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Moondogshouse

11/24/21 12:53 PM

#44744 RE: amc #44743

I loved to here your argument? My math says .02? Not .2?
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tw0122

11/24/21 12:56 PM

#44746 RE: amc #44743

I bailed recently because they are targeting India and will be back maybe or not when Nov 29th news is out.

India’s Crypto Bill Seeks To Ban Cryptocurrencies, To Allow Certain Use Cases

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Suprita Anupam
Inc42 Staff
23 Nov'21
The Cryptocurrency and Regulation of Official Digital Currency Bill, 2021 seeks to ban all private cryptocurrencies while allowing certain use cases
The crypto bill will also introduce a framework for the creation of the Indian CBDC
The bill is set to be tabled during the upcoming Winter Session of the Parliament starting from November 29, 2021

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The Indian government has yet again listed crypto bill named — “The Cryptocurrency and Regulation of Official Digital Currency Bill, 2021?, for the upcoming winter session of the parliament. The bill seeks to ban all private cryptocurrencies while allowing a few exceptions. 
The Bill may have to seek the cabinet’s approval before it is tabled in the parliament. 
The Crypto Bill has been listed along with 25 other proposed bills including The Insolvency and Bankruptcy (Second Amendment) Bill, 2021, and The Banking Laws (Amendment) Bill, 2021 that seeks privatisation of two public sector banks.
According to the bill description, the Cryptocurrency and Regulation of Official Digital Currency Bill, 2021, seeks:
“To create a facilitative framework for the creation of the official digital currency to be issued by the Reserve Bank of India. The Bill also seeks to prohibit all private cryptocurrencies in India, however, it allows for certain exceptions to promote the underlying technology of cryptocurrency and its uses.”

Commenting on the development, Nischal Shetty, founder and CEO of Binance-owned crypto exchange WazirX said that while the description of the draft bill appears to be the same as in January 2021, several noteworthy events have occurred since January. First, the Parliamentary Standing Committee invited a public consultation, and then our Prime Minister himself came forward to call for crypto regulations in India. “That being said, let’s respectfully wait to find out more about the draft bill to be tabled in the Parliament,” he said.

The bill will also pave the way for the central bank digital currency (CBDC) aka fiat cryptocurrency project. The RBI has already been working on the project. However, it is far behind in the global race of fiat cryptocurrencies. According to the CBDC tracker by The Atlantic Council, while seven countries such as Nigeria, The Bahamas etc have already launched their CBDCs, 16 countries including China have launched their CBDCs in pilot mode.
The RBI governor Shaktikanta Das had earlier told that India would start testing its CBDC in December, this year. Recent reports suggest that pilot might begin in Q1 2022. 
The latest Bill seems to be in line with the position taken by the RBI. The RBI has been issuing multiple warnings for the past many years. Recently, Shaktikanta Das had said that these [crypto] currencies pose serious threats to the macroeconomic and financial stability of the country. Das also undermined the number of investors trading on them as well their average transaction values.
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tw0122

11/24/21 1:11 PM

#44748 RE: amc #44743

Governments like India and China want to control their slave citizens by making them use their hyperinflationary CBDC’s
CBDC’s enable governments to invade your personal privacy by observing and controlling individual transactions. CBDC’s are the mark of the beast in
Christian terms 666.
Soon about to find out if India is a completely Communist dictatorship on November 29,
2021

The end of privacy? Central banks plan to launch digital coins

As regulators crack down on cryptocurrencies, policymakers develop state-run versions

The dilemma central banks face over how to tackle the world’s rapidly growing cryptocurrency market has been thrown into stark relief in recent days by two very different announcements.

On Thursday, global regulator the Basel Committee on Banking Supervision said that cryptocurrencies are some of the world’s riskiest assets, and called for tougher capital rules and stricter oversight of investors’ holdings.

However El Salvador had just a day earlier announced that it would make bitcoin a legal tender — the first country in the world to do so.


Regulators and central banks are fighting for control of the monetary system as cryptocurrencies become an increasing challenge to fiat currencies, threatening to blunt the levers policymakers rely on to control the running of their economies.

“It is no surprise that governments are not inclined to give up their monetary monopolies,” said Marion Laboure, an analyst at Deutsche Bank. “As cryptocurrencies begin to seriously compete with regular currencies and fiat currencies, regulators and policymakers will crack down.”

