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Last-minute tax tips for U.S. crypto investors

By Chris Taylor

NEW YORK (Reuters) – When accountant Zach Gordon gets calls from clients about how to handle cryptocurrency on their taxes, there is a common theme.

“They have absolutely no idea,” says Gordon, a principal with Grassi Advisors & Accountants in Westchester, New York.

It is not entirely their fault. The whole arena of cryptocurrencies like bitcoin is so novel and fast-growing that even the Internal Revenue Service itself has long been playing catch-up about how exactly to treat it on U.S. tax returns.

That being said, the guidance is becoming clearer, just as cryptocurrency adoption is growing. According to the Pew Research Center, 16% of U.S. adults now say they have invested in, traded or otherwise used cryptocurrencies.

“For years people almost thought of this as play money, and haven’t been so diligent about reporting it,” says Kelly Phillips Erb, a tax attorney and publisher of the site Taxgirl.com. “The IRS is super-serious about it now.”

Indeed, you might notice a mandatory little question on your 1040 tax form: “At any time during 2021 did you receive, sell, exchange, or otherwise dispose of any financial interest in any virtual currency?”

The basic framework is to think of crypto like a stock holding. If you have held it long term, meaning over a year, profits from any sale are subject to capital gains tax. That means a tax rate of 0%, 15% or 20%, depending on your income level.

If you have not sold crypto, there is no taxable event. But with short-term holdings of less than a year, gains from a sale are treated differently — as ordinary income, with the rate determined according to your tax bracket.

If you have been buying and selling crypto through major exchanges, such as Coinbase or Robinhood, then you should be getting annual statements that will make reporting straightforward. Otherwise, be diligent about record-keeping on your own.

Where things can get trickier is that more people are receiving crypto as salary or payment for services, in which case it is treated as ordinary income, based on the value that particular day.

In a similar way, if you have used crypto to pay for goods or services, that is considered a taxable transaction, if the currency value has risen since you originally acquired it.

TurboTax has a helpful interactive calculator to figure out your potential tax hit.

A few issues to keep in mind, as we close in on the April 18 filing deadline:

DO YOUR HOMEWORK

The IRS has published answers to frequently asked questions about crypto and a basic explainer and a roundup of its publications on the subject.

Exchanges themselves often have helpful tax resources for users, such as Robinhood and Coinbase.

GIFTING STRATEGIES

One way to move crypto around without incurring taxes is to give it away. For an individual, you can give up to $15,000 a year. For charitable organizations, you can use sites like GiveCrypto.org to donate directly to those in need and get a tax deduction for your efforts.

That might be a better option than selling it yourself and subsequently giving away that cash, because then you have triggered a taxable event that falls on you.

USE LOSSES

Crypto is obviously a volatile asset class. Instead of gains, you might also have losses.

“If you have had gains from selling crypto, don’t forget you can offset your gains with losses, just like with stock,” says Lisa Greene-Lewis, a CPA and tax expert with TurboTax. “You can also offset ordinary income (like from wages) with up to $3,000 in losses, and carry forward any remaining losses.”

ASK FOR AN EXTENSION

This is admittedly a tricky subject, especially for those whose crypto involvement is frequent. So since we are already running up against this year’s filing deadline, there is no shame in asking for the standard six-month extension. You don’t even have to give a reason why.

While this will not get you out of payment – if you have a rough idea of how much you owe, you can still send that in by April 18 – it will give you ample time to consult tax professionals, sort out your obligations and properly report all transactions. “It’s better to file a complete and accurate return on extension, than a rushed and flawed one just to get it in by the deadline,” says Erb. “I would highly encourage people to take advantage of that.”

(Editing by Lauren Young and Cynthia Osterman; Follow us @ReutersMoney or at http://www.reuters.com/finance/personal-finance.)

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State securities regulators order virtual casino firm to stop selling NFTs

By Chris Prentice

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – Securities regulators in the U.S. states of Texas and Alabama on Wednesday ordered an online casino developer to stop selling non-fungible tokens (NFTs), alleging the firm was illegally offering unregistered securities and defrauding the public.

Cyprus-based Sand Vegas Casino Club and co-founders Martin Schwarzberger and Finn Ruben Warnke allegedly offered 11,111 NFTs in a “high-tech fraudulent securities offering” to fundraise to build virtual casinos in the metaverse. They also erroneously told potential buyers the tokens were not securities, the Texas State Securities Board said in a statement.

Sand Vegas promised buyers of its Gambler and Golden Gambler NFTs they would share in virtual casino profits, forecasting proceeds of as much as $81,000 each year, the regulators said.

Sand Vegas and the co-founders could not be reached immediately for comment.

The cease-and-desist order appears to be the first of its kind tied to internet-based virtual environment platforms, colloquially known as the metaverse. It also marks a new frontier for U.S. authorities seeking to clamp down on NFTs, blockchain-based tokens that represent assets such as a piece of digital art. Last month, two men were arrested and charged with scamming NFT buyers worth $1.1 million.

Though this latest case is relatively small, state actions often spark interest from federal regulators. NFTs have seen a surge in investor interest, and the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) has not yet offered formal guidance on whether they could be considered securities in some instances.

OpenSea, the largest NFT marketplace, has listed Sand Vegas tokens, Wednesday’s order said. OpenSea did not respond immediately to request for comment.

Joe Rotunda, enforcement director at the Texas State Securities Board, said the regulator has spotted a number of securities offerings in the metaverse.

“This is a hot area,” he told Reuters. “We are coordinating among states to investigate the offerings and plan enforcement actions if necessary.”

(Reporting by Chris Prentice; Editing by Aurora Ellis)

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Nexo and Mastercard launch ‘world first’ crypto-backed payment card

LONDON (Reuters) – Crypto lender Nexo said it has teamed up with global payments company Mastercard to launch on Wednesday what it calls the world’s first “crypto-backed” payment card.

It signals the latest move by crypto and incumbent financial networks to join forces as digital assets become more mainstream.

Nexo said the card, available in selected European countries initially, allows users to spend without having to sell their digital assets such as bitcoin, which are used as collateral to back the credit granted.

Most traditional credit cards are unsecured and have a set credit limit.

The card is linked to a Nexo-provided, crypto-backed credit line and can be used at 92 million merchants worldwide where Mastercard is accepted, allowing investors to spend up to 90% of the fiat value of their crypto assets, Nexo said.

