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Tron based tokens sell at a 1200 premium as FTX users

Tron-based tokens sell at a 1200% premium as FTX users scramble to withdraw funds – Cointelegraph

Tron-based tokens like JUST (JST) are up as much as 1000% on FTX as users scramble to find ways to extract blocked liquidity from the troubled exchange.

At the time of writing, Tron’s native token TRX is trading at around $0.33 on the FTX exchange, more than five times its current market price, according to CoinGecko.

Meanwhile, BitTorrent (BTT), JUST (JST) and the Sun Token (SUN) are trading on the exchange at premiums ranging from 525% to 1,196% compared to the market price. As it stands, prices are extremely volatile and constantly changing.

The overinflation of Tron-related tokens comes after an agreement was struck on Nov. 10 that allows holders of assets like TRX, BTT, JST, and SUN to withdraw funds.

This move has resulted in traders on FTX increasing the price of Tron-related tokens in order to be able to recover their locked funds. However, buying the tokens at the inflated price will likely result in significant realized losses should they then sell them on another exchange.

Limited withdrawals

FTX’s website states that it is currently unable to process withdrawals as customers in the Bahamas, where the company is based, are the only ones able to withdraw from the exchange.

Subsidiary FTX.US has also hinted that it may soon follow the same path by halting withdrawals.

It’s also worth noting that FTX disabled new deposits from Tron-based assets when withdrawals went live.

Related: The FTX turmoil adds to the industry scrutiny institutional investors have been waiting for

Twitter users like @davidiach on Nov 11 have mused that FTX users could potentially bypass the Bahamian loophole, specifically by getting a local citizen to buy a low-cap asset on FTX, dumping it on the foreign user and then the Bahamians get to “take the profits” from them for a fee.

However, the feasibility seems in doubt as on November 10 the Securities Commission of The Bahamas (SCB) froze the assets of FTX Digital Markets (FDM) and “related parties” and suspended the company’s registration in the country.

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dream interest

dream interest

The government treats businesses with small onions: the average interest rate on the loans it gives them is 2.08%, which is much lower than what it charges students and community organizations.

• Also read: Key rate: Banks on high alert

• Also read: Inflation: According to the Bank of Canada, further rate hikes are to be expected

The average rate of 2.08% granted to corporations is compared to that imposed by 2.52% by community organizations, the 2.95% paid by students and the 3.05% adopted by community organizations, we learn in the public accounts 2021-2022 recently released by the Quebec Ministry of Finance.

“Such low interest rates should be seen as corporate subsidies,” said Nicolas Gagnon of the Canadian Taxpayers Federation.

Less than the borrowing rate

The average interest rate on corporate loans is significantly lower than the rate at which the government borrows on its own, which was 3.06% in the fiscal year ended March 31, the accounts show.

Quebec’s “significant favorable terms” on business loans cost taxpayers more than $100 million a year, the Treasury Department calculates.

The low average interest rate can largely be explained by the many interest-free loans granted to companies over the years. According to the Ministry of Economy, these accounted for almost 36% of the total in 2020-2021.

As of March 31, 2022, Quebec had lent more than $3.6 billion to corporations. This corresponds to almost 56% of all loans granted by the state.

Risky Loans

Government loans to companies are risky: nearly 35 percent of the $3.6 billion total is backed by secured assets. And no less than a quarter of the portfolio is covered by provisions for losses, meaning the government expects to be unable to recover those sums.

“With the recession approaching, the government should reduce certain spending,” Mr Gagnon said. Why not start with business grants? »

Less Spoiled Students

Maya Labrosse, President of the FECQ.

Photo from Linkedin

Maya Labrosse, President of the FECQ.

For Quebec Collegiate Student Federation (FECQ) President Maya Labrosse, the overall debt issue is more important than interest rates alone.

For years, student organizations have been urging the government to provide more grants to reduce borrowing.

“We need to make sure students don’t go into too much debt, which would prevent them from sustaining those interest rates,” says Ms Labrosse.

The FECQ hopes that Quebec can agree with Ottawa on the federal project to eliminate interest on student loans, mentioned recently in Le Devoir.

40% jump in financial support levels in just one year

The Department of Commerce, led by Pierre Fitzgibbon, provided more than $1.6 billion in financial support to companies in 2021-2022, up 40% from the previous year.

Amounts paid include $33.3 million provided under the Fonds Capital ressources naturelles et énergie, $208 million through the Fonds pour la développement des entreprises québécoises and $1.36 billion through the Economic Development Fund , show public accounts for 2021-2022 released earlier this month.

