Tag Archives: money

Taco Bell Employee Shot, Killed By Customer Attempting To Buy Food With Counterfeit Money – CBS Los Angeles

SOUTH LA (CBSLA) — A fast food employee was shot and killed in South Los Angeles on the job.

The incident unfolded just before 11 p.m. Saturday night at the Taco Bell on Avalon and Century boulevards.

READ MORE: LA County Sets New Record With 45,584 Positive COVID-19 Cases

It was there that a male suspect drove up to the drive-thru and attempted to purchase food with counterfeit currency.

READ MORE: Coast Guard Announces Safety Rules After Deadly Boat Fire

When that individual was refused service, the suspect opened fire at the employee multiple times, killing him. Another worker was possibly injured.

The victim who died was a 41-year-old man.

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The suspect drove away in an unknown vehicle.

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Bitcoin Could Hit $100,000 if Investors Treat It Like Gold, Goldman Sachs Says

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The publicly available float of Bitcoin is just under $700 billion.


Dreamstime

Bitcoin could be worth $100,000 if investors accept the premise that it really is digital gold, according to a report by


Goldman Sachs
.

At its current price around $46,800, Bitcoin has a market cap of $870 billion, compared with $2.6 trillion for gold held by the public for investment purposes, such as privately held bars and assets in exchange-traded funds.

The publicly available float of Bitcoin is just under $700 billion, as a considerable amount of Bitcoin doesn’t trade, according to Goldman. That implies that Bitcoin consists of 20% of the entire “store of value” market—Bitcoin plus gold, assuming gold at current prices around $1,800 an ounce with 44,000 metric tons in circulation for investment purposes.

Bitcoin could get to $100,000 if its market share of the “store of value” market were to increase to 50%, estimates Goldman analyst Zach Pandl. “We think that Bitcoin’s market share will most likely rise over time as a byproduct of broader adoption of digital assets,” he wrote in a note published Tuesday.

Hitting $100,000 implies Bitcoin would see annualized returns of 17% over the next five years. The target doesn’t assume demand growth for “store of value” assets, and it factors in the supply growth of Bitcoin, with about 900 coins minted every 24 hours at the current production rate (scheduled to halve in early 2024).

Yet Bitcoin won’t have a straight shot to $100,000—if it ever gets there. “The network’s consumption of real resources may remain an important obstacle to institutional adoption,” Pandl writes, flicking at the energy consumption toll that Bitcoin mining takes.

That is no trivial matter. Many countries are trying to reduce their carbon emissions, and Bitcoin mining—a global network of computers processing transactions—doesn’t help. Bitcoin miners are consuming 0.56% of the world’s electricity consumption, similar to the amount used by countries like Norway or Sweden, according to the Cambridge Bitcoin Electricity Consumption Index.

Some of that energy comes from renewables, but Bitcoin is also being mined from coal, oil, and natural gas-fired plants. And it’s getting tougher to justify in countries facing crippling energy shortages and soaring prices.

In Kazakhstan, where mining has taken off after China banned the practice, protesters stormed government buildings on Wednesday over soaring energy prices. The country’s telecom provider shut down internet access, cutting off Bitcoin miners.

Bitcoin may be far more appealing than other cryptos as a store of value, given its hard cap on supply. But it is also competing against other cryptos for investment dollars. The overall market is worth $2.2 trillion, including $450 billion in Ether and $85 billion in Binance Coin. And unlike many cryptos that are finding uses as “smart contracts” for trading cryptos, lending, and minting new digital assets like nonfungible tokens, Bitcoin’s primary use case and appeal may be as an alternative to gold.

Working in Bitcoin’s favor is that investors are now worried about inflation and the impact of soaring global money supplies, potentially depreciating national currencies. That could help Bitcoin in the long run, since its supply is capped at 21 million coins, with 18.9 million already produced.

But Bitcoin hasn’t been acting like an inflation beater lately. Prices have been flat for months.

Bitcoin has done better than gold in the past year: Bitcoin is up 15% from early January 2021, versus a 6.8% decline for the


SPDR Gold Shares

ETF (ticker: GLD). But gold has beaten Bitcoin in the past three months, with the Gold Shares ETF up 6% and Bitcoin slumping about 10%.

Timing, it seems, may matter just as much with digital gold as it does with the real thing.

Corrections & Amplifications

Bitcoin has a market cap of $870 billion. An earlier version of this article incorrectly said the market cap was $870 million.

