Category: Tech

  • UK adds e-bikes and security cameras to inflation basket

    The Office for National Statistics (ONS) in the UK has added e-bikes, frozen berries, and security cameras to the basket of goods and services it uses to track inflation. The changes reflect the growing popularity of new technology and environmental concerns. The ONS added 26 new items and removed 16 from the basket, which comprises over 700 goods and services. Hand sanitiser, added during the Covid-19 pandemic, is no longer included, while non-chart CDs, digital cameras, and non-film DVDs have also been removed. Soundbars, video doorbells, and computer game accessories are among the new items, which also include dairy-free spreads, reflecting the rise in veganism, and the first-time inclusion of frozen berries. The ONS has also changed its data source for rail fares from the Office for Rail and Road to the Rail Delivery Group. The ONS plans to rely less on the collection of physical goods prices and more on data including supermarket scanners and retailer websites.



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  • OSFI seizes Silicon Valley Bank\’s Canadian assets amid global effort to stop contagion

    Canada\’s federal banking watchdog has taken over the Canadian operations of Silicon Valley Bank (SVB), the US tech lender, to prevent further financial risk. SVB did not hold a banking license in Canada but operated as a foreign bank branch. Regulators in the US and Britain took similar steps to combat the risk of the second-largest bank failure in American history. In early March, the California Department of Financial Protection and Innovation shut down SVB after it was unable to cover its obligations following a run on deposits. Shares in Canadian banks fell by about $20bn last week on fears of global contagion. Toronto-based AcuityAds Holdings halted trading of its shares on 10 March after it disclosed having $55m on deposit with SVB. The Office of the Superintendent of Financial Institutions said in a media release that Peter Routledge, the superintendent of financial institutions, had taken temporary control of the Canadian assets of SVB and that he intended to seek permanent control. Regulators in the US released a joint statement stating that depositors of both SVB and Signature Bank would have access to their money on 15 March.



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  • OSFI seizes Silicon Valley Bank\’s Canadian assets amid global effort to stop contagion

    Canada\’s federal banking watchdog has taken over the Canadian operations of Silicon Valley Bank (SVB), the US tech lender, to prevent further financial risk. SVB did not hold a banking license in Canada but operated as a foreign bank branch. Regulators in the US and Britain took similar steps to combat the risk of the second-largest bank failure in American history. In early March, the California Department of Financial Protection and Innovation shut down SVB after it was unable to cover its obligations following a run on deposits. Shares in Canadian banks fell by about $20bn last week on fears of global contagion. Toronto-based AcuityAds Holdings halted trading of its shares on 10 March after it disclosed having $55m on deposit with SVB. The Office of the Superintendent of Financial Institutions said in a media release that Peter Routledge, the superintendent of financial institutions, had taken temporary control of the Canadian assets of SVB and that he intended to seek permanent control. Regulators in the US released a joint statement stating that depositors of both SVB and Signature Bank would have access to their money on 15 March.



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  • GM is experimenting with a ChatGPT-powered voice assistant

    General Motors (GM) is reportedly exploring potential uses for OpenAI\’s language models behind ChatGPT to develop a virtual personal assistant for its vehicles, as part of a collaboration with Microsoft. The system could provide drivers with information about their vehicle’s features beyond what is presently accessible through voice commands, including offering advice or instructional videos in response to diagnostic warnings, or concerning maintenance or repairs. GM\’s virtual assistant will be customised to include a \”car-specific layer\” over the base tech. Existing voice assistants enable users to program garage door codes or schedule reminders. \”This shift is not just about one single capability like the evolution of voice commands, but instead means that customers can expect their future vehicles to be far more capable and fresh overall when it comes to emerging technologies,\” a GM spokesperson said. Microsoft and GM have a long-term strategic relationship, including developing the automaker\’s autonomous vehicles. There has been no official announcement of GM\’s plans, and no release timeline is available.



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  • FirstFT: Silicon Valley Bank fallout

    US President Joe Biden is expected to address measures taken by regulators to contain the fallout from Silicon Valley Bank’s (SVB) collapse, the second-largest bank failure in US history. Regulators in the UK are also scrambling to contain the fallout, with Chancellor Jeremy Hunt preparing a cash lifeline for tech companies that have been hit. Start-up founders have warned of “carnage” if they cannot pay wages and bills. Red flags which experts say could have been spotted have also emerged, calling into question how the 16th largest US bank was allowed to become so vulnerable. Protests by Israeli reservists over plans to curb the judiciary’s powers have raised alarm. Meanwhile, the UK, US and Australia are set to discuss a deal to supply nuclear-powered submarines under the Aukus pact, while tens of thousands of junior doctors in England will begin a three-day strike. Porsche’s annual conference for investors is also taking place.



