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February 10th - According to the Financial Times, President Trump intends to exempt companies like Amazon, Google, and Microsoft from impending tariffs on chips as they race to build data centers that power the artificial intelligence boom. Sources familiar with the matter revealed that the U.S. Commerce Department plans to grant tariff exemptions to U.S. hyperscale data center operators, linked to investment commitments from TSMC. This exemption plan underscores President Trumps determination to impose tariffs on chips and incentivize domestic chip manufacturing, while also providing some assistance to companies heavily reliant on imported semiconductors and driving the rapid development of U.S. artificial intelligence. A government official familiar with the plans cautiously stated that these plans are still under review and have not yet been signed by the president.According to The Information: Amazon (AMZN.O) is discussing the artificial intelligence content market with publishers.White House officials: US President Trump has made it clear that he does not support Israels annexation of the West Bank.New Energy Vehicles: 1. Teslas North American sales head resigns amid global demand slump. 2. Shanghai NIO recalls some ES8, ES6, and EC6 pure electric vehicles. 3. Jike responds to recall of nearly 40,000 001 cars: will replace the power batteries of the affected vehicles free of charge, no cash payment involved. 4. Tesla: Cybercab self-driving electric car will be mass-produced and put into operation at the Texas Gigafactory. Artificial Intelligence: 1. EU warns Meta to open WhatsApp to competitor AI chatbots. 2. Anthropic has discussed securing at least 10 gigawatts of power generation capacity over the next few years. 3. Anthropic CEO will meet with Republican senators on the Senate Banking Committee on Tuesday. 4. OpenAI: Launches ChatGPT ad testing in the US for some free and Go plan subscribers. 5. OpenAI founder Altman: ChatGPT monthly growth exceeds 10%, new chat model to be launched this week. 6. US sources say Total Energy will provide 1 gigawatt of solar power capacity for Googles Texas data center for 15 years. Other news: 1. Horizon Robotics and CATL subsidiary TIME Intelligent have reached a strategic cooperation agreement. 2. STMicroelectronics and Amazon AWS announced an expanded strategic cooperation. 3. Elon Musk: SpaceX will build a system that allows anyone to go to the Moon and Mars. 4. Alphabets dollar bond issuance is reportedly expected to reach $20 billion, with subscriptions exceeding $100 billion. 5. The Inter-Ministerial Joint Conference Office for Collaborative Supervision of New Transportation Business Models held talks with Gaode Taxi. 6. Reports indicate that Nvidia will launch a new graphics card this year positioned above the GeForce RTX 5090. On February 10th, Trump stated that he would begin negotiations with Canada regarding a bridge project connecting Michigan and Ontario, threatening to block its opening unless the United States receives full compensation and owns "half of the asset." Trump stated on social media on Monday: "I will not allow this bridge to open until the United States is fully compensated for everything we have given, and more importantly, until Canada treats the United States with the fairness and respect we deserve. We will begin negotiations immediately. Given how much we have given them, we should perhaps own at least half of this asset." Trumps remarks are the latest attack on Canada, as the US president escalates tensions with his major trading partner. The president has also attacked Canada over dairy import tariffs, calling them "unacceptable" and putting "our farmers at enormous financial risk."

Lawsuit accuses troubled crypto lender Celsius Network of fraud

Skylar Shaw

Jul 08, 2022 14:54

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On Thursday, a former investment manager at Celsius Network filed a lawsuit against the cryptocurrency lender, alleging that it had frozen client funds and had rigged the price of its own cryptocurrency token using user contributions.


According to the lawsuit, Celsius engaged in "gross mishandling of client deposits" in order to enrich itself and deceived plaintiff KeyFi Inc, controlled by former manager Jason Stone, into delivering services worth millions of dollars while refusing to pay for them.


The complaint was filed in Manhattan's New York state court and demands both specific compensation and punitive damages; Celsius has not yet responded.


Stone's charges come after Celsius decided on June 12 to halt transfers and withdrawals for its 1.7 million clients due to "extreme" market circumstances.


Later, the Hoboken, New Jersey-based business recruited consultants to discuss a potential debt restructure that would include declaring bankruptcy.


While the cryptocurrency hedge fund went into liquidation late last month, the crypto lender Voyager Digital Ltd filed for bankruptcy protection this week.


Celsius guaranteed retail consumers disproportionate returns, up to 19% yearly.


However, Stone said that Celsius had trouble paying investors because it neglected to hedge its bets, leading to "severe" losses when the value of several currencies changed.


He also claimed that Celsius had a $100 million to $200 million hole in its records that it "could not completely explain or rectify" because certain deposits were recorded on a U.S. dollar basis even though clients were paid in bitcoin or other digital currencies.


The case filed on Thursday claims that Stone produced $838 million in profit for Celsius and KeyFi before expenses and overhead from August 2020 to March 2021 while mostly operating without a formal agreement, with KeyFi being entitled to 20% of net profit.


When it became apparent that the hedging difficulties "may be financially ruinous" for Celsius and harm KeyFi's image, Stone claims he ended the connection in March 2021. However, Stone claims that Celsius has refused to accept his resignation.


KeyFi Inc. v. Celsius Network Ltd. et al., New York State Supreme Court, New York County, is the name of the case.