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Bitcoin Standard Treasury SPAC Listing: A Bold Corporate Treasury Revolution Set for April
bitcoinworld113d ago

Bitcoin Standard Treasury SPAC Listing: A Bold Corporate Treasury Revolution Set for April

BitcoinWorldBitcoin Standard Treasury SPAC Listing: A Bold Corporate Treasury Revolution Set for AprilIn a landmark move for institutional cryptocurrency adoption, the Bitcoin Standard Treasury Company (BSTR) is preparing for a public listing as early as April 2025 through a Special Purpose Acquisition Company (SPAC) merger. This strategic initiative, first reported by CoinDesk, signals a pivotal shift in how corporations might manage treasury assets. The company, led by [...]This post Bitcoin Standard Treasury SPAC Listing: A Bold Corporate Treasury Revolution Set for April first appeared on BitcoinWorld.

#CRYPTO
1, 2, 3, 4, 5 And 5, 4, 3, 2, 1
zerohedge113d ago

1, 2, 3, 4, 5 And 5, 4, 3, 2, 1

1, 2, 3, 4, 5 And 5, 4, 3, 2, 1 By Michael Every of RabobankDepressingly, today marks the start of the fifth year of the Ukraine War: a battered Ukraine is still standing against a bruised Russia; the US is still aiming for a peace deal so it can pivot to Asia; and Europe --even as it knows it has to look after both Ukraine and its own conventional defenses after decades of having this provided for it-- is still trying to get its act together.Despite its rhetoric, with a few notable exceptions European rearmament isn’t happening with appropriate scale and speed. Is Ukraine supposed to hold on until 2035, when EU defense budgets will be at the promised 3.5% of GDP? EU ministers also just failed to agree their 20th sanctions package on Russia, and Hungary is blocking the €90bn loan to Ukraine the EU had thrashed out. As such, the EU’s Kallas is reopening the controversial Russian frozen assets option shelved in December, which Belgium refused to go along with it. That’s as the UK Telegraph reports that “Kremlin spies” are acquiring ‘Trojan horse’ networks of sites in residential homes near European military bases that could be used to launch sabotage campaigns.Meanwhile, we appear very close to a new war in the Middle East. Forget Bloomberg headlines and Iranian sabre-rattling. Look to: the USS Ford steaming towards Haifa; US troops removed from bases in Qatar; US staff removed from the embassy in Lebanon; former senior Israeli officials told to return home from abroad immediately; Israel preparing to shutter its embassies; a major underground hospital being opened in Tel Aviv; US Secretary of State Rubio postponing his planned meeting in Israel to next week; Indian PM Modi to speak in the Knesset tomorrow as part of what is claimed will be the announcement of a new extremist coalition (which will also have some EU members); and PM Netanyahu telling the Knesset: “This is not a time to engage in arguing. I am setting that aside. We are in very complex and challenging days. No one knows what tomorrow will bring. We have our eye open and are prepared for every scenario. I have made it clear to the ayatollah regime that if they make an error, perhaps the severest error in their history, and attack Israel, we will respond with force that they cannot imagine.... we must rally the ranks of the nation and stand shoulder to shoulder.” Importantly, what looms is not a repeat of the Iran-Israel clashes we correctly predicted following October 7: logically, if it’s to happen, it will be an endgame. The Iranian regime’s response will be appropriate, as seen vs its own people, up to 30,000 of whom may have died while protesting against it. In that respect, if Iran feels it’s going to lose control --which is never has until now-- it will do whatever it can to fan the global flames as high as possible for as long as possible. In the recent Greenland Crisis, we stressed that in 2026 Europe is the Egypt of 1956’s Suez Crisis and the US is still the US. Iran’s goal will be to try to make the US into the UK and France of 1956 via markets telling Trump to pack up and go home rather than play grand macro strategy in the Middle East.Of course, that involves energy flows – and it’s Iran’s physical ability to stop them that matters more than the politics or “because markets” of it. Could Hormuz be mined or see suicide attacks on tankers? Could missile attacks hit Saudi oil given reports Iran will have heard that Riyadh now backs a US strike? Could there be terror attacks from sleeper cells across the region