Strong impact of the pandemic

The figures for 2020-2021 and 2021-2022 were inflated by the Concerted Temporary Program of Action for Business (PACTE) implemented in the context of the pandemic. Over a period of approximately 18 months, approximately 1,479 companies received loans and loan guarantees totaling US$1.24 billion under this program.

In 2019-2020, the Commerce Department provided nearly $855 million in financial support to businesses, mostly in the form of loans but also equity investments.

At the end of March, the government had more than $3.6 billion in business loans. By comparison, Ontario, whose population is 70% larger than Quebec, had only lent $970 million to companies on the same day.

However, credit quality appears to be stabilizing for companies that Quebec has advanced funds to.

In 2021-2022, the government was not required to report any bad debt provisions related to corporate loans in its financial statements.

In the previous two years, he had written off more than $1.4 billion in that capacity. Specifically, the government had to write off its entire $1.3 billion investment in Bombardier’s C-series aircraft program, now known as the Airbus A220.

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1668143118 Stock futures edge higher after SP 500 posts its biggest

Stock futures edge higher after S&P 500 posts its biggest one-day rally since 2020

Looking ahead, we can't get too excited just yet, says New Street's Delano Saporu

Stock futures were slightly higher Thursday night after better-than-feared inflation data fueled a broad market rally.

Futures linked to the Dow Jones Industrial Average gained 43 points, or 0.13%. S&P 500 futures and Nasdaq 100 futures edged higher.

In regular trading, the major averages posted their biggest one-day rallies since 2020. The Dow is up more than 1,200 points. The S&P was up 5.5% and the Nasdaq Composite was up about 7.4%.

All indices are on track for a successful week. The Dow is up 4% on the weekly basis, while the S&P and Nasdaq are up 4.9% and 6.1%, respectively. The three averages are also on course for a positive month.

The rally came after the Bureau of Labor Statistics reported a lower-than-expected increase in consumer prices for the month of October, giving investors hope that inflation is cooling. US Treasury yields plummeted after the data was released, while tech stocks soared.

“Markets across the board are euphoric after this morning’s cooler CPI… But while today’s CPI report suggests that inflation is moving in the right direction, it doesn’t suggest that inflation is coming out of the broader economy eradicated,” said Quincy Krosby, chief global strategist for LPL Financial. “And it does not suggest that the Fed’s task of restoring price stability is complete.”

October CPI rose 0.4% for the month and 7.7% year-on-year. Corresponding estimates from Dow Jones were for gains of 0.6% and 7.9%.

Investors look forward to preliminary consumer sentiment data from the University of Michigan, which is due to be released at 10:00 a.m. ET.

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Portneuf 33 firearms seized in two apartments

Portneuf: 33 firearms seized in two apartments

A police strike aimed at ‘neutralising’ a suspected arms dealer led to the arrest and confiscation of 33 firearms in two apartments in Portneuf’s MRC.

• Also read: Arms trade in Portneuf: Authorities are currently conducting a search

Louis Tessier, 52, of Saint-Marc-des-Carrières, faces five counts of trafficking firearms, possession for the purpose of firearms trafficking, unauthorized possession of firearms, prohibited or restricted fire and violating a prohibition order.

He remained detained after appearing at the Quebec City courthouse on Wednesday.

Earlier in the day, he was arrested as part of an operation by the Integrated Anti-Arms Trafficking Team, made up of members of the Sûreté du Québec (SQ) and the Service de Police de la Ville de Quebec (SPVQ).

The strike was aimed at “neutralizing an arms dealer,” according to the police authorities’ press release.

Searches of a house in Saint-Marc-des-Carrières and its outbuildings and a second home in Saint-Thuribe led to the seizure of no fewer than 33 firearms, including three handguns and five prohibited weapons.

Thousands of different ammunition, several high-capacity magazines, a crossbow and sawed-off cannons were also discovered.

neighborhood in shock

On rue Raymond in Saint-Marc-des-Carrières, the police intervention caused some excitement early on Wednesday.

“I heard them screaming to get out of the house. They asked if there were other people in the house,” said one citizen.

He admits he “took the plunge” when he heard the news about the suspect’s alleged illegal activities, which seemed uneventful to him.

“It’s quiet, nothing’s happening here,” the resident shouted.

In January 2021, Tessier pleaded not guilty to charges of unauthorized possession of prohibited or restricted weapons and three counts of negligent use.

