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Major cryptocurrencies experienced a significant decrease in value on Wednesday evening, following hawkish remarks made by Fed Chair Jerome Powell during a press conference.Bitcoin, Ethereum, Dogecoin Price TodayCryptocurrencyGains +/-Price (Recorded 9:30 p.m. EDT)Bitcoin BTC/USD -1.00%$27,019Ethereum ETH/USD -1.84%$1,616Dogecoin DOGE/USD -0.71%$0.062

The Federal Reserve decided to maintain its current monetary policy on Wednesday, keeping the range for its benchmark interest rate unchanged at 5.25% to 5.50%.

Furthermore, Fed officials have revised their projections for next year, indicating a higher expected interest rate of around 5.1%, compared to the previous estimate of 4.3% in June. This increase reflects their anticipation of stronger economic growth. They now expect a 2.1% real GDP increase for this year, as opposed to the 1% forecasted in June.

Powell, expressed that a majority of committee members view another rate hike as appropriate during the remaining two Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) meetings, to align with the Feds objectives. Powell also noted that recent inflation trends have been encouraging, describing the last three months readings as very, very good.

The next FOMC policy meeting is scheduled to take place in early November.

Gold, Silver Or Bitcoin: What Is The Best Hedge Against Inflation? Ask industry experts directly at Benzingas Future of Digital Assets event happening in NYC on Nov. 14, 2023. Be a part of the discussions where you wont just be a passive spectator. Dont let this chance slip away secure early bird discounted tickets now!

Top Gainer (24 Hour)CryptocurrencyGains +/-Price (Recorded 9:30 p.m. EDT)Immutable+24.98%$0.6825Astar+9.53%$0.05659Aave+6.16%$65.77

Currently, the global crypto market capitalization stands at $1.07 trillion, a 0.51% decrease in the last day.

Stocks slipped on Wednesday following the announcement from the Federal Reserve that it would keep interest rates unchanged for now while hinting at a potential future increase. The S&P 500 experienced a decline of 0.94% to close at 4,402.20, while the Nasdaq Composite slid 1.53% to 13,469.13. Notably, Microsofts MSFT stock decreased by over 2%, while Nvidia NVDA and Google-parent Alphabet GOOGL both saw approximately 3% declines.

See More: Best Cryptocurrency ScannersAnalyst Notes

According to crypto analyst Michael Van de Poppe, it is unlikely that the FED will raise interest rates. He predicts that the current hiking policy may come to an end.

"Bitcoin is likely to start trending up from here (yes, a fakeout usually happens at the news)."

Breaking news:

No rate hike from the FED.

My best guess: we’re done with the hiking policy. #Bitcoin is likely to start trending up from here (yes, a fakeout usually happens at the news). Michal van de Poppe (@CryptoMichNL) September 20, 2023

In another post, he said Bitcoin holds a crucial level at $26,700-26,800 and rallies further. "This is strong and looks like weve got a continuation of the uptrend here. New range established, new uptrend, new altcoins breaking out."

Crypto analyst Benjamin Cowen said there is a possibility that Ethereum dominance may decrease over the next few months.

"Maybe it follows the pattern of BTC dominance. Namely, lower highs (which everyone loves to point out), but also higher lows," he tweeted.

Data from Santiment, an on-chain analytics firm, reveals that the Federal Reserve has decided to maintain interest rates at the recent FOMC meeting. However, they have indicated a possibility of future rate hikes. In the midst of this, the crypto market has remained resilient, despite the S&P 500 dropping to a 4-week low. This break in correlation is a promising sign. Bitcoin traders are showing an aggressive increase in short positions on both Deribit and Binance, leading to the likelihood of potential liquidations that could boost prices. Since the surge in shorting activity last week, BTCs price has already increased by 4%. This trend is likely to continue.

? #Bitcoin traders are aggressively shorting on both #Deribit and #Binance, making potential liquidations more likely to boost prices. $BTC’s price is +4% since the increase in shorting began to appear last week. This has a good probability of continuing. https://t.co/c8eTpAxIoP pic.twitter.com/8REpjp2rtx Santiment (@santimentfeed) September 20, 2023

Photo by Wit Olszewski on Shutterstock

Read Next: Jim Cramer Advises Against Using Binance, Provokes Strong Reactions From Twitter Users

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Scientists Warn Southern Ocean Could ‘Burp’ Stored Heat, Delaying Global Cooling for 100 Years

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New modelling suggests the Southern Ocean could one day release the vast heat it has stored from greenhouse gas pollution. If CO₂ levels were pushed to net-negative, deep convection may trigger a sudden “thermal burp” that warms the planet for decades. Though idealised, the study shows how Antarctica’s surrounding seas could shape long-term climate outcomes.

