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Binance announced it will cease support for deposits and withdrawals on selected networks as of December 12, 2025, according to its latest operational update.
Binance announced it will cease support for deposits and withdrawals on selected networks as of December 12, 2025, according to its latest operational update.
The decision affects user operations and liquidity, as certain tokens may have no alternative network support, potentially impacting market activity for those assets.
"Binance has treated network and token support changes as routine risk and infrastructure management decisions for the exchange rather than strategic hostility toward any specific chain." — Changpeng Zhao (CZ), Founder and Former CEO [2]
The Reserve Bank of Australia will hold its cash rate at 3.60% on Tuesday and keep it there through 2026, according to a Reuters poll, a shift from last month when a majority of economists expected at least one rate cut next year.
After lifting rates to a 12-year high of 4.35%, the RBA has cut 75 basis points this year, but expectations for another cut faded after inflation in the latest monthly data rose to 3.2%, above the central bank's 2%-3% target range, suggesting policy may not be as restrictive as thought.
Australia's economy grew at its fastest annual pace in two years, and a strong labour market should allow policymakers to keep rates on hold to focus on taming inflation.
All 38 economists in the December 1-4 poll expected the central bank to leave its official cash rate unchanged at the end of its two-day meeting on December 9.
"Given recent data...the RBA is likely to remain on hold for an extended period. We no longer expect another 25bp cut to the cash rate. Inflation has risen above the 2-3% target band and is too challenging for the RBA to look through," said Craig Vardy, head of Australia fixed income at BlackRock.
"The prudent course of action for the foreseeable future would be to keep the cash rate on hold."
MOST ECONOMISTS EXPECT RATES TO REMAIN UNCHANGED
In the November poll, over 60% expected at least one more cut to come by April-June, a view held by less than one-third in the latest poll.
Among economists who had a rates forecast until the end of 2026, a strong majority 19 of 33 expect rates to stay unchanged at 3.60%, and 10 forecast at least one cut. The remaining four expected the RBA to hike at least once.
That minority view aligns with a broader shift in sentiment, with many now saying the balance of risks has tilted toward a hike. Interest rate futures are pricing in over a 70% chance of a hike by the end of next year.
"Our base case remains a pause in 2026...However, in the near term, risks are skewed to hikes as inflationary pressures continue to rise. If inflation accelerates sustainably above the RBA's forecasts, and the labour market tightens, we anticipate that the RBA may hike, but the hurdle for a hike is high," said Nick Stenner, head of Australia and New Zealand economics at BofA.
Nifty futures point to a cautious start for local equities this morning after the benchmark index snapped a four-day slide on Thursday to hop back above 26,000. There was some respite for the rupee as well, and traders will be closely watching the RBI governor's comments on the currency at the policy call today.
Also in the spotlight will be the usual rate-sensitive corners of the market: banks, autos and developers. And to keep things interesting, Russian President Vladimir Putin is meeting Prime Minister Narendra Modi in New Delhi today. What comes out of that discussion might even influence India's long-awaited trade deal with the US. Meanwhile, regional markets are down ahead of a key US inflation data release.
Reliance Industries has quietly begun work on the initial draft prospectus for what could be India's biggest-ever IPO — the long-anticipated listing of Jio Platforms. The company is informally speaking with a couple of banks to prepare the document, aiming to file as soon as the market regulator SEBI notifies its new rules allowing minimum dilution as low as 2.5% for companies valued above 5 trillion rupees ($55 billion). SEBI approved the relaxed norms in mid-September, but they have yet to be implemented — a crucial step before one of the world's most-watched IPOs can proceed.
While some of the country's largest companies gear up to raise capital, new investors are eyeing India. On Thursday, Russia's biggest lender, Sberbank, said it's giving its clients a way to invest in Indian equities through a passive product linked to the Nifty Index. The benchmark is up around 10% so far this year and is on track to notch its 10th straight year of gains. The market still looks pricey, but investors seem hopeful that earnings will grow to justify those valuations. Sberbank isn't stopping at equities. The bank's top executive said they're also eyeing government securities and even have plans to expand into retail banking in the country.
This interest in high-value markets echoes in Mumbai's property market, where ultra-luxury spending is booming while affordable segments lag behind. In the financial capital, high-end apartments are priced as much as 100,000 rupees ($1,109) per square foot — on par with prices in New York's Lower Manhattan — according to a report by Anarock Group and wealth management firm 360 One Wealth.
For markets, the message is mixed. Strong luxury demand is still boosting jewelry and premium consumption stocks, despite worries about slower economic growth. But if real estate prices keep rising, affordability could erode and dent demand. After a two-year rally in which a gauge tracking realty stocks more than doubled, 2025 has been a dampener, with the gauge falling over 15% as affordability and valuation concerns take center stage.