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  • Silicon Valley Bank collapse sets off scramble in London to shield UK tech sector

    اس مضمون کو سننے کے لیے پلے کو دبائیں۔

    مصنوعی ذہانت سے آواز آئی۔

    لندن – برطانیہ کی حکومت اتوار کے روز بہت سی اسٹارٹ اپس اور ٹکنالوجی کمپنیوں کو امریکی قرض دینے والے سیلیکون ویلی بینک کے خاتمے سے برطانوی ٹیک سیکٹر کے نتائج کو محدود کرنے کے لئے گھماؤ پھرا رہی تھی۔

    کیلیفورنیا میں مقیم ایس وی بی کو دیوالیہ پن کی طرف دھکیلنے کے بعد حکومت ممکنہ ردوبدل کو \”اعلی ترجیح\” کے طور پر دیکھ رہی ہے، جو عالمی مالیاتی بحران کے بعد سب سے بڑی بینک کی ناکامی کی نشاندہی کرتی ہے، برطانیہ کے خزانے کے چانسلر جیریمی ہنٹ نے ایک بیان میں کہا۔ بیان اتوار کی صبح. امریکی وزیر خزانہ جینٹ ییلن اور دیگر پالیسی ساز چوکس تھے کہ SVB میں مسائل پھیل سکتے ہیں۔

    ہنٹ نے کہا کہ برطانوی حکومت SVB کے نفاذ اور اس کے برطانوی یونٹ سلیکن ویلی بینک UK کی تجارت کو روکنے سے متاثر ہونے والی کمپنیوں کی کیش فلو کی ضروریات کو پس پشت ڈالنے کے منصوبے پر کام کر رہی ہے۔ بینک آف انگلینڈ نے جمعہ کو اعلان کیا کہ یوکے یونٹ تیار ہے۔ دیوالیہ پن درج کریں.

    ہنٹ نے کہا کہ سلیکن ویلی بینک کی ناکامی کا ٹیک ایکو سسٹم کی لیکویڈیٹی پر اہم اثر پڑ سکتا ہے۔

    چانسلر نے کہا کہ حکومت \”برطانیہ میں ہماری سب سے امید افزا کمپنیوں میں سے کچھ کو پہنچنے والے نقصان سے بچنے یا کم کرنے کے لیے کام کر رہی ہے۔\” \”ہم اس بات کو یقینی بنانے کے لیے فوری منصوبے لائیں گے کہ سلیکن ویلی بینک UK کے صارفین کی مختصر مدت کے آپریشنل اور کیش فلو کی ضروریات کو پورا کیا جا سکے۔\”

    ہنٹ نے اتوار کی صبح بی بی سی کو بتایا کہ حکومت کے پاس \”اگلے چند دنوں میں\” کمپنیوں کی آپریشنل کیش فلو کی ضروریات کو پورا کرنے کا ایک منصوبہ ہوگا۔

    بیان کے مطابق، بینک آف انگلینڈ کے گورنر، وزیر اعظم اور چانسلر کے درمیان بات چیت ہفتے کے آخر میں ہو رہی تھی۔

    اتوار کی صبح سکائی نیوز پر بات کرتے ہوئے، ہنٹ نے کہا کہ بینک آف انگلینڈ کے گورنر اینڈریو بیلی نے واضح کیا ہے کہ \”ہمارے مالیاتی نظام کو کوئی منظم خطرہ نہیں ہے۔\” لیکن ہنٹ نے خبردار کیا کہ برطانیہ میں ٹیکنالوجی اور لائف سائنس کے شعبوں کے لیے \”سنگین خطرہ\” ہے۔

    وزراء نے ہفتے کے روز ٹیک ایگزیکٹوز کے بعد ٹیک انڈسٹری سے بات چیت کی۔ کھلا خط ہنٹ نے خبردار کیا کہ SVB کے خاتمے سے برطانیہ کے ٹیک سیکٹر کے لیے ایک \”وجود خطرہ\” پیدا ہو گیا ہے۔ انہوں نے حکومت سے مداخلت کا مطالبہ کیا۔

    برطانیہ کے سائنس اور ٹیکنالوجی کے وزیر نے ہفتے کے روز برطانیہ کی ٹیک کمپنیوں پر اثرات کو محدود کرنے کے لیے \”ہم جو کچھ کر سکتے ہیں\” کرنے کا عہد کیا۔

