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.
With Russian gas imports largely cut off, Europe is facing an energy-scarce winter—and next year could be even worse. The crisis could finally force countries to dramatically pivot toward renewable energy.
Your Saturday Asia Briefing: China on the Move
South Korea Trade Data Show Export Slump Persisting
US Can Slow Inflation Without Unemployment Spike, Fed Study Says
Next BOJ Governor Needs to Be ‘Crafty,’ LDP’s Amari Says
Fed’s Waller Backs Slowing the Next Rate Hike to 25 Basis Points
Google Cuts Add to Tech Wipeout That’s Claimed Over 100,000 Jobs
Juventus Soccer Club Hit with 15-Point Slam for False Accounting
Western Digital Talks With Kioxia Are Said to Be Advancing
Google Staff Anxiety Runs High After 12,000 Colleagues Cut
Google to Cut 12,000 Jobs in 6% Reduction of Global Workforce
Trump Drops NY Tax Return Fight Because GOP ‘Has No Interest’
Meta Lobbying Spending Dips as Job Cuts, Costs Surge
White Americans Collect 92% of Benefits From Investor Tax Breaks
Robert Smith Scours Globe for $20 Billion Comeback After Tax Case
Juventus Soccer Club Hit with 15-Point Slam for False Accounting
Brooke Shields examines her life, fame in doc ‘Pretty Baby’
Our Furry Friends Aren’t So Valuable These Days
Alec Baldwin Manslaughter Charge Is a Stretch
New York’s Tax Code Is a WFH Nightmare
The Coyotes Working the US Side of the Border Are Often Highly Vulnerable, Too
How Microbes Can Help Solve the World’s Fertilizer Problems
Carlsberg’s New Lager Is Made for a Warming World
Crowded Clinics, 8-Hour Drives and Abortion Pills Are New Reality on Roe’s 50th Anniversary
Brits Are Renting Out Spare Rooms to Beat Cost of Living Crisis
Chinese Battery Plant Investment Faces Local Backlash in Hungary
Gasoline’s Slow Fade Heralds US Supply Pain Now, Gain Later for Climate
Red Tape Is Slowly Killing Hong Kong’s Street Food Stalls
Mayors Implore Washington for Help on Influx of Migrants
The Man Enforcing Texas’ Crackdown on Wall Street Over ESG
This Week in Crypto: FOMO Returns, 3AC Founders Seek Funding (Podcast)
The Global Legal Fallout of FTX (Podcast)
One of FTX’s Biggest Victims Could Be the Bahamas’ Finance Reputation
It’s a new year, and there are some green shoots in the digital asset space.
    
and

Subscriber Benefit
Subscribe
Listen to Bloomberg Crypto on the iHeartRadio App, Apple Podcasts or  Spotify.
Is crypto back? That’s one question Bloomberg editors and reporters discuss in another This Week in Crypto episode. Already, the year is packed with digital asset action. Bitcoin is up nearly 30% so far in 2023. Lots of smaller tokens have climbed even more than that. Suddenly, crypto enthusiasts are uttering words like FOMO — Fear of Missing Out — again. 

Then there are some crypto comebacks happening. Or, at least, attempted comebacks. The guys behind 3AC, Three Arrows Capital, the cryptocurrency hedge fund credited in some circles with launching the crypto winter, are seeking funding for a new startup. Crypto Twitter has not been kind.

source

Write A Comment