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Fed rate cuts: Iran war and jobs data lower odds of 2026 interest cut



In the entirely likely event that Kevin Warsh’s nomination for Fed chairman makes it through Senate hearings, he’ll be keen to leave his first Federal Open Market Committee meeting (FOMC) this summer with a base rate cut in-hand.

After all, in order to land the nomination to succeed Jerome Powell the directive from the Oval Office was explicit: The candidate would have to be more dovish than Powell. Warsh, a former Fed Governor, fits the bill: He’s bullish on the U.S. economy, thanks in large part to the promise of AI, and is advocating for relative economic tightening on the Fed’s balance sheet to offset lower rates.

Trump’s campaign against Powell’s central bank has been intense—he literally brought it to the doorstep of the Fed. Any incoming Fed chairman would be keen to set the tone early on, and deliver the much-requested rate cut the president has been lobbying for.

But to deliver that cut would be no mean feat. Trump’s military escapades with Israel in Iran are only likely to push an already skittish FOMC into a more hawkish stance, analysts believe. That’s because the biggest economic fallout from the conflict (notwithstanding the humanitarian toll) is the impact on energy supplies from the Gulf region.

Iran borders the Strait of Hormuz, a narrow waterway in the Persian Gulf through which exports from UAE, Qatar, Kuwait, and Iraq all flow. Shipmasters are now nervous to sail through it. The White House has suggested its military will offer escorts to ships along the strait in order to keep the route open, though whether that actually happens remains to be seen.

The knock-on effect for oil and gas prices is the key concern for economists. The Fed is tasked with keeping inflation at 2%, and consumer prices are already above-target on this metric. Lower the base rate would be adding fuel to that inflationary fire, by stoking consumption and borrowing.

Compounding the issue is the latest jobs data, which shows the labor market continuing to strengthen. Payroll provider ADP reported that private employers added 66,000 roles in February, well above the 50,000 expected. That doesn’t help the argument for a cut. The second part of the Fed’s mandate—steady employment—is already taking care of itself with little intervention.

Regional Fed Presidents, whose vote holds equal weight to that of the chairman, are already indicating that their wait-and-see stance is further warranted by the conflict. Cleveland’s president, Beth Hammack, said rates could be held for “quite some time,” with Iran presenting a new inflationary risk. Likewise, Minneapolis Fed President Neel Kashkari said this week he was growing less confident about his previous estimation of a 25bps cut this year, explaining: “With the geopolitical events, we need to get a lot more data in.”

Global bank hawks

Central bankers are approaching the Iran war as “hawks,” Macquarie’s Thierry Wizman said in a note to clients yesterday. As well as U.S. bankers, Wizman pointed to the fact that representatives from the Bank of Japan, Bank of England, the Bank of Canada, and the European Central Bank have also signalled they’re watching carefully for any inflationary hints.

“The prospect that the Fed may be ‘on hold’ instead of cutting rates this year may be why the USD has gotten an extra fillip of appreciation (beyond the haven-seeking impulse) during the war,” Wizman added. “With the OIS market previously projecting more than two cuts from the Fed in 2026 (as of last week) it is the U.S.’s rate outlook that is seen to have the greatest ‘potential’ to be overturned by another burst of global inflation in 2026, if energy supplies become constrained.”

The strong data meant investors are pricing out the likelihood of a cut in the first half of this year, noted Deutsche Bank’s Jim Reid this morning: “The probability of a cut by the June meeting (which would be the first with a new Chair) fell to just 39% by the close, the lowest so far this year. So clearly there’s growing scepticism that a new Chair can start cutting straight away, particularly with the data as strong as it is right now.”

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Monetary policy, state-dependent bank capital requirements and the role of non-bank financial intermediaries – Bank Underground


Manuel Gloria and Chiara Punzo

The expansion of non-bank financial institutions (NBFIs) is transforming the financial landscape and introducing fresh challenges for financial stability and oversight at the same time as creating opportunities. Using a dynamic stochastic general equilibrium (DSGE) model, we find that while NBFIs may enhance long-term welfare for households and entrepreneurs in normal conditions, their greater role also heightens vulnerabilities to severe shocks in the financial system. Greater NBFI activity boosts competition in the financial sector, leading to more efficient resource allocation. A working paper detailing these results was recently published.

Introduction

The global financial landscape has undergone significant transformation in recent years with NBFIs becoming increasingly prominent in credit provision. Their expanded activities have contributed to a more intricate system, presenting new challenges for macroprudential policy and supervision (Buchak et al (2018)).