    مشیل ڈونیلن، جو سائنس، انوویشن اور ٹیکنالوجی کے نئے بنائے گئے شعبہ کی سربراہ ہیں، نے کہا ایک ٹویٹ: \”ہم تسلیم کرتے ہیں کہ ٹیک سیکٹر اکثر کیش فلو مثبت نہیں ہوتا کیونکہ وہ بڑھتے ہیں اور میں ان کے ساتھ کھڑا ہونے کے لیے پرعزم ہوں کیونکہ ہم اس شعبے پر اثر کو کم کرنے کے لیے ہر ممکن کوشش کرتے ہیں۔\”

    \"\"
    چانسلر جیریمی ہنٹ نے کہا کہ SVB کے خاتمے کے اثرات سے برطانیہ کے شعبے کی حفاظت ایک \”اعلی ترجیح\” تھی | گیٹی امیجز کے ذریعے جسٹن ٹیلس/اے ایف پی

    Silicon Valley Bank UK کے لیے بینک دیوالیہ پن کے طریقہ کار کا مطلب یہ ہوگا کہ اہل جمع کنندگان کو £85,000 کی محفوظ حد، یا مشترکہ اکاؤنٹس کے لیے £170,000 تک کی ادائیگی کی جائے گی۔

    بینک آف انگلینڈ نے اپنے جمعہ کے بیان میں کہا کہ SVB UK نے \”a محدود موجودگی برطانیہ میں اور مالیاتی نظام کی حمایت کرنے والے کوئی اہم کام نہیں ہیں۔\”





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  • The tech industry moved fast and broke its most prestigious bank

    On the last night of its existence, Silicon Valley Bank was hosting VC Bill Reichert of Pegasus Tech Ventures, who was giving a presentation on “How to Pitch Your WOW! to Investors” to about 45 or 50 people. Mike McEvoy, the CEO of OmniLayers, recounted the scene for me. “It was eerie over there,” he said. He saw a number of people exiting the building during the event, looking subdued.

    Roger Sanford, the CEO of Hcare Health and a self-described “professional Silicon Valley gadfly,” was also there. “Everyone was in denial,” he told me. “The band played on.”

    The next day, the emblematic bank of the tech industry was shut down by regulators — the second-biggest bank failure in US history, after Washington Mutual in 2008.

    What happened is a little complicated — and I’ll explain farther down — but it’s also simple. A bank run occurs when depositors try to pull out all their money at once, like in It’s a Wonderful Life. And as It’s a Wonderful Life explains, sometimes the actual cash isn’t immediately there because the bank used it for other things. That was the immediate cause of death for the most systemically and symbolically important bank in the tech industry, but to get to that point, a lot of other things had to happen first.

    What is Silicon Valley Bank?

    Founded in 1983 after a poker game, Silicon Valley Bank was an important engine for the tech industry’s success and the 16th largest bank in the US before its collapse. It’s easy to forget, based on the tech industry’s lionization of nerds, but the actual fuel for startups is money, not brains.

    Silicon Valley Bank provided that fuel, working closely with many VC-backed startups. It claimed to be the “financial partner of the innovation economy” and the “go-to bank for investors.” Among those banking at SVB: the parent company of this here website. That’s not all. More than 2,500 VC firms banked there, and so did a lot of tech execs.

    It fell in less than 48 hours.

    What happens to Silicon Valley Bank’s customers?

    Most banks are insured by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC), a government agency that’s been around since the Great Depression. So of course, the accounts at Silicon Valley Bank were insured by the FDIC — but only up to $250,000. That’s how FDIC deposit insurance works. 

    That might be a lot of money for an individual, but we’re talking about companies here. Many have burn rates of millions of dollars a month. A recent regulatory filing reveals that about 90 percent of deposits were uninsured as of December 2022. The FDIC says it’s “undetermined” how many deposits were uninsured when the bank closed. 

    How bad could it get?

    Even small disruptions to cash flow can have drastic effects on individuals, companies, and industries. So while one very likely outcome is that the uninsured depositors will eventually be made whole, the problem is that right now they have no access to that money.

    The most immediate effect is on payroll. There are lots of people who are wondering if their next paycheck will be disrupted. Some people already know their paychecks will be; a payroll service company called Rippling had to tell its customers that some paychecks weren’t coming on time because of the SVB collapse. For some workers, that’s rent or mortgage payments, and money for groceries, gas, or childcare that isn’t coming.