“The card requires no minimum repayments, monthly, or inactivity fees. There are no FX fees for up to 20,000 euros per month,” Nexo said.

There are no restrictions on how much a customer can spend or withdraw from the open credit line and interest is only paid on the amount of credit actually used. Interest remains at 0% for customers who maintain a loan-to-value ratio of 20% or below.

“Mastercard recognizes that digital assets are revolutionizing the financial landscape,” said Raj Dhamodharan, Mastercard’s head of crypto and blockchain products and partnerships.

Electronic money firm DiPocket is Nexo’s card issuer.

(Reporting by Huw Jones; Editing by Toby Chopra)

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Cryptoverse: NFT bubble gets that shrinking feeling

(This story corrects APRIL 5 story to replace final chart, after data provider Nansen found error in their data)

By Elizabeth Howcroft

(Reuters) – The NFT bubble isn’t popping, but it may have sprung a leak.

A year on from when a single non-fungible token sold for $69.3 million in crypto at Christie’s auction house, with the buyer paying to be recorded on blockchain as the owner of a digital file that anyone can see online for free, this weird and wild market is showing some signs of slowing down.

Sales on OpenSea, the largest NFT marketplace, had reached nearly $5 billion in January, a giant leap from the $8 million a year before, but declined to around $2.5 billion last month.

Around 635,000 people bought an NFT last month, for $427 on average, according to market tracker CryptoSlam, down from about 948,000 for $659 in January.

Companies nonethless continue to pile into the fashionable “metaverse”, where digital assets like virtual land and clothing for avatars can be bought for cryptocurrency as NFTs. JPMorgan and HSBC are among businesses that have opened virtual venues in NFT-based worlds this year, while YouTube and Instagram also have NFT plans.

“Obviously the enthusiasm and interest that we had at some periods last year is not here anymore,” said Pablo Rodriguez-Fraile, a Miami-based digital art collector. “I think we achieved something that wasn’t sustainable.”

He added that sales had picked up again in recent weeks, though.

Graphic: NFT sales on OpenSea- https://fingfx.thomsonreuters.com/gfx/mkt/zjvqkdodgvx/Past%20the%20peak.png

Modesta Masoit, director of finance and analytics at NFT research firm DappRadar, said the market was not in overall decline but rather consolidating after its meteoric growth, adding that investor caution following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in late February may have depressed sales.

“Everybody was expecting that there was going to be a consolidation period,” she added. “It’s not going away, it’s just consolidating.”

Overall NFT sales have totalled about $11.8 billion so far in 2022, according to DappRadar, excluding $19.3 billion worth of sales from a platform suspected to be dominated by irregular trades, where a small number of accounts trade items back and forth for inflated prices.

Graphic: Daily NFT volumes- https://fingfx.thomsonreuters.com/gfx/mkt/xmvjoqeqwpr/Daily%20volumes%20drop.png

BULL TO BEAR TO APE

NFTs can be exotic and dangerous beasts.

Prices can drop dramatically after an initial surge, in a highly volatile market where the value of an asset depends on its social status.

Nima Sagharchi, head of digital assets at auction house Bonhams, said that in contrast to the traditional art world, the NFT market can see-saw between bull and bear cycles within as little as a week.

An NFT representing a piece of computer-generated abstract images from a collection called Art Blocks would sell for around $15,000 on average at a peak in September 2021, but fetched just under $4,200 last month, according to CryptoSlam.

Meanwhile, Bored Ape Yacht Club NFTs – a set of 10,000 variations on a cartoon primate – still sell for around $300,000 on average.

Graphic: Bored Ape prices- https://fingfx.thomsonreuters.com/gfx/mkt/myvmnqxqlpr/Six%20figure%20profile%20pictures.png

Buying a Bored Ape – as celebrities including Madonna and Paris Hilton have done – can be considered akin to joining a cross between a members’ club and an investment scheme. Buyers often advertise their membership by setting their NFT as their profile picture on social media.

A cryptocurrency called ApeCoin was launched last month, given initially to holders of Bored Ape NFTs as well as the project’s founders. Its market cap is already $3.4 billion, according to Coinbase data.

Raoul Pal, a former Goldman Sachs executive, wrote in a blog post that expectations for this token encouraged him to spend around $400,000 worth of the cryptocurrency ether on a Bored Ape NFT.

“Social tokens are the BIG thing,” he wrote.

Graphic: NFT indexes – https://fingfx.thomsonreuters.com/gfx/mkt/gkplgqaoevb/NFT%20indexes.png

(Reporting by Elizabeth Howcroft in London; Editing by Pravin Char)

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Binance CEO praises ‘pro-crypto’ France as it pursues base there

By Mathieu Rosemain

PARIS (Reuters) – Binance boss Changpeng Zhao praised France for its “pro-crypto” regulations on Wednesday, as the world’s biggest cryptocurrency exchange pursues plans to make Paris its European base.

Zhao, better known by his initials CZ, is trying to get Binance registered with French markets regulator AMF as a “digital asset service provider” (DASP).

Last year, more than a dozen national regulators, including those in Germany, Italy and Britain, issued warnings about Binance. Some said it was operating without a licence in their jurisdictions. Others cautioned against using its services.

Binance has said that it welcomes regulation and that it works closely with authorities across the world.

On Wednesday, Zhao said that the government of French President Emmanuel Macron had a welcoming attitude toward the largely unregulated cryptocurrency sector.

“France has some very pro-business, pro-crypto regulations and also just (the) government’s attitude towards this industry … has been phenomenal,” he told a packed conference hosted in the Paris stock exchange’s historic building.

Binance is already the top cryptocurrency exchange in France, it said in a slide shown during Zhao’s speech.

The exchange said last month it had been granted a licence to conduct some operations in Dubai, from where it plans to carry out regional business. Meanwhile, Bahrain’s central bank has also given it a crypto-asset service provider licence.

Zhao, who floated the idea late last year that France could become home to Binance’s global headquarters, made no mention during his speech of the French presidential elections, where Macron faces far-right leader Marine Le Pen in the runoff.

The Binance boss has pledged to invest 100 million euros in France and said that he had signed a deal to grant 2 million euros for the restoration of a room at Chateau de Versailles.

A finance ministry official said in January that France supported the development of the cryptocurrency sector, although the AMF has not yet published its decision.

An AMF spokesperson did not immediately reply to a request for comment on Binance’s registration.

