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Strategies & Market Trends : 2026 TeoTwawKi ... 2032 Darkest Interregnum -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: maceng2 who wrote (178737)9/21/2021 10:06:55 PM
From: TobagoJack2 Recommendations

Recommended By
alanrs
maceng2

  Respond to of 217714
 
Re <<gas>>

yes, I see the problem. Seems self-made by the authorities and industry, and to be paid for by the 'consumers'

economist.com

Britain’s gas market is broken
Soaring energy bills are a problem for firms, households and the government

Sep 21st 2021
“THE HISTORY book on the shelf/Is always repeating itself.” So sang ABBA in the 1974 Eurovision Song Contest, in the song that catapulted the Swedish band to global fame: “Waterloo”. Nearly half a century later those words seem apt. The band has reunited, with its first album in four decades due out in November. Its members are going on a virtual tour, performing as CGI avatars that look like their younger selves. And in Britain, where ABBA dominated the charts for more than a decade after that Eurovision victory, echoes of the 1970s are growing louder, too.

Back then, Britain was struggling with energy shortages and industrial disruption. In 1974 the government attempted to tame inflation by limiting manufacturers to a three-day week. Today, Britain once again faces interrupted energy supply, empty supermarket shelves and government bail-outs. On September 20th Kwasi Kwarteng, the business secretary, promised Parliament that “there’ll be no three-day working weeks, no throwback to the 1970s”. Such talk, he insisted, was “alarmist, unhelpful and completely misguided”. As always with such political reassurances, the words mattered less than the fact they were considered necessary.

The backdrop is fast-rising prices on the global energy market (see finance section). They are painful for many countries, but particularly so for Britain. For a decade its government has permitted upstart suppliers to capture a significant slice of the retail gas and electricity market with business models that left them ill-prepared to weather market turbulence. Now, in the run-up to the COP26 climate conference in November in Glasgow, instead of focusing on its planned switch from gas to renewables, it must choose between allowing the energy market to collapse and offering vast subsidies for fossil fuels.



The origins of the mess lie in the 1980s and 1990s, when privatisation created an oligopolistic energy market dominated by the “Big Six”, which paid their shareholders juicy dividends and their bosses fat pay-packets. The government responded to anger over high energy bills with further liberalisation, which resulted in a highly fragmented market (see chart). Some of the new entrants were genuinely innovative, such as Bulb, which provides its customers with consumption-tracking apps, and Octopus, which uses dynamic pricing to discourage consumption when demand is high. But most were thinly capitalised and produced no energy, merely buying it on global wholesale markets and selling it on. Some paid little attention to ensuring continuity of supply or hedging against price fluctuations.

Such me-too operations were always vulnerable to a demand squeeze. But the risks rose in 2017 with the closure of a storage facility owned by Centrica, a utility firm, at Rough off the North Yorkshire coast. That left Britain able to store just 2% of its annual demand for gas. Other big gas importers, by contrast, can store 20-30%. And they rose further in 2019, when the government responded to continued grumbles about high energy bills by setting a consumer-price cap.

The perfect storm came this summer. As pandemic restrictions eased in many countries, demand for energy rose. Meanwhile gas supply in Russia, a big producer, was disrupted, and unusually calm weather stilled wind turbines across Europe. In August Ofgem, the industry regulator, said that from October the price cap would rise by 12%. But since then the wholesale price of gas paid by British energy firms has risen by more than 70%. The result is that British energy firms are tied into contracts to supply gas to households at far less than they must pay to get it. Five have failed so far, and industry insiders say that without government intervention, dozens more will.

Some energy-intensive businesses found themselves thrust into a no-day week. CF Industries, an American-owned fertiliser company, recently ceased production at its two British sites, saying it was no longer economic. The effects rippled through the food-supply chain. One of the by-products of fertiliser production is carbon dioxide (CO2) which is used to stun animals before slaughter, to package fresh food and to create the dry ice used to keep food cool during transport. In normal times, CF Industries supplies more than half of Britain’s commercial CO2. The British Meat Processors Association, a trade body, warned that the country faced meat shortages within a fortnight.

Ofgem, says the boss of one of the bigger firms, has been “asleep at the wheel”. On September 21st the government announced that emergency talks with CF Industries had led to a deal whereby the company would restart CO2 production. The details were not revealed, but it seems likely that financial incentives were involved, perhaps a direct subsidy for the firm’s energy costs.