— With Jeremy Bernier

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Hong Kong stocks up more than 5 as Asian markets

Hong Kong stocks up more than 5% as Asian markets rise after US inflation report

Hong Kong movers: Alibaba, JD.com, Tencent rise at Open

Hong Kong-listed Chinese tech stocks emerged in early Asian trade as the broader Hang Seng index briefly rose more than 6%.

Tech giants Alibaba and JD.com are up 7.94% and 10%, respectively. Tencent gained 9.16% and Meituan 12.26%.

— Lee Ying Shan

Currency check: Japanese yen, Chinese yuan higher

The Japanese yen and Chinese yuan traded around stronger levels after the US dollar index fell more than 1% overnight on a weaker-than-expected inflation report.

The yen stood at 141.63 against the greenback and hovered around its strongest levels in two months before slipping above 150 in October.

The onshore yuan was around 7.18, also trading near its strongest level against the dollar in almost a month.

– Jihye Lee

Asia Pacific indices open after US inflation report

CNBC Pro: Bitcoin will continue to fall, fund manager says – until he uses a catalyst

Bitcoin is down 75% from its all-time high and a cryptocurrency exchange is on the verge of bankruptcy. In such an environment, a bond fund manager reveals the only thing it takes for prices to rise.

Cross Border Capital’s Michael Howell also said that the lack of a catalyst means there is an increased risk that investors will jump in “a little too early”.

CNBC Pro subscribers can read more here.

— Ganesh Rao

CPI rises less than expected

The US CPI – a broad measure of inflation – rose 0.4% mom in October. Year-over-year, the CPI rose 7.7%.

Economists polled by Dow Jones expected monthly growth of 0.6% and annual increase of 7.9%.

Excluding fluctuating food and energy costs, core CPI rose 0.3% for the month and 6.3% for the year, compared to estimates of 0.5% and 6.5%, respectively.

– Jeff Cox

Dollar Index on track for worst day since December 2015

The US dollar slipped against a basket of other currencies on Thursday as investors cheered October’s CPI report, which came in weaker than expected and signaled that inflation may have peaked.

The Dollar Index is down 2%, on track for its worst daily performance since December 4, 2015. If the index falls more than 2.1%, it will hit levels not seen since 2009.

This week, the dollar index is down 2.3% and is on course for its worst week since March 2020.

– Carmen Reinicke

Biden to raise concerns about Xi’s relationship with Putin ahead of the G-20 summit

The US government has introduced some of its broadest export controls aimed at cutting off advanced semiconductors from China. Analysts said the move could shake China’s domestic chip industry.

Almond Ngan | AFP | Getty Images

President Joe Biden is expected to discuss Russia’s war in Ukraine in a face-to-face meeting with Chinese President Xi Jinping next week.

The meeting between the two leaders, the first since Biden’s ascension to the US presidency, will take place ahead of the G-20 summit in Bali, Indonesia.

“I think the president will be honest and direct with President Xi about how we view the situation in Ukraine with Russia’s war of aggression,” a senior Biden administration official told reporters on a call.

“This is an issue that the President and President Xi have discussed several times. They talked about it extensively in their video call in March and then spoke about it again in July, so it’s part of an ongoing conversation between them,” added the official, who spoke on condition of anonymity.

– Amanda Macias

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Cascades increases revenue in third quarter

Cascades increases revenue in third quarter

Cascades paper business revenue was $1.174 billion in the third quarter, up $144 million from the same period in 2021.

Net income per share fell to $0.20 year-over-year from $0.32 while operating income was flat, stabilizing at $44 million between the two periods under review.

The paper mill, based in Kingsey Falls in the Center-du-Québec region, has planned capital investments of US$121 million for the quarter ended September 30, which is expected to reach US$333 million in the first nine months of the year .

“Our third quarter performance is in line with expectations, although our tissue paper sector continued to face unprecedented cost inflation and reduced productivity,” said Mario Plourde, President and Chief Executive Officer of Waterfalls.

“On a consolidated basis, higher volumes and sales prices as well as an improved range of products sold have mitigated the ongoing cost headwinds sequentially and compared to the previous year,” it says in detail.

Mr. Plourde is cautious on the near-term outlook, particularly given inflationary pressures and more generally the macroeconomic environment and labor shortages.

“Our initiatives so far have met expectations, despite some delays in their implementation,” he said. However, we will not meet our production targets for which we continue to take additional measures to close the gap.”

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Silicon Valley has pumped money into FTX with just a

Silicon Valley has pumped money into FTX with just a few strings attached

A marquee list of investors from Silicon Valley and Wall Street teemed with FTX. They invested almost $2 billion with few strings attached and no oversight from the cryptocurrency exchange board, promoting it as a safe bet.

