Headlines

Sri Lanka’s Cabinet on Wednesday approved a program to restructure the country's staggering domestic debt as the island nation struggles to emerge from an economic crisis that has engulfed it since last year, the Associated Press reported. The domestic debt restructuring is required as part of a bailout package obtained from the International Monterey Fund, under which nearly $3 billion in government budgetary support will be disbursed in stages. Sri Lanka’s total debt exceeds $83 billion, of which $41.5 billion is foreign and $42.1 billion is domestic.
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Leading global central bankers asserted Wednesday that they are not backing off their steep interest rate increases, pointing to inflation being more persistent than expected but still downplaying fears of recession from their hikes, the Associated Press reported. The clear message was that rates would stay high until the inflation beast is subdued, according to a panel discussion with U.S. Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell, European Central Bank President Christine Lagarde, Bank of England Gov. Andrew Bailey and Bank of Japan Gov. Kazuo Ueda.
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Brazil's delinquency rate reached its highest level in over five years in May, accompanied by a rise in average consumer interest rates, reflecting deteriorating credit conditions, according to data released by the central bank on Wednesday, Reuters reported. A broad measure of default rates for non-earmarked credit, encompassing both individuals and businesses, increased from 4.8% in April to 4.9% in May, the worst reading since February 2018. In May of last year, the delinquency rate stood at 3.7%.
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Brazil’s central bank said it may be able to start cutting interest rates in August after President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva and top members of his economic team demanded clarity about the timing of an expected monetary easing cycle, Bloomberg News reported. While policymakers hadn’t ruled out an August rate cut in a short statement issued together with their June 21 decision, the minutes of that meeting published on Tuesday were much more explicit about that possibility.
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Brazilian airline Azul said on Wednesday that a group accounting for roughly 86% of holders of bonds expiring in 2024 and 2026 have agreed with an exchange offer proposed by the company to delay their maturities to 2029 and 2030, Reuters reported. The offer had been announced by the company earlier this month as part of a broader restructuring plan that also included deals with aircraft lessors for lower payments, with initially 65.5% of the bondholders having agreed with it.
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The European Union on Wednesday proposed making the payments sector more competitive, giving legal backing to a digital euro, and preserving the role of cash as fewer people use coins and notes, Reuters reported. The package of European Commission reforms seeks to further prise open a payments market long dominated by banks and U.S. duo Visa and Mastercard, which are now being challenged by fintechs that offer rival services using data from customers' bank accounts.
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Chinese tech giants Tencent Holdings and Ant Group said that they would allow users to link international credit cards to their platforms, an issue that has long plagued foreign visitors as the country’s payment system has kept credit cards out for years, Reuters reported. Tencent, operator of the popular chat app WeChat and payment network WeChat Pay, said on Wednesday that WeChat users overseas can link credit cards issued by Visa Inc to their WeChat app from next month. Foreign tourists can then pay with WeChat when traveling in mainland China.
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Peter Thiel’s Valar Ventures has led a €30 million ($33 million) investment in a company created from the spinout of Bitpanda Pro, helping fill a gap in Europe for a regulated marketplace for crypto derivatives, Bloomberg News reported. The independent platform is called One Trading and has applied to the Dutch financial watchdog for a trading venue license under the Markets in Financial Instruments Directive. Thiel already backs the exchange’s former parent, Vienna-based Bitpanda GmbH.
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The Sri Lankan Cabinet has approved a joint proposal presented by the President and the Minister of Justice, Prison Affairs, and Constitutional Reform to authorize the Law Commission to prepare a preliminary draft of the insolvency laws within a period of three (03) months after consultation with the relevant parties, LankaBusinessOnline.com reported. Reforms in the insolvency laws for unincorporated small businesses and consumer insolvency are contained in the Insolvency Ordinance 1853, and provisions relating to company insolvency are contained in the Companies Act No.
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China’s local government funding problems last year were even worse than most economists thought. At least $12 billion worse. That is the boost Chinese local governments got to their revenues after a series of fictitious sales of land and other state-owned assets, according to the country’s national audit office, the Wall Street Journal reported. The disclosure means that even the official data, which showed a sharp drop in land sales and local government revenues last year, painted a more positive picture than was accurate.
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