That is likely to be just the first instalment of a rapidly rising bill. When a retail energy firm fails, Ofgem transfers its customers to another provider. This year, however, the survivors are reluctant to take on what may add up to millions of loss-making accounts. Ofgem is likely to raise the energy-price cap again next spring, but not by enough to bring energy bills in line with global prices. So the government is considering either underwriting the losses from customers transferred from failed energy firms or forming a temporary, publicly owned and loss-making firm to supply those customers over the winter.

Either option will be expensive. Precisely how expensive depends on how many firms fail, how soon and how high gas prices go. Officials say they hope that the cost to taxpayers can be kept “in the billions”. After a decade of neglecting energy security, the bill is coming due.



To: maceng2 who wrote (178737)9/21/2021 10:07:03 PM
From: TobagoJack  Respond to of 217714
 
<<Price increases 40%>> should not bother anyone because it is transient :0)

At some juncture, and we might have passed that 'some' juncture, price increases, especially if ubiquitous, becomes more a function of money dilution than of demand and supply and logistics

however, 'some' inflations can be good, especially if such work in our favour.

in the meantime, Caspers looking good, dropping, but my 0.092 was not hit. shall fix by attempting to grab some at 0.95.

in the meantime, climate workout seems to be going well, as team china undertaking to stop coal plants overseas, presumably to make space for nuclear and other sort of plants more available once container ships are less costly by revving up capabilities and capacities for the greater-good and common-prosperity

bloomberg.com

China to Stop Building New Coal-Fired Power Projects Abroad

22 September 2021, 04:12 GMT+8
China plans to stop building new coal-fired power plants abroad and will bolster support to help poorer nations develop clean energy, President Xi Jinping said during the United Nations General Assembly meeting on Tuesday.

The announcement came a year after Xi surprised world leaders by pledging to make China carbon-neutral by 2060 after reaching peak emissions by the end of the decade. He has come under pressure to back up that promise with concrete short-term goals ahead of global climate talks, known as COP26, to be held in Glasgow, Scotland, in November.

“China will step up support for other developing countries in developing green and low-carbon energy, and will not build new coal-fired power projects abroad,” Xi said in a prerecorded video.

Xi’s announcement means one of the last sources of funding for global coal projects may be drying up. More than 70% of all coal plants built today rely on Chinese funding, according to the Beijing-based International Institute of Green Finance. China’s Belt and Road Initiative for overseas development projects didn’t fund any coal projects in the first half of this year, the first time that’s happened.

Earlier Tuesday, U.S. President Joe Biden pledged at the UN to double the amount of money the U.S. will spend helping poorer nations fight climate change. And Turkey President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, whose nation is one of the few that hasn’t ratified the Paris climate agreement, said his parliament will work toward approving the landmark accord next month.

Read more: Biden Doubles Climate Pledge in Test to Spur Global Action

Xi’s coal pledge comes as China has sought to wrest the initiative from America as the Biden administration struggles with the fallout from its rushed Afghanistan withdrawal.

Last week, China applied to join an Asia-Pacific trade pact once pushed by the the Obama administration as a way to isolate Beijing and solidify American dominance in the region. Former President Donald Trump pulled out of the deal, known officially as the Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement for Trans-Pacific Partnership, in 2017.

Xi’s speech also took aim at Biden’s Afghanistan withdrawal, though he didn’t name the country by name. “Recent developments in the global situation show once again that military intervention from the outside and so-called democratic transformation entail nothing but harm,” Xi said.

The Chinese leader also drew an implicit distinction between China’s policies and the Biden administration’s pledge to pursue “extreme competition” with Beijing. Xi repeated his position that differences between countries be handled on the basis of “equality and mutual respect” and urged countries to uphold multilateralism.

What on Earth?The Bloomberg Green newsletter is your guide to the latest in climate news, zero-emission tech and green finance.

Sign up to this newsletter

As the world’s most populous nation and top greenhouse gas emitter, China can do more than any other country to help the planet avoid the worst effects of climate change. U.S. climate envoy John Kerry and Alok Sharma, the U.K. host’s point man for COP, visited China in recent weeks seeking new green commitments. China has argued that developed nations need to do more to cut their own pollution, while raising more funds to help poorer countries decarbonize.

