Anchored by Anna Edwards and Mark Cudmore, Bloomberg Markets Europe is a fast-paced hour of news and analysis, building towards the drama and excitement of the start of the cash trade across the continent.
Overnight on Wall Street is morning in Europe. Bloomberg Daybreak Europe, anchored live from London, tracks breaking news in Europe and around the world. Markets never sleep, and neither does Bloomberg News. Monitor your investments 24 hours a day, around the clock from around the globe.
We revisit leg-strap technology that harnesses electromagnetic power to repel sharks. Then surfing pro Kai Lenny delivers all the wisdom you need to sample the fast-growing sport of hydrofoiling.
Malaysia Airlines Is Considering Doubling Boeing 737 Max Order
India Grapples with LNG Glut as Consumers Balk at High Gas Rates
Egypt Reveals $16 Billion Funding Gap That IMF Deal Can Help Fix
Serbia to Hike Key Rate Despite Slowing Growth: Decision Guide
Philippine Economy Shows Unexpected Strength as Demand Holds
Disney Drop Sends Media Stocks Toward Worst Decline in 30 Years
Thai Airways Will Keep Some Old Jets Instead of Selling as Flight Demand Rises
Sony’s God of War Ragnarok Is Set to Jump-Start Slow Year for Hits
TSMC Monthly Sales Rise 56% as Chip Giant Weathers Tech Slowdown
Rakuten Is Said Cutting Mobile Unit Headcount to Woo Investors
China Points to Offer of Climate Aid to Boost Taiwan Claims
Russia Embassy in Indonesia Confirms Putin Won’t Attend G-20
Manhattan Luxury Rents Go ‘Through the Roof,’ Other Prices Fall
Private Equity CEO Probed for Allegedly Setting Fishing Boat Afloat
Paul Allen Art Auction Totals an Historic $1.5 Billion
Allen Auction Tops $1 Billion, Freud Sets Own $86 Million Record
Republicans Mismanaged Expectations. Let's Try Again: John Authers
British CEOs Snared Big Bonuses. For What?
The Banking Market Where Profits Are Guaranteed
Midterm Voters Sent a Clear Message on Support for Abortion Rights
Binance’s Thumping of FTX Shows How Centralized Crypto Can Be
Peter Thiel’s Strategy of Pushing the GOP Right Is Just Getting Started
The Murders Shocked Slovakia, But LGBTQ Rights Get No Mercy
BHP Chair Apologizes for Sexual Harassment and Racism at Miner
High Interest Rates Make It Harder to Unleash Clean Energy Finance
The UK’s Climate Crown Slips
Denver Set to Reject Anti-Eviction Measure, Bucking National Trend
The Biggest Wins and Losses for Ballot Measures
Bedrock, USA: Why School Boards Had the Toughest Political Races
JPMorgan Team Says Crypto Markets Face ‘Cascade’ of Margin Calls
Crypto Prime Broker Urges Clients to Cash Out FTX Positions
Crypto.com to Publish Audited Proof of Reserves, CEO Says
Deere & Co. customers are facing weeks-long delays for parts orders as a strike at the world’s biggest farm-equipment maker continues.
Parts and components that U.S. farmers need to keep combines running in the busiest farming season of the year are taking as many as three weeks to reach customer hands -- an eternity when fields need to be quickly harvested to stay ahead of wintry weather, according to dealers and customers in the industry.