Write to Daren Fonda at daren.fonda@barrons.com

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NVIDIA Spends Big Money To Acquire TSMC’s 5nm Wafers For Next-Gen GeForce RTX 40 ‘Ada Lovelace’ GPUs

NVIDIA has allegedly gone on a huge spending spree to acquire some of TSMC’s next-gen 5nm wafer supply for its next-gen GeForce RTX 40 ‘Ada Lovelace’ GPUs.

NVIDIA Goes on TSMC 5nm Spending Spree, Billions of Dollars Paid To Acquire Wafers For GeForce RTX 40 ‘Ada Lovelace’ GPUs

NVIDIA’s Ada Lovelace GPUs powering the next-generation GeForce RTX 40 series graphics card lineup are expected to utilize TSMC’s 5nm process node. Both AMD and NVIDIA are expected to utilize the node for its next-gen lineup but it looks like NVIDIA is very serious in making sure they get enough wafer supply for its lineup and as such, they have paid the Taiwanese semiconductor manufacturer several Billions of dollars as an advanced payment for 5nm wafers.

NVIDIA GeForce RTX 3080 Ti For Laptops To Be The Most Powerful & Most Power Hungry Mobile GPU Ever Made!

According to industry sources, TSMC’s requirements for Apple, MediaTek, AMD and other three major customers are relatively low. They do not need to pay too much deposit in advance to stabilize production capacity. Customers like NVIDIA need to pay huge advance payments in advance if they want to obtain 5nm production orders.

via MyDrivers (Machine Translated)

MyDrivers reports that NVIDIA has prepaid TSMC around $1.64 Billion US in Q3 2021and will pay $1.79 Billion US in Q1 2022. The total long-term ‘Multi-Billion’ dollar deal is set to cost NVIDIA an insane $6.9 Billion US which is much higher than what they paid last year. NVIDIA will not just use this money to procure wafer supply from TSMC but also from Samsung but it looks like that the majority of the amount will be spent on TSMC’s 5nm technology.

NVIDIA GeForce RTX 4090 Graphics Card – Ada Lovelace Powered AD102 Flagship GPU

Based upon previous rumors, there have been whispers that NVIDIA would utilize TSMC’s N5 (5nm) process node for its Ada Lovelace GPUs. This includes the AD102 SKU too which will be an entirely monolithic design. Talking about specific GPU configurations, the flagship AD102 GPU is said to feature a clock speed as high as 2.5 GHz (2.3 GHz average boost). The specific tweet states that the GPU clock for Ada Lovelace ‘AD102’ could be 2.3 GHz or greater so let’s take that as a baseline and previously leaked specifications to figure out where the performance should land.

The NVIDIA AD102 “ADA GPU” appears to have 18432 CUDA Cores based on the preliminary specs (which can change), housed within 144 SM units. This is almost twice the cores present in Ampere which was already a massive step up from Turing. A 2.3-2.5 GHz clock speed would give us up to 85 to 92 TFLOPs of compute performance (FP32). This is more than twice the FP32 performance of the existing RTX 3090 which packs 36 TFLOPs of FP32 compute power.

The 150% performance jump looks huge but one should remember that NVIDIA already gave a big jump in FP32 numbers this generation with Ampere. The Ampere GA102 GPU (RTX 3090) offers 36 TFLOPs while the Turing TU102 GPU (RTX 2080 Ti) offered 13 TFLOPs. That’s over a 150% increase in FP32 Flops but the real-world gaming performance increase for the RTX 3090 averaged at around 50-60% faster over the RTX 2080 Ti. So one thing we shouldn’t forget is that Flops don’t equal GPU gaming performance these days. Furthermore, we don’t know if 2.3-2.5 GHz is the average boost or the peak boost with the former meaning that there could be even higher compute potential for AD102.

NVIDIA GeForce RTX 3090 Ti 24 GB Flagship Confirmed For 27th Retail Launch, Would Easily Cost Over $2000 US

Aside from that, leaks have also stated that the NVIDIA GeForce RTX 40 flagship would retain a 384-bit bus interface, similar to the RTX 3090. What’s interesting is though that the leaker mentions G6X which means that NVIDIA won’t be moving to a new memory standard until after Ada Lovelace and utilize the higher pin-speeds of G6X of 21 Gbps for its next-generation cards before we see a newer standard (e.g. GDDR7). The card will feature 24 GB of memory so we can either expect single-sided 16Gb DRAM or dual-sided 8Gb DRAM modules.

