• English
  • 简体中文
  • 繁體中文
  • Tiếng Việt
  • ไทย
  • Indonesia
Subscribe
Real-time News
China Resources Beer (00291.HK) jumped in the afternoon and is now up more than 3.7%. The company disclosed at noon that its profit attributable to shareholders in the first half of the year increased by 23% year-on-year.The 20-year Japanese government bond yield rose 2 basis points to 2.595%.Futures News, August 19th. Economies.com analysts latest outlook: Spot gold prices fluctuated late in the day, hovering within a small bearish range in the short term, signaling market caution and uncertainty. Prices remain under pressure below the 50-day moving average (EMA), which remains a key barrier to a rebound. The RSI indicator continues to flash bearish signals, indicating that sellers remain dominant. Unless a strong rebound alters the current technical landscape, further downward pressure on prices to test new support levels is likely to persist.Futures News, August 19th. Economies.com analysts latest outlook: WTI crude oil futures fell late in the day. Earlier, prices had managed to escape the oversold territory of the RSI indicator and briefly rebounded, capitalizing on momentum gained from stabilizing at key support at $62.00. Prices then retreated after hitting resistance at the 50-day moving average (EMA), with sellers reasserting control. A small short-term downtrend continues, increasing the risk of a pullback to new support levels.Futures News, August 19th, Economies.com analysts latest view today: Brent crude oil futures fell in late trading yesterday as key resistance at $66.00 held firm and the price hit resistance at the 50-day moving average, intensifying bearish pressure and triggering the current decline. The RSI indicator formed a death cross after reaching overbought territory, which increases the possibility of a further short-term decline.

UK Government: Cryptoassets Could Be Seized to Stop Crime

Cameron Murphy

Apr 28, 2022 09:42


微信截图_20220428093416.png


The British government suggested on Thursday that crypto assets might be confiscated to help battle economic crime, but the plan fell short of the drastic change demanded by legislators, who want an unified crime-fighting agency.


Scams involving banking and the internet have increased dramatically in the United Kingdom, especially after the COVID-19 outbreak.


In response to a parliamentary investigation into economic crime, the administration said that it would introduce laws to allow cryptoassets to be confiscated and recovered more rapidly as soon as legislative time permits.


"In particular, (we propose) the development of a civil forfeiture authority to limit the danger presented by people who cannot be punished but use their wealth to continue crime," the government told the Treasury Select Committee in parliament.


The panel proposed creating a single organization to combat economic crime to replace a "bewildering" multitude of institutions, but the administration insisted that its multi-agency system was the best.


"It allows us to discriminate between various sorts of criminality," the government stated, adding that public-sector fraud required a different reaction than schemes perpetrated by individuals or corporations.


In a statement, TSC Chair Mel Stride stated, "This might be a big squandered opportunity."


The government has already endorsed a suggestion that requires internet platforms like as Google and Facebook to take aggressive steps to combat fraudulent financial product advertising, but the law will take time to adopt and execute.


"Now is the time for online platforms to step up and take down these fake ads," Stride added.


Google has already pledged to only accept financial advertisements from organizations that are authorized by the Financial Conduct Authority, and Facebook owner Meta is expected to follow suit later this year.


The investigation advised that internet platforms be required to assist clients who have been scammed, a measure that the government is considering.


"We're working together with technology firms, law enforcement, and civil society partners to investigate all options for assisting victims of online fraud and mitigating the damage they've suffered," the government stated.