An investigation by Reuters in January found Binance has in the past withheld information from regulators, maintained weak checks on customers and acted against its own compliance department’s recommendations.

Binance said in response that it is driving higher standards in the crypto industry. Zhao has previously said that Binance has never withheld information from regulators.

(Reporting by Mathieu Rosemain; Additional reporting by Elizabeth Howcroft and Tom Wilson in London; Editing by Alexander Smith)

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BOJ won’t introduce digital yen as means for negative rates – central bank official

TOKYO (Reuters) – The Bank of Japan (BOJ) will not introduce a digital yen as a means to achieve negative interest rates, an idea sometimes discussed in academic circles, a senior central bank official said on Wednesday.

In upcoming experiments on issuing a central bank digital currency (CBDC), the BOJ will explore features such as setting a limit on the amount of transactions and holdings for each entity, BOJ Executive Director Shinichi Uchida said in a speech.

The BOJ has not decided whether to issue a digital yen but has moved to a second phase experiment from April to prepare for a possible launch.

(Reporting by Leika Kihara; Editing by Muralikumar Anantharaman)

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U.S. crypto researcher sentenced to five years for helping North Korea evade sanctions

By Jody Godoy

(Reuters) – A former researcher at a high-profile cryptocurrency group was sentenced to five years and three months in prison on Tuesday for conspiring to help North Korea evade U.S. sanctions using cryptocurrency, federal prosecutors in Manhattan said.

Virgil Griffith was arrested in 2019 and pleaded guilty last September to conspiring to violate the International Emergency Economic Powers Act by traveling to North Korea to present on blockchain technology.

Griffith formerly worked for the Ethereum Foundation, a non-profit that works to support the technology behind the cryptocurrency ether.

The sentence, imposed by U.S. District Judge Kevin Castel, was the minimum amount of prison time prosecutors had sought. Griffith had asked for a sentence of two years. Castel also fined Griffith $100,000, below the $1 million prosecutors suggested.

Griffith’s attorney Brian Klein said in a statement that while the sentence was disappointing, the judge “acknowledged Virgil’s commitment to moving forward with his life productively, and that he is a talented person who has a lot to contribute.”

U.S. Attorney Damian Williams said in a statement on Tuesday that “justice has been served.”

Griffith, who has a doctorate from the California Institute of Technology, traveled to North Korea via China in April 2019 to deliver a presentation at the Pyongyang Blockchain and Cryptocurrency Conference, despite being denied permission by the U.S. Department of State to go, according to prosecutors.

Prosecutors said Griffith understood the information could be used to evade sanctions the U.S. had imposed on North Korea over its development of nuclear weapons technology.

“The most important feature of blockchains is that they are open. And the DPRK can’t be kept out no matter what the USA or the UN says,” Griffith said during the presentation, according to prosecutors, using the initials of North Korea’s official name.

The Ethereum Foundation said at the time of Griffith’s arrest that it had not approved or supported his travel to North Korea.

(Reporting by Jody Godoy; editing by Richard Pullin)

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Cryptoverse: 10 billion reasons bitcoin could become a reserve currency

By Lisa Pauline Mattackal and Medha Singh

(Reuters) – A crypto platform’s pledge to amass $10 billion worth of bitcoin to back its own “stablecoin” is firing up the market. It’s part of a wider movement to crown bitcoin as the reserve currency of a new age.

Seoul-based Terraform Labs has so far built up nearly 40,000 bitcoin worth $1.7 billion in a series of purchases via a non-profit affiliate, Luna Foundation Guard, according to publicly available blockchain data.

The spree follows Terraform co-founder Do Kwon’s announcement on Twitter last month https://twitter.com/stablekwon/status/1506278298883706882 that the project would buy the $10 billion worth of bitcoin reserves to underpin TerraUSD, breaking ranks with other large stablecoins – a ballooning class of cryptocurrencies that aim to minimise wild price swings and are typically backed by U.S. dollar reserves.

A stablecoin backed by bitcoin reserves, according to Kwon, “will open a new monetary era of the Bitcoin standard”, referencing the gold standard that formed the backbone of global finance about a century ago.

The acquisitions, and the anticipation of more to come, are supporting the price of bitcoin, with some market players identifying them as a big driver of bitcoin’s climb back towards $48,000 at the end of March. More significant, perhaps, is whether others will follow Terraform’s lead.

“Buying $10 billion worth can move the price in the short term,” said Sid Powell, CEO of Sydney-based crypto lender Maple Finance. “But over the longer period, it’s more what it signals – that bitcoin has been introduced as the hottest form of collateral backing for currencies.”

Yet other market participants cautioned that an ever-closer embrace between bitcoin and stablecoins like TerraUSD could introduce a new risk for crypto markets that raised the prospect of a “death spiral” for investors down the line.

Either way, it’ll be worth watching.

In the short term, too, there are pitfalls.

“There is a danger some people are trying to position long ahead of the buying which could exaggerate a fall if the price starts to retrace,” said Richard Usher, head of OTC trading at crypto firm BCB Group in London, who attributed bitcoin’s gains last month to an improving risk environment.

Vetle Lunde, analyst at Norway-based crypto research firm Arcane Research who is tracking the Terra project purchases, estimates that, to reach an initial $3 billion in reserves, it could eventually hold between 60,000 to 70,000 bitcoin.

That would surpass Tesla’s 43,200 bitcoin https://bitcointreasuries.net, the public company with the second largest bitcoin stockpile behind MicroStrategy.

Terraform Labs didn’t respond to a request for comment.

EARTH AND MOON

Stablecoins are rapidly gaining ground. They’re a common medium of exchange and often used by traders seeking to move funds around and speculate on other cryptocurrencies.

For example, it is much easier to swap tether – the biggest and most mature stablecoin – for bitcoin or other crypto, than it is to swap U.S. dollars for bitcoin.

A year ago, tether’s market cap $44.5 billion, while upstart TerraUSD’s was $1.76 billion. They have since risen about 85% and 850% respectively to stand at $82.3 billion and $16.7 billion, according to CoinMarketCap.

TerraUSD is now the fourth-largest stablecoin and, like its peers, is pegged to the dollar. However, while the likes of Tether and USD Coin have reserves in traditional assets which they say match the value of tokens in circulation, TerraUSD maintains its 1:1 dollar peg through an algorithm that moderates supply and demand in a complex process that involves the use of another balancing token, Luna.

The bitcoin reserves theoretically add another level of reassurance, while keeping the Terra project decentralised.