NVIDIA CUDA GPU (RUMORED) Preliminary:

GPU TU102 GA102 AD102
Architecture Turing Ampere Ada Lovelace
Process TSMC 12nm NFF Samsung 8nm 5nm
Graphics Processing Clusters (GPC) 6 7 12
Texture Processing Clusters (TPC) 36 42 72
Streaming Multiprocessors (SM) 72 84 144
CUDA Cores 4608 10752 18432
Theoretical TFLOPs 16.1 37.6 ~90 TFLOPs?
Memory Type GDDR6 GDDR6X GDDR6X
Memory Bus 384-bit 384-bit 384-bit
Memory Capacity 11 GB (2080 Ti) 24 GB (3090) 24 GB (4090?)
Flagship SKU RTX 2080 Ti RTX 3090 RTX 4090?
TGP 250W 350W 450-650W?
Release Sep. 2018 Sept. 20 2022 (TBC)

The NVIDIA Ada Lovelace GPUs will power the next-generation GeForce RTX 40 graphics cards that will go head-on with AMD’s RDNA 3 based Radeon RX 7000 series graphics cards. There’s still some speculation regarding the use of MCM by NVIDIA. The Hopper GPU, which is primarily aimed at the Datacenter & AI segment, is allegedly taping out soon and will feature an MCM architecture. NVIDIA won’t be using an MCM design on its Ada Lovelace GPUs so they will keep the traditional monolithic design.

Which next-generation GPUs are you looking forward to the most?Poll Options are limited because JavaScript is disabled in your browser.

News Source: HardwareTimes



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Experts pull documents, money from Lee statue time capsule

RICHMOND, Va. (AP) — Conservation experts in Virginia’s capital Tuesday pulled books, money, ammunition, documents and other artifacts from a time capsule found in the remnants of a pedestal that once held a statue of Confederate Gen. Robert E. Lee.

The lead conservator for the Virginia Department of Historic Resources, Kate Ridgway, said the measurements and material of the box, copper, match historical accounts. As the contents inside were unpacked, they appeared to match the description of the 1887 time capsule they had been looking for.

“It does appear that this is the box we expected,” she told reporters.

Records maintained by the Library of Virginia suggest that dozens of Richmond residents, organizations and businesses contributed about 60 objects to the capsule, including Confederate memorabilia.

The box was discovered and carefully extracted from the monument site a day earlier, marking the end of a long search for the elusive capsule. Ridgway said the box, which weighed 36 pounds, was found in water in a little alcove of the pedestal. The contents were damp, but “it’s not soup,” Ridgway said.

“I think it’s in better shape than we expected,” she said.

Historical records had led to some speculation that the capsule might contain a rare and historically significant photo of deceased President Abraham Lincoln. One line from a newspaper article listed among the contents a “picture of Lincoln lying in his coffin.”

On Tuesday, conservators found a printed image from an 1865 issue of Harper’s Weekly in the time capsule that Ridgway said seemed to show a figure grieving over Lincoln’s grave — but did not appear to be the much-anticipated photo.

Harold Holzer, a historian and Lincoln scholar, had previously told The Associated Press he believed it highly unlikely that the time capsule contained an actual photograph of Lincoln in his coffin because the only known photo of Lincoln in death was taken by photographer Jeremiah Gurney in City Hall in New York on April 24, 1865.

The contents of the tightly packed box had expanded from the damp and stuck together, making unpacking difficult, so conservators decided to relieve pressure by cutting down one side.

“Not ideal, but it’s the way it is,” Ridgway said.

After Ridgway and other team members meticulously extracted each object, other conservators would then cart the pieces to the back of the lab for further study and cataloging. The team made sure to photograph each object in the box before manipulating it.

Many of the paper items were damaged from water and time but still at least partly legible.

Along with several waterlogged books, pamphlets and newspapers, the box contained an envelope of Confederate money, which conservators carefully separated, and two carved artifacts — a Masonic symbol and a Confederate flag said to have be made from the tree that grew over Gen. Stonewall Jackson’s original grave.

Conservators also pulled buttons, coins and Miniè balls, a type of bullet used in the Civil War, from the box. A bomb squad had checked the capsule Monday, partly to make sure there was no live ammunition.

Virginia Gov. Ralph Northam ordered the enormous equestrian statue of Lee removed in 2020, amid the global protest movement sparked by the police killing of George Floyd. Litigation pushed back his plans, and the statue was not removed until September, after a court cleared the way.

Contemporaneous news accounts from the late 1800s detailed the placement of the time capsule in the foundation of the pedestal, and imaging tests conducted earlier this year appeared to confirm its existence. But a lengthy search during the September statue removal came up empty.

Earlier this month, Northam ordered the pedestal removed as well, and crews working on the project again started to search for the artifact. A time capsule was discovered two weeks ago, generating excitement, but hours of painstaking and ultimately anti-climactic examination suggested that artifact was placed by someone else, perhaps someone involved with the construction.