Now backers are nursing a high-profile black eye as the three-year-old company — which was valued at $32 billion at its peak — falters. This was announced by the venture capital company Sequoia Capital on Wednesday writes an investment of 150 million dollars One of his funds had gone to zero in FTX because of solvency risk.

FTX CEO Sam Bankman-Fried told several investors on a call Wednesday that he needed emergency funding to cover a shortfall of up to $8 billion, the Wall Street Journal reported. Mr. Bankman-Fried said he hopes FTX can raise $3 billion to $4 billion in equity.

Under normal circumstances, that would be a huge challenge for a financial company the size of FTX. The largest funding round to date was $1 billion in mid-2021, as crypto was booming and investors were clamoring to get into what many consider to be one of the hottest startups in the world.

WSJ crypto

Smart and accessible crypto market analysis for investors.

In addition to Sequoia, dozens of others supported FTX’s rise, including Ontario Teachers’ Pension Plan, SoftBank Group Corp. 9984 1.32%, a venture capital arm of Samsung Electronics Co.

,

Dan Loeb’s Third Point LLC, Tiger Global and soccer star Tom Brady.

Sequoia said in a letter to fund investors that it had conducted a “rigorous due diligence process” on FTX and its loss was small in the context of a fund making billions in profits. “We’re in the business of taking risks,” the company said.

An FTX spokesman declined to comment.

The rapid dissolution of FTX shows the pitfalls of investing in a rush. Attracted by a founder they saw as visionary, investors quickly jumped at the stakes while forgoing some usual oversight precautions, according to people familiar with the company.

Mr. Bankman-Fried founded FTX in 2019. Two years prior, he founded a crypto trading firm called Alameda Research, and his dissatisfaction with the quality of existing crypto exchanges inspired him to try to build a better one.

FTX’s big funding push began in the summer of 2021, when it raised the first of three consecutive rounds of funding at progressively higher valuations. It raised $1.9 billion from more than 70 investors in seven months, according to data provider PitchBook.

The holdings are characterized by their structure. Several investment rounds have been widely split among dozens of backers, in contrast to typical venture capital rounds where a lead investor negotiates key terms with the company, several investors said.

The lack of a key investor strengthened FTX’s negotiating position and made it more difficult for venture investors to campaign for a seat on the board, these investors said.

At WSJ Tech Live, FTX’s Sam Bankman-Fried and Lightspeed Venture Partners’ Ravi Mhatre discuss how the crypto industry is planning a comeback.

What reassured many investors who heard the pitch was FTX’s perceived simplicity. While the crypto sector is full of companies with difficult-to-understand business models that rely on speculative tokens for their growth, venture investors in FTX boasted that it was just an exchange that made real money by reducing crypto transactions.

“We don’t really speculate on whether crypto asset prices, bitcoin or otherwise, will go up or down,” Ontario Teachers chief investment officer Ziad Hindo said, according to a transcript at the fund’s annual meeting in April. The bet, he added, was that “there will be a lot more transactions and exchanges will clearly benefit from it.”

Ontario Teachers said in a statement posted to its website on Thursday that financial losses on its FTX investment would have limited impact as they represent less than 0.05% of total net assets. “Of course, not all early-stage investments in this asset class perform as expected,” the fund added.

Venture capital-backed startups typically have a board of directors that includes at least one or two early investors. Those who raise large sums of money often negotiate a seat to oversee the company. But by the summer of 2021, Mr. Bankman-Fried was the sole director, according to securities filings and people familiar with the matter.

In a summer 2021 funding round that saw FTX raise around $1 billion, the company wrote to investors telling investors it would add two “highly qualified, independent” directors to its board.

In the next round of funding, these directors were in place. FTX appointed Jonathan Cheesman, then FTX manager, and Arthur Thomas, an Antigua attorney whose website lists gaming as his area of ​​expertise. Mr. Cheesman was replaced by another FTX employee earlier this year.

For US-listed public companies, independent directors may not be officers or have any other financial relationship with the companies. FTX is tightly held and based in the Bahamas.

Mr Bankman-Fried told the Financial Times in March, which reported on the composition of the three-member board, that a board “should reflect what is important to the operation and oversight of the company, rather than financial contributions”.

One reason venture investors like to sit on boards is that directors are typically required to approve related-party transactions where the company does business with its top executives or major shareholders.

