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European Central Bank on Behalf of Eurosystem Launches the Appia Roadmap 

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The European Central Bank (ECB), on behalf of the Eurosystem, has launched the Appia roadmap.

This strategic initiative outlines a plan to develop an integrated, innovative, and resilient tokenized wholesale financial ecosystem in Europe, with central bank money; euro-denominated wholesale settlements serving as the core anchor to maintain stability and trust amid the shift toward tokenization and distributed ledger technology (DLT).

The announcement emphasizes building a bridge from the current financial system to future tokenized markets “firmly grounded in central bank money,” as stated by ECB Executive Board member Piero Cipollone.

Key Components of the Roadmap

The strategy follows a two-track approach: Pontes: This is the near-term, operational DLT-based settlement solution from the Eurosystem. It will enable tokenized transactions on market DLT platforms to settle in central bank money, while remaining interoperable with existing TARGET payment settlement services (like TARGET2).

Pontes is scheduled to launch in the third quarter of 2026, addressing immediate market needs without disrupting current infrastructure. Appia: This provides the broader, longer-term strategic framework. It involves collaboration with public and private sector stakeholders to explore designs for a tokenized ecosystem, including infrastructure, standards, governance, and legal aspects.

The project aims to conclude with a comprehensive blueprint published in 2028, crystallizing the Eurosystem’s vision for Europe’s tokenized wholesale markets. The initiative supports the growing trend of tokenizing assets; securities, bonds, or other financial instruments on DLT/blockchain, ensuring the euro remains central and reducing risks from private stablecoins or foreign dependencies.

A public consultation is now open, seeking input from stakeholders until April 22, 2026, to refine the approach. This aligns with broader ECB efforts, such as the digital euro project with potential issuance targeted around 2029, pending legislation and recent acceptances of tokenized securities as collateral in certain cases.

The move is seen as part of the EU’s push for financial autonomy, innovation in capital markets, and resilience in a digital transformation. Pontes is the Eurosystem’s (the ECB and national central banks of the euro area) near-term, practical distributed ledger technology (DLT) settlement solution.

It forms the operational “bridge” (the name “Pontes” means “bridges” in Latin) within the broader Appia roadmap, enabling tokenized wholesale financial transactions to settle in central bank money (euro-denominated wholesale central bank money) starting in the near future.

The main goal is to address immediate market needs for safe, efficient settlement in tokenized environments. As tokenization grows representing assets like securities, bonds, or other instruments as digital tokens on DLT networks, there’s increasing demand for reliable settlement without relying on private stablecoins or risking fragmentation.

Pontes ensures: Central bank money remains the safest and most trusted settlement asset. It supports innovation in DLT-based markets while preserving financial stability, monetary policy control, and smooth payment systems. It avoids disrupting existing infrastructure that euro area institutions already use.

 

This prevents potential issues from private or foreign-dominated settlement options and keeps the euro central in Europe’s evolving digital financial landscape. Pontes acts as an interoperability layer connecting market-operated DLT platforms with the Eurosystem’s established TARGET Services particularly TARGET2 for real-time gross settlement, or T2.

Transactions can settle directly on a Eurosystem-provided DLT platform using tokenized cash (cash tokens representing central bank money) or via traditional T2 accounts. The cash leg ultimately finalizes in T2 for ultimate settlement assurance. Delivery versus payment (DvP): It uses reliable interoperability mechanisms to ensure atomic, simultaneous exchange of assets and cash, reducing settlement risk.

Supports end-to-end processing and seamless interaction with T2, enabling programmability and efficiency in tokenized transactions. Pontes builds on lessons from the Eurosystem’s 2024 exploratory work, which tested three interoperability solutions involving features like full-DLT settlement (DL3S), Trigger solutions, and TIPS Hash-Link.

It combines the best elements into a single, unified Eurosystem offering. A tokenized transaction occurs on a market DLT platform ? Pontes bridges it to TARGET ? Settlement happens in central bank money, ensuring finality and safety. A pilot for Pontes is scheduled to launch in the third quarter of 2026, with initial operations and onboarding starting then.

This is an operational product rollout not just experimental, allowing eligible participants to begin settling DLT-based transactions. Post-pilot, Pontes will see incremental enhancements, informed by ongoing Appia work. It will evolve toward integration with the longer-term Appia vision.