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Binance Turkey fined 8M lira for non-compliance against money laundering

The Financial Crimes Investigation Board (MASAK) has fined Binance Turkey 8 million lira (nearly $750,000) after the crypto exchange failed the financial watchdog’s audit for monitoring Anti-Money Laundering (AML) compliance. 

The Financial Crimes Investigation Board (MASAK), which serves as Turkey’s financial intelligence unit under the Ministry of Finance and Treasury, found crypto exchange Binance’s Turkey operations guilty of violating laws that intend to prevent the laundering of money acquired through criminal means. According to local news media Anadolu Agency, MASAK carried out an audit of Law No. 5549 on Prevention of Laundering Proceeds of Crime, also known as the AML Law.

The AML Law in Turkey requires companies to identify and verify the personal identification information of the customers on the platform, which includes details such as surname, date of birth, T.C. identification number (Turkey equivalent of a social security number) and type and number of identity documents. The law also requires businesses to immediately notify the government about suspicious activities within a 10-day period.

As Cointelegraph Turkey reported, the watchdog imposed the maximum possible administrative fine of 8 million Turkish lira for the alleged violation. Additionally, this timeline also coincides with the day President Erdoğan announced the completion of a crypto law draft that will soon be handed over to the Parliament for approval.

With this, Binance also becomes the first crypto business to get fined by the Turkish government. Moreover, MASAK is working closely with Financial Action Task Force (FATF), a global regulator against money laundering and terrorist financing, according to former Treasury and Cost Minister Lutfi Elvan:

“FATF has asked for measures to be taken against crypto trading platforms.”

In line with this request, MASAK has also agreed to report transactions that exceed the value of 10 thousand lira within 10 days.

Related: Turkey’s crypto law is ready for parliament, President Erdoğan confirms

Turkey’s President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan confirmed the completion of a crypto law that will soon be handed over to the Parliament for mainstream implementation.

As Cointelegraph reported, the crypto law envisions a new economic model that can bolster Turkey’s effort to bring back the depreciating value of lira. Erdoğan also said that the recent inflation on Turkish lira is not related to mathematics but a matter of process — implying a possibility and potential of lira’s value growth:

“With this understanding, we intend to channel it to a dry spot. But the exchange rate will find its own price on the market.”

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We don’t recommend these stocks that don’t make money

Exelon: “I think it’s terrific. I could tell you it’s a couple of bucks ahead of itself, but I think you’ve got a winner there.”

Clean Energy: “We are in favor of companies that are actually making money now. There was a period where you could in to something and the company not make money and you’d do OK. That company’s got to deliver on the earnings. It just has to.”

CareTrust REIT: “If I’m going to own assisted living, I’m going to always go — even here, with the yield appreciably lower than yours— I’m going to go to Ventas. But I actually don’t want to go to the group in general. It’s too hard right now. Too many things can go wrong because of omicron.”

Charles Schwab: “I like Schwab very much. I’ve been a client of Schwab. … Morgan Stanley sells at a [price-to-earnings] multiple that is half of Schwab. I think that’s why I like Morgan Stanley more, but I’m not debating Schwab as being not a great company. It is indeed a great company.”

C3.AI: “We’ve got to understand, it’s got to make money. That’s the whole point. If they’re not making money, we’re not recommending it. We’ve got enough problems with the ones that are making money. We don’t need the ones that aren’t making money. The only one that’s not making money that I really like is Snowflake.”

Trade Desk: “[CEO] Jeff Green is real. That company is real. I wouldn’t mind you buying more of that stock. I think it is a terrific company.”

Roblox: “I like [CEO David] Baszucki. I think Baszucki is good. Now that is one of my couple metaverse names. I don’t have a lot of metaverse names. That remains a solid metaverse name, and my favorite of course that we have not mentioned in like 36 hours, as I like Nvidia.”

Luminar Technologies: “No, no, look, I saw there was an article in some publication saying Ford was ready for a fall. As soon as I see that I say go buy some Ford. That one yields 2%, it’s making money. That’s what we’re looking for — companies that are making money in the EV-ICE space. And one of them is Ford.”

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Turkish Lira, Stocks Sink Amid Inflation Concerns

Istanbul’s stock market was twice forced to halt trading and the Turkish lira continued to fall Friday as concerns deepened that recent interest-rate cuts could cause an inflationary spiral.

Turkey’s benchmark Borsa Istanbul 100 index sank 8.5% Friday in its worst day since March, triggering two circuit breakers that halted trades. The lira lost as much as 8% of its value against the dollar, despite Turkey’s central bank intervening to arrest the decline in the country’s currency.