“Backing it with something as predictable – not from a price perspective but from a rules and governing perspective – as bitcoin brings a lot of confidence to people,” said Matthew Sigel, head of digital assets research at VanEck in New York.

He said he expected other algorithmic stablecoins to follow Terra’s lead and back up their coins with reserves of bitcoin, and even other crypto tokens, if the experiment succeeds.

THE DEATH SPIRAL

However, not all algorithmic stable coins have been stable in the past, with some losing their peg and collapsing in value.

“There is still much work to be done and regulatory uncertainties to overcome regarding algorithmic stablecoins and their resistance to a collapse in contractions, which might cause a so-called ‘death spiral’,” said Carlos Gonzalez Campo, an analyst at 21Shares in Switzerland.

“This phenomenon refers to a theoretical vicious circle where UST (TerraUSD) contraction leads to LUNA being minted and declining in price, which leads to fear and more UST redemptions,” he said, comparing this to a bank run.

This is what the bitcoin reserve is meant to avoid, but it could also cause wider contagion.

“It’s far better to have some reserve outside of luna because otherwise you’re very exposed to its performance and that can make everything break as we’ve seen with other algorithmic stablecoins,” said Arcane’s Lunde.

“But I’m a bit concerned about the long-term structural effects this may have on luna and on bitcoin. If things really start to break up, and they have 70,000 bitcoin in reserves they want to use to settle the market and maintain the peg, it might have implications for the entire market.”

(The story is updated to correct figure to $3 billion in paragraph 11)

(Reporting by Medha Singh and Lisa Pauline Mattackal in Bengaluru; Editing by Alun John and Pravin Char)

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China gaming firms toe the line, paving the way to end licence freeze

By Josh Ye

HONG KONG (Reuters) – China lifted a nine-month freeze on gaming licences after companies, including industry leader Tencent, made major adjustments to their business practices and due to the ban’s economic fallout, industry sources and analysts said.

The watchdog of the $47 billion video games market, the world’s largest, stopped issuing publishing licenses, which are key to monetising games, in August following a crackdown that curbed game-playing time for minors. That freeze was lifted on Monday when 45 games were granted licences.

Sources and analysts said while the timing of the relaxation was unexpected, companies had bent over backwards after facing heavy criticism from authorities for being non-compliant.

“Regulations this time around are certainly the strictest they have been,” said Chenyu Cui, senior analyst at research firm Omdia, “Every company is scared of falling out of compliance.”

A source at a game studio of which Tencent Holdings is a major shareholder said it was requested by Tencent to remove English words from its game, avoid the colour red and scrap wordings such as “headshots” or “death” to be compliant.

And the studio also delayed the title’s international launch fearing that it could been seen as circumventing Chinese rules, the source said, declining to be named because he is not authorised to speak to media.

During a similar freeze on licences in 2018, some projects opted to release their games – including Tencent’s Bladed Fury and Iris.Fall – overseas, while waiting for the domestic situation to be resolved.

Tencent declined to comment.

China’s regulators have also been proactive in ensuring compliance in a sector state media once called “spiritual opium”.

Two sources said that during the suspension companies were still able to submit games for approval and received regular feedback on changes needed on their content or monetisation features.

In September, a state-backed gaming association organised a training programme for developers at which it emphasised that games had to highlight “a correct set of values” and could not contain any violent or religious elements, according to a memo seen by Reuters.

Daniel Ahmad, senior analyst at Niko Partners, said that over 5,000 game companies were now connected to the national anti-addiction system, numerous firms have made changes to in-game content and non-compliant ones have been investigated and fined by the relevant regulators.

“Concerns have been adequately addressed,” he said.

Tencent, smaller peer NetEase and over 200 other firms pledged in September to self-regulate to combat gaming addiction.

ECONOMIC HIT

While companies were getting their house in order, the worsening economic impact of the gaming crackdown could no longer be ignored by Beijing.

During the licence freeze, about 14,000 video gaming-related firms – including those involved in merchandising, advertising and publishing – shut, according to business registry firm Tianyancha.

Some highly anticipated projects have also been spiked, such as Lilith Games’ Eden Apocalypse. A representative said this was due to a change in the business’s direction.

Three gaming industry sources said many projects have been hit by a hiring freeze as they are under pressure to cut their size and budget.

Tencent, a big employer of fresh graduates, said during its results its hiring pace would slow, and Reuters has reported that it and other peers plan to cut jobs.

“They are doing this to protect jobs,” one industry executive told Reuters, referring to the lifting of the freeze and declining to be named as he was not permitted to speak to the media.

The game industry’s regulator, National Press and Public Administration, did not respond to a request for comment.

LOOKING OVERSEAS

Chinese gaming shares soared on Tuesday after the regulatory relaxation, with some analysts saying it showed the government’s commitment to the sector.

But some were also cautious, pointing out that only 45 games were approved this time, versus the 80 to 90 usually greenlighted once a month prior to the freeze.

And the landscape has changed completely, prompting some to diversify or to consider leaving the Chinese market altogether.

Small gaming firms in China are considering pivoting towards blockchain gaming in the West, even though it could mean abandoning the China market since Beijing bans unapproved cryptocurrencies, said Greg Pilarowski, head of law firm Pillar Legal.

“The current environment in China is very challenging for gaming companies,” Pilarowski said. “So a lot of folks are asking how they could get into blockchain games… because crypto and blockchain have been very profitable for many people in the US.”

(Reporting by Josh Ye; Editing by Brenda Goh and Muralikumar Anantharaman)

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Bitcoin falls 5.3% to $39,881

(Reuters) – Bitcoin dropped 5.3% to $39,881.02 at on Monday, down $2,231.58 from its previous close.

Bitcoin, the world’s biggest and best-known cryptocurrency, is down 17.3% from the year’s high of $48,234 on March 28.

Ether, the coin linked to the ethereum blockchain network, dipped 6.58 % to $2,991.51 on Monday, losing $210.86 from its previous close.

(Reporting by Maria Ponnezhath in Bengaluru; Editing by Leslie Adler)

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Musk proposes Twitter Blue subscription shake-up days after disclosing 9.2% Twitter stake

(Reuters) – Elon Musk, Twitter Inc’s biggest shareholder, on Saturday suggested a raft of changes to the social media giant’s Twitter Blue premium subscription service, including slashing its price, banning advertising and giving an option to pay in the cryptocurrency dogecoin.