Pontes provides certainty for markets now while Appia guides the bigger picture. Eligible participants for the initial launch include entities with TARGET2 access, authorized CSDs, DLT settlement system operators, CCPs, and other supervised financial institutions.

The Eurosystem has market contact groups for ongoing dialogue. This initiative reflects the Eurosystem’s commitment to innovation grounded in central bank money as of March 2026.

Leveraging AI to Strengthen the UK’s Trade Position

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The United Kingdom is actively leveraging artificial intelligence (AI) to enhance its global trade position, driven by government strategies, substantial investments, and sector-wide adoption.

As a leading AI innovator; third-largest market globally, the UK is positioning itself to boost exports, improve competitiveness, and reshape trade flows through AI integration. The UK’s Trade Strategy explicitly recognizes that AI and other emerging technologies will “reshape trade flows and the whole way we do business.”

It emphasizes opportunities in digital trade agreements, electronic trade documents, and reducing administrative burdens at borders—priorities echoed in industry feedback, where over half of respondents highlighted AI’s potential to streamline customs and export processes.

Complementing this, the AI Opportunities Action Plan aims to accelerate adoption, potentially adding £47 billion annually to the economy through productivity gains of up to 1.5%. Broader initiatives include the Modern Industrial Strategy, AI Growth Zones with £24.25 billion in recent private commitments, and £1.6 billion from UK Research and Innovation for AI over 2026–2030.

These efforts focus on scaling businesses internationally, attracting inward investment, and supporting exports in high-value sectors like professional and business services. Recent statements from Business and Trade Secretary Peter Kyle urge manufacturers to embrace AI for productivity, advanced technologies, and new export models—supported by UK Export Finance for smaller firms exporting integrated solutions rather than just goods.

Key Ways AI Strengthens UK Trade

AI enhances trade competitiveness through several mechanisms: AI drives automation, predictive maintenance, and process optimization in manufacturing and services, lowering costs and enabling UK firms to compete globally. Estimates suggest AI could boost UK GDP by £550 billion by 2035, helping climb manufacturing rankings.

The Department for Business and Trade uses AI tools to predict high-potential exporters, targeting support for faster international scaling. AI reduces red tape, speeds customs, and cuts delays—potentially increasing global goods exports by up to 37% by 2040 if barriers are addressed.

The UK’s services sector (second-largest exporter globally) benefits immensely from AI-powered growth in professional/business services (£181 billion in exports in 2024). AI enhances fraud detection, personalized services, and innovation in finance, legal, and tech—highly exportable areas where the UK leads.

Over 65% of UK AI companies export up significantly in recent years, with many deriving substantial revenue internationally. The sector saw £2.9 billion in investment in 2024 and strong inward FDI (£15 billion announced, creating jobs). Over 52% of UK businesses use AI up from 39%, with many reporting revenue increases up to 28% and strong ROI.

While promising, realizing full benefits requires addressing skills gaps, ethical/regulatory alignment and barriers like tariffs on AI-related tech. The government prioritizes pro-innovation regulation, talent nurturing, and international partnerships to maintain leadership.

By embedding AI in trade policy, industrial strategy, and business operations, the UK is transforming potential vulnerabilities into strengths—aiming for resilient, innovation-led growth in a digital global economy. This positions Britain not just as an AI adopter, but as an exporter of AI-driven solutions and services.

The overarching goal is to “ramp up AI adoption” to deliver broad-based benefits: higher living standards, future-proof jobs, improved everyday lives, and alignment with the government’s five missions including kickstarting economic growth as the highest in the G7.

The AI Opportunities Action Plan represents a proactive, investment-backed blueprint to turn the UK’s strong AI position into tangible advantages—economic resilience, better public services, and leadership in a transformative technology. It complements related strategies like the Modern Industrial Strategy and Trade Strategy by prioritizing AI as a key driver of competitiveness and growth.

US February Consumer Price Index (CPI) Data Came-in Exactly in Line with Expectations

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The February 2026 US Consumer Price Index (CPI) data came in exactly in line with expectations. The Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) released the report which Key figures include: Headline CPI (year-over-year): +2.4%, unchanged from January and matching economist consensus forecasts; Dow Jones and others expected 2.4%.

Headline CPI: month-over-month, seasonally adjusted: +0.3%, up slightly from +0.2% in January and aligning with expectations. Core CPI excluding food and energy, year-over-year: +2.5%, unchanged from January and in line with forecasts. Core CPI (month-over-month, seasonally adjusted): +0.2%, slightly cooler than January’s +0.3% but matching expectations.