The crash followed another decision by the central bank on Thursday to cut interest rates under pressure from President

Recep Tayyip Erdogan,

who favors lower rates as a part of a vision to grow the Turkish economy. Mainstream economists have urged the government to raise interest rates to control Turkey’s rising inflation, which reached more than 21% last month, according to official statistics.

The lira’s continuing decline is increasingly squeezing ordinary Turks, who have seen their savings evaporate. It is also adding to pressure on the banking system, which has high levels of foreign-currency-denominated loans to repay within the next 12 months. As of September, the loans equaled about 11% of Turkey’s gross domestic product, according to Capital Economics.

“We are astonished to watch the central bank releasing its precious foreign exchange resources to the market today after it cut rates yesterday,” said

Erdal Bahcivan,

chairman of the board of the Istanbul Chamber of Industry, in a tweet.

Friday’s decision to intervene in the currency market was the fifth time that the central bank has stepped in to prop up the lira this month. It cited “unhealthy price formations in exchange rates,” in a statement declaring the intervention.

Economists estimate that Turkey’s central bank has more foreign-currency liabilities than assets, giving it little firepower to steady the lira through intervention. Despite the central bank selling assets Friday after the lira fell past 17 to the dollar, the currency began to slide again hours later.

“The diminishing impact of intervention is really telling,” said

Paul McNamara,

an emerging-market fund manager at GAM. “With this kind of intervention, the trouble is the market knows the level of reserves they have. It’s not like Russia or Brazil—countries that really have a lot of foreign currency they can throw at this.”

The lira has lost more than half its purchasing power against the dollar this year, much of that decline in the past month, a dramatic unraveling reminiscent of past emerging-market crises in places such as Argentina and Lebanon.

The plummeting lira makes it more likely that Turkey will need to implement capital controls—measures to restrict or even prohibit the flow of money out of the country—to keep the lira from being heavily sold, Mr. McNamara said.

Turkey’s ability to impose such controls is complicated by the country’s consistent need for foreign currencies as banks and companies need to repay or service debts. Investors see few other options for Turkey to stabilize the lira, expecting that Mr. Erdogan won’t want to raise interest rates. The Turkish president has fired a series of central bank governors and other senior officials who opposed his unorthodox view of the economy.

The loss of confidence in Turkey’s monetary policy has also put pressure on other parts of the market.

Turkish stocks had seen a strong run before Friday. Locals might have preferred to put their savings into stocks rather than other assets as inflation has risen, investors said, because companies can increase prices alongside inflation, boosting returns.

“Generally, a little bit of inflation is good for equities,” said

Daniel Wood,

a portfolio manager at William Blair Investment Management. “Once you get concerned about hyperinflation, that’s bad for companies.”

Shortly after Thursday’s rate raise, Mr. Erdogan also announced an increase in Turkey’s minimum wage, which could also stoke inflation, Mr. Wood said. Concerns over unbridled inflation might have prompted some investors to sell shares.

The cost of insuring against default on $10,000 of five-year Turkish dollar-denominated bonds using derivatives contracts called credit default swaps climbed to about $525 a year Friday, from about $380 a year at the end of June, according to FactSet. Investors buy these swaps if they think the price for insuring against a default will rise further.

“The upheaval in the markets and the level that foreign currencies reached worries many of our companies and affects them negatively,” said

Rifat Hisarciklioglu,

president of the Union of Chambers and Commodity Exchanges of Turkey.

As the Federal Reserve and other central banks around the world deal with rising inflation amid the economic recovery from the pandemic, Turkey — where the rate is currently over 20% — offers a warning. Soaring inflation has led to economic turmoil after years of broad growth. Photo: Sedat Suna/Shutterstock

Write to Caitlin Ostroff at caitlin.ostroff@wsj.com and Jared Malsin at jared.malsin@wsj.com

Copyright ©2021 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved. 87990cbe856818d5eddac44c7b1cdeb8

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SEC Floats Rules to Shore Up Money Markets, Curb Insider Trading

WASHINGTON—The Securities and Exchange Commission issued a raft of proposals Wednesday including measures aimed at shoring up money-market funds and curbing executives’ ability to trade their own companies’ stock.

The proposals, some of which surprised Wall Street executives with their scope, indicate that Chairman

Gary Gensler

is moving quickly to enact a policy agenda that observers have called the SEC’s most ambitious in decades. That stands in contrast to other financial regulators, for which President Biden has yet to fill key positions, and saw a nominee withdraw amid Senate skepticism during confirmation.