Musk, who disclosed a 9.2% stake in Twitter just days ago, was offered a seat on its board of directors, a move which made some Twitter employees panic over the future of its ability to moderate content.

Twitter Blue, launched in June 2021, is Twitter’s first subscription service and offers “exclusive access to premium features” on a monthly subscription basis, Twitter says. It is available in the United States, Canada, Australia and New Zealand.

In a Twitter post, the head of electric vehicle maker Tesla Inc suggested that users who sign up for Twitter Blue should pay significantly less than the current $2.99 a month, and should get an authentication checkmark as well as an option to pay in local currency.

“Price should probably be ~$2/month, but paid 12 months up front & account doesn’t get checkmark for 60 days (watch for credit card chargebacks) & suspended with no refund if used for scam/spam,” Musk said in a tweet.

“And no ads,” Musk suggested. “The power of corporations to dictate policy is greatly enhanced if Twitter depends on advertising money to survive.”

Musk also proposed an option to pay with dogecoin and asked Twitter users for their views.

Twitter declined to comment on Musk’s suggestions.

The company already lets people tip their favorite content creators using bitcoin. Twitter had said last year that it planned to support authentication for NFTs, or non-fungible tokens, which are digital assets such as images or videos that exist on a blockchain.

Musk also started a poll on his Twitter account – which has more than 81 million followers – asking whether the firm’s San Francisco headquarters should be converted to a homeless shelter as “no-one shows up (to work there)”. The poll got more 300,000 votes in an hour, with 90% answering yes.

(Reporting by Maria Ponnezhath in Bengaluru; Additional reporting by Jaiveer Singh Shekhawat; Editing by Kenneth Maxwell)

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EU targets crypto wallets in latest round of Russia sanctions

By Huw Jones

LONDON (Reuters) – The European Union on Friday targeted crypto wallets, banks, currencies and trusts in its fifth package of sanctions on Russia in a bid to close potential loopholes which could allow Russians to move money abroad.

Following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine on Feb. 24, EU-based crypto exchanges were already required to apply sanctions that bar transactions from targeted individuals, but there were concerns that loopholes remained.

The EU on Friday said it was extending the prohibition to deposits to crypto-wallets.

“This will contribute to closing potential loopholes,” the EU’s executive European Commission said in a statement.

Crypto wallets allow individuals to keep the password that gives them access to cryptocurrencies safe, and to send, receive and spend cryptocurrencies like bitcoin.

The EU said it is also banning the sale of banknotes and transferable securities, such as shares, denominated in any official currencies of EU member states to Russia and Belarus.

It also confirmed a full transaction ban on four Russian banks, including VTB, representing 23% of market share in the Russian banking sector.

The banks have already been cut off from the international bank messaging system SWIFT and will be now subject to an asset freeze to completely cut them off from EU markets, the bloc said.

There is also a ban on advising on trusts for wealthy Russians, to make it more difficult for them to store their wealth in the EU.

(Reporting by Huw Jones; Editing by Kirsten Donovan)

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EU adopts new sanctions against Russia including coal import ban

By Francesco Guarascio

(Reuters) – The European Union on Friday formally adopted its fifth package of sanctions against Russia since the country’s Feb. 24 invasion of Ukraine, including bans on the import of coal, wood, chemicals and other products.

The measures also prevent many Russian vessels and trucks from accessing the EU, further crippling trade, and will ban all transactions with four Russian banks, including VTB.

The ban on coal imports will be fully effective from the second week of August. No new contracts can be signed from Friday, when sanctions are to be published in the EU’s official journal.

Existing contracts will have to be terminated by the second week of August, meaning that Russia can continue to receive payments from the EU on coal exports until then.

“These latest sanctions were adopted following the atrocities committed by Russian armed forces in Bucha and other places under Russian occupation,” EU’s top diplomat, Josep Borrell, said in a statement.

The Kremlin has said that Western allegations Russian forces committed war crimes by executing civilians in the Ukrainian town of Bucha were a “monstrous forgery” aimed at denigrating the Russian army.

The coal ban alone is estimated by the Commission to be worth 8 billion euros a year in lost revenues for Russia. That is twice as big as the EU Commission’s head Ursula von der Leyen had said on Tuesday.

In addition to coal, the new EU sanctions ban imports from Russia of many other commodities and products, including wood, rubber, cement, fertilisers, high-end seafood, such as caviar, and spirits, such as vodka, for a total additional value estimated in 5.5 billion euros ($5.9 billion) a year.

The EU also restricted export to Russia of a number of products, including jet fuel, quantum computers, advanced semiconductors, high-end electronics, software, sensitive machinery and transportation equipment, for a total value of 10 billion euros a year.

The sanctions also forbid Russian companies from participating in public procurement in the EU and extend prohibitions in the use of crypto-currencies that are considered a potential means to circumvent sanctions.

The Commission said that another 217 people were added to the EU blacklist as part of the new sanctions package, meaning their assets in the EU will be frozen and they will be subject to travel bans in the EU.

Most of them are political leaders of the separatist regions of Luhansk and Donetsk, but the sanctions also hit top businessmen, politicians and military staff close to the Kremlin.

This brings close to 900 the number of people sanctioned by the EU since the start of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, which Moscow calls a “special operation” to demilitarise and “denazify” the country.

(Reporting by Francesco Guarascio and Bart Meijer; editing by Philip Blenkinsop, Andrew Heavens and Nick Macfie)

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Crypto and gaming collide in high-risk ‘play-to-earn’ economies

By Elizabeth Howcroft

(Reuters) – Jarindr Thitadilaka says he made as much as $2,000 a month last year from his collection of digital pets, which he would breed and send into battle to win cryptocurrencies.

The 28-year-old from Bangkok was playing Axie Infinity, one of a new breed of blockchain-based online games, dubbed “play-to-earn”, which blend entertainment with financial speculation.

These games can make for lucrative businesses amid the hype around NFTs and virtual worlds, attracting millions of players plus billions of dollars from investors who see the games as a way to introduce more people to cryptocurrency.

In Axie Infinity, users buy virtual blob-like creatures with varying attributes as NFTs, or non-fungible tokens – digital assets whose owner is recorded on the blockchain – for anything from tens of dollars to hundreds of thousands.

Players can then use the pets to earn money by winning battles, as well as creating new pets, whose value depends on their rarity. The assets can be traded with other players on the platform, which says it has about 1.5 million daily users.

