Bloomberg Markets European Open kick starts the trading day, breaking down what’s moving markets and why. Francine Lacqua and Tom Mackenzie live from London bring you an action-packed hour of news no investor in Europe can afford to miss.
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.
Fast. Clever. Deadly. Deceptive. Are goalscorers born or made? Do you have to be selfish to be a striker? Is finding the back of the net the hardest job in football? The modern day striker has to be many things to make it to the top. FourFourTwo gets inside the mind of a striker, interviewing the masters of the art and the men who have to mark them, including Jermain Defoe, Romelu Lukaku, Michael Owen, Martin Keown and Ledley King.
Events Attendance Hit by Banking, Tech Turmoil: The London Rush
Presight AI Soars 176% in Abu Dhabi Debut After $496 Million IPO
China’s Economic Recovery Faces Risks From Global Trade Slump
China Industrial Profits Drop on Weak Demand, Falling Prices
Singapore Price Pressures Top Hong Kong With Quicker Reopening
Germany Faces Travel Chaos Amid Lufthansa Snags, Strike
Hong Kong Airport Handled 2.1 Million Passengers in February
Pinduoduo App Malware Detailed by Cybersecurity Researchers
Twitter Source Code Leak Turns Into Hunt for Perpetrator
South Korea to Surpass China in Chip Machine Spending Next Year
Netanyahu Mulls Delay to Courts Overhaul As Protests Rock Israel
Ukraine Latest: Hungary to Vote on Finland’s Bid to Join NATO
When Selling an ‘£8 Million’ Flat for 25% Less Is the Right Call
Bank of America Trims Banking, Lending Group Amid Industry Slump
Review: Sweeney Todd, Sondheim’s Bloody Barber, Is Back
‘John Wick: Chapter 4’ Comes Out Blazing With $73.5M
A Tale of Two Crises — and One Is Even in France
The Mystery of the Missing Oil Barrels Is Solved
Tech’s AI Armies Are Huge, Yet Struggling to Innovate
How to Keep Corporate Accounts Safe Amid Bank Collapse Jitters
What Happens When Sexting Chatbots Dump Their Human Lovers
Iranian Activists Want Tech Companies to Ban the Ayatollah
Black Children Six Times More Likely for UK Police Strip Search
50 Years Since Women Trailblazers Joined London Stock Exchange
BHP to Trial Carbon Capture With Major Chinese Steelmaker
Plan to Curb Coal And Gas to Seal Key Australia Climate Pact
Howard University Tackles Persistent Housing Woes With Bond Deal
Venezuela’s Electrical Blackouts Widen Gap Between Rural and Urban Areas
Air Pollution Casts a Pall Over Booming Bangladesh Megacity
Bitcoin Liquidity Hits 10-Month Low Even With the Price Surging
Venezuela’s Oil Graft Probe Widens With 11 More Arrest Warrants
Bitcoin Retreats; Justin Sun-Linked Coins Drop After SEC Charges
Yoolim Lee and
Georgina McKay
Subscriber Benefit
Subscribe
Zip Co. expects “significant” capital inflows from asset sales as it prepares to exit most of its markets, unwinding a years-long expansion after a slump in the once red-hot “buy now, pay later” industry.
The Australian company is trying to win back investors after a 95% stock slump over the past two years by selling or ending operations in 10 of 14 markets around the world. The firm, like many peers, is struggling to reach profitability amid intense competition and a slowdown in online spending in the aftermath of the pandemic.