Bloomberg Daybreak Middle East. Live from Dubai, connecting Asian markets to the European opens. The show will focus on global macro issues with a middle eastern context, provide expert analysis of major market moving stories and speak with the biggest newsmakers in the region.
Simulcast of Bloomberg Television
We join a group of filmakers from Germany as they seek out a shy schoolboy in the Philippines who harbors dreams of escaping poverty through surfing. After that we take a look at a unique hotel that offers surfers everywhere the perfect way to sample the waves in comfort, even in remote locations.
HSBC Raises Hong Kong Prime Rate for First Time Since 2018
Transcript ‘Zero’ Episode 2: Why Venture Capital Is Crucial to the Climate Fight
SoftBank’s Son Plans to Discuss Arm Partnership With Samsung
US 30-Year Mortgage Rate Hits 6.25%, Highest Since 2008
Oaktree Selling $107 Million Loan on ‘L.A. Law’ Tower as Office Values Ebb
SoftBank’s Son Plans to Discuss Arm Partnership With Samsung
Intel Executive With Industry’s Toughest Job Plots Comeback
India Expands Incentives for Chip, Display Units in Renewed Push
Malaysian Fugitive ‘Fat Leonard’ Caught in Venezuela After US Military Bribery Scandal
US Treasury Advertises for a Sanctions Guru to Avoid Pitfalls
Manhattan Apartment Rents Plateau After Months of Record Highs
Jamie Dimon Slams Crypto Tokens as ‘Decentralized Ponzi Schemes’
Yankees’ Aaron Judge Stuck at 60 Homers as Fans Wait for Him to Shatter Record
Formula One Singapore Brings $70,000 Tables to Nightclubs
Fed Splits the Difference on Labor Market Pain
Skipping New York Is Bad Policy for Jakarta
Putin’s New Cannon Fodder Won’t Win the Ukraine War
No One Likes Annual Performance Reviews—Here’s How to Get Rid of Them
Columbia, MIT Explore the Future of Work With New Business School Courses
How Covid Turned Shake Shack Into a Digital Operation Overnight
Low-Income Parents May Have to Pay to Work Due to ‘Spiraling’ Childcare Costs
Woman in Viral Central Park Video Loses Suit Over Firing
Puerto Rico Struggles to Reach Areas Cut Off By Fiona
How Crucial Is Venture Capital to the Climate Fight?
A Global Push for More ‘15-Minute Cities’
Chicago Offers Sanctuary for Abortions, Gender-Affirming Care
Salesforce’s Benioff Sees Improvement in San Francisco Homeless Crisis
Jamie Dimon Slams Crypto Tokens as ‘Decentralized Ponzi Schemes’
Crypto Agitator Jesse Powell Steps Down as CEO of Kraken
The Tricky Business of Calculating Crypto’s Market Value
Welcome to Bloomberg Crypto, our twice-weekly look at Bitcoin, blockchain and more. If someone forwarded this to you, sign up here. In today’s edition, Michael P. Regan takes the temperature of the crypto market:
There’s that number again: $20,000. After its worst ever drawdown in market-cap terms from a high last November to an 18-month low in June, Bitcoin has done … well, not much of anything. A sleepy summer has seen the largest and oldest cryptocurrency fluctuate aimlessly, trading roughly between $19,000 and $25,000 and frequently landing back in the vicinity of that round-number level of $20,000.
In a glass-half-full reading of the price action, this could be seen as good news. At least the bleeding has stopped, and the trading range corresponds with a change of tone in crypto news flow. The headlines are way less hair-on-fire than they were in the spring as the failure of the TerraUSD stablecoin project infected various corners of the market. Crypto reporters are back to writing about stuff like new leveraged exchange-traded funds targeting the industry’s stocks, Bitcoin and Ether futures denominated in euros, or how Eminem and Snoop Dogg performed as their Bored Ape avatars at the MTV awards.