With a thin majority in Congress, Democrats are leaning on Mr. Gensler to advance progressive priorities such as fighting climate change and curbing the power of big business. The SEC’s authority to write rules for asset managers, publicly traded companies and the stock market provides powerful, if sometimes roundabout, tools for achieving such goals.

The proposals “will go a long way toward increasing corporate transparency and accountability,” Sen.

Sherrod Brown

(D., Ohio), chairman of the Senate Banking Committee, said, praising enhanced disclosures around stock buybacks. “The first step to workers getting their fair share is learning just how much corporate executives are spending on themselves.”

Mr. Gensler’s agenda reflects political divisions. Three of the four proposals garnered party-line votes from the SEC’s five commissioners. Republicans

Hester Peirce

and

Elad Roisman

supported only a plan to tighten rules on how and when corporate insiders can sell their companies’ stocks. The agency is independent of the Biden administration.

The other proposals “are a partisan overreach that will likely diminish investment opportunities, economic growth and capital formation,” Sen.

Pat Toomey

(R., Penn.), the top Republican on the Senate Banking Committee, said.

Two of the proposals put forward Wednesday seek to make the financial system more stable by reducing panicked investors’ tendency to flee money-market funds and by regulating opaque derivatives known as “swaps.” The other two rules would seek to enhance fairness and transparency in the stock market. They would introduce new restrictions on corporate executives’ trading and heighten disclosure requirements around share buybacks by publicly traded companies.

The new rules for money-market mutual funds aim to prevent episodes that occurred during the past two recessions, in 2008 and 2020, when the Federal Reserve was forced to backstop the funds after they were hit with a wave of redemption requests that caused credit markets to seize up.

Money markets are typically used by corporate treasurers, pension funds and millions of individual investors as a safe place to park cash and earn a higher return than they could obtain in a bank account. They provide companies with liquidity for short-term loans, called “commercial paper,” to cover immediate expenses like payroll.

But money-market funds aren’t regulated like banks, which must meet minimum capital requirements and offer deposit insurance. Regulators say this makes them more susceptible to runs when markets are under severe stress, creating broader risks to the financial system.

“This is about resiliency,” Mr. Gensler said in an interview, noting that Americans have roughly $5 trillion invested in money markets. “Though there have been reforms in 2010 and 2014, we found again in 2020 some instability…with the dash for cash.”

The SEC’s proposed changes include a measure called “swing pricing” that firms including

BlackRock Inc.

and

Federated Hermes Inc.

have warned could destroy a subset of the industry that holds short-term corporate debt and caters to institutional investors. The measure would require these funds to adopt policies for adjusting their share prices by a “swing factor” on days when they have net redemptions. The factor would be determined by transaction costs and the market impact of selling a slice of the fund’s portfolio.

The goal is to protect investors who remain in the fund from dilution by investors who redeem their shares, Mr. Gensler said.

The SEC’s timing caught money-market fund managers off guard, said

John Tobin,

investment chief at Dreyfus Cash Investment Strategies, which oversees $350 billion in money funds. Many didn’t expect to see the new proposed rules until next spring, he said.

The swing-pricing proposal is likely to draw universal industry opposition, said Mr. Tobin, whose business is a unit of

Bank of New York Mellon Corp.

He said the rule would create operational challenges and could encourage institutional investors to head for the exits before a fund executes any swing-price decision.

“It’s definitely a shot across the bow,” he said. “This is a watershed moment.”

The SEC also proposed significant restrictions on arrangements, known as 10b5-1 plans, by which corporate officers and directors schedule stock trades ahead of time to avoid running afoul of insider-trading rules. Among other changes, the agency would require executives to wait 120 days before buying or selling their employer’s stock after setting up or modifying the plans.

That proposal follows academic research suggesting the arrangements are being abused as company leaders cash in at historic levels on their companies’ shares.

“The core issue is that these insiders regularly have material information that the public doesn’t have,” Mr. Gensler said in a statement. Wednesday’s proposed changes seek to ensure their stock trading is done “in a way that’s fair to the marketplace,” he added.

Commissioners also voted 3-2 along party lines to propose increased disclosures around public companies’ stock buybacks, which are also hitting records this year.

Repurchases support stock prices by reducing the number of shares outstanding in a company, lifting the firm’s earnings per share. Like dividends, they enable companies to return cash to investors. But critics, including many Democrats, say buybacks give executives who are partly paid in equity or options a roundabout way of boosting their own compensation, at the expense of workers’ wages or productive investments.

The SEC’s proposal would require stock-buyback disclosures to be more detailed and more frequent. Rather than disclosing monthly aggregate share repurchases once a quarter, companies would have to report buybacks on the next business day. They would also have to indicate whether any executives bought or sold shares within 10 business days of a buyback program’s announcement.

