The Best Of the Qatar Economic Forum, Powered by Bloomberg – bringing together some of the world’s most influential thinkers, policy makers and business leaders to tackle the major issues facing the world – such as inflation, supply chain disruption and the war in Ukraine. This special Bloomberg program highlights the event’s biggest interviews and news makers.
Bloomberg Daybreak, anchored from New York, Boston, Washington DC and San Francisco provides listeners with everything they need to know. Hear the latest economic, business and market news, as well as global, national, and local news.
Street Art pioneer FUTURA started painting his name on walls as a coping mechanism to deal with his struggle around identity. But as he turned a signature into a brand he quickly realized that it could also be a business. And that’s where things got interesting.
Cheap-Clone ETFs Are Sucking Billions Away From Bigger Siblings
Shapps Urges RMT to Put 8% Pay Offer to Rail Workers Amid Strike Chaos
Social Media Buzz: Texas Weather Warning, Linda Evangelista
UK Equips Nurses with Smart Goggles to See More Patients
Twitter Tells Employees Bonuses Could Halve on Performance: NYT
Military Families’ Housing Benefits Lag as Rents Explode
EU Favors Only Limited Tweaks to Recovery Plans, Gentiloni Says
BlackRock Warns SEC’s Plans on ESG Disclosures Will Backfire
Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway Seeks to Buy as Much as 50% of Occidental
Q&A: Bardem Is Excited for US Arrival of ‘The Good Boss’
France Pays Homage to Beloved New Yorker Cartoonist Sempé
What Happened When Minneapolis Ended Single-Family Zoning
FBI’s Mar-A-Lago Search Raises a Big Question: Why?
Can ‘House of the Dragon’ Ignite a Big Media Merger?
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
They Pledged Not to Prosecute Abortions. The Reality Is Tougher
Foot Locker Comeback Hangs on Woman Who Rewrote Beauty Playbook
Kobe Bryant’s Widow Says She’d Go Through Hell to Get Justice
Hawaii Seeks End to Strife Over Astronomy on Sacred Mountain
Chinese Farmers Struggle as Scorching Drought Wilts Crops
Electric Scooter Revolution Faces a Reckoning in Stockholm
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
Ethereum Overhaul Risks Creating a New Class of Crypto Kingpins
FTX US, Four Others Ordered to Correct FDIC Insurance Claims
Tether’s Second Quarter Lays Bare Impact of Terra Collapse
Zheping Huang
Tencent Holdings Ltd. logged its first-ever revenue decline after online advertising sales fell by a record, underscoring the extent to which China’s worsening economy is hurting its biggest corporations.
The country’s most valuable company slashed 5,000 jobs or nearly 5% of its workforce — the first quarterly drop in staffing since 2014 after layoffs rippling through the global tech sector finally hit the WeChat operator. Revenue fell a deeper-than-projected 3% to 134 billion yuan ($19.8 billion) while net income also missed estimates, plunging 56% in the June quarter.