Startup of the Week: CurrencyTransfer

"CurrencyTransfer is a business foreign exchange price comparison marketplace. International business payments can be expensive and opaque, with hidden markups of up to five percent of the value of transfers. CurrencyTransfer aims to bring transparency and impartiality to the market, by getting currency specialists to lifestream their tradable rates -- which are usually decided 'manually' over the phone depending on the client -- in a transparent market. It was set up by computer scientist Stevan Litobac, who was born in Sarajevo but fled to the UK when the Bosnian war started, and Israeli-Brit Daniel Abrahams." Continue reading

Continue ReadingStartup of the Week: CurrencyTransfer

Appeals court upholds Fed’s 21-cent cap on retailer ‘swipe fees’

"A Federal Reserve rule allowing banks to charge retailers 21 cents to process debit-card transactions has been upheld by a federal appeals panel, a blow to big merchants such as Wal-Mart Stores Inc. and Target Corp. The dispute stems from a Dodd-Frank provision that required the Fed to set the so-called interchange fees, known colloquially as swipe fees, at a level reflecting the actual processing costs. The Fed's staff recommended cutting the fee from 44 cents per transaction on average to just 12 cents. But after heated protests from the financial industry, the Fed in June 2011 set a cap of 21 cents per transaction." Continue reading

Continue ReadingAppeals court upholds Fed’s 21-cent cap on retailer ‘swipe fees’

Jeff Berwick: Bitcoin Is Equivalent to the Internet in 1993

"Perception of Bitcoin now is like of the Internet in 1993. Mt Gox, Tesla and the free market. US government pressuring foreign governments making it harder to get foreign citizenship. Staggering fraud in the banking sector and banker suicides. Crazy Keynsian thinking. Russia and China more free market than the West. Disaster brewing for the West. The move into precious metals stocks." Continue reading

Continue ReadingJeff Berwick: Bitcoin Is Equivalent to the Internet in 1993

Massachusetts regulators warn about bitcoin as ATM opens

"Massachusetts regulators issued a strongly worded warning Tuesday about the risks of the virtual currency known as bitcoin after the opening of the second ATM-like kiosk in the Boston area that make it easier for people to buy it. On Monday, the second bitcoin ATM in Massachusetts — and apparently just the fourth in the country — opened at the Clover Food Lab restaurant in Harvard Square. The company that installed and operates the machine, Liberty Teller of Boston, placed its first kiosk at South Station in Boston in February. So far, a handful of Boston-area restaurants and retailers accept the currency, whose value is determined by supply and demand." Continue reading

Continue ReadingMassachusetts regulators warn about bitcoin as ATM opens

Ukraine’s Gold Reserves Secretly Flown Out by the New York Fed?

"The unconfirmed source quoted by Metal.com, says that the operation to airlift Ukraine’s gold had been ordered by the acting Prime Minister Arseny Yatsenyuk with a view to safe-keeping Ukraine’s gold reserves at the NY Fed, against a possible Russian invasion which could lead to the confiscation of Ukraine’s gold reserves. The National Bank of Ukraine estimated Ukraine’s gold reserves in February to be worth $1.8 billion. According to William Kaye: 'That would amount to a very nice down payment to the $5 billion that Assistant Secretary of State Victoria Nuland boasted that the U.S. has already spent in their efforts to destabilize Ukraine, and put in place their own unelected government.'" Continue reading

Continue ReadingUkraine’s Gold Reserves Secretly Flown Out by the New York Fed?

Russia’s Anti-Bitcoin Stance May Be Softening, Reports Say

"The letter asserts that a meeting of top Russian financial authorities in February did not result in a bitcoin ban, but rather was devoted to 'combating crimes in the sphere of the economy devoted to the use of anonymous payment systems and cryptocurrencies on the territory of Russia'. Translations of the posted letter indicate that the goal of the meeting was also to 'develop a unified approach to the determination of the legal status of cryptocurrencies'. Meeting attendees 'discussed future directions for the legal regulation of the sphere of cryptocurrencies', including establishing property rights for citizens and organisations in the field and introducing regulation for their use." Continue reading

Continue ReadingRussia’s Anti-Bitcoin Stance May Be Softening, Reports Say

Bitcoin ATM Company Refused Account by Bank of Ireland

"Ireland’s first bitcoin ATM company suffered a setback yesterday as the Bank of Ireland rejected their application for a bank account. Dolan clarified: '[The bank] informed me that: ‘Your account application has been rejected due to the nature of your business. We’re not comfortable with it.’' Dolan says their business advisor at the Bank of Ireland claimed instructions came from on high." Continue reading

Continue ReadingBitcoin ATM Company Refused Account by Bank of Ireland

Cyprus Central Bank Governor resigns with $250K golden parachute

"One of the main criticisms directed against Demetriades has been how, under his watch, the now defunct Laiki Bank accumulated around €9.5 billion in emergency liquidity aid, only to buckle and fail when the ECB threatened to pull assistance. 'How much independence can a central banker have when, from his statements, it appears he was serving other expediencies instead of his country’s interest,' President Nicos Anastasiades said last year. For the state to get its €10 billion in bailout funds last March, the president said, it was told to privatise state companies, seize deposits, make painful cuts, and raise taxes." Continue reading

Continue ReadingCyprus Central Bank Governor resigns with $250K golden parachute