“Companies may determine to allocate capital towards share repurchases for a number of different reasons,” Democratic SEC Commissioner

Allison Lee

said. “But one of those reasons should not be for the opportunistic, short-term benefit of executives.”

The SEC’s chief economist,

Jessica Wachter,

said during the meeting that the costs of complying with the increased disclosure requirements might discourage some companies from buying back stock. Ms. Peirce and Mr. Roisman issued strong dissents against the rule.

“Say ‘dividend,’ and nobody gets angry, but say ‘share buyback,’ and the rage boils over,” Ms. Peirce said. “Today’s proposal channels some of that rage against repurchases in a way that only a regulator can: through painfully granular, unnecessarily frequent disclosure obligations.”

Write to Paul Kiernan at paul.kiernan@wsj.com

Corrections & Amplifications
The SEC proposed significant restrictions on 10b5-1 plans. An earlier version of this article incorrectly referred to them as 10b5-5 plans. (Corrected on Dec. 15.)

Copyright ©2021 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved. 87990cbe856818d5eddac44c7b1cdeb8

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Investing in Legos Will Earn You More Money Than Gold

Photo: Johannes EiseleI / AFP (Getty Images)

While some people may consider gold, jewelry, art, wine, or antiques good investments in the long-term, a new study challenges that notion and presents a unique and more lucrative alternative: Lego sets.

Economists from the Higher School of Economics in Russia have found that the market prices of retired Lego sets sold on the secondary market grow by at least 11% annually, which is higher than the average returns provided by gold, large stocks, bonds, and alternative investments. For their study, the authors analyzed the prices of 2,322 unopened Lego sets from 1987 to 2015 and information about primary sales and online auction transactions.

The study will be published in the January issue of Research in International Business and Finance.

“We are used to thinking that people buy such items as jewellery, antiques or artworks as an investment,” Victoria Dobrynskaya, an economics and finance professor at HSE and a co-author of the study, said in a university news article. “However, there are other options, such as collectible toys. Tens of thousands of deals are made on the secondary LEGO market. Even taking into account the small prices of most sets, this is a huge market that is not well-known by traditional investors.”

The researchers offer some reasons to explain why people pay big bucks for Legos. A significant one may be the small number of sets produced and the limited number of people who want to sell their Legos after they buy them. In addition, LEGO has been making Legos since the 1960s and has amassed a legion of nostalgic adult fans who value older sets.

Before you start wondering whether you have any Lego sets laying around your house that could be secret treasures, there are some things you should know. First off, prices for Lego sets on the secondary market, which vary greatly and range in returns from between -50% to +600% on an annual basis, typically start to increase two or three years after a set has been retired. This means you have to factor in high costs like delivery and storage into your investment.

Secondly, the prices of small or very big sets will grow faster than medium-sized sets, the researchers found. The sets that see the biggest growth in value on the secondary market are those related to famous buildings, movies, or holidays. As such, it shouldn’t be a surprise that some of the most expensive Lego sets include the Millennium Falcon, the Death Star II, and the Imperial Star Destroyer. Other highly valued Lego sets include limited edition sets and those given out at promotional events.

And finally, the secondary Lego market is not something you can jump into easily if you’re not a fan, Dobrynskaya said. There are a lot of Lego sets out there, and it takes a true fan to analyze the market and make a bet on a set that might be worth a lot more someday.

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Crypto Executives Defend Industry as Congress Considers Oversight

WASHINGTON—Cryptocurrency industry executives appeared before Congress on Wednesday to argue that their technologies hold promise for the future, as lawmakers and regulators wrestle with how to bring the more than $2 trillion market under government oversight.

The House Financial Services Committee, led by

Rep. Maxine Waters

(D., Calif.), called the hearing in hopes of improving lawmakers’ understanding of crypto assets and how the sector fits into existing regulations. While millions of Americans have invested in crypto assets, many experts say the asset class needs clearer rules of the road, which Congress could provide.

Cryptocurrency is a name given to a broad group of digital assets such as bitcoin. While the assets are criticized by some as volatile, opaque and presenting risks to users and the broader financial system, the industry executives said cryptocurrency can make financial transactions faster, less expensive and more accessible to users around the world.

“The industry has the potential to improve a lot of people’s lives,” FTX Trading Ltd. Chief Executive Sam Bankman-Fried told lawmakers.

