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A potential Russia-Ukraine ceasefire could ease energy and food price pressures, lift European sentiment, and modestly support the euro, but defence spending, inflation concerns, and geopolitical risks would likely keep markets cautious.








Donald Trump headed to Alaska on Friday for what he called a "high stakes" summit with Russia's Vladimir Putin to discuss a ceasefire deal for Ukraine to help end the deadliest war in Europe since World War Two.
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy, who was not invited to the talks, and his European allies fear Trump might sell out Ukraine by essentially freezing the conflict and recognising - if only informally - Russian control over one fifth of Ukraine.
Trump sought to assuage such concerns as he boarded Air Force One, saying he would let Ukraine decide on any possible territorial swaps. "I'm not here to negotiate for Ukraine, I'm here to get them at a table," he said.
Both the U.S. and Russian presidents, due to meet at a Cold War-era air force base in Alaska's largest city, are seeking wins from their first face-to-face talks since Trump returned to the White House.
Trump, who casts the war as a "bloodbath" fraught with escalatory risk, is pressing for a truce in the 3-1/2-year-old war that would bolster his credentials as a global peacemaker worthy of the Nobel Peace Prize.
For Putin, the summit is already a big win as he can use it to say that years of Western attempts to isolate Russia have unravelled and that Moscow has retaken its rightful place at the top table of international diplomacy.
The summit, the first between a U.S. and Russian leader since 2021, was set to start at 11 a.m. Alaska time (1900 GMT).
Trump, who once said he would end Russia's war in Ukraine within 24 hours, conceded on Thursday it had proven a tougher nut to crack than he thought. He said that if Friday's talks went well, quickly arranging a second three-way summit with Zelenskiy would be even more important than his encounter with Putin.
"It's time to end the war, and the necessary steps must be taken by Russia. We are counting on America," Zelenskiy wrote on the Telegram messaging app on Friday, adding that the Trump-Putin meeting should open the way for a "just peace" and three-way talks with him included.
Of Putin, Trump said on Friday: "He is a smart guy, been doing it for a long time but so have I... We get along, there's a good respect level on both sides." He also welcomed Putin's decision to bring a lot of businesspeople with him to Alaska.
"But they're not doing business until we get the war settled," he said, repeating a threat of "economically severe" consequences for Russia if the summit goes badly.
One source acquainted with Kremlin thinking said there were signs that Moscow could be ready to strike a compromise on Ukraine given that Putin understood Russia's economic vulnerability and costs of continuing the war.
Reuters has previously reported that Putin might be willing to freeze the conflict along the front lines, provided there was a legally binding pledge not to enlarge NATO eastwards and to lift some Western sanctions.
Russia, whose war economy is showing signs of strain, is vulnerable to further U.S. sanctions - and Trump has threatened tariffs on buyers of Russian crude, primarily China and India.
"For Putin, economic problems are secondary to goals, but he understands our vulnerability and costs," the Russian source said.
On the eve of the summit, Putin held out the prospect of something else he knows Trump wants - a new nuclear arms control agreement to replace the last surviving one, which is due to expire in February next year.
The source familiar with Kremlin thinking said it looked as if the two sides had been able to find some common ground.
"Apparently, some terms will be agreed upon... because Trump cannot be refused, and we are not in a position to refuse (due to sanctions pressure)," said the source, who spoke on condition of anonymity because of the matter's sensitivity.
Putin has so far voiced stringent conditions for a full ceasefire, but one compromise could be a truce in the air war. Putin has said he is open to a ceasefire but has repeatedly said the issues of verification need to be sorted out first.
Zelenskiy has accused Putin of playing for time to avoid U.S. secondary sanctions and has ruled out formally handing Moscow any territory.
Beyond territory, Ukraine has been clear in talks with Western allies that it needs a security guarantee backed by Washington. It is unclear how that guarantee could work - and what part the U.S. would play in it.
Ukrainians who spoke to Reuters in central Kyiv on Friday were not optimistic about the Alaska summit.
"Nothing good will happen there, because war is war, it will not end. The territories - we're not going to give anything to anyone," said Tetiana Harkavenko, a 65-year-old cleaner.
US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent has clarified that his department is still exploring budget-neutral ways to buy Bitcoin for the Strategic Bitcoin Reserve — contrasting with his recent comments suggesting the plan was off the table, which triggered a Bitcoin sell-off.“Treasury is committed to exploring budget-neutral pathways to acquire more Bitcoin to expand the reserve, and to execute on the President’s promise to make the United States the ‘Bitcoin superpower of the world,’” Bessent clarified in an X on Thursday.
He reiterated that the Bitcoin (BTC) forfeited to the federal government would form the reserve’s foundation.There were already concerns that the US’s slow pace of executing its Strategic Bitcoin Reserve could leave it open to being front-run by other nation-states. Some feared that the Treasury may not even follow through on the strategy.Around seven hours earlier on Thursday, Bessent’s comments to FOX Business were widely interpreted to mean the Treasury isn’t looking to buy Bitcoin.
Source: Scott Bessent“We’ve also started to get into the 21st century, a Bitcoin reserve. We’re not going to be buying that, but we are going to use confiscated assets and continue to build that up,” Bessent told the media outlet, which wiped nearly $55 billion off Bitcoin’s market cap within 40 minutes of his comments, with Bitcoin falling from $121,073 to $118,886, CoinGecko data shows.
While Bessent’s clarification reassured some Bitcoiners, others are still concerned that the US Treasury Department may not execute on its promise:“Are you seriously still ‘exploring budget-neutral pathways’? At some point, exploration without execution starts to look like avoidance,” Bitcoin mining firm Braiins CEO Eli Nagar said on X.
“Come on, get moving!”
El Salvador Bitcoin adviser Max Keiser ridiculed Bessent’s use of the term “exploring.” Source: Max KeiserTreasury has been “exploring” budget-neutral ways for five months nowTrump signed an executive order on March 6 establishing both a Strategic Bitcoin Reserve and a Digital Asset Stockpile, both of which would initially use crypto forfeited in government criminal cases.
The order opened the door for additional Bitcoin purchases via “budget-neutral” strategies that “do not impose incremental costs on United States taxpayers.” However, no major developments were shared on how those strategies may be executed in the Digital Asset Working Group’s lengthy crypto report last month.Among the budget-neutral strategies that have been floated are the reevaluation of the Treasury’s gold certificates and tariff revenue.
One reason for the slow progress may be that the Treasury requires congressional approval to purchase Bitcoin in a budget-neutral manner. US Senator Cynthia Lummis made note of that point, calling on Congress to look closer into the BITCOIN Act she introduced in March.
While no action has been taken on the buying side, Bessent confirmed that the US doesn’t plan to sell its existing Bitcoin holdings:“We’re going to stop selling,” he told FOX Business, adding that he believes that the Strategic Bitcoin Reserve is currently valued “somewhere between $15 billion and $20 billion.”That aligns closely with BitBo’s Bitcoin Treasuries dashboard, which reports that the US holds 198,012 Bitcoin worth $23.5 billion.

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