This steadiness in inflation occurred just before escalating geopolitical tensions notably the conflict involving Iran began driving up energy prices, which weren’t yet reflected in the February data. Economists note that March and future months could see higher readings due to rising oil and gasoline costs.

The report was viewed as tame and on-target, offering some reassurance to markets and the Federal Reserve that inflation wasn’t accelerating pre-conflict, though it remains above the Fed’s 2% target.

The February 2026 CPI data, came in line with expectations (headline CPI at +2.4% YoY, unchanged from January; core at +2.5% YoY) and had a limited but reinforcing impact on Federal Reserve rate decisions. It provided no strong signal for immediate easing, keeping the Fed in a cautious, data-dependent stance amid ongoing inflation above the 2% target and emerging geopolitical risks from the Iran conflict.

The tame, steady inflation print not accelerating but also not decisively cooling toward 2% supported the Fed’s recent “higher for longer” approach. Markets already expected the Fed to hold the federal funds rate steady in its 3.5%–3.75% target range at the March 17–18, 2026, FOMC meeting.

Post-CPI, the probability of no change rose to around 98–99% per CME FedWatch tool and market reports, up slightly from pre-report levels. A rate cut at this meeting was priced in at near-zero odds. Economists and analysts widely viewed the report as “on hold” friendly.

It didn’t show disinflation resuming strongly enough to justify near-term easing, especially with core measures sticky in services and shelter. Combined with the Iran war’s upward pressure on energy prices (not yet in February data but expected to boost March/April readings), the Fed is likely to remain sidelined longer to monitor for second-round effects or embedded inflation expectations.

Many forecasts now point to the next cut potentially in summer or later, with only 1–2 total cuts anticipated for 2026 down from earlier hopes for more aggressive easing. Inflation remains above target, with some economists noting no clear deceleration signal. Geopolitical uncertainty adds upside risk, leading to comments like “the Fed sits on its hands” due to war-related unpredictability.

Recent labor market softness complicates the picture but hasn’t outweighed inflation concerns enough for dovish shifts yet. The Fed’s preferred PCE gauge (due soon) may show slightly hotter readings, further supporting caution. Bond yields ticked higher post-report, reflecting reduced near-term cut bets.

Stock futures were mixed to slightly down, with focus shifting to energy price risks rather than the CPI itself. The data was “tame” but insufficient to pivot the Fed from pause mode; higher inflation ahead could push cuts even further out.

The next key updates will be March PCE data and the March FOMC statement (March 18), which could provide more clarity on the Fed’s updated dot plot and projections. For now, the February CPI keeps the door closed on imminent rate relief while highlighting vigilance on emerging inflationary pressures.

Pump.fun’s $1B Milestone Exemplifies how Speculative Apps can Supercharge a Chain’s Metrics 

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Pump.fun, the popular Solana-based memecoin launchpad, has become the first platform on the Solana blockchain to surpass $1 billion in lifetime revenue. This milestone was reported across multiple crypto news sources and on-chain analytics.

According to data from Dune Analytics dashboards tracking Pump.fun’s fees: Cumulative revenue reached approximately $1.003 billion with some reports citing figures like $1,003,944,721 or slightly higher at ~$1.004 billion. The platform achieved this since its launch in January 2024, driven primarily by fees from its bonding curve mechanism typically a 1% swap fee on transactions for memecoin launches and trades.

Pump.fun has facilitated the creation of around 12 million tokens, with lifetime unique users exceeding 22 million. It has dominated Solana’s memecoin ecosystem, at times accounting for a majority of daily transactions and outpacing established DeFi protocols like Jupiter ($401 million lifetime) and Raydium ($127 million).

Daily revenue often hovers around $1 million or more, with examples like $863,908 on March 10, 2026. A significant portion of revenue has funded PUMP token buybacks over $323 million worth in SOL used for repurchases to date. This makes Pump.fun not just Solana’s top revenue generator but one of the most profitable apps in crypto overall.

Highlighting the massive scale of memecoin activity despite high failure rates ~98.5% of launched tokens fail to complete their bonding curve. The platform shows signs of evolution beyond Solana, with reports of subdomain registrations and potential expansions to chains like Ethereum, Base, BSC, and Monad—positioning it as a multi-chain memecoin and trading hub.

