Bloomberg Daybreak Europe. Live from London, tracking the breaking and top business news stories in the lead-up to the opening of European markets.
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.
A 9-year-old fascinated with robots now runs his own company with a full-time staff of adults who help teach other children about robotics. A baseball fanatic has created an enterprise that sends out subscription boxes full of baseball gear on a monthly basis, from training equipment to sunflower seeds. And finally, meet the young men who, with the help of music superstar Drake, help people get into the increasingly lucrative world of professional online gaming.
UAE’s Biggest Banks Beat Estimates as Economy Boosts Earnings
Morgan Stanley Fines Bankers Over Messaging Breaches, FT Reports
Cost-of-Pizza Shock Hits Italy as Surge Far Outstrips Inflation
Why QT Is Forcing the ECB to Rethink Its Monetary-Policy Levers
Sweden’s Housing Rout Persists as Riksbank Keeps Raising Rates
Mega Factories Target Cow-Free Milk and Cheese to Plug Shortage
Blackstone Gets Extra $500 Million From University of California
US Filed Microsoft-Activision Suit to Head Off EU Settlement
Singapore’s Sea Is Said to Eye Sale of Phoenix Labs to Cut Costs
Trump’s Facebook, Instagram Accounts Reinstated After Two-Year Ban
China-Australia Ties Proceeding in ‘Right Direction,’ Xi Says
The Tory Tax Problem May Be Britain’s, Too
Hindenburg vs Adani: The Short Seller Taking on Asia’s Richest Person
Popular 401(k) Funds Rebound After Tanking in 2022
The Porsche Vision 357 Concept Car Is Giving Us Nissan Vibes
US Investment Firm MSP Sports Eyes Stake in Premier League’s Everton FC
‘Peak Passive’ Seems Closer, But Just How Much?
The Adani Short Sale Puts Investor Trust in India in Doubt
Zahawi’s Careless Tax Error Is Sunak’s Problem
A Machine That Sorts Moth-Eaten Sweaters Is Helping to Stem Textile Waste
The US Hasn’t Noticed That China-Made Cars Are Taking Over the World
DoubleClick Deal Started ‘Google’s March to Monopoly,’ US Says
Emhoff Heads to Holocaust Sites to Fight Rising Antisemitism
Cities Forge On to Protect Lunar New Year Celebrations After Shootings
Transcript Zero Episode 24: Capitalism Meets Climate Change, with Chamath Palihapitiya
High-Octane Capitalism Meets Climate Change
Zimbabwe Plans a New City for the Rich
In ESG Fight, Texas Wants an ‘Honest’ Conversation With Wall Street
NYC’s New Grand Central LIRR Stop Lets Long Islanders Skip Penn Station
Looking to the Upcoming Coinbase Earnings Call in the Wake of the FTX Chaos (Podcast)
There Is a Bitcoin Bar in New York City for Thirsty Crypto Fans (Podcast)
Binance Says Signature Sets Transaction Minimum Amid Pullback
Kyiv and Moscow both grasp what the 18th-century King of Prussia understood: Diplomacy without arms is like music without instruments.
Ukraine now has arms, and friends too.
Photographer: Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images
Andreas Kluth
Subscriber Benefit
Subscribe
As Russia’s invasion of Ukraine nears its first anniversary, what’s next? In some ways, the Kremlin and Kyiv both seem to be signaling a new openness to begin peace negotiations. In others, they appear to be doing the opposite — ruling out talks by setting implausibly maximalist preconditions, while simultaneously girding for a climactic military showdown. It can’t be both at the same time, can it?
Oh yes it can. It’s naive to think that wars, including this one, are settled by either diplomacy or fighting, and that the second route implies a failure of the first. The actual dynamic between jaw-jaw and shooting was better captured by Frederick the Great, the 18th century king of Prussia: “Diplomacy without arms is like music without instruments.”