Tuesday, November 08, 2022

"Red Wave"

 


dknation.draftkings.com

2022 Midterm Election Betting Update: The bettors favor Red Wave, but they always do

2022 Midterm Election Betting Update: The bettors favor Red Wave, but they always do

Who do you believe: The polls or the odds? That’s the big question ahead of tonight’s results.

 

"The 2022 Midterm Election is a gamblers paradise for a particular type of person.

If you’re as excited about the White House Correspondents’ Dinner as you are the Super Bowl annually, tonight is your biennial … Super Bowl. And just like in Las Vegas for the NFL Championship, there will be plenty of proposition wagering available.

Betting is as much a part of elections for as long as people have gambled in an organized fashion. You could cast a ballot and then place a wager on the outcome in Italy even in the 16th Century, and wagering on outcomes in Britain’s House of Commons is a practice from the 1700’s until today.

And while most markets are a pretty good way to express value in everything from sports to hot dog eating contests or who will win an Oscar, that doesn’t mean the markets are always correct. And there’s probably nowhere more than that being the case than in election betting.

Nate Silver and FiveThirtyEight.com gives Adam Laxalt a 51 in 100 chance of winning tonight’s Senate seat in Nevada. But the bettors at Polymarket have Laxalt at 70% to flip Nevada red. The spread is even bigger at PredictIt, who has him at .71 to take it home at 12:30 p.m. on Election Day.

In Pennsylvania, Mehmet Oz holds a 57% chance at 538 of beating John Fetterman, but is a 59% favorite at PolyMarket, and an even bigger .65 at PredictIt. These are just two examples of the larger narrative, which is that betting markets have continued to oversample Republicans for the last several cycles.

The most extreme example came during the election returns in 2020, where Donald Trump was -385 favorite to become President of the United States, and even higher than that in some places during the count of returns. Even when the electoral college math was clearly in favor of Joe Biden, the odds were still pointing towards a second term of Donald Trump.

It got so out of whack, we said this during our liveblog in 2020:

There’s only three possibilities here:

The markets think Biden loses Pennsylvania and either Michigan or Wisconsin.

They believe something will happen in the courts to deny Joe Biden the Presidency.

They’re just completely irrational.

It turned out to be some combination of No. 2 and No. 3 it appears.

The reasons for this aren’t totally known, although Alex Kirshner at Slate took a shot at trying to find a theory of the case in December of 2020.. There are plenty of opinions out there, but for at least the fourth-straight cycle it appears the betting markets are still slanting towards the Republican Party.

It could be the limited size of these markets, as getting down a bet of more than $1,000 can often be challenging. Or it could be that conservative voters, who tend to be more male, are also more active gamblers. But whatever the reason, betting on Republicans tonight is often not a sound strategy strictly from a value perspective.

So sit back and enjoy the election results as they come in tonight, and feel free to do some handicapping while watching the network coverage. But if you think the Red Wave is coming, you simply won’t get paid on it nearly as well as someone that disagrees with you."


 

NEWS 

CGTN Cartoon: Blinded by partisan battles

Today, the U.S. is facing inflation at a 40-year-high, rising gun violence and racism, etc. But as the voting day for midterm elections approaches, Democrats and Republicans only seek political gains. But negative hyper-partisanship will drive the nation to become more divided and put Americans in a worse predicament.

Blinded by partisan battles

Cartoon
Designer: Cao Yi 
Editor: Yuan Xin
Senior producer: Wei Wei 
Managing directors: Liu Ge, Ge Jing

(To submit cartoons and share story ideas or feedback on our cartoon page, please contact us at cartoon_opinions@cgtn.com)

 

Monday, November 07, 2022

O Really? Massive Chunk Missing of Bitcoins found in a Popcorn Tin (10 years later)

The $3.36 billion belonged to James Zhong, 32, of Gainesville and Athens, Georgia. On Friday, Zhong pled guilty to one count of wire fraud, an offense that carries a maximum sentence of 20 years in prison.

“James Zhong committed wire fraud over a decade ago when he stole approximately 50,000 bitcoin from Silk Road,” Damian Williams, US Attorney for the Southern District of New York, said in Monday’s release. “For almost 10 years, the whereabouts of this massive chunk of missing bitcoin had ballooned into an over $3.3 billion mystery.

arstechnica.com

Hacker took pains to hide $3.36B of stolen bitcoin. Feds found it anyway

by Dan Goodin - Nov 7, 2022 10:17 pm UTC
Dan Goodin / Dan is the Security Editor at Ars Technica, which he joined in 2012 after working for The Register, the Associated Press, Bloomberg News, and other publications.
5 - 6 minutes

The haul, the second biggest in DOJ history, shows the difficulty of hiding cryptocurrency.