    The problem is access to money

    This is especially rough for startups. A third of Y Combinator companies won’t be able to make payroll in the next 30 days, according to YC CEO Garry Tan. An unexpected mass furlough or layoff is a nightmare for most companies — after all, you can’t make sales if the salesforce isn’t coming into the office.

    Some investors are loaning their companies money to make payroll. Penske Media, the largest investor of this website’s parent company, Vox Media, told The New York Times that “it was ready if the company required additional capital,” for instance. That’s good, because Vox Media has “a substantial concentration of cash” at Silicon Valley Bank. Of course, one other problem is that a lot of investors were also banking at SVB, too.

    Payroll isn’t the only expense a company has: there are payments to software providers, cloud services, and so on, too. I’m just scratching the surface here.

    Does this have something to do with crypto?

    SVB’s failure didn’t have anything directly to do with the ongoing crypto meltdown, but it could potentially worsen that crisis, too. Crypto firm Circle operates a stablecoin, USDC, that’s backed with cash reserves — $3.3 billion of which are stuck at Silicon Valley Bank. That stablecoin should always be worth $1, but it broke its peg after SVB failed, dropping as low as 87 cents. Coinbase stopped conversions between USDC and the dollar.

    On March 11th, Circle said that it “will stand behind USDC and cover any shortfall using corporate resources, involving external capital if necessary.” The stablecoin’s value mostly recovered.

    Oh, and bankrupt crypto lender BlockFi also has $227 million in funds stuck, too.

    So if SVB doesn’t exist anymore, what takes its pla
    ce?

    In response to the collapse, the FDIC created a new entity, the Deposit Insurance National Bank of Santa Clara, for all insured deposits for Silicon Valley Bank. It will open for business on March 13th. People who have uninsured deposits will be paid an advanced dividend and get a little certificate, but that isn’t a guarantee people will get all their money back.

    The FDIC’s job is to get the maximum amount from Silicon Valley Bank’s assets. That can happen a couple ways. One is that another bank acquires SVB, getting the deposits in the process. In the best-case scenario, that acquisition means that everyone gets all their money back — hooray! And that’s the best-case scenario not just for everyone who wants to get their paycheck on time, but also because the FDIC’s greater mission is to ensure stability and public confidence in the US banking system. If SVB’s assets can only be sold for, say, 90 cents on the dollar, it could encourage bank runs elsewhere.

    Okay, but let’s say that acquisition doesn’t happen. Then what? Well, the FDIC evaluates, then sells the assets associated with Silicon Valley Bank over a period of weeks or months, with the proceeds going to depositors. Uninsured deposits rank high on the pay-back scale, behind only administrative expenses and insured deposits. So even if a sale doesn’t happen soon, the odds are high that customers will get their money back, assuming they can stay afloat waiting for it.

    How did we get here?

    So this is actually bigger than startups and Silicon Valley VCs. To understand how this happened, we’ve gotta talk about interest rates. Since 2008, they’ve been pretty low, sparking a venture capital boom and some real silliness (see: WeWork, Theranos, Juicero). There’s been a lot of froth for a long time, and it got worse during the pandemic, when the money printer went brrr. Meme stocks? Crypto boom? SPACs? Thank Federal Reserve chair Jerome Powell, who settled on zero percent interest rate policy (ZIRP).

    So if you are, let’s say, a bank specializing in startups, do you know what ZIRP world does to you? Well, my children, according to the most recent annual filing from SVB, bank deposits grew as IPOs, SPACs, VC investment and so on went on at a frenetic pace. 

    And because of all these liquidity events — congrats, btw — no one needed a loan because they had all this cash. This is sort of a problem for a bank. Loans are an important way to make money! So, as explained in more detail by Bloomberg’s Matt Levine, Silicon Valley Bank bought government securities. This was a fine and steady way for SVB to make money, but it also meant it was vulnerable if interest rates rose.

    A good old-fashioned bank run tipped SVB over, and there was no George Bailey to stop it

    Which they did! Powell started cranking up rates to slow inflation, and told Congress this week that he expects to let them get as high as 5.75 percent, which is a lot higher than zero.

    Here’s the problem for Silicon Valley Bank. It’s got a bunch of assets that are worth less money if interest rates go up. And it also banks startups, which are more plentiful when interest rates are low. Essentially, these bankers managed to put themselves in double trouble, something a few short-sellers noticed (Pity the shorts! Despite being right, they’re also fucked because it’ll be hard to collect their winnings).

