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Bitcoin hits $80,000. Why Trump is boosting crypto
  + stars: | 2024-11-10 | by ( David Goldman | ) edition.cnn.com   time to read: +2 min
After briefly touching the $80,000 milestone, bitcoin was trading just below it Sunday mid-morning. The crypto industry believes Trump’s victory is a bullish sign for bitcoin and other digital currencies. Although Trump was once a bitcoin skeptic, once saying it “was based on thin air,” he has fully embraced crypto in recent months — unlike the Biden administration, which has sought to rein in crypto. A big reason Trump has changed his tune on crypto: He now has a financial stake in it. In September, Trump and his children started a new crypto business called World Liberty Financial.
Persons: CNN — Bitcoin, Donald Trump, Bitcoin, Trump, , ” Trump, , Biden, Gary Gensler, ” Gensler’s, Sam Bankman, Gensler, Gensler’s, cryptocurrencies, Elon Musk Organizations: CNN, Biden, Liberty, . Securities, Exchange, ” Gensler’s SEC, SEC, Department of Justice, cryptocurrencies Locations: USA
Publicly traded companies that misleadingly or untruthfully promote their use of artificial intelligence risk engaging in “AI-washing” that can harm investors and run afoul of US securities law, said SEC Chair Gary Gensler in a speech on Tuesday. They also shouldn’t lie about whether they use an AI model or how they use AI in specific applications, Gensler added. One would be the intentional use of AI to facilitate securities fraud, Gensler said Tuesday. The SEC could target those who deploy AI in ways that create reckless or knowing disregard for the risks to investors, Gensler said. He said the SEC could also investigate those who place fake orders in violation of securities law, or investment advisers who place their own interests ahead of their clients’.
Persons: Gary Gensler, “ We’ve, ” Gensler, Gensler, Alvaro Bedoya Organizations: Washington CNN, Securities and Exchange Commission, Publicly, SEC, Yale Law School, Federal Trade Commission
How to survive hot desking
  + stars: | 2023-06-26 | by ( Jeanne Sahadi | ) edition.cnn.com   time to read: +6 min
Everyone is doing a version of [hot desking],” said Carlos Martinez, co-managing director and principal at Gensler, a global office design and planning firm. That’s the tradeoff.’”Transparency is keyStill, intellectually accepting that such a tradeoff is worth it doesn’t mean employees will embrace hot desking if it becomes harder to get their jobs done. While she wasn’t consulting with them about hot desking per se, she witnessed its failure in the course of her work there. That’s also why employers embarking on the switch to hot desking may want to customize the options to best suit different employees’ needs. Invite employee feedbackSwitching to hot desking should be viewed as a work in progress by everyone.
Persons: , , Carlos Martinez, Sanjay Rishi, Rishi, I’m, ” Rishi, Jessica Kriegel, ” Kriegel, Martinez, That’s, Kriegel, , JLL’s Rishi Organizations: New, New York CNN, Dynamics, Culture Partners Locations: New York, Gensler, Americas
New York CNN —Coinbase CEO Brian Armstrong is confident his battle with federal regulators will benefit the crypto industry, no matter how the judge rules. “Regardless of the outcome of the case, it’s a step towards clarity.”The Securities and Exchange Commission dealt another blow to the crypto industry on Tuesday by suing Coinbase, America’s largest crypto exchange. The SEC alleges Coinbase made billions of dollars facilitating the sale of crypto assets as an unregistered exchange, robbing investors of key protections along the way. ‘Icy reception’Armstrong questioned the timing of SEC Chairman Gary Gensler’s decision to file a lawsuit against his company just 24 hours after the agency accused Binance, the world’s largest crypto exchange, of mishandling customer funds. “They allowed us to become a public company,” Armstrong said.
Persons: Brian Armstrong, isn’t, ” Armstrong, Coinbase, Armstrong, , Gary Gensler’s, Binance, “ He’s, Gensler, , I’ve, , ‘ I’m, ’ ” Armstrong, , Gurbir Grewal, ” Coinbase, San, Coinbase wouldn’t, We’re, Adam Levitin Organizations: New, New York CNN, CNN, Securities, Exchange Commission, SEC, Enforcement, , SEC —, Georgetown Law Locations: New York, Washington, SEC’s, “ Europe, Singapore, Hong Kong, San Francisco
“Look, we don’t need more digital currency,” Gensler told CNBC on Tuesday. “We already have digital currency: It’s called the US dollar. Many crypto investors appear to be abandoning so-called “alt-coins” and sticking with the relatively more reliable OG virtual currency, wrote Ed Moya, a senior market analyst with Oanda. Bottom line: “The SEC looks like it is playing Whac-A-Mole with crypto exchanges,” Moya wrote. Because of that, crypto investors will have to decide whether they are confident that the offerings on various exchanges will remain available to trade.
