonise as well as reduce its dependencies, notably on China for essential minerals, and increase defence investment.What is productivity and why is Europe so desperate to crack the code? Listen now to Reuters Econ World.($1 = 0.9051 euros) More

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    Wall St eyes higher open on soft landing optimism

    (Reuters) -Wall Street was set for a higher open on Monday, rebounding from a week of heavy losses as investors remained optimistic about a soft landing scenario for the U.S. economy ahead of a crucial inflation report later in the week.All megacap stocks rose in premarket trading, with Tesla (NASDAQ:TSLA) leading the gains, rising 2.2%.Most chip stocks, which also saw heavy selling last week, recovered with AMD (NASDAQ:AMD) and Marvell (NASDAQ:MRVL) Technology advancing 1% and 1.5%, respectively.Global markets were rattled last week as uncertainty over the U.S. economy’s health rippled across assets, adding fuel to an already volatile period that has investors grappling with a shift in the Federal Reserve’s policy and worries over stretched valuations.Friday’s weaker-than-expected August jobs data spurred worries on economic growth and drove the Nasdaq Composite to its worst week since January 2022, while the S&P 500 saw its biggest weekly drop since March 2023. Still, S&P 500 was 13.4% higher so far this year as hopes of a soft landing for the U.S. economy remained alive with the Fed expected to begin its rate-cutting cycle next week.Markets will be squarely focused on U.S. consumer prices data on Wednesday that is expected to show a moderation in headline inflation in August to 2.6% on a yearly basis, while on a monthly basis it is expected to remain unchanged at 0.2%.”While the inflation battle is not fully won, it appears safe to say that the Fed should feel comfortable that inflation is sufficiently under control to begin moving monetary policy in a less restrictive direction,” said Ronald Temple, chief market strategist at Lazard (NYSE:LAZ). This will be followed by producer prices data on Thursday. Money markets currently see a 75% chance of a 25-basis-point rate reduction by the Fed next week and expect a total monetary easing of 100 bps by the end of the year, according to CME’s FedWatch Tool.Bank of America, the most conservative among Wall Street’s brokerages on the size of the Fed’s expected rate cuts this year, raised its forecast to match most of its peers’ expectations of 25 bps of easing in each of the three remaining policy meetings this year. At 08:25 a.m. ET, Dow E-minis were up 227 points, or 0.56%, Nasdaq 100 E-minis were up 111 points, or 0.6% and S&P 500 E-minis were up 28.75 points, or 0.53%. Debate between Democrat Kamala Harris and Republican Donald Trump on Tuesday – the first time ahead of the presidential election on Nov. 5 – will be closely eyed by the investors.Among individual movers, Boeing (NYSE:BA) advanced 3.7% after it reached a tentative agreement with a union representing more than 32,000 workers in the U.S. Pacific Northwest, in a deal that could help avert a possible crippling strike as early as Sept. 13.Eli Lilly (NYSE:LLY) climbed 1% after the drugmaker appointed insider Lucas Montarce as its chief financial officer. Dell Technologies (NYSE:DELL) and Palantir (NYSE:PLTR) rose 4.9% and 8.4% respectively, while Erie climbed 3.3% as they are set to join the S&P 500 index on Sept. 23.These companies will replace American Airlines (NASDAQ:AAL) Group, Etsy (NASDAQ:ETSY) and Bio-Rad Laboratories (NYSE:BIO), respectively, in the index. More

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    What if Elon Musk ran the economy?

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    The Fortress America that’s built from costly steel

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    TSX futures jump on crude gains, US rate cut optimism

    September futures on the S&P/TSX index were up 0.9% at 6:18 a.m. ET (10:18 GMT).The composite index ended at an over three-week low on Friday due to declines in technology and commodity-linked shares after U.S. and Canadian jobs data came out.Canadian unemployment rose to 6.6%, its highest level in more than seven years excluding the pandemic years.While the U.S. employment numbers came in below analyst expectation and cemented a base case for a soft landing, it also gave jitters to the global markets over an economic slowdown in the world’s largest economy.Policymakers are widely expected to cut rates by 25-basis points in the Federal Reserve’s next policy meeting on September 18..U.S. consumer prices data is also due on Wednesday.On the political front, the first-ever presidential debate between Democrat Kamala Harris and Republican Donald Trump on Tuesday will set the stage for the upcoming U.S. elections in November.In Canada, the energy sector looks strong as oil prices jumped over 1% on the possibility of a hurricane hitting the U.S. Gulf Coast. [O/R]The materials sector remained in focus as gold prices eased due to a strong dollar, while copper prices rebounded after their biggest weekly loss since mid-July. [GOL/] [MET/L]In corporate news, Canada’s Alimentation Couche-Tard said it was open to engage in talks with Japanese retail giant Seven & i Holdings after the latter rejected former’s $38.5 billion takeover.COMMODITIES Gold: $2,404.8; -0.1% [GOL/]US crude: $68.36; +1.0% [O/R]Brent crude: $71.74; +1.0% [O/R]FOR CANADIAN MARKETS NEWS, CLICK ON CODES:TSX market report (TO)Canadian dollar and bonds report [CAD/] [CA/]Reuters global stocks poll for CanadaCanadian markets directory($1 = 1.3561 Canadian dollars) More