    So did Silicon Valley just flunk the prisoner’s dilemma?

    Okay, this mismatch in risk in and of itself won’t tip a bank over. A good old-fashioned bank run did that. And at Silicon Valley Bank, there was no George Bailey to stop it.

    Here’s how it happened. When interest rates rose, VCs stopped flinging money around. Startups started drawing down more of their money to pay for their expenses, and SVB had to come up with cash to make that happen. That meant the bank needed to get liquidity — so it sold $21 billion of securities, resulting in an after-tax loss of $1.8 billion. It also came up with a plan to sell $2.2 billion in shares to help shore itself up. Moody’s downgraded the bank’s credit rating.

    Customers tried to withdraw a quarter of the bank’s total deposits on a single day

    In its slide deck explaining all this, Silicon Valley Bank talks about — I am not making this up — “ample liquidity” and its “strong capital position.”

    Now, recall, another bank called Silvergate had just collapsed (for crypto reasons). Investors, like horses, are easily spooked. So when Silicon Valley Bank made this announcement on March 8th, people bolted. Peter Thiel’s Founder’s Fund advised its portfolio companies to pull out, ultimately yanking millions. And you know how VCs love to follow trends! Union Square Ventures and Coatue Management, among others, decided to tell companies to pull their money, too. 

    This bank run happened fast, in less than two days. Tech nerds can take credit for that one. It used to be that you had to physically go to a bank to withdraw your money — or at least take the psychic damage of picking up a telephone. That slower process gave banks time to maneuver. In this case, digitalization meant that the money went out so fast that Silicon Valley Bank was essentially helpless, points out Samir Kaji, CEO of investing platform Allocate. Customers tried to withdraw $42 billion in deposits on March 9th alone — a quarter of the bank’s total deposits on a single day.

    It was over the next day. The share sale was canceled. Silicon Valley Bank tried to sell itself. Then the regulators stepped in.

    Who was in charge here?

    Until shortly after the failure of Silicon Valley Bank, its (now-former) CEO Greg Becker was a director of the Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco. That’s one of the 12 banks overseen by the Washington Fed.

    While the bank run was ongoing, Becker told VCs, “I would ask everyone to stay calm and to support us just like we supported you during the challenging times.” As anyone who has ever been in a long-term relationship knows, telling someone else to calm down is a way to ensure they lose their entire goddamn mind. I think it might have been possible to staunch the bleeding if Becker had been even halfway good at PR. Obviously, he’s not.

    But separately from Becker’s ill communication, he was the leader behind the spooky asset sale/share offering combo punch. In fact, Silicon Valley Bank had other options: it could have borrowed funds or tried to offer sweet deals to depositors who stayed.

    It turns out Becker also sold $3.6 million of shares in Silicon Valley Bank’s parent company on February 27th. This was a pre-arranged sale — he filed the paperwork on January 26th — but it does seem like curious timing! Becker was presumably aware of his own balance sheet, and a director of a regional Fed bank. He had to know the Fed was going to keep raising interest rates — I mean, if I knew it, he’d better have known it — and he had to know that would be bad news for Silicon Valley Bank.

    What does this mean for startupland?

    The venture capital ecosystem exists because once upon a time, banks wouldn’t loan startups money. Think about it: a 23-year-old nerd slapping together a startup in someone’s garage or whatever usually doesn’t own anything they can put up as collateral against a loan. 

    One way that Silicon Valley Bank bolstered startups was by offering risky forms of financing. For instance, the bank lent against money owed to a business’ accounts receivables. Even riskier: the company lent against expected revenue for future services. Silicon Valley Bank also offered venture debt, which uses a VC investment as a way of underwriting a loan. And it worked! These kinds of products helped build Silicon Valley into the powerhouse it is now, says Jonathan Hirshon, who’s done high-tech PR for the last 30 years.

    One of SVB’s key problems: Silicon Valley is actually a small town

    The bank also would get slices of companies as part of its credit terms. That meant it made $13.9 million on FitBit’s IPO, for instance. More recently, Coinbase’s IPO paperwork revealed that Silicon Valley Bank had the right to buy more than 400,000 shares for about $1 a share. Coinbase’s shares closed at a price of $328.28 the first day it was listed.

    Startups aren’t the only ones who need to raise money. Venture capitalists do too — often from family offices or governments. Silicon Valley Bank invested in a number of VCs over the years, including Accel Partners, Kleiner Perkins, Sequoia Capital, and Greylock.

