Currency

Ethereum price hits $3.5K record as Winklevoss exchange adds Dogecoin

 

Gemini follows eToro in integrating Dogecoin as Ethereum underscores altcoins’ Bitcoin-crushing surge.

Ethereum doesn’t stop at $3,500

Data from Cointelegraph Markets Pro and Tradingview followed ETH/USD as the pair broke through its latest historic boundary and continued climbing.

At the time of writing, the largest altcoin by market cap was in pure price discovery mode as it sought resistance above $3,500.

The week had already seen new highs for Ether price on a daily basis, with seven-day gains standing at 36%.

Among analysts and traders alike, the sense of excitement on the day was palpable.

“I have been calling for $3600 $ETH for well over a month, but think it can go much higher,” Scott Melker told Twitter followers.

Short-term price targets had called for $5,000 while zooming out, $10,000 and even $20,000 were not unheard of as Ether outperformed Bitcoin in dollar gains throughout the past year.

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Big Fat Idea – Investing in AdTech

The driving engine of the e-commerce boom has been the shift to digital advertising. The underlying technology has revolutionized the industry and is the foundation of the Big Tech behemoths like Amazon, Google and Facebook. Martijn van den Bemd of Adcore joins Mike to explore opportunities for Canadian investors going forward.

Mike’s Comment

It’s finally here. The government wants control over what you can read, see, or upload to social media. Bill C-10 has been called a full frontal attack on free speech and democracy by Canada leading internet experts.

China reboots the internationalization of its currency

The emergence of China as an economic and financial powerhouse has been much quicker than often anticipated. Whether in terms of technological advances, industrial development, global trade or involvement in the capital markets, China’s rise has been rapid and highly disruptive.

There is, however, one glaring omission from this panoramic picture of strength: the internationalization of its currency, which has been far slower than earlier anticipated.

China’s expected rewriting of the world’s financial system after the 2008 global financial crisis seemingly peaked in 2015 with the International Monetary Fund’s conclusion that the yuan was comparable to the dollar, euro, yen and pound. But since then, although various measures have been implemented, such as improving foreign access to its onshore equity and debt markets, there has been a little evidence of a concerted effort to push for its broader global adoption.

This loss of momentum is very visible. According to the Society for Worldwide Interbank Financial Telecommunications (SWIFT), the global payment processing system, just 2.2% of total international payments and an even lower 1.3% of trade financing are denominated in yuan. Not only does this compare unfavorably with China’s 12.4% share of 2020 global merchandise trade, but these proportions have not changed over the last five years. Nor has the yuan been widely adopted as a reserve currency: It accounted for just 2.1% of global allocated reserves at the end of 2020, far less than the dollar’s 55.2%.

There is, however, mounting evidence that China is gearing up for a second push to encourage greater global yuan adoption. Much attention is focused on the international potential of the planned digital yuan, or e-CNY, especially as the platform will allow its overseas usage outside the existing U.S.-dominated financial architectures. But China has also announced or proposed other substantive initiatives… CLICK for the complete article

Copper Nears All Time High

In February 2020 the kick-off theme for the World Outlook Financial Conference chosen by Michael Campbell was “The Coming Commodity Boom”. That decision and recommendation has paid off big time for our subscribers. ~ Ed

Copper topped $10,000 a metric ton for the first time since 2011, nearing the all-time high set that year as rebounding economies stoke demand and mines struggle to keep up.

Prices rose as much as 1.3% to $10,008 a ton on the London Metal Exchange, before slipping back to trade near unchanged. The metal hit a record $10,190 in February 2011.

Copper has been among the best performers in a month where metals ranging from aluminum to iron ore have surged to the highest in years. The rally is being fueled by stimulus measures, near-zero interest rates and signs that economies are recovering from the virus pandemic. A push toward cleaner energy sources is also seen boosting consumption of copper, used in everything from electric vehicles to solar power systems, further straining supplies.

“This is a remarkable run for copper in terms of magnitude and consistency,” said Tai Wong, head of metals derivatives trading at BMO Capital Markets. “The all-time high at $10,190 is just around corner and now practically a foregone conclusion.”

Investors have piled into copper… Click for complete article