This achievement underscores Solana’s strength in high-volume, speculative applications, even as the broader memecoin market remains volatile. Pump.fun’s achievement of surpassing $1 billion in lifetime revenue on Solana has had a profound impact on both liquidity and broader ecosystem growth within the Solana network, while also signaling potential for multi-chain expansion.

Pump.fun operates primarily through its bonding curve mechanism for memecoin launches, where trades incur a ~1% fee that directly contributes to platform revenue. This model bootstraps liquidity without requiring traditional initial pools unlike many DEX launches, as the curve gradually builds price and liquidity as buys occur.

Successful tokens “graduate” to DEXs like Raydium or Meteora, often with locked liquidity post-graduation to prevent rugs.The platform’s massive fee generation often $1M+ daily has funded aggressive PUMP token buybacks, with cumulative repurchases exceeding $320-323 million in SOL.

These buybacks reduce circulating supply, stabilize PUMP’s price, and indirectly support ecosystem liquidity by recycling capital. Initiatives like the Glass Full Foundation (GFF) inject liquidity into promising memecoins, reducing volatility for select projects and encouraging more launches. Pump.fun’s integrated PumpSwap DEX has recorded peak weekly volumes like $6.6 billion, often outpacing other Solana DEXs.

It aggregates liquidity from sources like Raydium and Meteora, while adding support for assets like wrapped BTC (wBTC), broadening tradable liquidity pools. Spillover effects boost Solana-wide liquidity: High memecoin activity drives DEX volumes on Jupiter, Raydium, etc., increases active addresses, and contributes to TVL growth in DeFi protocols.

However, liquidity remains fragmented and volatile—~98.5% of launched tokens fail, concentrating real depth in winners. Recent expansions enhance accessibility but risk diluting Solana-specific liquidity if multi-chain shifts accelerate. Pump.fun has become a core engine for Solana’s growth, particularly in the memecoin/speculative sector, which dominates retail activity.

It facilitates ~12 million tokens created and 22+ million unique users, dominating 75-91% of Solana memecoin launches at peaks. This drives network usage: At times, it accounted for 62% of daily Solana transactions. Revenue flywheel supports ecosystem health—fees fund buybacks, creator payouts via programs like Project Ascend, and liquidity injections, creating a virtuous cycle that attracts creators and traders.

Broader Solana benefits include revived sentiment, higher TVL in ancillary DeFi, and alignment with network upgrades like Firedancer for scalability. The platform is evolving beyond pure memecoins: Pivots toward multi-asset trading, venture funds, livestreaming, and “infrastructuralization” aim to diversify and sustain growth amid cyclical memecoin hype.

Pump.fun exemplifies how speculative apps can supercharge a chain’s metrics—driving fees, users, and liquidity far beyond traditional DeFi—while highlighting risks like volatility and high failure rates. Its $1B milestone cements Solana’s edge in high-volume retail crypto, with ongoing expansions likely fueling further growth in 2026.

India Reaches Out to Iran As Energy Shock Following Hormuz Closure Disrupts Supplies, Fuels Inflation Fears

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India is scrambling to safeguard its energy security after Iran’s leadership vowed to keep the Strait of Hormuz closed, a move that threatens the flow of oil and gas through one of the world’s most critical shipping corridors and exposes the vulnerabilities of the world’s third-largest crude importer.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi held urgent talks with Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian within hours of the declaration, underscoring New Delhi’s growing alarm over supply disruptions and rising energy costs that are already triggering panic-buying in parts of the country.

The call marked Modi’s first direct contact with Iran since the war began and highlighted the diplomatic pressure building on major Asian economies that rely heavily on energy shipments through the narrow waterway linking the Persian Gulf to global markets.

“The safety and security of Indian nationals, along with the need for unhindered transit of goods and energy, remain India’s top priorities,” Modi said in a message posted on X after the conversation.

A Chokepoint For India’s Energy Lifeline

The Strait of Hormuz, like many others, is strategically important to India’s economy. According to estimates from Citigroup, about half of India’s crude oil imports move through the strait, while the majority of its liquefied petroleum gas (LPG) — the primary cooking fuel used by households and businesses — also transits the route.

The closure, therefore, threatens not only oil supply but also the availability of cooking fuel used by nearly 330 million households and more than 3 million businesses. For India, where energy demand has surged alongside rapid economic growth and urbanization, such a disruption poses immediate economic risks.