“It’s not just a game any more. It’s more like an ecosystem,” said Thitadilaka. “You can even call it a country, right?”

The dangers of this speculative ecosystem, and the largely unregulated crypto gaming industry, were brought into sudden focus last week when Axie Infinity was hit by a $615 million heist. Hackers targeted a part of the system used to transfer cryptocurrency in and out of the game.

Axie Infinity’s Vietnam-based owner, Sky Mavis, said it would reimburse the lost money through a combination of its own balance sheet funds and $150 million raised by investors including cryptocurrency exchange Binance and venture capital firm a16z.

Sky Mavis’ co-founder Aleksander Larsen told Reuters that if he could do things differently, he would have focused more on security when growing the game, which was launched in 2018.

“We were running 100 miles per hour, basically, to even get to this point,” he said. “The trade-offs we made maybe weren’t the ideal ones.”

The hack, one of the biggest crypto heists ever, shone a light on play-to-earn games, a young world largely unknown outside crypto and gaming circles, that’s becoming big business.

Players spent $4.9 billion on NFTs in games last year, according to market tracker DappRadar, representing around 3% of the global gaming industry. Although demand has cooled since a peak last November, gaming NFTs have still racked up $484 million in sales so far in 2022.

Investor interest in NFT-based games has also ballooned, with projects attracting $4 billion of venture capital funding last year, up from $80,000 in 2020, DappRadar said.

“There’s so many users who want to interact with the tech,” said Larsen, adding that Axie Infinity’s revenues exceeded $1.3 billion last year. “It’s like you found a new continent … like finding America all over again.”

Graphic: Monthly sales of gaming-related NFTs- https://fingfx.thomsonreuters.com/gfx/mkt/dwvkrqnwqpm/Monthly%20sales%20of%20gaming-related%20NFTs.png

HAVES AND HAVE NOTS

Adding layers of complexity, unofficial financial networks have also emerged around these games, as some players leverage their coveted in-game possessions for further gain.

Thitadilaka in Thailand decided last July that he wanted make more money than he could by simply playing on his own, so he and his friends decided to form what’s known in gaming lingo as a “guild”. They allowed their NFTs to be used by people who wanted to play Axie Infinity for free, without investing in an asset, and took a cut of any winnings in return.

    This model is commonplace across play-to-earn games. Thitadilaka said his guild, GuildFi, grew into a network with 3,000 Axie Infinity players who split their earnings with the asset-owners 50:50.  Thitadilaka now runs GuildFi as a full-time job and the company has raised $146 million from investors.

Southeast Asian countries such as Thailand and the Philippines have emerged as some of the hottest global gaming hubs.

Teriz Pia, who is 25 and lives in Manila, quit her job as a pre-school teacher last June after her brother founded a play-to-earn gaming guild, Real Deal Guild.

Now she says she makes as much as $20,000 a month through her network of more than 300 players across multiple games, plus other crypto assets.

For Axie Infinity Pia lets her players keep 70%, while she takes a 30% cut. In another play-to-earn game, Pegaxy, where players buy and trade NFTs of virtual horses to compete in races to win crypto tokens, she splits it 60:40.

“I don’t call them workers. I just call them my friends, or my scholars,” she said. “The salary in the Philippines if you’re a teacher … I’m a college graduate, I’m an educator, but it’s not enough. I never imagined that I could earn this kind of money.”

But Pia cautioned that it was a dangerous business.

“There’s a lot of risk. When I’m investing in a new game … being a member of Real Deal Guild, we have a partnership team, we have researchers, but at the end of the day, it’s still crypto, it’s still a risk.”

One of the biggest play-to-earn networks, Yield Guild Games, said it had 10,000 Axie Infinity players as of the fourth quarter of 2021 who kept 70% of their earnings and had received $11.7 million in total.

Australian-based Corey Wilton, 25, founded Pegaxy, which he says has about 160,000 daily users. He estimates that 95% of users of play-to-earn games participate as “renters”, generating revenue without owning the assets, while 5% are asset owners.

‘HOW PEOPLE GET HURT’

Legal experts warn there is no safety net for players who effectively invest in risky assets, leaving them highly vulnerable should a project fail or the market for the assets dry up.

As global regulators seek to get to grips with cryptocurrencies themselves, there is little oversight of NFTs or the relatively niche offshoot of play-to-earn games, which typically use in-game crypto tokens that can then be cashed out into traditional money.

“Storing any value in projects like this is risky. The earning in play to earn, blockchain-based games is often through rewards paid in the native token of the project,” said David Lee, cryptocurrency associate at London-based law firm Fladgate.

“There are no guaranteed values of either the token or the in-game asset as their value is often determined by supply and demand in the market. This means there can be significant volatility in the price and, if the project becomes less popular or is abandoned, then there is a potential for the assets to become worthless.”

Yet advocates of these games say success is built upon a combination of factors such as skill, strategy and luck.

“There is definitely money to be made, but there is also money to be lost here,” Pegaxy’s Wilton added. “Play to earn should not be confused with charity, that’s how people get hurt.”

(Reporting by Elizabeth Howcroft in London; Editing by Pravin Char)

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‘Tip of the iceberg’: Taiwan’s spy catchers hunt Chinese poachers of chip talent

By Yimou Lee and Sarah Wu

TAIPEI (Reuters) – Taiwan’s spy catchers have launched probes into around 100 Chinese companies suspected of illegally poaching semiconductor engineers and other tech talent, a senior official at the island’s Investigation Bureau told Reuters.

That comes on top of seven prosecuted since the start of last year and includes 27 which have either been raided or whose owners have been summoned for questioning by the bureau, the official said.

Home to industry giant TSMC and accounting for 92% of the world’s most advanced semiconductor manufacturing capacity, Taiwan possesses what China needs – chip expertise in spades.

A global chip shortage and Beijing’s avowed goal of achieving self-reliance in advanced chips – more forcefully promoted by Chinese President Xi Jinping after a trade war with the former Trump administration – has only intensified the scramble for engineering talent.

Taiwan responded with the creation in December 2020 of a task force within the justice ministry’s Investigation Bureau – its main spy catching organisation – to tackle poaching.

Cases where it has taken action with raids or questioning represented “the tip of the iceberg”, the official said, asking to remain anonymous so that investigations are not impeded.

The Investigation Bureau said the official’s comments represented its views.