Bitcoin laundering concept vector illustration.

"Federal prosecutors have recovered $3.36 billion in bitcoin that was stolen a decade ago from Silk Road, the dark web bazaar responsible for distributing massive quantities of illegal drugs and other illicit goods and services to people worldwide.

Last November, federal agents executing a search warrant on a then-defendant’s Gainesville, Georgia, house seized a little more than 50,491 bitcoin that was stashed in an underground floor safe and on a “single-board computer” that was submerged under blankets in a popcorn tin stored in a bathroom closet, the Justice Department said on Monday. During the same search, agents recovered $661,900 in cash, 25 Casascius coins (physical bitcoin) with an approximate value of 174 bitcoin, 11.1160005300044 additional bitcoin, and four one-ounce silver-colored bars, three one-ounce gold-colored bars, four 10-ounce silver-colored bars, and one gold-colored coin.

A $3.3 billion mystery

At the time, the haul was the biggest cryptocurrency seizure in US Justice Department history and today remains the department’s second largest financial seizure ever, behind a ​​$3.6 billion seizure prosecutors made earlier this year from a married couple charged with money laundering.

The $3.36 billion belonged to James Zhong, 32, of Gainesville and Athens, Georgia. On Friday, Zhong pled guilty to one count of wire fraud, an offense that carries a maximum sentence of 20 years in prison.

“James Zhong committed wire fraud over a decade ago when he stole approximately 50,000 bitcoin from Silk Road,” Damian Williams, US Attorney for the Southern District of New York, said in Monday’s release. “For almost 10 years, the whereabouts of this massive chunk of missing bitcoin had ballooned into an over $3.3 billion mystery. Thanks to state-of-the-art cryptocurrency tracing and good old-fashioned police work, law enforcement located and recovered this impressive cache of crime proceeds.”

Prosecutors said Zhong executed a sophisticated scheme to defraud Silk Road of what was about $650,000 worth of bitcoin, based on the value of the cryptocurrency when the fraud took place in September 2012. To execute the plan, prosecutors said Zhong created about nine Silk Road accounts and funded them with an initial deposit of 200 to 2,000 bitcoin. Zhong then triggered 140 transactions in rapid succession to trick the Silk Road withdrawal-processing system into releasing about 50,000 bitcoin into the accounts.

“As an example, on September 19, 2012, Zhong deposited 500 bitcoin into a Silk Road wallet,” prosecutors said. “Less than five seconds after making the initial deposit, Zhong executed five withdrawals of 500 bitcoin in rapid succession—i.e., within the same second—resulting in a net gain of 2,000 bitcoin.”

One of Zhong’s other fraud accounts made a single deposit and more than 50 withdrawals before the account ceased its activity. Within a few days of the transactions, Zhong moved the bitcoin out of Silk Road and consolidated them into two high-value amounts.

When bitcoin performed a hard fork coin split in August 2017, Zhong’s 50,000 bitcoin windfall received a matching number of bitcoin cash coins. Zhong used an overseas exchange to convert the bitcoin cash to about 3,500 bitcoin, bringing his total take to roughly 53,500 bitcoin.

Starting earlier this year, Zhong started voluntarily surrendering a little more than 1,004 bitcoin to federal authorities.

Silk Road operated from 2011 to 2013 and was used to trade illicit goods around the world. The platform’s founder, Ross Ulbricht, was sentenced to life in prison in 2015.

IRS Criminal Investigation Special Agent in Charge Tyler Hatcher said that once Zhong completed the heist, “he attempted to hide his spoils through a series of complex transactions which he hoped would be enhanced as he hid behind the mystery of the ‘darknet.’” In reality, the bitcoin blockchain provides a history of every single transaction that forensic investigators can use to trace stolen coins even when they pass through tumblers and other tools designed to obscure their origins.

Even cryptocurrencies with stronger privacy assurances, however, aren’t automatically safe from government seizures. Some of the $3.6 billion recovered in March, for instance, was in the form of monero, a cryptocurrency designed to obfuscate the trails of funds within its blockchain by mixing up the payments of multiple users. Using techniques that still aren’t clear, the IRS was able to recover the monero funds anyway.

Zhong is scheduled to be sentenced on February 22, 2023." 


ECB's Lagarde: Inflation is ''much too high'', rates will rise further

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www.fxstreet.com

ECB's Kazaks: There is no pivot

3 - 4 minutes

"The European Central Bank's Martins Kazaks said ''there is no pivot, we still say that inflation is a problem, and we will keep raising rates.''

