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New Meme-Based, Decentralized Cryptocurrency Token Junior Shiba ($JRSHIB) Is Launching

The disruptive cryptocurrency Junior Shiba driven by its community members New York, NY / November 15, 2021 / SEAPRWire / – Junior Shiba, a fully decentralized cryptocurrency completely driven by its fun and creative community members. Junior Shiba is a meme-based cryptocurrency that offers a full range of features including NFTs, Games, earning crypto while playing, swapping, and a presence in the Metaverse. The junior Shiba token being launched in Both ERC20(Uniswap) and BEP20(Pancake Swap). The community is open to all and welcomes diverse perspectives from members to build the absolute best Junior Shiba platform. The token symbol is $JRSHIB. There is a (3%) usage reward and the total supply is 1 quadrillion. The holder of the crypto can play games and present in metaverse and use Junior Shiba as a mode of payment. The history of the first meme-coin, launched in 2013, originally was seen as an ironic joke, yet its popularity has grown into a cryptocurrency with a US $32.54 billion market capital. Meme coins like Junior Shiba are cryptocurrencies that are linked to popular jokes, sarcastic comments and puns on social media. In 2021, the advent of the Dogecoin success prompted the...

US banks shelling out more to land top grads

(BLOOMBERG) - Much of Mr Michael Lewis' graphic description of life for junior bankers in the early 1980s still rings true today. Fresh college grads "gave themselves over entirely" to firms, working so many nights and weekends that one friend learnt to nap on the office toilet, the author recalled in his book Liar's Poker. But one thing is changing fast: The pay. A recent wave of raises meant to address complaints that rookie bankers, known as analysts, work too hard for too little means this year's newbies will get salaries of at least US$100,000 (S$133,900), before five-figure bonuses. Amid an escalating debate over income inequality, junior bankers are set to earn almost five times - or more - the median wage of fellow young college graduates, data from the United States Census Bureau shows. Back when Mr Lewis comically bombed his initial interviews to join Wall Street, he was chasing the prospect of earning what he saw as a whopping US$25,000 salary, about twice the median then. Adjusted for inflation, it translates to roughly US$72,000 now. After junior bankers were pressed to do even more during the coronavirus pandemic, virtually every firm - including Goldman Sachs, JPMorg...