While some studies highlight the risks posed by NBFIs, particularly due to their limited regulatory oversight and potential to amplify systemic vulnerabilities (Plantin (2014), Gennaioli et al (2013)), others point to their role in improving market efficiency and diversifying funding sources (Ordoñez (2018)). The ultimate impact of NBFIs on financial stability and welfare remains an open question, especially during periods of economic stress. Our paper contributes to this debate by examining how NBFIs influence the economy’s vulnerability to severe downturns − those rare but impactful episodes that can pose outsized risks to financial stability − and the transmission of monetary policy.

To explore these dynamics, we develop a structural model that reflects the interactions between traditional banks, NBFIs, and monetary policy. This framework allows us to assess how financial structures affect the economy’s response to shocks. By focusing on episodes of heightened financial fragility, our aim is to provide insights that can help policymakers balance the goals of stability and efficiency in an evolving financial landscape.

Methodology

We develop a microfounded DSGE model that places state-dependent capital requirements for commercial banks at the heart of the financial system. Unlike traditional models that assume banks face symmetric capital adjustment costs (Gerali et al (2010)), our framework introduces a crucial non-linearity: capital adjustment costs only activate when a bank’s capital ratio dips below a regulatory threshold, otherwise remaining inactive. This asymmetry means that when banks are well-capitalised, they face no penalty, but as soon as their capital falls short, loan-deposit spreads rise, reflecting heightened funding costs.

While our methodology enables the analysis of state-dependent dynamics, it still retains some of the simplifying features of Gerali et al (2010): it does not account for risk and uncertainty, and the way banks are required to hold extra capital relies on simplified assumptions.

The financial sector in our model explicitly distinguishes between two types of lenders: regulated commercial banks, subject to capital requirements and protected by resolution regimes and deposits insurance; and NBFIs, which are not directly regulated. NBFIs depend on market discipline to maintain investor trust, operating under an incentive compatibility constraint that ensures their actions remain credible in the eyes of savers and investors. Within this competitive landscape, commercial banks possess some market power when setting interest rates, whereas NBFIs operate in perfectly competitive markets (Gebauer and Mazelis (2023)). In our framework, banks and NBFIs compete but do not interact directly; we therefore abstract from potential interlinkages such as banks’ exposure to NBFIs through activities like prime brokerage.

We utilise this model to examine how the economy reacts to monetary policy shocks in both the short and long term. Specifically, we distinguish the effects of asymmetric capital requirements, as opposed to symmetric ones, on the consequences of a rise in the policy rate, and we assess the specific role that NBFIs play in the transmission mechanism compared to a scenario in which only banks act as financial intermediaries.

Beyond average outcomes, we focus on how these factors shape the economy during severe downturns − what economists call the ‘left tail’ of the GDP distribution, meaning situations where GDP falls to very low levels. To capture these rare but costly events, we simulate the model under a wide range of economic conditions and focus on extreme scenarios such as deep recessions or financial stress. This approach allows us to evaluate how the inclusion of NBFIs affects the likelihood and severity of rare but costly events.

We also account for the zero lower bound on interest rates, given its relevance in recent stress episodes. Finally, we complement our analysis with a welfare analysis, where welfare is defined as the weighted sum of the individual welfare of savers in the economy and the entrepreneur. This approach enables us to compare long-term outcomes with and without NBFIs, thereby assessing their broader contribution to financial stability and economic efficiency.

Findings

Chart 1 illustrates impulse response functions following a 1% monetary policy shock, contrasting two versions of the model: one featuring only banks (red lines) and the other incorporating NBFIs (blue lines). Each subplot reports percentage deviations from steady state (except for the policy rate, which is shown as absolute deviations) and the x-axis represents quarters, extending up to 10 years ahead). The Chart shows that NBFIs significantly amplify the contractionary effects of monetary policy, due to their exposure to bond prices. When bond prices decline, NBFIs cannot offset the reduction in bank credit, meaning they cannot fully fill the gap left by banks. This limitation outweighs the competitive lending channel identified by Gebauer and Mazelis (2023), where NBFIs might otherwise step in to increase credit supply when banks retrench. In our analysis, the balance sheet channel dominates, so the ability of NBFIs to act as a ‘spare tyre’ is significantly curtailed during periods of falling bond prices.