Countries have been trying to produce an agreement to phase out coal power before the United Nations-backed climate talks in order to keep the Paris Agreement goal of limiting warming to 1.5ºC from pre-industrial levels within reach. China’s coal consumption is poised to hit a record this year.

Climate Aid Urgency Is Tempered by New Optimism at UN Conference

Xi’s announcement injects new hope into the Glasgow talks, which have been shaping up to be challenging. Delegates have expressed concern that tensionbetween the U.S. and China could hurt progress on issues from raising emission reduction targets to tackling methane leaks.

China is still in the process of developing an official road map to zero out emissions. The nation’s plan for the next five years aims to reduce carbon emissions per unit of gross domestic product by 18% through 2025 and cut energy use per unit of GDP by 13.5%. It also included plans to boost non-fossil fuels to 20% of energy use by then.

— With assistance by John Liu, Karoline Kan, and Peter Martin

(Adds context beginning in fourth paragraph)

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To: maceng2 who wrote (178737)9/21/2021 10:07:11 PM
From: TobagoJack  Respond to of 217714
 
<<Russia is a problem now for Gas contracts>>

I am surprised that the authorities in charge of your gas feed have not increased sanctions on the Russians so as to encourage them to go free-flow on gas.

... yes, I am being sarcastic :0) for today is a public holiday to celebrate harvest per lunar calendar.

ft.com

IEA urges Russia to ramp up gas supply to Europe

More could be done to fill storage sites ahead of winter heating season, says energy body

4 hours ago


Some industry participants have accused Gazprom, Russia’s state-backed monopoly exporter of pipeline gas, of limiting top-up sales in the spot market to Europe © Andrey Rudakov/Bloomberg

The International Energy Agency has called on Russia to send more gas to Europe to help alleviate the energy crisis, becoming the first major international body to address claims by traders and foreign officials that Moscow has restricted supplies.

The Paris-based group said that while Russia was fulfilling long-term contracts to European customers it was supplying less gas to Europe than before the coronavirus pandemic.

“The IEA believes that Russia could do more to increase gas availability to Europe and ensure storage is filled to adequate levels in preparation for the coming winter heating season,” said the IEA, which is primarily funded by OECD members to advise on energy policy and security.

“This is also an opportunity for Russia to underscore its credentials as a reliable supplier to the European market.”

Some European members of parliament have called for an investigation into Gazprom, Russia’s state-backed monopoly exporter of pipeline gas. Foreign officials and traders have questioned why the company has limited top-up sales in the spot market to Europe, saying that this has fuelled a surge in prices that is raising household bills and threatening industries across the continent.

The company has also unsettled energy traders by keeping the underground storage facilities it controls in Europe stocked at low levels compared with previous years.

Gazprom’s chief executive Alexei Miller last week said the company was meeting its supply obligations and was ready to increase production if needed. But he warned prices could rise further in the winter because of shortages in underground facilities.

Gas prices rose again on Monday after Gazprom declined to book additional capacity for export via Ukraine for October and reserved only one-third of the available space on the Yamal gas pipeline via Poland.

Russia also wants to gain approval to start the Nord Stream 2 pipeline to Germany, a recently completed project that is contentious partly because it will redirect some of the gas that flows through Ukraine, where Russia has waged a proxy war in eastern border regions since 2014.

Gazprom and Kremlin officials have said Russia could boost gas sales once Germany and the EU approve the start-up of the pipeline, adding to suspicions that it has restricted sales in order to try to accelerate the decision.

The IEA, which was formed after the Arab oil embargoes of the 1970s, did not solely blame Russia for the rise in prices. It said strong demand for liquefied natural gas in Asia, which has diverted cargoes from Europe, had tightened supplies globally.

It added that blaming the rise of renewable energy for the price surge was misguided. Lower wind speeds in Europe this summer are one factor that has boosted demand for gas.

“Recent increases in global natural gas prices are the result of multiple factors, and it is inaccurate and misleading to lay the responsibility at the door of the clean energy transition,” the IEA said.

Thierry Bros, a former oil and gas adviser at the French economy ministry and a professor at Sciences Po in Paris, said the IEA was “highlighting what has been discussed in the industry for some time but many politicians in Europe have been hesitant to address — the role Russia has played in the current energy crisis”.