Heightened military pressure from China, which claims Taiwan as its territory, has only strengthened Taipei’s determination to protect its chip supremacy – an asset also strategically important to the United States as much of its chip manufacturing is outsourced to the island.

Last month the bureau conducted its biggest operation to date – a raid of eight companies aimed at countering what it said was “the Chinese Communist Party’s illegal activities of talent-poaching and secret-stealing”.

China’s Taiwan Affairs Office did not respond to a Reuters request for comment.

TRICKS EMPLOYED

It is not illegal per se for Chinese firms to hire Taiwanese engineers. Taiwanese law, however, prohibits Chinese investment in some parts of the semiconductor supply chain including chip design and requires reviews for other areas such as chip packaging, making it very difficult for Chinese chip firms to operate on the island legally.

Taiwanese engineers are also free to go to China, but many prefer the quality of life on the island, especially while COVID-19 restrictions make travel harder.

One case under investigation involves a firm that purports to be a Taiwanese data analysis company but which authorities believe is an arm of a Shanghai-based chip firm sending chip design blueprints to China, according to the official and another colleague who spoke with Reuters.

In mid-March, after nearly a year of surveillance, the bureau summoned the firm’s owner for questioning. The owner has since been released on bail, they said, declining to identify the company as charges have yet to be laid.

Other tricks employed include incorporating units in tax havens such as the Cayman Islands, making it harder to identify money inflows from China.

Beijing-based Starblaze Technology, an integrated circuit (IC) design house, has been accused of running an R&D centre in the tech hub of Hsinchu without approval. It allegedly conducted job interviews via Zoom and used a Hong Kong company to handle payroll and insurance, according to court documents reviewed by Reuters. The trial is ongoing.

Tongfu Microelectronics, a Chinese state-affiliated company, was accused of having an illegal office whose employees received salaries in U.S. dollars in offshore accounts wired via a Hong Kong-based subsidiary. The defendants were found guilty in January.

Starblaze and Tongfu did not respond to Reuters requests for comment.

THE MOST WANTED

Lucy Chen, vice president of Taipei-based Isaiah Research, says that last year Chinese chip firms came wooing with salary offers two to three times local levels. Among the most sought-after employees are IC designers, who can work remotely.

While it is difficult to compete on salary, local firms aim to provide more secure long-term career development and perks such daycare centres, massages and gyms on site, said an executive at a Hsinchu chip company, declining to be identified.

Those willing to be poached risk not finding work again at Taiwanese tech firms as well as public shaming. Several senior TSMC executives who went to work for SMIC in China have been branded as traitors in Taiwanese press.

Authorities are also working to increase penalties for poaching. Maximum prison sentences are set to be increased to three years from one year and maximum fines from $5,200 to $520,525.

In a related move, the government has proposed making the leaking of core chip technologies a breach of national security law.

But there are concerns that tougher rules might hinder President Tsai Ing-wen’s drive to build a supply chain spanning materials to chip manufacturing.

“What if we put off legitimate foreign investors and damage our national economy due to overly strict regulation?” said the Investigation Bureau senior official.

($1 = 28.6090 Taiwan dollars)

(Reporting by Yimou Lee and Sarah Wu; Additional reporting by Beijing newsroom; Editing by Edwina Gibbs)

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Honduran special economic zone adopts bitcoin as legal tender

By Gustavo Palencia

TEGUCIGALPA (Reuters) – A special economic zone on a tourist-centric island on Honduras’ Caribbean coast has adopted bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies as legal tender, officials of the zone said on Thursday.

Called “Honduras Prospera,” the special zone was established in 2020 to help encourage investment, and has administrative, fiscal and budgetary autonomy.

“Prospera’s flexible regulatory framework enables crypto-innovation and the use of Bitcoin by residents, businesses, and governments,” Honduras Prospera said in a statement.

The economic zone will also let municipalities, local governments and international firms issue bitcoin bonds from the area’s jurisdiction.

Honduras Prospera covers parts of the picturesque Roatan island as well as the city of La Ceiba on Honduras’ Atlantic Coast.

Neighboring country El Salvador adopted bitcoin as legal tender in September, the first country in the world to do so, although the roll-out was bumpy and mired in public skepticism.

In Honduras, the Central Bank has said it cannot vouch for cryptocurrency transactions.

“Any transaction carried out with this type of virtual asset falls under the responsibility and risk of the person carrying it out,” the bank said in a March statement sent in response to queries on Thursday.

(Reporting by Gustavo Palencia in Tegucigalpa; Writing by Valentine Hilaire; Editing by Matthew Lewis)

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U.S. FDIC asks banks for info on crypto activities, cites potential ‘systemic risks’

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – The U.S. Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) on Thursday said the thousands of banks it supervises should notify the regulator of any crypto-related activities they have or are planning.

Citing potential systemic risks from certain crypto assets and activities, the FDIC said any firm considering dabbling in crypto should tell the agency of its plans, and any institution already involved in such activities should “promptly” notify the FDIC, the regulator said in a statement.

“Crypto-related activities may pose significant safety and soundness risks, as well as financial stability and consumer protection concerns,” the FDIC said, noting evolving credit, liquidity, pricing and operational risks that are not yet fully understood.

The request comes as U.S. banking regulators reckon with the increasing popularity of cryptocurrencies. U.S. President Joe Biden last month told government agencies to assess the risks and benefits of various cryptocurrency issues, a move seen as a stark acknowledgement of the potential consequences of the growing importance of digital assets.

A disruption in crypto-asset transactions or activities could result in a “run” on a firm’s financial assets and consumers may be confused about crypto assets offered by, through or connection with their institutions, the FDIC said on Thursday.

Prior to jumping into a crypto-related activity, the FDIC-supervised institution should notify the regulator, providing details on the planned activity and proposed timeline. The agency said it plans to review the information for safety and soundness, financial stability and consumer protections.

(Reporting by Chris Prentice; editing by Bernard Orr)

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Yellen says U.S. crypto rules should support innovation, manage risks

By David Lawder

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – U.S. Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen said on Thursday crypto asset regulations should support responsible innovation while managing risks, sticking to the contours of a recent White House executive order that was well-received by the crypto market.

In a speech on digital assets policy released by the Treasury, Yellen said that in many cases regulators already have authorities that can manage crypto risks and provide appropriate oversight of new types of intermediaries such as digital asset exchanges.