Chart 1: NBFIs amplify the negative effect of higher interest rates on GDP


Importantly, if we run a large number of simulations with randomly drawn shocks to characterise the full distribution of outcomes, we find that this amplification is most pronounced in the left tail of the GDP distribution. To clarify, these charts illustrate the impact of introducing NBFIs on GDP in extreme scenarios. The median value falling by 0.01 percentage points suggests that, on average across all simulations, the effect on GDP is minimal. However, the shift of the fifth percentile by -0.81 percentage points indicates that in the worst 5% of simulated outcomes, GDP is significantly lower − that is, deep downturns become noticeably more severe when NBFIs play a larger role. This heightened vulnerability persists even when interest rates are constrained at the zero lower bound, meaning that the risk of sharper contractions in GDP remains present under stressed conditions.


Table A: Median and 5th percentile values of the distribution of GDP deviations from steady state across 1,000 simulations

GDP No NBFI NBFI Diff
Median -0.17% -0.18% -0.01%
5th percentile -9.17% -9.98% -0.81%
Median (zlb) -0.36% -0.39% -0.03%
5th percentile (zlb) -9.07% -9.87% -0.80%

In contrast, our long-term analysis indicates that greater involvement of NBFIs supports higher overall welfare. Chart 2 illustrates how aggregate welfare changes as the proportion of NBFI credit rises − in particular, as the NBFIs share increases from 0 to 0.3 and the banks share drops correspondingly. We observe a clear trend: welfare tends to increase as the proportion of NBFI lending rises, with the most pronounced gains occurring when NBFIs are first introduced to an economy − specifically between a share of 0 and 0.1. By facilitating a broader spectrum of lending channels, an increased share of NBFI activity supports a more diverse and adaptable financial system, which can enhance the allocation of resources without relying solely on the regulatory mechanisms applied to commercial banks.


Chart 2: Aggregate welfare as a function of NBFI share of total lending


Policy implications

These findings highlight that while NBFIs may enhance long-term welfare by expanding credit channels and supporting economic efficiency in normal circumstances, their growing presence also renders the financial system more susceptible to severe downturns. In other words, the improvement in welfare during typical economic conditions comes at the cost of increased vulnerability to extreme shocks.

Policymakers must therefore strike a thoughtful balance between stability and efficiency. Adaptive oversight is crucial, because effective macroprudential policies must address risks arising from every part of the financial system − not only by evaluating banks and non-bank institutions individually, but by understanding their interactions and the combined effects these have on the broader economy. This requires a dynamic regulatory framework that considers the evolving interplay between regulation, monetary policy, and the diverse spectrum of financial intermediaries.

In summary, understanding these complex dynamics equips policymakers to better prepare for future shocks and enhance financial system stability and welfare.


Manuel Gloria and Chiara Punzo work in the Bank’s Macroprudential Strategy and Support Division.

If you want to get in touch, please email us at bankunderground@bankofengland.co.uk or leave a comment below.

Comments will only appear once approved by a moderator, and are only published where a full name is supplied. Bank Underground is a blog for Bank of England staff to share views that challenge – or support – prevailing policy orthodoxies. The views expressed here are those of the authors, and are not necessarily those of the Bank of England, or its policy committees.

The Best Large Mortgage Companies to Work for in 2026



The following 5 companies, which boast 500 or more employees, were highly rated by their staffs for creating a great environment to work in.

SEE THE FULL LIST: The Best Mortgage Companies to Work For in 2026

This ranking is a partnership between National Mortgage News and the Best Companies Group, which conducts extensive employee surveys and reviews employer reports on benefits and policies. The employee survey covers eight topics: leadership and planning; corporate culture and communications; role satisfaction; work environment; relationship with supervisor; training, development and resources; pay and benefits; and overall engagement. 

LAST YEAR’S LIST: 2025 Best Large Mortgage Companies to Work For

Once the survey data is analyzed, the companies get a score that decides their ranking. The overall score is calculated using the employee survey (weighed at 75%) and the employer questionnaire (25%). To qualify for consideration, organizations with 25 or more employees need a minimum response rate of 40% while companies with 25 or fewer employees need 80%.

Check out the winners in the large-company category below.



New Gold Coin Deal Thursday (3/5), $685 In Credit Card Spend & $20+ Profit


Update 3/4/26: Price is confirmed at $685. It seems not many are buying this, but MPD is confirmed at $20 profit. Has worked in the past for readers but do your own research and only commit if you plan on actually selling to them even if the price skyrockets after purchase. Do your own research and this isn’t an endorsement nor do we receive anything. 