The struggling rupee strengthened on Thursday after six straight days of losses that pushed it below the psychologically crucial 90-per-dollar mark. The rebound, which made the rupee the best-performing Asian currency on the day, comes as some analysts say that it now appears undervalued. Analysts from Yes Securities cite that as a factor that may comfort foreign funds, while Elara notes that equity inflows typically pick up after the valuation gauge bottoms out. Traders also said the Reserve Bank of India — set to announce its policy decision later today — has intermittently stepped in to support the currency. Although the rupee's recent slide has been steep, positive developments in US trade talks or fresh RBI measures to attract inflows could trigger a sharp rally.
The Federal Reserve's December meeting is set to be contentious, with multiple dissents likely on a widely expected rate cut, but it is unlikely to mark the end of the easing cycle as the data backdrop still points to more cuts ahead rather than a one-and-done pivot, Wells Fargo said.
"We expect the FOMC to proceed with returning policy toward a more neutral stance and reduce the fed funds rate by another 25 bps to 3.50%-3.75% at its upcoming meeting on December 9-10," Wells Fargo economists said in a recent note, noting that "the latest available labor market data suggest that conditions have continued to slowly soften" while inflation shows "few signs of inflationary pressures bubbling up further."
While nonfarm payrolls growth firmed in September, the unemployment rate reached 4.4%, which was "above the Committee's central tendency range for 'maximum employment' and PCE inflation running at 2.8% on both a headline and core basis.
The interest-rate decision will be accompanied by an updated summary of economic projections that will likely reinforce the case for further easing beyond December, the economists said. Adjustments to the 2025 SEP will likely be "in the direction of higher unemployment and lower inflation," a combination Wells Fargo calls "consistent with another 25 bps rate cut at this meeting."
Looking to 2026, the economists believe the SEP medians are more likely to drift "up a tenth or so for GDP growth and the unemployment rate, while edging down a tick for inflation," with risks to the 2026 fed funds "median dot as skewed to the downside" if those trends are confirmed.
That somewhat dovish backdrop comes even as the FOMC is increasingly split, with "multiple dissents" expected in December. The economists expect that the Fed will manage dissent by serving up a "more hawkish post-meeting statement" that would raise the "bar to additional rate cuts," perhaps even hinting that a hold in January is the base case despite the underlying projections still pointing toward higher unemployment and lower inflation over time.
For Wells Fargo, that mix means December's move is part of an ongoing recalibration, not a final cut. The median dot for the 2026 fed funds rate is expected to stay at 3.375% for now, underscoring the simmering hawkish tilt at the Fed, the economists forecast, though add that "it would take just one participant at the current median… moving their dot lower for the median to fall."
"Given the potential for a slightly higher unemployment rate and slightly lower inflation in the 2026 projections, we see the risks to the 2026 median dot as skewed to the downside," Wells Fargo added.
Ahead of the Fed's December meeting, odds of rate cut remain nearly fully priced in at about 85%, according to Investing.com's Fed Rate Monitor Tool.
A federal grand jury in Virginia has refused to indict New York State Attorney General Letitia James for a second time over mortgage fraud claims.
Prosecutors had sought charges against James less than two weeks after a federal judge dismissed the earlier case, saying that Lindsey Halligan, the US Attorney for the Eastern District of Virginia, had been improperly appointed.
"The grand jury's refusal to re-indict Attorney General James is a decisive rejection of a case that should never have existed in the first place," James's lawyer Abbe Lowell said in a statement.
James shouldn't have a premature celebration because the Justice Department might try again to indict her, according to a source familiar with the matter who declined to be identified discussing confidential deliberations.
A representative for the US Attorney's Office for the Eastern District of Virginia had no immediate comment.
"As I have said from the start, the charges against me are baseless," James said in a statement. "It is time for this unchecked weaponization of our justice system to stop."
James had previously called the charges "political retribution" for a civil case she brought against Trump before his second term in office. She pleaded not guilty and challenged the appointment of Halligan, who was named to the post in September after her predecessor resigned under pressure to bring the charges.
The Justice Department's probe into James stemmed from claims by Federal Housing Finance Agency Director Bill Pulte that she may have committed mortgage fraud based on the residence status she listed on loan applications.
The initial charges followed a consistent campaign by Trump for legal action against James.
"We can't delay any longer, it's killing our reputation and credibility," Trump wrote in a Truth Social post in September. "JUSTICE MUST BE SERVED, NOW!!!"
James had campaigned on promises to investigate Trump. In 2022, her office sued Trump and his real estate company, alleging he reaped hundreds of millions of dollars in "illegal profit" by inflating the value of assets, including his Mar-a-Lago estate and Trump Tower penthouse. The complaint alleged Trump and his two eldest sons carried out the scheme for years so he could get better loan terms from Deutsche Bank AG and other lenders.
James won after a trial in which Trump took the witness stand and denied wrongdoing. A judge set the penalty at $464 million. But a New York appeals court in August vacated the fine, ruling it was unconstitutionally "excessive," while upholding the judge's finding that Trump and his company were liable for fraud. Both sides have appealed, escalating the case to the state's highest court.
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