In less than one year, WeWork went from having a $47 billion valuation and being the darling of the venture capital world to needing an $8 billion infusion to avoid running out of money. This is the story of Adam Neumann, Softbank’s risky investment, a failed IPO and how we got here.
Bloomberg Business of Sports lets you follow the money in the world of sports, reporting on trades, salaries, endorsements, contracts and collective bargaining. The show takes listeners inside the business end of the sports world, and explains what it means to fans and their pocketbooks.
The Iboga plant has been used for tribal rituals in West Africa for millenia. While the highly toxic root causes days-long hallucinations, it may also be the answer to a problem plaguing modern society. Today, Iboga and its ingredient ibogaine are being closely studied as a potential cure for drug addiction.
Alex Jones Is the Latest Big Defamation Case, Here Are Five Others You Should Know
Italy’s Rating Outlook Cut to Negative by Moody’s on Politics
Amazon’s iRobot Deal Seen Facing Tough FTC Antitrust Review
Twitter Seeks Musk Deal Insight From Larry Ellison’s Trust
SpaceX Rocket Launches South Korea’s First Mission to the Moon
Alex Jones Ordered to Pay $45 Million in Punitive Damages
Illinois Wins End to 50-Year Oversight of State Employment
SoftBank’s Next Pain Point Is Recognizing Private Asset Meltdown
Wealthy Americans Escape Tax Hikes in Bill But Would Face Beefed-Up IRS
Michigan Cuts Ties With Embattled Hockey Coach Mel Pearson
Warner Bros. Discovery Q2 Results Miss Wall Street’s View
The Global Economic Outlook Is as Clear as Mud
Unemployment Heads in the Wrong Direction for the Fed
A Crushing Defeat in November Would Help Democrats
Amazon’s Roomba Deal Is Really About Mapping Your Home
Crypto Companies Are Spending $2.4 Billion on Sports Sponsorships
IVF Patients Are Trapped in Limbo and Bracing for the Next Post-Roe Fight
VC Billionaire Marc Andreessen and Ultra-Wealthy Neighbors Thwart Housing in California Town
NYC Mayor Slams Texas Governor for Busing Migrants in Test of Sanctuary Cities
Women Drive Job Gains as US Labor Market Surges Back in July
Flash Floods Strand 1K People in Death Valley National Park
Western Senators Secure $4 Billion for Drought in Spending Bill
The Mission to Rescue Beirut’s Cultural Heritage From Rubble
The Cities Encouraging Healing With ‘Trauma-Informed Placemaking’
Across Europe, Gas-Strapped Cities Prepare to Power Down
Bankrupt Crypto Broker Voyager Plans to Resume Cash Withdrawals
Lambo Dealers Are Keeping Warm Despite Crypto Winter
Bitcoin Lingers Near $23,000 as Job Gains Weigh on Risk Assets
Pressure is building on regulators to put safeguards in place for digital assets, but many questions remain about how best to do this.   
That crypto needs better rules in the US isn’t in dispute — but there are differences of opinion about how regulation should takes shape.

With every additional bankruptcy filing or accusation of insider trading in crypto, regulators seem to turn up the heat ever so slightly when it comes to their focus on the digital-asset industry. But who is planning on doing the regulating? What would that even look like? And what does it mean that regulators themselves don’t seem to entirely agree? 
Joining this episode to bring us up to speed on what’s happening with US crypto regulation are Bloomberg reporters Allyson Versprille  and Alex Nguyễn. Welcome. 

source

Write A Comment

Your article is loading
Exit mobile version