There is another profitable U.S. Mint coin deal coming up March 5, 2026, at 12 noon (ET).

  • American Eagle 2026 One-Tenth Ounce Gold Proof Coin

Cost hasn’t been announced yet (probably around $650) and will come with $5.95 shipping, limit of one. I’d recommend locking in a price ahead of time to lock in your profit and avoid any risk (keep in mind there always seems to be a bit of astroturfing in the comments for different purchasers). This coin is more expensive so I would definitely recommend locking in a price before purchasing. You can see what credit cards code as a cash advance and the best cards to use in this dedicated post.

business 101 basics, learning business basics, and fundamentals



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20:09 | defining accounting
24:10 | assets, liabilities, and owner’s equity
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How to Lead When You Can’t See the Way


March 4, 2026

For today’s senior leaders, uncertainty isn’t episodic—it’s structural. Geopolitics, emerging technologies, and shifting stakeholder expectations have created what one executive described to Harvard Business School’s Linda A. Hill as “leading through a fog.” When you can’t see clearly ahead, what does leadership even mean?



How Out-of-Town Buyers Are Driving Rental Demand in 87 of the Top 100 Housing Markets


Out-of-town buyers are no longer a niche market. They are the market.

Those who are old enough might remember their first pre-2008 investment seminar from old-school gurus like Robyn Thompson and Ron LeGrand when they suggested sending postcards to buyers who lived out of state, and you dutifully made a note, thinking, “That’s a good idea.” It was.

Flash forward two decades, and potential out-of-town buyers now comprise 62% of online views for homes in the largest 100 U.S. metros, according to a report from Realtor.com, with 87 of those 100 markets being driven by out-of-market interest. In 2019, 48.6% of online shoppers were out-of-market. 

What’s driving the move away from traditional employment hubs? Affordability and warm weather. Throw in remote work as a facilitator, and more residents are seizing the opportunity to live a more relaxed life away from adverse weather and without stretching their finances. This is also borne out in U.S. News and World Report’s ongoing “Moving Trends,” which shows the allure of affordable metros in the South and Midwest.

Realtor.com notes that Sunbelt enclaves such as Cape Coral-Fort Myers and Lakeland-Winter Haven in Florida and Durham-Chapel Hill in North Carolina attracted around 80% of their listing traffic from out-of-town buyers in late 2025, a figure even higher than during the pandemic, with interest coming from potential owner-occupants, second-home buyers, and investors.

“We have seen a fundamental change in where Americans who are shopping for a home are looking to live,” said Danielle Hale, chief economist at Realtor.com, when releasing the report. “As the ‘lock-in effect’ keeps some owners from selling, those who are moving are increasingly untethered to the market they’re currently in.”

How Affordability Is Squeezing Buyers

According to a recent Investopedia analysis citing Oxford Economics, a household needed to earn $110,000 in the third quarter of 2025 to buy a single-family home as well as pay property taxes and home insurance costs—almost double the amount needed at the same time five years earlier. Despite house prices slowing rather than collapsing due to tight supply, a starter home is still out of reach for many.

It’s not just sunnier climes that buyers and new residents are looking to. Midwest and Northeast markets that traditionally sourced their buyers locally now average about 56% and 62% out-of-town listing views, respectively, with smaller and mid-sized markets being the target for migration.

Migration and Rental Demand: The Happy Couple

Migration and rental demand often go hand in hand because when moving to a new city, potential homeowners usually test-drive it first by renting. When tenants are moving from larger cities to smaller cities such as Richmond, Virginia, and Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, the end result, according to Yahoo! Finance’s analysis of Realtor.com data, is a lower vacancy rate and higher rental demand.

Renters arriving from expensive metros are helping to bid up prices in what have been considered budget?friendly cities, according to Realtor.com analysts.

Moving Company Reports Back Real Estate Data

Transportation companies echo the same message, adding their own nuances.

United Van Lines’ 2025 National Movers Study shows inbound migration led by Oregon, West Virginia, and South Carolina. Its top destination metros include Eugene-Springfield, Oregon; Wilmington, North Carolina; and Dover, Delaware, with a focus on smaller cities and towns.