He was also recently quoted saying that the European Central Bank must raise interest rates much further, but that it is impossible to say how far because economic uncertainty is too high.

“Nobody at the moment can know with any precision where exactly the terminal rate will be,” Kazaks said in an interview in Riga. Borrowing costs “are still way below where they should be” and must move to levels that equate to monetary tightening, not just a withdrawal of stimulus, he said. 

Meanwhile, the euro is advancing on Monday. Investors have been of the mind that the US economy is slowing enough to allow the Federal Reserve to ease its rate-hiking pace and the ongoing speculation that China may ease COVID restrictions. The euro is approaching last month's highs as the following hourly chart illustrates:

NEXT 

www.fxstreet.com

ECB's Lagarde: Inflation is ''much too high'', rates will rise further

By Anil Panchal
3 - 4 minutes

European Central Bank President Christine Lagarde has repeated that the cycle of interest-rate increases must ensure that inflation returns to the 2% target over the medium term.

''Must bring inflation back to 2%,'' she said in recent trade, adding again that inflation is ‘much too high’'. She said rates will rise more. 

Meanwhile, EURUSD is on the up and traders have been of the mind that the US economy is slowing enough to allow the Federal Reserve to ease its rate-hiking pace.

This is weighing on the greenback and the ongoing speculation that China may ease COVID restrictions is also playing a role in the downside at the start of the week.

EURUSD has been approaching last month's highs as the following hourly chart illustrates:

ECB Preview (European Central Bank)

By Ross J Burland
6 - 8 minutes

ECB says more to go on normalisation after 75 bps hike in October

LATEST ECB MEASURES TO BATTLE INFLATION

ECB's Lagarde: Inflation way too high, we have to take action

|

The European Central Bank President Christine Lagarde said on Thursday that inflation is way too high, ''we have to take action,'' adding that the ECB will do whatever is needed and will use all instruments including balance sheet reduction. We ''must deliver on price mandate, ‘no matter what','' she said.


OCTOBER MEETING REVIEW




NEWS TODAY: Mesa...AZDIC (Story from YourValley.net)

Posted
yourvalley.net

Our History | The Daily Independent at YourValley.net

3 - 4 minutes

INI is a normal for-profit company that pays taxes the same as any other for-profit. It does not pay dividends to any individuals or groups, however, since it is 100% owned by INI Holdings, Inc., a non-profit membership corporation.

The five non-profit trustees serve staggered five-year terms, with a new trustee being elected each year.

They pledge to uphold the corporation's articles and bylaws, to act as guardians of its purposes, and to perpetuate the tradition of allowing all after-tax profits to be reinvested in pursuit of the operating company's journalistic mission. Other than receiving a modest honorarium for attending the annual meeting, they pledge to not benefit personally.

yourvalley.net

Mesa, West Valley groups among 4 alliances in new defense, industry coalition

INDEPENDENT NEWSMEDIA
2 - 3 minutes

Four Arizona  alliances have formed the Arizona Defense and Industry Coalition whose mission is to act as a united voice for the state's defense and industry communities.

AZDIC includes four defense coalitions established by the late Sen.  John McCain: the West Valley Defense Alliance, Mesa Industry & Defense Council, Southern Arizona Defense Alliance and the Yuma 50.

AZDIC will promote "transparency and engagement" among defense industry organizations, military installations and Congress, according to a release.

"We are proud to form AZDIC and carry out Senator John McCain's legacy," said Lynndy Smith, president of WVDA and AZDIC.

"He believed in the importance of collaboration between Arizona's defense industry, installations and Congress, and we will actively work with U.S. Congress to address

AZDIC intends to unite the defense community in Arizona, which is home to six military installations, four national guard operations and 1,250 defense contractors, specializing in numerous fields including electronic systems, smart automation, precision machining and advanced materials, the release stated.

The Arizona defense industry produces more than 76,000 direct and indirect jobs and generates $10 billion in economic impact, AZDIC officials said.

"As a member of AZDIC, we are dedicated to preserving U.S. military assets by ensuring that U.S. policies allow for proper allocation of U.S. resources," Robert Medler, president of SADA, said. 

Julie Engel, president of Yuma 50, said AZDIC is "taking immediate action" to influence U.S. defense policy and bring about "lasting change to better support U.S. national security, military installations and warfighters."

AZDIC officials said they invite other Arizona organizations to join and carry out the group's "action-oriented mission."

ongoing defense concerns and positively influence both state and nationwide policy."