Analysts say the country’s reliance on imported fuel makes it particularly exposed to geopolitical shocks in the Middle East.

“India needs more oil and gas,” said Nikhil Bhandari of Goldman Sachs, noting that the country has a significantly smaller inventory buffer than many East Asian economies and is therefore more vulnerable to supply disruptions.

The supply risks are already rippling through India’s domestic energy market. Government officials say petrol stations still have adequate fuel supplies, but panic buying of LPG cylinders has begun to strain the system.

The shortage is particularly acute for commercial users such as restaurants and hotels, which rely on larger LPG cylinders.

The National Restaurant Association of India said some restaurants have begun closing temporarily or reducing menus as commercial LPG cylinders become harder to obtain. In response, authorities have instructed pollution control boards to allow restaurants to temporarily switch to alternative fuels such as kerosene, biomass, or coal.

While the measure is intended to conserve LPG for households, it also illustrates how quickly energy shortages can disrupt sectors ranging from hospitality to food services.

The government has also tightened distribution rules, extending the waiting period between LPG cylinder bookings to 25 days in urban areas and up to 45 days in rural regions.

Inflation Pressures Mounting

Economists warn that the disruption is likely to feed into inflation across the broader economy. Citigroup estimates that sustained oil prices between $90 and $100 per barrel could push retail fuel prices up by between 5 and 10 rupees per liter.

That increase alone could add up to 50 basis points to India’s consumer inflation rate, posing a challenge for policymakers seeking to maintain price stability. The bank now sees a 50- to 75-basis-point upside risk to its forecast of 4% inflation for the financial year ending March 2027.

Meanwhile, analysts at Nomura have raised their forecast for India’s consumer inflation to 4.5% from 3.8%, citing higher cooking fuel costs and rising prices in restaurants and food services, according to Reuters.

India has already raised the price of LPG cylinders by about 60 rupees, or roughly 6.5%, though economists say political considerations may limit further increases as several states head into election campaigns.

Currency And Trade Risks

The energy shock is also putting pressure on India’s external accounts. The Indian rupee has weakened sharply in recent sessions, trading near record lows of around 92.48 to the dollar as markets factor in the prospect of higher oil import bills.

Economists warn that sustained oil prices near $100 per barrel could widen India’s current account deficit and intensify downward pressure on the currency. Radhika Rao, senior economist at DBS Bank, estimates that oil prices averaging $100 per barrel could widen India’s current account deficit by around 70 basis points.

India’s current account deficit stood at about 1.3% of GDP at the end of December 2025. A sustained widening of the deficit would increase the country’s reliance on foreign capital flows and potentially weaken the rupee further.

Supply disruptions are already evident in shipping data. Energy intelligence firm Kpler estimates that around 130 million barrels of crude oil remain stranded in the Middle East Gulf because vessels cannot safely transit the Strait of Hormuz.

India Is Among The Countries Affected.

Officials say at least 28 Indian vessels carrying nearly 800 seafarers remain stuck in the strait. Foreign Minister Subrahmanyam Jaishankar has held multiple discussions with Iranian Foreign Minister Seyed Abbas Araghchi in recent days, focusing on the safety of shipping routes and energy supplies.

A spokesperson for India’s foreign ministry said the talks addressed “the safety of shipping and India’s energy security,” but declined to provide further details.

In the meantime, India has stepped up efforts to diversify its oil supply. The country now imports crude from more than 40 nations, with shipments from Russia increasing significantly.

Data from Kpler shows India purchased about 1.46 million barrels per day of Russian crude in March, up from around 1 million barrels per day in February.

Market chatter indicates that Indian refiners recently bought Russian Urals crude at a premium of about $5 per barrel above Brent for deliveries in March and April — a sign that tight supply is pushing up prices even for discounted barrels.

Yet analysts say shifting supply chains is easier said than done.

“If Hormuz remains closed beyond the near term, India will be forced into a structural reconfiguration it was never fully prepared for, at a cost premium it may not be able to afford,” said Reema Bhattacharya of Verisk Maplecroft.

Energy experts note that rerouting supplies from other producers often requires longer shipping routes, higher freight costs, and competition with other major importers. That means the current crisis could mark more than a temporary disruption. If the closure persists, it could reshape the country’s energy trade patterns and push fuel costs higher for an extended period — reinforcing concerns that the surge in global energy prices may not ease anytime soon.