Related party transactions are at the heart of FTX’s troubles, particularly billions of dollar flows between FTX and Alameda Research, a crypto trading firm also controlled by Mr. Bankman-Fried, The Wall Street Journal reported. A CoinDesk article about these links helped spark a wave of withdrawals at FTX that led to its current crisis.

In its most recent audited financial statements for 2021, FTX announced that related parties accounted for around 6% of total transaction volume, according to several people familiar with the matter. No significant credit exposure to Alameda Research was specifically mentioned.

After cryptocurrency prices plummeted earlier this year, FTX was seen as a rare bright spot among venture capitalists, who viewed Mr. Bankman-Fried as a prudent risk manager who quickly became a leading voice in the industry.

Until earlier this week, FTX held a prominent place on Sequoia’s website, being listed as the fourth startup at the top of the page. An article provided a glimpse of the firm’s partners’ reactions to meeting Mr. Bankman-Fried, including an internal message from an unnamed Sequoia partner who wrote, “LOVE THIS FOUNDER.”

Some investors viewed Mr. Bankman-Fried’s Alameda experience as an asset as he had built a large, profitable business with little outside investment.

Following its investment in FTX last year, Samsung Next, the South Korean conglomerate’s venture arm, has mentioned its role in building Alameda ahead of FTX’s launch in a blog post about its investment. The post described Mr. Bankman-Fried as a “crypto prodigy” and called the company “one of the hottest startups in the world.”

Write to Eliot Brown at [email protected], Peter Rudegeair at [email protected], and Berber Jin at [email protected]

Copyright ©2022 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All rights reserved. 87990cbe856818d5eddac44c7b1cdeb8

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1668140029 Disney bears the burden of brand amid launch of critical

Disney bears ‘the burden of brand’ amid launch of critical ad tiers: analyst

Disney (DIS) faces an extremely competitive landscape as it prepares to launch its $7.99 Disney+ advertising tier in December, a month after Netflix (NFLX)’s highly anticipated debut.

Despite the slowdown in ad spending, analysts remain optimistic about the prospects for profitability of ad-supported services. However, investors will be watching Disney’s execution closely as the battle for ad dollars escalates.

“Disney weighs on the brand where there are higher expectations for the quality of the ad experience,” Eunice Shin, a partner at consultancy Prophet, told Yahoo Finance Live (video above). She explained that ad buyers “will have a very wide range of where to go and place their ads – it creates a very competitive marketplace.”

Disney stock began recovering Thursday amid a broader market rally, up more than 4% at the close. Shares slumped in after-hours trading Tuesday after the company reported fourth-quarter results that missed expectations across the board, except for net additions to subscribers. Those losses accelerated on Wednesday as investors focused on Disney’s flagging park revenue and mounting losses at the company’s streaming division.

Disney+, Hulu, and ESPN+ lost a combined $1.5 billion in the fourth quarter after losing $1.1 billion in the third quarter. Average revenue per user for Disney+ also disappointed and stood out $3.91 (vs. $4.29 estimate) on unfavorable currency effects and a larger subscriber mix.

Management said it expects streaming losses to shrink by about $200 million in the first quarter of 2023 and that Disney+ remains on track to become profitable in fiscal 2024.

(Courtesy: Disney/Marvel)

(Courtesy: Disney/Marvel)

One way to achieve this goal is through advertising.

Shin noted that Disney’s biggest challenge will be creating an advertising experience that doesn’t create friction on the platform and helps differentiate it from the competition.

“How do you win in a compelling environment with a lot of competition and a lot of expectations?” stressed Shin. “Media buyers expect a return. You expect results. Disney+ and all these other streamers really need to deliver that.”

The story goes on

Kutgun Maral, an analyst at RBC Capital Markets, warned in an interview with Yahoo Finance Live that it will likely take some time for the ad tier to grow.

“It’s probably more of a back half of 2023 and more importantly 2024, some kind of event in terms of the uptrend we’re seeing from advertising,” he surmised, adding, “Part of the uptrend on this one.” ad-supported stage will depend, hopefully, an improved macro environment.”

Disney+ saw net subscribers increase to 12 million in the fourth quarter, beating expectations of just over 9 million. The blow came after the company reported an increase in subscribers (14.4 million) in the third quarter following new launches and a robust range of content.

The company warned that it expects core Disney+ subscriber growth and Indian service Hotstar’s subscriber numbers to be lower in the first quarter. Full year 2023 content spending is expected to be in the low $30 billion range.

Alexandra is a senior entertainment and media reporter at Yahoo Finance. Follow her on Twitter @alliecanal8193 and email her at [email protected]

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