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Is Starmer continuing to mislead public over the budget?

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Is Starmer continuing to mislead public over the budget?

Did the chancellor mislead the public, and her own cabinet, before the budget?

It’s a good question, and we’ll come to it in a second, but let’s begin with an even bigger one: is the prime minister continuing to mislead the public over the budget?

The details are a bit complex but ultimately this all comes back to a rather simple question: why did the government raise taxes in last week’s budget? To judge from the prime minister’s responses at a news conference just this morning, you might have judged that the answer is: “because we had to”.

“There was an OBR productivity review,” he explained to one journalist. “The result of that was there was £16bn less than we might otherwise have had. That’s a difficult starting point for any budget.”

Politics latest: OBR boss resigns over budget leak

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Beth Rigby asks Keir Starmer if he misled the public

Time and time again throughout the news conference, he repeated the same point: the Office for Budget Responsibility had revised its forecasts for the UK economy and the upshot of that was that the government had a £16bn hole in its accounts. Keep that figure in your head for a bit, because it’s not without significance.

But for the time being, let’s take a step back and recall that budgets are mostly about the difference between two numbers: revenues and expenditure; tax and spending. This government has set itself a fiscal rule – that it needs, within a few years, to ensure that, after netting out investment, the tax bar needs to be higher than the spending bar.

At the time of the last budget, taxes were indeed higher than current spending, once the economic cycle is taken account of or, to put it in economists’ language, there was a surplus in the cyclically adjusted current budget. The chancellor had met her fiscal rule, by £9.9bn.

Pic: Reuters
Image:
Pic: Reuters

This, it’s worth saying, is not a very large margin by which to meet your fiscal rule. A typical budget can see revisions and changes that would swamp that in one fell swoop. And part of the explanation for why there has been so much speculation about tax rises over the summer is that the chancellor left herself so little “headroom” against the rule. And since everyone could see debt interest costs were going up, it seemed quite plausible that the government would have to raise taxes.

Then, over the summer, the OBR, whose job it is to make the official government forecasts, and to mark its fiscal homework, told the government it was also doing something else: reviewing the state of Britain’s productivity. This set alarm bells ringing in Downing Street – and understandably. The weaker productivity growth is, the less income we’re all earning, and the less income we’re earning, the less tax revenues there are going into the exchequer.

The early signs were that the productivity review would knock tens of billions of pounds off the chancellor’s “headroom” – that it could, in one fell swoop, wipe off that £9.9bn and send it into the red.

Read more:
Main budget announcements – at a glance
Enter your salary to see how the budget affects you

That is why stories began to brew through the summer that the chancellor was considering raising taxes. The Treasury was preparing itself for some grisly news. But here’s the interesting thing: when the bad news (that productivity review) did eventually arrive, it was far less grisly than expected.

True: the one-off productivity “hit” to the public finances was £16bn. But – and this is crucial – that was offset by a lot of other, much better news (at least from the exchequer’s perspective). Higher wage inflation meant higher expected tax revenues, not to mention a host of other impacts. All told, when everything was totted up, the hit to the public finances wasn’t £16bn but somewhere between £5bn and £6bn.

Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible video player

Budget winners and losers

Why is that number significant? Because it’s short of the chancellor’s existing £9.9bn headroom. Or, to put it another way, the OBR’s forecasting exercise was not enough to force her to raise taxes.

The decision to raise taxes, in other words, came down to something else. It came down to the fact that the government U-turned on a number of its welfare reforms over the summer. It came down to the fact that they wanted to axe the two-child benefits cap. And, on top of this, it came down to the fact that they wanted to raise their “headroom” against the fiscal rules from £9.9bn to over £20bn.

These are all perfectly logical reasons to raise tax – though some will disagree on their wisdom. But here’s the key thing: they are the chancellor and prime minister’s decisions. They are not knee-jerk responses to someone else’s bad news.