Senior executives from stablecoin issuer Circle Internet Financial Ltd., crypto exchange

Coinbase Global Inc.,

COIN 0.37%

bitcoin-mining firm Bitfury Group Ltd., cryptocurrency-payments system Stellar Development Foundation and blockchain firm Paxos Trust Co. also testified. They aim to tout what supporters believe to be the potential upsides of crypto and blockchain technology while playing down the dangers highlighted by many policy makers and consumer-protection advocates.

Ms. Waters raised concerns about the crypto industry’s lack of regulation. “Currently, cryptocurrency markets have no overarching or centralized regulatory framework, leaving investments in the digital-asset space vulnerable to fraud, manipulation and abuse,” she said Wednesday.

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As the crypto industry builds out its lobbying presence in Washington, it has found more allies in the GOP than among Democrats. The top Republican on the financial-services committee, Rep.

Patrick McHenry

of North Carolina, echoed industry lobbyists’ warning Wednesday that excessive regulation of cryptocurrency could push technological innovation to other countries, leaving the U.S. at a disadvantage.

“We don’t need knee-jerk reactions by lawmakers to regulate out of fear of the unknown rather than seeking to understand,” he said. “That fear of the unknown and the move to regulate before understanding will only stifle American ingenuity and put us at a competitive disadvantage”

The executives argued that cryptocurrencies don’t fit neatly within the existing structure of U.S. financial regulations and that lawmakers should consider tailor-made legislation for their industry. Critics say the industry wants to write its own rules to avoid the oversight that banks, brokers and stock exchanges face.

“Because of their nascent stage of development and unique underlying technology, digital assets trade in markets that are fundamentally different from traditional financial markets,” Coinbase Chief Financial Officer

Alesia Haas

said in her testimony. “As a result, existing regulatory regimes often do not accommodate this new technology.”

Crypto proponents believe that the technology can facilitate faster and cheaper transactions than traditional payment networks and that it has the potential to foster innovation and financial inclusion.

“When you look at the number of people who are underbanked or unbanked, both in the United States and globally, it’s indicative of a system that does not work for everyone,” Mr. Bankman-Fried said. “It’s a product of payments infrastructure that is difficult and clunky enough to use that it just does not work for most people.”

Five percent of American adults didn’t have a bank account in 2020, according to the Federal Reserve.

Lawmakers including Rep.

Ritchie Torres

(D., N.Y.) asked about the potential for crypto to help immigrants send remittances between countries, a process that can be slow and costly through banks or money-transfer companies. Supporters often tout that as a use.

But such transactions remain uncommon. Using cryptocurrency involves a learning curve, mistakes can be irreversible, and there aren’t enough outlets offering crypto remittances to give it a competitive presence.

Coinbase Chief Financial Officer Alesia Haas said ‘existing regulatory regimes often do not accommodate’ digital assets.



Photo:

Stefani Reynolds/Bloomberg News

Many policy makers worry that the rapid growth of the crypto market, which has more than quadrupled in value over the past year, poses a threat to financial stability. They say that the market is rife with fraud, that bitcoin mining wastes vast amounts of electricity and that criminals use cryptocurrencies to evade taxes and circumvent anti-money-laundering laws.

Oversight of crypto markets is spotty in the U.S., where financial regulation is split between federal and state agencies. Major gaps exist, according to regulators.

One of the few confrontational exchanges Wednesday took place between

Rep. Brad Sherman

(D., Calif.) and Ms. Haas over the amount of Coinbase’s transaction fees. Mr. Sherman asked if buying and selling $100 of bitcoin over two days could result in nearly $6 in fees. After initially saying she couldn’t answer the question, Ms. Haas eventually said depending on the product, he could be correct.

Mr. Sherman expressed deep skepticism of cryptocurrency’s potential uses and urged regulators to protect investors if Congress fails to pass meaningful legislation.

Most lawmakers displayed less-formed opinions of the crypto industry than they typically do of other sectors such as social media or banking. While testifying in Congress can often be uncomfortable for corporate bosses, some of the executives who participated in Wednesday’s hearing expected it to advance their cause.

“I think it went really, really well,” Circle Chief Executive

Jeremy Allaire

said after the hearing. “It was very comprehensive, not contentious.”

Shiba Inu Coin’s recent surge, and subsequent fall in value, is part of a growing trend of meme coins that are rivaling some of the largest digital tokens in the world. WSJ retail investing reporter Caitlin McCabe explains why investors are pouring money into this meme based cryptocurrency. Photo: Amber Bragdon/Getty Images

Corrections & Amplifications
Alesia Haas is Coinbase’s chief financial officer. An earlier version of this article incorrectly said she was CEO. (Corrected on Dec. 8)

Write to Paul Kiernan at paul.kiernan@wsj.com

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