The stories of today’s need
HSBC considers that the return of three days to the office for all employees
HSBC is considering a global policy forcing employees to work with the office at least three days a week, because it aims to bring coherence to hybrid work practices through its international operations, according to a financial Times report on Wednesday.
The bank, which employed 211,000 full -time employees at the end of 2024, currently allows each commercial unit to set its own attendance requirements.
In the United Kingdom, staff should already spend at least 60% of their time in the office or with customers, or risk a reduction in their bonus.
The chief executive officer, Georges Elhedery, is said to have discussed the proposed policy with the high leaders of the group, although no final decision has yet been made, the FT, citing the sources with the discussions, reported.
Peer Barclays, whose headquarters are in the United Kingdom, introduced an attendance rule at the minimum office of three days earlier this year. Wall Street lenders have adopted a stricter approach, with banks such as JPMorgan and Goldman Sachs forcing a complete five -day return to the office.
The American Senate adopts the bill for regulating historical cryptography
The US Senate has approved a bill to establish a regulatory framework for American cryptocurrencies.
The legislation, known as Genius Act (Tracker Link regulation), was adopted Tuesday with strong bipartisan support during a vote of 68-30.
If it is promulgated, the law would force issuers to completely support their tokens with liquid assets such as US dollars or short -term treasure bills. The issuers would also be mandated to publish monthly disclosure detailing the composition of their reserves.
He is now awaiting the approval of the House of Representatives controlled by the Republican before being sent to President Donald Trump for a final signaling failure.
Stablecoins have experienced rapid growth in recent years, a market capitalization of around 250 billion dollars.
JPMorgan extends the cryptography strategy with the JPMD deposit token
JPMorgan extends its presence in the cryptocurrency space with plans to issue a stablecoin type deposit token for its institutional customers.
The token, named JPMD, will be launched on the basic network of Coinbase, a public blockchain built above Ethereum, according to an interview with a main bank frame published Tuesday by CNBC.
Designed as a digital representation of a commercial bank deposit, JPMD will allow a regulation 24/7 and will offer interest payments to holders.
Unlike more widely accessible stable stables, JPMD is an “authorized token”, which means that it will only be available for JPMorgan institutional customers.
JPMorgan said that the issuance of a deposit token, rather than a traditional Stablecoin, will offer its institutional customers a more efficient and seamless means of transferring funds while maintaining a strong link with the traditional banking system.
“We see institutions using JPMD for solutions to set up digital assets on a chain as well as to carry out business transfrontal transactions to business,” said Naveen Malleala, World Co-Chef of Kinexys, JPMorgan’s Blockchain division.
“Since the deposit tokens would ultimately be of interest, this would provide better fungibility with the existing deposit products that institutions are currently using,” he added.
Sberbank to upgrade Gigachat AI with reasoning capacities
The largest lender in Russia, Sberbank, is preparing to launch an improved version of its large language model, Gigachat, which will include advanced reasoning functions.
“In the near future, we will publish a new model. Our gigachat will have reasoning functions, which means that it will be capable of scientific research,” said first vice-president Alexander Vedyakhin on Wednesday in an interview published on Wednesday.
Linguistic models equipped with reasoning capacities can manage more complex tasks in fields such as scientific research, programming and mathematics. OPENAI, based in the United States, has deployed similar capabilities in its models last September.
Vedyakhin said that around 15,000 Russian companies are already using Gigachat, while recognizing that Russia still drags behind the United States and China in the development of artificial intelligence from around six to nine months.