Yet when the prime minister explained his budget decisions, he focused mostly on that OBR report. In fact, worse, he selectively quoted the £16bn number from the productivity review without acknowledging that it was only one part of the story. That seems pretty misleading to me.

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Politics

Is Starmer continuing to mislead public over the budget?

Published

on

By

Is Starmer continuing to mislead public over the budget?

Did the chancellor mislead the public, and her own cabinet, before the budget?

It’s a good question, and we’ll come to it in a second, but let’s begin with an even bigger one: is the prime minister continuing to mislead the public over the budget?

The details are a bit complex but ultimately this all comes back to a rather simple question: why did the government raise taxes in last week’s budget? To judge from the prime minister’s responses at a news conference just this morning, you might have judged that the answer is: “because we had to”.

“There was an OBR productivity review,” he explained to one journalist. “The result of that was there was £16bn less than we might otherwise have had. That’s a difficult starting point for any budget.”

Politics latest: OBR boss resigns over budget leak

Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible video player

Beth Rigby asks Keir Starmer if he misled the public

Time and time again throughout the news conference, he repeated the same point: the Office for Budget Responsibility had revised its forecasts for the UK economy and the upshot of that was that the government had a £16bn hole in its accounts. Keep that figure in your head for a bit, because it’s not without significance.

But for the time being, let’s take a step back and recall that budgets are mostly about the difference between two numbers: revenues and expenditure; tax and spending. This government has set itself a fiscal rule – that it needs, within a few years, to ensure that, after netting out investment, the tax bar needs to be higher than the spending bar.

At the time of the last budget, taxes were indeed higher than current spending, once the economic cycle is taken account of or, to put it in economists’ language, there was a surplus in the cyclically adjusted current budget. The chancellor had met her fiscal rule, by £9.9bn.

Pic: Reuters
Image:
Pic: Reuters

This, it’s worth saying, is not a very large margin by which to meet your fiscal rule. A typical budget can see revisions and changes that would swamp that in one fell swoop. And part of the explanation for why there has been so much speculation about tax rises over the summer is that the chancellor left herself so little “headroom” against the rule. And since everyone could see debt interest costs were going up, it seemed quite plausible that the government would have to raise taxes.

Then, over the summer, the OBR, whose job it is to make the official government forecasts, and to mark its fiscal homework, told the government it was also doing something else: reviewing the state of Britain’s productivity. This set alarm bells ringing in Downing Street – and understandably. The weaker productivity growth is, the less income we’re all earning, and the less income we’re earning, the less tax revenues there are going into the exchequer.

The early signs were that the productivity review would knock tens of billions of pounds off the chancellor’s “headroom” – that it could, in one fell swoop, wipe off that £9.9bn and send it into the red.

Read more:
Main budget announcements – at a glance
Enter your salary to see how the budget affects you

That is why stories began to brew through the summer that the chancellor was considering raising taxes. The Treasury was preparing itself for some grisly news. But here’s the interesting thing: when the bad news (that productivity review) did eventually arrive, it was far less grisly than expected.

True: the one-off productivity “hit” to the public finances was £16bn. But – and this is crucial – that was offset by a lot of other, much better news (at least from the exchequer’s perspective). Higher wage inflation meant higher expected tax revenues, not to mention a host of other impacts. All told, when everything was totted up, the hit to the public finances wasn’t £16bn but somewhere between £5bn and £6bn.

Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible video player

Budget winners and losers

Why is that number significant? Because it’s short of the chancellor’s existing £9.9bn headroom. Or, to put it another way, the OBR’s forecasting exercise was not enough to force her to raise taxes.

The decision to raise taxes, in other words, came down to something else. It came down to the fact that the government U-turned on a number of its welfare reforms over the summer. It came down to the fact that they wanted to axe the two-child benefits cap. And, on top of this, it came down to the fact that they wanted to raise their “headroom” against the fiscal rules from £9.9bn to over £20bn.

These are all perfectly logical reasons to raise tax – though some will disagree on their wisdom. But here’s the key thing: they are the chancellor and prime minister’s decisions. They are not knee-jerk responses to someone else’s bad news.

Yet when the prime minister explained his budget decisions, he focused mostly on that OBR report. In fact, worse, he selectively quoted the £16bn number from the productivity review without acknowledging that it was only one part of the story. That seems pretty misleading to me.

Continue Reading

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