and the West against civilians or key infrastructure? None of this is available on Bloomberg, so are you sure?Look to the cartel violence in Mexico as an example of how one can be relaxing one minute and fleeing from gunfire the next. There, following President Shenbaum’s evacuation to a naval vessel for her own safety, the WSJ reports, ‘Mexico Races to Prevent Cartel War’.That’s plenty of ‘risk off’ for markets. But there’s far more afoot.Stocks were rocked by a viral report underlining the devastating impact of AI on the economy as another claimed UK unemployment will rise above its pandemic high within months: you think the UK by-election on Thursday shows a fragmented and polarized polity now? Such views overlook the need for resources to power AI but are worth considering – so is the struggle for those resources, which hardly says we are all going to sit and sing kumbaya together.The US is leaning on Anthropic to get with the (military-industrial) program or be on the outs; and Anthropic is reporting China set up 16,000 fake accounts to use Claude to train DeepSeek. That effectively allows China access to Nvidia chips indirectly. Again, no kumbaya here but rather more controls on who can get access to US AI ahead – and notably that’s as India is strategically looped into the US AI ecosystem. If we are developing separate supply chains from critical minerals up to chips, how does that allow for a “because markets” free trade in the end product AI? Answer: it doesn’t. Walls will go up. Which/whose side you are on will dictate what AI you can use as a consumer.Relatedly, Trump eviscerated the ‘supreme court’ (no capital letters) and stressed --correctly-- that their ruling allowed him to “use Licenses to do absolutely “terrible” things to foreign countries,” and that tariffs can “be used in a much more powerful and obnoxious way, with legal certainty.” He later added another point also clear to us: any country that thinks it can wriggle out of US trade deals will face even higher tariffs. Moreover, the WSJ reports Trump is considering new 232 and 301 national security tariffs on large-scale batteries, cast iron and iron fittings, plastic piping, industrial chemicals and power grid and telecom equipment.Yet as France bans the US ambassador from talking to its government, the EU Parliament put the US trade deal on ice. Expect US-EU tensions to rise further, it seems. By contrast, Japan has underlined that it’s sticking with its trade deal and the $550bn of pledged, and guided, investment into the US. The contrast between the two is stark – and markets should take note.More so given the Nikkei Asia reports the marked swing we saw in USD/JPY in January was initiated by FX intervention from US Treasury Secretary Bessent not Tokyo, even if Washington, D.C. is open to coordinated forex moves if requested by Japan. In short, FX markets don’t get to focus on simple risk on/off and the likes of rate differentials anymore: they have to focus on the geopolitics of geoeconomics and who wants to help, and hurt, whom, and how.Similarly, the WSJ reports that crypto firm Binance fired staff who flagged $1bn moving to sanctioned Iran entities, which sounds like something the Treasury and Pentagon might also like a word about. Moreover, the Trump-backed crypto group World Liberty’s stablecoin says it was the subject of a deliberate attack. Bitcoin is also having a bad time of it rather than rallying on all the above uncertainty. And as those at the leading edge of markets thrash around for what the emerging global architecture may be, China is pushing Hong Kong as its global gold trading hub.All of this is the backdrop to President Trump’s State of the Union address tonight at 9PM US eastern time. Start the countdown clocks to that piece of political theatre – with what surprises for the viewing audience?Five, four, three, two, one... Tyler DurdenTue, 02/24/2026 - 10:20

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Global broker FP Markets is 20 years old, and it is definitely not pausing to reflect
insidermonkey113d ago

Global broker FP Markets is 20 years old, and it is definitely not pausing to reflect

Twenty years is a milestone many financial firms pause to celebrate quietly. FP Markets has chosen a different route. As the company marks its 20th anniversary, the message is clear: this is not a moment for reflection alone, but a springboard for what comes next. The past two decades have been about building credibility, scale, [...]