A digital currency revolution [could be] either a triumph of decentralisation and market forces or a triumph of centralisation and government monitoring

Randall Kroszner, University of Chicago Booth School of Business
There are broadly two options: regulation and competition. Most countries are inching towards a combined approach of tightening supervision over cryptocurrencies and private payment systems while also developing central bank-backed digital coins.

The EU set out a regime for overseeing cryptocurrency markets in September last year and national regulators in the bloc have also taken steps. For example Germany’s BaFin has been pushing back against efforts by crypto exchange Binance to issue digital tokens that mimic more tightly controlled traditional securities.


Regulators elsewhere are also on the move. In May, the People’s Bank of China escalated its multiyear crackdown on cryptocurrencies, saying that financial institutions should not accept them as payment or offer services related to them.

China, which once accounted for the majority of bitcoin trading globally, first moved to close down cryptocurrency exchanges in 2017. Last month there were also signs of greater pressure on the mining of virtual currencies, with the province of inner Mongolia setting up a hotline where people could report suspected mining outfits.

After a more sluggish start, regulators in the US are also showing signs of taking a firmer approach towards bitcoin and its peers, although there are rifts about the extent of the crackdown.

Hester Peirce, a senior member of the Securities and Exchange Commission, recently warned against overly strict regulatory requirements for cryptocurrency markets. Her remarks contrasted with new commissioner Gary Gensler’s calls to bring them under closer supervision.

Meanwhile many central banks are embracing the technology behind cryptocurrency in an attempt to compete with existing coins. Nearly 90 per cent of the world’s central banks have launched projects on issuing digital currencies according to the Bank for International Settlements.


“Central banks representing a fifth of the world’s population say they are likely to issue the first central bank digital currencies in the next few years,” the BIS said in a report in January.

Potential benefits include making cross-border payments cheaper and faster and giving access to the monetary system to all individuals, rather than dividing the world into those with bank accounts and the unbanked. National digital currencies could also trigger a reshuffling of the world’s most dominant currencies.

“We do not usually associate disruption with central banks. But a major move to introduce central bank digital currencies could actually disrupt the financial system,” said Chetan Ahya, an analyst at Morgan Stanley, in a research note.

But the gamble risks sparking a vicious row about data privacy because officially run digital currencies could hand unprecedented power to policymakers.


Unlike cryptocurrencies which operate on decentralised systems, central bank digital currencies would be issued, backed and controlled by domestic national banks, giving them the ability to pay money directly to individuals. That would allow central banks and national governments to monitor every transaction and keep a record of all money movements in their economies.

“A digital currency revolution could go in two directions: either a triumph of decentralisation and market forces or a triumph of centralisation and government monitoring of every transaction,” Randall Kroszner of the University of Chicago Booth School of Business told the Financial Times.


It could also shake up other economic relationships. Bank of England deputy governor Sir Jon Cunliffe recently said that a digital pound would allow parents to programme their children’s pocket money so that they are unable to buy sweets, illustrating the potential powers of the UK’s planned “britcoin”.

China, Sweden and the Bahamas are the world leaders in the efforts to develop national cryptocurrencies. China has already launched live trials of its digital renminbi with millions of people currently using it as an experiment.

After a slower start, central bankers in the US, Europe and the UK are also responding. The ECB recently concluded a public consultation on a digital euro and will make a decision on whether to move forward with a formal investigation phase later this summer.


Last month US Federal Reserve chair Jay Powell outlined its plans to assess the prospects of a digital version of the dollar, although he said there would be a “thoughtful and deliberative process” this summer before making any firm commitments.

That leaves policymakers and regulators in a race against time to grapple with the ethical issues involved, as the economic role of privately run cryptocurrencies grows rapidly.


“The dilemma society faces is: do we really want a central bank to know all about our financial lives?” said Eswar Prasad of Cornell University. “The great irony is that the revolution that bitcoin set off could be the end of [financial] privacy.”
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pennymom

11/24/21 1:12 PM

#44749 RE: amc #44743

yes exactly....you understand how to review the fins! Wont be long! Market will catch up. Hold for gold. Revenues much higher of course, 2/15, when next fins come out. 8k on watch as well.