“In many ways this is the IEA returning to what it was originally set up to do — ensuring security of supply.”

Politicians in Europe have at times been reluctant to blame Russia for rising gas prices, which have more than tripled this year. However, some members of the European parliament have called for an investigation into Gazprom’s role in the crisis.

The IEA’s call comes as Russia’s president Vladimir Putin considers allowing Rosneft, the Russian state-owned oil company, to supply gas to Europe via the Nord Stream 2 pipeline, according to a person familiar with the situation.

Energy minister Alexander Novak recommended allowing Rosneft to export 10bn cubic metres to Europe a year via Gazprom’s export transit facilities in a recent report to Putin, the person said.

The amount is small compared with the 139 bcm that Gazprom has exported outside the former Soviet Union this year. But it would spell a highly significant end to Gazprom’s monopoly on gas exports, which are more lucrative than the domestic Russian market.

The Kremlin is keen to secure long-term pipeline supply contracts with Europe via Nord Stream 2, which it has said will help lower gas prices.

Both Rosneft and Gazprom are controlled by longtime allies of Putin.

Rosneft’s chief executive Igor Sechin, who has lobbied for access to the gas export market for years, has argued that allowing it to export gas via Nord Stream 2 will help Russia generate more revenues from record gas prices. It would also conform with EU energy regulations that mandate Gazprom to open up half of Nord Stream 2’s capacity to third parties.

Gazprom is opposed to the move, according to the report to Putin, on the grounds that the high gas prices may not stretch into next year. Russian newspaper Kommersant first reported on the contents of the briefing to Putin.

Rosneft and Gazprom declined to comment. Russia’s energy ministry also declined to comment.

Amos Hochstein, senior adviser for energy security at the US state department, told the Financial Times this month he was worried that “lives are at stake” in Europe in the event of a severe winter in part because Russia had “undersupplied the market compared to its traditional supplies”.

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To: maceng2 who wrote (178737)9/21/2021 10:07:43 PM
From: TobagoJack1 Recommendation

Recommended By
maceng2

  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 217714
 
something crypto

casper is not money, a good thing, but can be passed around like money, also a good thing

zerohedge.com

Crypto Crashes As SEC/OCC Warn Of 'Reckoning', Question "Long-Term Viability" Of Private Forms Of Money


Crypto was hit by a double whammy from The SEC and OCC today...

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Like a wolf in sheep's clothing, SEC chief Gary Gensler led many crypto industry types to believe that he would be "a friend" to the nascent industry, largely because he once taught a class on the subject at MIT.

Instead, using the logic that extensive regulation is necessary to spur "widespread adoption" (note: there are more Coinbase accounts than Charles Schwab accounts now), Gansler has insisted that all exchanges be registered with, and regulated by, his agency, or "a lot of people are going to get hurt".

Speaking during a live interview Tuesday with the Washington Post, Gensler made another comment that was immediately twisted by headline writers in a way that sent prices of bitcoin and Ethereum sliding once again. Gensler said he doesn't see "long-term viability" for most crypto.

“I don’t think there’s long-term viability for five or six thousand private forms of money,” Gensler said in a virtual event hosted by the Washington Post.
“So in the meantime I think it’s worthwhile to have an investor-protection regime placed around this.”


Speaking to WaPo's David Ignatius, Gensler doubled down on his "Wild West" analogy for cryptocurrencies like stablecoins, which he compared to gambling chips.

"Stablecoins are almost acting like poker chips at the casino right now,"said Gensler."
"We’ve got a lot of casinos here in the Wild West, and the poker chip is these stablecoins at the casino gaming tables."


While we are not exactly shocked that 'the establishment' should question "private forms of money" - that are not under their total control - the fact that Gary Gensler was heralded as 'educated and friendly' towards crypto is clearly wrong now that political pressure from Yellen et al. is in play.

[url=][/url]

It wasn't just Gensler though, as Michael Hsu, the acting chief of the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, argued Tuesday that cryptocurrencies and decentralized finance may be evolving into threats to the financial system in much the same way certain derivatives brought it near collapse more than a decade ago.

