Far-right cryptocurrency follows ideology across borders, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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The Daily Stormer website advocates for the purity of the white race, posts hate-filled, conspiratorial screeds against Blacks, Jews and women and has helped inspire at least three racially motivated murders. It has also made its founder, Andrew Anglin, a millionaire.

Anglin has tapped a worldwide network of supporters to take in at least 112 Bitcoin since January 2017 – worth $4.8 million at today’s exchange rate – according to data shared with The Associated Press. He’s likely raised even more.

Anglin is just one very public example of how radical right provocateurs are raising significant amounts of money from around the world through cryptocurrencies. Banned by traditional financial institutions, they have taken refuge in digital currencies, which they are using in ever more secretive ways to avoid the oversight of banks, regulators and courts, finds an AP analysis of legal documents, Telegram channels and blockchain data from Chainalysis, a cryptocurrency analytics firm.

Anglin owes more than $18 million in legal judgments in the United States to people whom he and his followers harassed and threatened. And while online, he remains visible – most days, dozens of stories on the Daily Stormer homepage carry his name – in the real world, Anglin’s a ghost.

His victims have tried – and failed – to find him, searching at one Ohio address after another. Voting records place him in Russia in 2016 and his passport shows he was in Cambodia in 2017. After that, the public trail goes cold. He has no obvious bank accounts or real estate holdings in the U.S. For now, his Bitcoin fortune remains out of reach.



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Forex reserves cross $600 billion for first time on foreign flows, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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MUMBAI: The country’s forex reserves crossed the $600-billion mark for the first time on the back of continued foreign investment flow into the capital markets. According to the RBI, forex reserves increased by $6.8 billion in the week ended June 4 to $605 billion.

The current level of forex reserves is enough to cover nearly 16 months of imports. According to RBI governor Shaktikanta Das, the central bank has enough ammunition to meet challenges arising out of “global spillovers”, a reference to any sudden policy changes in the US or geopolitical shifts that could lead to funds exiting India.

India is now less than $200 million behind Russia, which has an almost identical level of reserves. The pile-up of foreign exchange reserves is an outcome of the RBI’s strategy of buying dollars when there is a sudden spurt of inflows, which causes volatility in the forex markets.

In FY20, the RBI added over $100 billion to the reserves. It has also sold dollars when the rupee came under pressure. In February and March, the central bank had depleted its stockpile by almost $10 billion by selling dollars.
Foreign fund buying of shares and debt in India also added to the reserves. According to the data from CDSL, in FY21, net inflows of about $37 billion came in through these routes and while another $400 million net flows were added to it.

According to a report by Brickworks Ratings, the exchange rate volatility demands more forex interventions by the RBI. Hence, the accumulation of forex reserves helps the RBI to maintain the exchange rate at a comfortable level.

The report points out that doubts over India’s economic recovery led to significant capital outflows in April and May. The RBI’s purchase of dollars also has a corollary impact on rupee liquidity. Every $1 billion that the RBI purchases results in around Rs 7,300 crore of rupee funds being released.



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