Fundraising platform raises $2m of Tether for Ukrainians: Crypto Moves

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Updated 08 March 2022
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Fundraising platform raises $2m of Tether for Ukrainians: Crypto Moves

RIYADH: Whitepay, a fundraising platform that seeks to assist Ukrainian civilians and the country’s military forces, said it had raised $2 million of the stablecoin Tether, known as USDT.

Some of the donated crypto assets have been sent to the Ukrainian military and to a humanitarian fund that finances volunteers.

Others have been transferred to the Ukrainian Army to cater to its medical needs. A portion of the assets has gone to the humanitarian fund that finances the volunteers, according to a tweet posted by the fund.

The announcement by Whitepay, which was founded by the Estonian crypto exchange Whitebit and Ukrainian fintech and crypto entrepreneur Gleb Udovychenko, came as reports said Ukraine had received cryptocurrency valued at $50 million in just one week, Bitcoin.com reported.

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Bitcoin, the leading cryptocurrency internationally, traded higher on Tuesday, rising by 1.60 percent to $39,005 at 3:00 p.m. Riyadh time.

Ether, the second most traded cryptocurrency, was priced at $2,587, down by 1.75 percent, according to data from Coindesk.

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President Joe Biden is expected to sign an executive order on cryptocurrency this week that will mark the first step toward regulating how digital currency is traded, AP reported.

Apple co-founder Steve Wozniak says Bitcoin is “the only one that’s pure-gold mathematics”, and he is skeptical of most other cryptocurrencies.

“There’s so many cryptocurrencies that come out now. Everybody has a way to create a new one, and you have a celebrity star with it. It seems like they’re just collecting a bunch of money from people who want to invest at the very earliest stage, when it’s worth pennies,” Wozniak said in an interview with the Insider.

While he is a fan of the metaverse, Wozniak is less enthusiastic about non-fungible tokens and cryptocurrencies, according to Bitcoin.com.

Wozniak said they are “so up in the air,” stressing they have a track record of thefts.


Global Markets: Record selloff in Seoul leads stock rout as markets brace for energy shock

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Global Markets: Record selloff in Seoul leads stock rout as markets brace for energy shock

  • S. Korea head for heaviest selloff on record
  • US and European equity futures slip

SINGAPORE: Asian stocks tanked on Wednesday,with a record-breaking market crash in Seoul, as investors dumped crowded bets on chipmakers on worries a widening Middle East ​war will drive an oil shock that raises inflation and delays interest rate cuts.

Asia is heavily dependent on energy imports shipped through the near-shuttered Strait of Hormuz and nowhere was the strain clearer than in Seoul, where the session finished with the market plunging 12 percent, the largest drop on record.

Over two days the benchmark has lost more than 18 percent of its value while the currency has slumped to a 17-year low.

Japan’s Nikkei fell 3.9 percent and Taiwan stocks dropped 4.3 percent as investors raced out of what has been one of the hottest bets of the last few months in semiconductor makers — likely as cover for losses elsewhere and to cut ‌down on risks.

“Asia’s ‌selloff is turning disorderly because markets are no longer treating this as ​a ‘one-week ‌headline ⁠shock,’ said ​Charu Chanana, ⁠chief investment strategist at Saxo in Singapore.
“The ‘sell-what-you-can’ phase is spreading.”

S&P 500 futures wobbled 0.6 percent lower and European futures gave up an early bounce to trade flat.

Goldman Sachs CEO David Solomon said he’d been surprised at markets’ “benign” reaction up to now to the building risks.

“There’s a cumulative effect of everything that’s happening and a much harsher reaction. Up to this point, we haven’t seen that cumulative effect,” he said in a speech in Sydney.

“I think it’s gonna take a couple of weeks for markets to really digest the implications of what has happened both in ⁠the short term and medium term, and I can’t speculate as to how ‌that would play out,” he said.

Rate cuts in question

Benchmark Brent crude ‌oil futures were on the rise and up more than 13 percent for ​the week at $82.08 a barrel, though prices have come ‌off highs since US President Donald Trump ordered an insurance guarantee on Gulf shipping and said the navy ‌may escort oil tankers through the Strait of Hormuz.

US and Israeli forces have pounded Iran since Saturday and Iranian drones and missiles have struck Gulf oil refineries and also US embassies in Saudi Arabia and Kuwait.

“Oil infrastructure seems to be under attack ... so people are having to think about what is the duration of all of that,” said Damien Boey, ‌portfolio strategist at Wilson Asset Management in Sydney.

Bond markets, after an initial rally, are now under pressure as investors bet higher oil prices will stoke inflation ⁠and delay rate cuts. Traders ⁠now see the Federal Reserve as more likely than not to hold rates in June.

“For the United States, this is very clearly inflationary ... so the market’s reassessing whether the Fed can actually deliver any rate cuts at all this year,” said Andrew Lilley, chief rates strategist for Australian investment bank Barrenjoey.

Dash for cash

That’s left cash as the beneficiary, with flow rushing in to money-market funds from riskier bets. Even gold took a hit overnight, along with the Australian dollar, which was still under pressure as investors close winning trades.

Gold steadied at $5,163 per ounce in Asia, while the Aussie dipped just below 70 cents. Overnight on Wall Street, indexes pared heavier losses and the S&P 500 closed 0.8 percent lower.

The euro was pinned at $1.16 by higher energy costs. Benchmark European gas prices have jumped about 66 percent in two days.

Coal prices are also starting to move in response to the energy crunch, ​with Australia’s benchmark Newcastle price up almost 17 percent this ​week.

“For markets to find a floor, we need signs of de-escalation on the war front or status quo, which could then move the focus back to fundamentals,” said Rupal Agarwal, Asia quant strategist at Bernstein in Singapore.