“Crypto/DeFi today is on a path that looks similar to CDS in the early 2000’s,” Hsu told the Blockchain Association in a webcast.
“Fortunately, this group has the power to change paths and avoid a crisis.”


As Bloomberg reports, OCC had previously been run by a former Coinbase executive, Brian P. Brooks, who led a pro-crypto charge to establish policies more welcoming to the industry and to provide some of the firms banking charters. When he was installed at the OCC by Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen, Hsu put its crypto-friendly policies on hold and has been among regulators calling for a new, unified approach across agencies.

Hsu went even further in his broad denigration of the crypto world:

“Crypto/DeFi solutions to problems in the real economy are rare,” Hsu said, adding that a reckoning could be on the way in which the “hardcore believers in the technology” give way to mainstream users who aren’t as eager to forgive the riskiness of the products.
Those people will “dominate and drive reactions,” which he suggested could mean more danger of panics that unravel crypto investments and threaten firms that run into trouble.


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As all this regulatory pressure hit, Coindesk reported that Coinbase is said to be working on a pitch to federal regulators on how to oversee the crypto industry.

Having gone on an anti-SEC tirade over their 'Lend' program - only to quickly fold on the entire product - we wish CEO Brian Armstrong luck as the exchange plans to publicly roll out this proposal in the coming days, according to sources familiar with the regulatory discussions.

Details of the proposal were not available at press time, but among other matters the company intends to argue what should and should not be defined as a security within the US.

With all this hitting, it's no surprise FUD has driven cryptos lower with Bitcoin and Ethereum testing down towards their 100-day moving-averages...

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But, on a more hopeful note, CoinTelegraph notes that the Crypto Fear & Greed Index indicates that the cryptocurrency market is experiencing a period of investor fear with a three-month low score of 27 out of 100 - a shift towards extreme fear signals BTC may be undervalued.

[url=][/url]

Reddit user u/_DEDSEC_ adapted the common trading mantra ‘buy the rumour, sell the news’ and commented that traders should "buy the fear, sell the greed."

Arguably, it would seem Ray Dalio's view of the end of crypto - crushed before it can become too successful - is the gameplan of the establishment for now.

"Well I think regulation, I think at the end of the day if it's really successful, they'll kill it. And they'll try to kill it and I think they will kill it because they have ways of killing it but that doesn't mean it doesn't have, you know, a place, a value and so on," Dalio said.


Can a decentralized platform defeat the hegemon?



To: maceng2 who wrote (178737)9/22/2021 12:41:53 AM
From: TobagoJack  Respond to of 217714
 
Very interesting ...

from JPM in in-tray

QUOTE

Dear All,

Bitcoin and ether prices rise in the week. The price of bitcoin and ether rose by about 4% w/w and 6% w/w to $48.1K and $3.6K, respectively. This recovery follows the price decline across major cryptocurrencies after a selloff in the last week. The price of ether gained following the news of its co-founder Vitalik Buterin making it to the TIME's 'Most Influential' List.

Trading volume of major cryptocurrencies decline w/w. The average daily volume (ADV) of Bitcoin and Ether declined by 18% and 21% w/w, respectively.

The ADV of Litecoin, Dogecoin and Uniswap also declined during the week.

SEC Chair Gary Gensler takes a tough stance against cryptocurrencies at Senate hearing. Gensler reiterated that most cryptocurrencies, including stablecoins, qualify as securities, which should not be sold without proper risk disclosures. He also said that crypto lending and staking services are likely to fall under SEC’s jurisdiction as lending products come under the securities laws.

2Q21 saw an increase in DeFi adoption by institutional investors as more than 60% of all DeFi transactions were over $10mm versus less than half in the broader crypto market. Institutions in major economies are driving the DeFi activity as emerging markets are still adopting traditional crypto assets.

Coin Spotlight: Audio is the native token of decentralized content streaming platform Audius, which leverages blockchain technology to circumvent the traditional intermediaries in the music industry and gives more power to the artists by allowing them to distribute and get paid directly by their content consumers.

Interactive Brokers to start offering cryptocurrency trading and custody services for Bitcoin, Ethereum, Litecoin and Bitcoin Cash.

Fidelity Digital Assets plans to increase its headcount by up to 70% between April and year-end. It also plans to offer yield funds and other products related to stablecoins or decentralized finance (DeFi) coins