#FOREX
AUD/USD Retreats: Critical CPI Data Looms Amid Daunting US Tariff Uncertainty
bitcoinworld113d ago

AUD/USD Retreats: Critical CPI Data Looms Amid Daunting US Tariff Uncertainty

BitcoinWorldAUD/USD Retreats: Critical CPI Data Looms Amid Daunting US Tariff UncertaintySydney, Australia – April 2025: The AUD/USD currency pair is experiencing notable pressure, retreating from recent highs as traders adopt a cautious stance. This defensive positioning comes ahead of a critical Australian Consumer Price Index (CPI) release. Simultaneously, looming uncertainty surrounding potential US tariff adjustments is injecting significant volatility into forex markets. Consequently, analysts are [...]This post AUD/USD Retreats: Critical CPI Data Looms Amid Daunting US Tariff Uncertainty first appeared on BitcoinWorld.

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Yogi Adityanath woos Singapore investors, pitches UP as secure hub
newsable_asianetnews113d ago

Yogi Adityanath woos Singapore investors, pitches UP as secure hub

UP CM Yogi Adityanath pitched the state as a secure and fast-growing investment destination at a Singapore roadshow. He assured investors of safety, stability, and speed, highlighting the state's economic transformation and infrastructure readiness.

#ECONOMY
Insider Decision: Patrick Pacious Exercises Options At Choice Hotels Intl For $1.70M
benzinga113d ago

Insider Decision: Patrick Pacious Exercises Options At Choice Hotels Intl For $1.70M

On February 23, it was revealed in an SEC filing that Patrick Pacious, President & CEO at Choice Hotels Intl (NYSE:CHH) executed a significant exercise of company stock options.What Happened: A Form 4 filing with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission on Monday revealed that Pacious, President & CEO at Choice Hotels Intl in the Consumer Discretionary sector, exercised stock options for 66,288 shares of CHH stock. The exercise price of the options was $81.15 per share.Choice Hotels Intl shares are trading up 1.38% at $106.76 at the time of this writing on Tuesday morning. Since the current price is $106.76, this makes Pacious's 66,288 shares worth $1,697,635.Get to Know Choice Hotels Intl BetterAt year-end 2024, Choice Hotels operated 654,000 rooms across the economy, midscale, upscale, and extended-stay segments. Comfort Inn and Comfort Suites are the largest brands (26% of the company's total domestic rooms), while Ascend and Cambria (10%) are newer lifestyle and select-service brands. Choice closed on its Radisson acquisition in August 2022, which added about 70,000 rooms. Franchises account for 100% of total revenue, and the United States represented 78% of total rooms in 2024.Unraveling the Financial Story of Choice Hotels IntlPositive Revenue Trend: Examining Choice Hotels Intl's financials over 3 months reveals a positive narrative. The company achieved a noteworthy ...Full story available on Benzinga.com

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TransferMate Completes Global Rollout of Vivox AI’s Next Generation KYB Automation
ffnews113d ago

TransferMate Completes Global Rollout of Vivox AI’s Next Generation KYB Automation

TransferMate, the world’s leading provider of embedded B2B payments infrastructure, has completed a full global rollout of Vivox AI’s trusted, explainable AI agents as its new Know Your Business (KYB) automation platform.The post TransferMate Completes Global Rollout of Vivox AI’s Next Generation KYB Automation appeared first on FF News | Fintech Finance.

#TECH
US datacenters face slew of problems amid grassroots protests against AI
theguardian113d ago

US datacenters face slew of problems amid grassroots protests against AI

New constructions delayed or cancelled, raising questions about US’s ability to expand infrastructure to support boomCancellations and delays of new US datacenters have increased as the artificial intelligence boom runs up against a slate of issues, including supply chain snags, energy shortages and tariff-induced restraints.Grassroots opposition from local communities has also derailed some plans, and some investors have grown wary of datacenters amid fears of an AI bubble. Continue reading...

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