“Our regulatory frameworks should be designed to support responsible innovation while managing risks – especially those that could disrupt the financial system and economy,” Yellen said in the excerpts of her speech to be delivered at American University in Washington.

“As banks and other traditional financial firms become more involved in digital asset markets, regulatory frameworks will need to appropriately reflect the risks of these new activities,” she said.

Crypto regulation remains patchy and regulators are still figuring out the best way to oversee trading platforms and crypto services provided by banks, such as digital asset custody.

Some lawmakers want regulators to crack down on the industry due to volatility in crypto asset valuations, causing some market worries about onerous new rules. But the White House’s and Treasury’s message on supporting responsible innovation has assuaged some of those fears.

Biden’s executive order requires the Treasury and the Commerce Departments and other agencies to prepare reports on “the future of money” and the role cryptocurrencies will play.

Yellen also said that wherever possible crypto regulations should be “tech neutral” and guided by risks associated with services provided to households and businesses, not the underlying technology.

“For example, consumers, investors, and businesses should be protected from fraud and misleading statements regardless of whether assets are stored on a balance sheet or distributed ledger,” Yellen said. “Similarly, firms that hold customer assets should be required to ensure those assets are not lost, stolen, or used without the customer’s permission.”

(Reporting by David Lawder; Editing by Sam Holmes)

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Yellen says Russia should be expelled from G20, U.S. may boycott some meetings

By David Lawder and Dan Burns

(Reuters) – U.S. Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen said on Wednesday that Russia should be expelled from the Group of 20 major economies forum, and the United States will boycott “a number of G20 meetings” if Russian officials show up.

Her comments at a U.S. House Financial Services Committee hearing raised questions about the G20’s future role in the wake of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.

Since 2008, the club has served as a key international forum for issues from COVID-19 relief to cross-border debt and also includes China, India, Saudi Arabia and other countries that have been reluctant to condemn Russia’s actions.

Yellen told lawmakers Russia’s invasion of Ukraine and the killings of civilians in Bucha “are reprehensible, represent an unacceptable affront to the rules-based global order, and will have enormous economic repercussions in Ukraine and beyond.”

The United States and its key allies have placed greater emphasis in recent months on the G7 grouping of industrial democracies, whose interests are more aligned, using G7 meetings to coordinate their response to Russia’s war in Ukraine.

Yellen said the Biden administration wants to push Russia out of active participation in major international institutions, but acknowledged it was unlikely that Russia could be expelled from the International Monetary Fund given its rules.

“President Biden’s made it clear, and I certainly agree with him, that it cannot be business as usual for Russia in any of the financial institutions,” Yellen said. “He’s asked that Russia be removed from the G20, and I’ve made clear to my colleagues in Indonesia that we will not be participating in a number of meetings if the Russians are there,” Yellen said.

Indonesia holds the presidency this year and will host a finance meeting in July and a leaders summit in November.

A Treasury spokesperson later said that Yellen was referring to an April 20 G20 finance ministers and central bank governors meeting on the sidelines of the IMF and World Bank Spring Meetings in Washington and associated deputies meetings.

The April finance meeting will be held both in-person and virtually and Russia’s participation is unclear at present.

Russia has said that President Vladimir Putin intends to attend the G20 summit in Bali this year and has received China’s backing to stay in the group.

Indonesia could not expel or “disinvite” any G20 members, including Russia, a government official familiar with the matter said, adding whether a country attended was up to that nation.

ENERGY FLEXIBILITY

Yellen’s testimony came as the Biden administration announced a new round of sanctions to punish Russia, including banning Americans from investing in Russia and locking Sberbank, Russia’s largest lender and holder of a third of its bank deposits, out of the U.S. financial system, along with other institutions.

But transactions allowing European allies to purchase Russian oil and natural gas were exempted through special Treasury licenses.

Yellen said that flexibility on Russian energy transactions was needed because many European countries “remain heavily dependent on Russian natural gas, as well as oil, and they are committed to making the transition away from that dependence as rapidly as possible.”

But she acknowledged that this would take time.

A complete ban on oil exports from Russia, the world’s third-largest producer after the United States and Saudi Arabia, would likely prompt “skyrocketing” prices that would hurt both the United States and Europe, Yellen said.

She added that she hoped that currently high prices would entice oil companies in the United States and elsewhere to ramp up production in the next six months, which, along with the Biden’s release of oil from the U.S. Strategic Petroleum Reserve, may allow for tougher restrictions on Russian oil.

CHINA WARNING

Yellen also issued a warning to China that Treasury was prepared to turn its sanctions tools against Beijing in the event of Chinese aggression against Taiwan, which China claims as a wayward province.

Asked if the United States would take such steps if Taiwan was threatened, she said: “Absolutely. I believe we’ve shown that we can. In the case of Russia, we threatened significant consequences. We’ve imposed significant consequences. And I think that you should not doubt our ability and resolve to do the same in other situations.”

(Reporting by David Lawder and Dan Burns; Additional reporting by Gayatri Suroyo in Jakarta; Editing by Andrea Ricci, Ed Davies)

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Meta plans virtual currency, creator coins for its apps – FT

(Reuters) – Meta Platforms Inc is readying plans to introduce virtual tokens and cryptocurrencies to its family of apps with an aim to use such virtual tokens for rewarding creators and lending and other financial services, the Financial Times reported on Wednesday.

The move, which is reported to be in its early stages, comes as Meta grows its focus on services centered around the metaverse, a virtual environment where people interact, work and play.

If implemented, it could also give Meta a new revenue channel and control over transactions in its suite of apps and services, which include Facebook, Instagram, WhatsApp and the Meta Quest virtual reality platform.

Meta’s cryptocurrencies, internally dubbed “Zuck Bucks”, are intended for the metaverse and may not be based on blockchain, the FT report said, citing people familiar with the matter.

Meta could introduce in-app tokens that would be centrally controlled by the company, the report said, and such tokens could be used to pay favorite creators on Instagram or reward people who make meaningful contributions in Facebook groups.

Meta did not immediately respond to a Reuters request for comment.

Mark Zuckerberg, chief executive officer of Meta, said last month that Instagram will introduce non-fungible tokens (NFTs) in the “near-term”.

Earlier this year, Meta joined the Crypto Open Patent Alliance (COPA), a group of companies led by Jack Dorsey’s Block Inc that has pledged to promote open access to cryptocurrency technologies.

(Reporting by Yuvraj Malik in Bengaluru; Editing by Maju Samuel)