David Westin speaks with top names in finance about the week’s biggest issues on Wall Street.
Bloomberg Law speaks with prominent attorneys and legal scholars, analyzing major legal issues and cases in the news. The show examines all aspects of the legal profession, from intellectual property to criminal law, from bankruptcy to securities law, drawing on the deep research tools of BloombergLaw.com and BloombergBNA.com. Reporters from Bloomberg’s Washington, D.C. bureau are prominently featured as they offer analysis of policy and legal issues.
Africa is quickly becoming one of the business world’s most supercharged areas, with a burgeoning startup scene, expansive infrastructure projects, and capital pouring in from across the world. In this series, Quicktake Originals takes an in-depth look at the domestic and international projects that are shaping modern Africa, and their implications for the global economy.
ECB’s Nagel Wants More Rate Hikes, Says German Recession Likely
Indonesia Ramps Up Grain Production to Improve Food Security
UK Equips Nurses with Smart Goggles to See More Patients
Mexico Considers Incentives to Attract Semiconductor Investment
Uber and Lyft Drivers’ Complaints Are a Startup Opportunity
Pence Says He Didn’t Leave Office With Classified Material
Manchin Nearly Killed EV Credit With Take-It-or-Leave-It Threat
BlackRock Warns SEC’s Plans on ESG Disclosures Will Backfire
Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway Seeks to Buy as Much as 50% of Occidental
McLaren’s New $3.6 Million Hypercar Is Based on a Video Game
Can Grocery Stores Save the American Mall?
Elon Musk Can Make an Even Smarter Bid Now
Buying Occidental Isn’t Warren Buffett’s Only Option
If the Economy Is Shrinking, Why Is Everything Going Gangbusters?
Richest Silicon Valley Suburb Says Build Anywhere But Here
Neobanks Are Struggling to Make Good on Their Lofty Promises
Stories of Climate Adaptation From a Simmering Subcontinent
Foot Locker Comeback Hangs on Woman Who Rewrote Beauty Playbook
Kobe Bryant’s Widow Says She’d Go Through Hell to Get Justice
Dan Price Resigns from Gravity Payments After Abuse Allegations
Flood-damaged Death Valley to Reopen Popular Sites to Public
US Climate Law Means California Can Cut Solar Perk, Group Says
San Francisco Bets on Swanky Sho Club to Lure Workers Back to Office
New York MTA Seeks First Rider Ban for the Assault of a Subway Worker
New England Cities Fight Abortion Misinformation With Truth-in-Ads Laws
FTX US, Four Others Ordered to Correct FDIC Insurance Claims
Tether’s Second Quarter Lays Bare Impact of Terra Collapse
NFT Prices Diverge Sharply as Ethereum ‘Merge’ Mania Intensifies
Khine Lin Kyaw
Myanmar’s military regime plans to start an online lottery in the next two months as it hunts for new revenue streams to offset a slump in tax collections from an economy battered by the pandemic and the exit of foreign companies following the coup.
The digital raffle will be started in partnership with private companies, and the authorities are in talks with several local and foreign firms, according to Zaw Min Tun, the lead spokesman for the State Administration Council. The initiative will supplement the government’s existing physical lottery business, and participants can use bank accounts and other authorized payment channels, he added.