Michael A. Stoll, economist and professor in the Department of Public Policy at the University of California, Los Angeles, said in the United Van Lines report:

“For most Americans, interstate relocation is no longer a linear calculation; it’s a complex decision balancing multiple competing factors. It is interesting to see that in general, population movement continues from North/Midwest regions to Southern states, and again, top inbound locations are dominated by smaller- to medium-sized metro areas. This reflects a legacy of COVID-era preferences for lower-density living, combined with the reality that housing costs continue to drive people toward more affordable regions.”

Similarly, Allied Van Lines’ U.S. Migration Report highlights the Carolinas, Tennessee, New York State, and Florida as its customers’ top destinations. The report says that North Carolina has “burst on the scene as a hot destination,” with former resort towns reimagined as full-time hubs for remote workers, while tech and finance workers are drawn to Charlotte.

Seven Is the Magic Number

Metros with vacancy rates above 7% give tenants a tactical advantage, according to a Realtor.com report, with landlords often eager to offer incentives, such as rental concessions, to fill units. 

In smaller cities where tenants have been arriving en masse, that advantage slides back to landlords. U.S. News and World Report’s exhaustive The Fastest-Growing Places in the U.S. is a good companion guide for investors looking for safe havens to buy rental properties. It’s clustered with smaller Southern cities in Florida, South Carolina, and Texas, with some Western states like California and Arizona attracting more affluent movers.

Older Movers Are Increasingly Choosing to Rent Over Buy

Wondering whether all the migration translates into actual tenants? It’s a valid question, especially when the demographics skew toward older tenants who have former homes, equity, retirement funds, and pensions to presumably see them through their later years. Wouldn’t they simply want to buy a place of their own? Apparently not.

According to a study by Point2Homes, a real estate listing website for American Rental Homes, citing U.S. Census data, seniors are one of the fastest-growing rental demographics. In a 10-year period, the senior renter population increased by 30%, adding 2.4 million people. 

But it’s not just seniors who are choosing to rent rather than own. The 55-64 age group is up by 500,000. Finances play a big part, as a Harris Poll cited in the report shows, with older residents less willing to be saddled with mortgages, taxes, insurance, repairs, and possibly HOA fees, preferring the ease of movement that renting offers.

Not surprisingly, Florida is a prime destination, as the Realtor.com report confirms, with Cape Coral-Fort Myers among the top destinations. Also, for smaller investors, older renters are not opting for gleaming new apartment buildings and amenities but instead prefer single-family rentals, with numbers increasing by more than 25% compared to a decade ago among the 65+ age group.

Final Thoughts

Looking at these various reports together helps make the decision of where to invest easier. The good news is that people are moving to more affordable markets and have a preference for smaller single-family homes, especially among older tenants, which plays into the hands of BRRRR investors and buy-and-hold landlords.

For flippers, upgrading homes in smaller markets means less capital at risk and faster turnover, helping feed demand from investors and homebuyers alike.

Is Sprouts Farmers Market Stock Going to $100?


Over the past three years, Sprouts Farmers Market (SFM 1.89%) has experienced roller-coaster price action. When it was one of the popular small-cap growth stocks, shares in the organic grocery store chain surged from the low $40s to more than $180. However, starting last summer, the stock lost its sterling reputation following a series of poorly received company developments.

The sell-off continued into 2026, but consumer staples stock Sprouts Farmers Market is slowly turning things around, gaining 11% in the last month.

Sprouts Farmers Market Stock Quote

Today’s Change

(-1.89%) $-1.48

Current Price

$76.52

The question now is whether this continues. Taking a look at the details, I can identify one clear takeaway. It will all depend on whether Sprouts keeps beating expectations in the coming quarters.

A person carries a grocery basket through a supermarket aisle.

Image source: Getty Images.

Sprouts Farmers Market’s steep drop and emerging comeback

It’s not surprising that sentiment for Sprouts took a sharp turn during the latter half of 2025. As with other consumer-focused businesses, high inflation on consumer spending affected operating performance.

For Sprouts, inflation led to lower sales growth, coupled with lower margins. For example, throughout 2025, year-over-year sales growth declined from 19% in he first quarter to just 13% in the third quarter. Same-store sales growth fell from 11.7% to 5.9%, while quarterly earnings per share fell from $1.81 to $1.22 .

Sprouts’ fourth-quarter results, released on Feb. 19, however, were an improvement. Although revenue of $2.15 billion came up short of expectations, EPS of $0.92 beat estimates by $0.03. Overall sales grew 8%. Same-store sales grew 1.6%, beating prior guidance that growth would be flat.