    This kind of gets
    us to one of SVB’s key problems: Silicon Valley is actually a small town. And while that meant SVB was the cool banker for the tech and life sciences startups here, that also meant its portfolio wasn’t very diverse. The incestuous nature of Silicon Valley startups means gossip is a contact sport, because everyone here is hopelessly entwined with everyone else.

    I don’t know if this is going to lead to bigger problems. It could! A lot of other banks are also losing money on their securities. But the gossipy nature of Silicon Valley, and the fact that so many of these firms are entwined, made the possibility of a bank run higher for SVB than it was for other places. Right now, rumors are flying in WhatsApp groupchats full of founders scrambling for cash. I suspect, too, that we’ll start seeing scammers attempting to target panicky technology brothers, to extract even more cash from them. 

    I don’t know what’s going to happen now, and I don’t think anyone else does, either. I do know, though, that SVB’s leadership weren’t the only ones who fucked up. This was the second big bank failure in a single week, suggesting our regulators were asleep at the wheel. And who was the primary regulator for both banks? Why, our friends at the Fed,





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  • U.S., EU search for climate truce — and a united front against China

    ایک موسم سرما کے بعد جس کے دوران یورپی یونین امریکہ پر مسلسل barbs پھینک دیا بائیڈن کے اوپر دستخط آب و ہوا قانون اور اس کے 369 بلین ڈالر کی سبز مراعات، بحر اوقیانوس کے دونوں اطراف کے بہت سے لوگ امید کر رہے ہیں کہ یہ دورہ موسم بہار کے پگھلنے کے آغاز کا اشارہ دے گا۔ بائیڈن اور وان ڈیر لیین کا پیغام یہ تھا کہ ان میں جو بھی اختلافات ہیں وہ اب بھی اپنی صاف توانائی کی صنعتوں کے حق میں ہونے کی کوشش کرتے ہیں، امریکہ اور یورپ دونوں کو ایک ہی خطرہ پر قابو پانے کی ضرورت ہے – چین، جو اس صنعت کا عالمی سطح پر آگے ہے۔

    اپنے بیان میں، بائیڈن اور وان ڈیر لیین نے تعاون کے بارے میں بات کی – اقتصادی اور تجارتی اضطراب سے نکلنا جو گزشتہ کئی مہینوں سے تعلقات پر حاوی ہے – اور چین کی \”غیر منڈی کی پالیسیوں اور طریقوں\” کا ذکر کیا۔



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  • Pakistan to produce a unicorn by 2025: Endeavor Managing Partner Allen Taylor

    پاکستان، دنیا کا پانچواں سب سے زیادہ آبادی والا ملک، اپنی قلیل مدتی معاشی پریشانیوں کا جواب دینے کے لیے 1.1 بلین ڈالر کی قسط کھولنے کے لیے اپنے بین الاقوامی مالیاتی فنڈ (IMF) کے پروگرام کو بحال کرنے کے لیے جدوجہد کر رہا ہے۔

    جیسا کہ روپیہ تاریخی نچلی سطح پر گرا ہے اور افراط زر ایک نئی چوٹی کو چھو رہا ہے، اس بات کی بہت کم توقع ہے کہ یہ پریشانی کسی بھی وقت جلد ہی کم ہو جائے گی۔ ان مسائل نے مشترکہ طور پر ملکی معیشت کو تقریباً ٹھپ کر کے رکھ دیا ہے۔

    اگر چند ہزار جواب دہندگان کے سروے پر یقین کیا جائے تو زیادہ تر پاکستانیوں کا مستقبل تاریک نظر آتا ہے۔

    ٹیک اسٹارٹ اپس کے لیے جدید سہولت کا آغاز

    ایسے حالات میں، ایک درجن سے زائد غیر ملکی ہیں، جن میں تین امریکہ سے ہیں، جو اینڈیور کے آفیشل لانچ میں شرکت کے لیے پاکستان پہنچے ہیں۔



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  • Collapse of Silicon Valley Bank UK ‘could have big impact on tech start-ups’

    سلیکن ویلی بینک یوکے (SVBUK) کے خاتمے سے ٹیک اسٹارٹ اپس پر نمایاں اثر پڑ سکتا ہے، اسے خبردار کیا گیا ہے۔

    ڈیجیٹل اکانومی کے لیے اتحاد (Coadec)، جو کہ ڈیجیٹل اسٹارٹ اپس کو سپورٹ کرنے کے لیے پالیسیوں کے لیے ایک غیر منافع بخش مہم چلاتا ہے، نے جواب دیا…



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