Persons: CNN Business ’, Binance, , Matt Levine, I’ll, Coinbase, Brian Armstrong, Gary Gensler, ” Gensler, , It’s, Crypto, TD Cowen, Reena Aggarwal, Aggarwal, bitcoin, Ed Moya, ” Moya, , you’ll Organizations: CNN Business, New York CNN, Securities and Exchange Commission, SEC, CNBC, Georgetown, Psaros, Financial Markets, Chicago Mercantile Exchange, Oanda Locations: New York, United States, , cryptos
Italian corporate activism has a long way to go
  + stars: | 2023-05-10 | by ( ) www.reuters.com   time to read: +2 min
MILAN, May 10 (Reuters Breakingviews) - Fighting opaque governance at Italy’s state-backed companies is proving a tough nut to crack. That’s a victory for the Italian Treasury – the utility’s top investor with 23.6% – which managed to install oil and gas veteran Paolo Scaroni as chairman, along with other board members. The Italian state is in dire need of improving the way it picks its corporate representatives. But to confront Rome, investors will need to make a good case. They do not reflect the views of Reuters News, which, under the Trust Principles, is committed to integrity, independence, and freedom from bias.
Swedish drugmaker finds alluring poison pill
  + stars: | 2023-05-10 | by ( ) www.reuters.com   time to read: +2 min
LONDON, May 10 (Reuters Breakingviews) - Sweden’s rare disease drug maker is experiencing unfortunate deal side effects. On Wednesday, shares in Swedish Orphan Biovitrum (SOBI) (SOBIV.ST) fell 15% after it announced a plan to buy CTI BioPharma (CTIC.O), a specialist in rare blood cancers, for $1.7 billion. The Anglo-Swedish drugmaker refused to tender its shares amid a squabble over the U.S. rights for a respiratory drug. But SOBI’s new deal, which will be funded by a rights issue backed by main shareholder Investor AB (INVEb.ST), suggests Oelkers has support for a solo future. They do not reflect the views of Reuters News, which, under the Trust Principles, is committed to integrity, independence, and freedom from bias.
Amazon applies therapy to retail
  + stars: | 2023-05-09 | by ( ) www.reuters.com   time to read: +2 min
Rising costs and customers battered by inflation are hampering Amazon’s efforts to get its retail division on a path to sustainable profitability. While the rate of sales growth has outstripped growth in costs of distribution, the retail business over the past 12 months has lost $8 billion. More important, investors haven’t loved the idea of subsidizing delivery costs at the expense of profit. Applying therapy to its retailing business won’t change its consumers’ co-dependency. They do not reflect the views of Reuters News, which, under the Trust Principles, is committed to integrity, independence, and freedom from bias.
Aramco’s dividend largesse contains a hard logic
  + stars: | 2023-05-09 | by ( ) www.reuters.com   time to read: +2 min
That could work out to up to $18 billion a year, Royal Bank of Canada analysts reckon. Given that there are solid long-term reasons to hold Aramco shares, it might seem odd that the world’s largest oil producer feels the need to keep its investors on side. Meanwhile, Aramco’s dividend has been fixed since its listing, but that arrangement expires next year. Flagging to prospective foreign investors that its dividend policy is not entirely dependent on the whims of the Saudi state is probably not a bad idea. They do not reflect the views of Reuters News, which, under the Trust Principles, is committed to integrity, independence, and freedom from bias.
Additionally, there isn’t a regulatory framework for audits for many crypto companies. The SEC, which oversees the PCAOB, is reviewing how crypto companies portray reports from audit firms in the aftermath of the FTX collapse. The PCAOB—which sets audit standards, inspects audits and disciplines audit firms—has said it can only oversee audits of public companies and SEC-registered broker-dealers. In a letter last month to PCAOB Chair Erica Williams, they said the watchdog ignored what they called questionable practices by auditors of crypto companies. Even potential improvements to crypto audit regulation might not prevent fraud in the crypto industry, said Andrew Kitto, an assistant professor of accounting at the University of Massachusetts Amherst and a former PCAOB economic research fellow.
Securities and Exchange Commission Chair Gary Gensler is pushing to hold the cryptocurrency firms to the same rules that apply to stocks and bonds, rather than write a raft of new regulation for the troubled sector. That puts him at odds with some lawmakers who say the collapse of Sam Bankman-Fried’s FTX trading platform shows that crypto needs its own set of guardrails and point out that Mr. Gensler’s enforcement strategy moved too slowly to stop FTX from imploding.
Market overhaul pits perfect against good-enough
  + stars: | 2022-12-14 | by ( Ben Winck | ) www.reuters.com   time to read: +4 min
At present, more than 90% of individual investors’ trades are sold to a small group of market-makers, according to the agency. The profit that middlemen make from handling retail stock trades suggests Gensler has a point. The trouble is that retail investors have, in some ways, never had it so good. The changes reflect the largest overhaul of market rules since the agency introduced the Regulation National Market System framework in 2005. The proposals range from new disclosures on execution quality to an auction system for individual investors’ stock trades.
Chairman Gary Gensler, a Biden administration appointee, is pushing an ambitious list of regulatory changes through the SEC. WASHINGTON—The Securities and Exchange Commission’s fast-paced rule-making agenda under Chairman Gary Gensler has stretched staff resources, and some officials worry it could increase the risk of lawsuits, the agency’s internal watchdog said in a recent report. In meetings with the SEC’s inspector general, managers at the agency expressed concerns about short deadlines for staff to draft proposed rules and for public stakeholders to submit comments on them, according to the Oct. 13 report. Mr. Gensler’s rule-making teams have borrowed staff from across the agency, making it difficult to complete other parts of the SEC’s mission, managers reported.
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