Moreover, management accompanied these figures with 2026 guidance that suggests results will stabilize this year. Guidance calls for net sales growth in a range from 4.5% to 6.5%, with same-store sales ranging from -1% to 1%.

Getting back to $100 per share could prove challenging

Currently, Sprouts Farmers Market trades for around 13 times forward earnings. This valuation is in line with most U.S.-listed grocery store stocks.

Recovering $100 per share in the immediate future may be a stretch. This is, unless, of course, Sprouts not only meets expectations but beats them handily in the coming quarters. Even as the company may be stabilizing, that’s not the same as a growth resurgence.

Moving forward, a lot hinges on whether Sprouts’ plan to continue aggressively expanding its store count will lead to better-than-expected growth. Management may be bullish it can successfully expand as Amazon‘s Whole Foods chain does the same, but the market may be in “wait and see” mode. On the other hand, macro challenges such as high inflation could continue to put pressure on consumer demand and growth.

Sprouts’ $1 billion share repurchase program could provide support for shares. Announced last August, Sprouts bought back around $472 million worth of shares, with plans to buy back another $300 million throughout the year. This figure represents around 4.2% of Sprout Farmers Market’s current market cap. This could help further stabilize earnings, and at best, could give the bottom line an unexpected boost in the coming quarters.

Tether And Lugano Unveil Plan ₿ Phase II With CHF 5 Million Pledge To Build Resilient Digital Infrastructure


Tether has joined forces with the City of Lugano to launch Plan ₿ Phase II, a five-year strategy running through 2030 that extends their blockchain partnership. The collaboration includes a commitment of up to CHF 5 million, focused on expertise, infrastructure, research, and training.

This initiative builds on the 2022 program, shifting from initial experiments with digital payments to a framework for long-term digital sovereignty and resilience.

Since its debut four years ago, Plan ₿ has delivered tangible results.

More than 400 local businesses now accept Bitcoin, Tether’s USD₮ stablecoin, and the city’s LVGA token for everyday transactions.

The city has pioneered digital bond issuances and incorporated blockchain into select municipal payments, embedding the technology into public finance without exposing taxpayers to undue risk.

A physical innovation hub called PoW.space was established, drawing over 100 fintech and blockchain firms to the region and bridging traditional finance with decentralized systems.

The annual Plan ₿ Forum has grown from a local event into a major international conference, attracting more than 4,000 participants from over 60 countries.

Educational partnerships with universities have also expanded, offering training in decentralized finance, distributed systems, and blockchain development to cultivate local talent.

With Phase II, Lugano is moving beyond pilots to systemic change.

The strategy rests on core pillars: developing institutional infrastructure for digital assets and automation; establishing the city as a center for digital trade and commodity processing; advancing privacy-focused digital identity solutions; nurturing local artificial intelligence ecosystems and autonomous agents; and deploying modular, resilient urban digital networks.

These efforts aim to reduce reliance on centralized global tech providers, mitigating risks around data dependency and cybersecurity while strengthening governance and operational independence.

The renewed memorandum of understanding ensures the City of Lugano retains full authority over all projects, with each initiative governed by separate agreements.

Tether’s contribution emphasizes technical support and capacity building rather than direct financial control.

“Over the past four years, Lugano has shown that public institutions can engage with emerging technologies pragmatically while maintaining oversight,” said Paolo Ardoino, CEO of Tether.

“Phase II focuses on infrastructure, resilience, and local capacity building. The ambition is to support Lugano in becoming a globally relevant digital infrastructure hub, while preserving public governance and autonomy.”

Mayor Michele Foletti added:

“Four years ago, Lugano chose to lead rather than wait. We demonstrated that innovation and institutional responsibility can coexist. With Plan ₿ Phase II, we are investing in open and resilient civic digital infrastructure, because by 2030, a city’s freedom will increasingly be measured by its ability to govern its data and essential services without critical dependencies, with public governance safeguarding the collective interest.”

By transitioning from early adoption to comprehensive digital infrastructure, Lugano is positioning itself as a model for cities worldwide. In an environment dominated by concentrated cloud, payment, and AI services, this partnership underscores a proactive approach to technological autonomy.



This Company Is Now Worth $1.5 Billion. Its Product Is a Better Night’s Sleep



Would you buy a $5,000 smart sleep system to help you get better shuteye?