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.
In South African townships oppressed because of unemployment, crime, drugs and violence, and where many of the population are suffering from HIV and Aids, this inspiring feature-length documentary follows the journey of six people who transform themselves through yoga, and documents the impact that yoga has on their families, and communities.
Global Investors Cool On India’s Bad Debt Reconstruction Firms
China Covid Wave Sparks Scramble for Vital Drugs Across Region
South Korea Inflation Stays Elevated, Paving Way for More Tightening
US Jobless Claims Rise Slightly But Remain Near Historic Lows
China Vows ‘Appropriate’ Fiscal Expansion to Aid Economic Growth
Pelé, Brazilian Who Made Soccer the ‘Beautiful Game,’ Dies at 82
Kansas Rallies, But Arkansas Wins Liberty Bowl 55-53 in 3OTs
Huawei Declares ‘Business as Usual’ After Weathering US Curbs
Asos Is Worst UK Stock in 2022 as Consumer Crisis, Inflation Hit
China Tightens Reins on EdTech in New Blow to Private Tutors
Myanmar Court Jails Suu Kyi for 7 More Years in Final Verdicts
Malaysia to Test Wastewater From Flights Arriving From China
These Are the Hottest (and Coldest) UK Housing Markets for 2022
Retail Investors Took a Beating in 2022. Will It Continue in 2023?
Ian Tyson, Half of Ian & Sylvia Folk Duo, Dies At Age 89
Vivienne Westwood, Fashion Maverick Who Influenced Punk Style, Dies at 81
Hindsight Capital II: Weed and Truss Went Up in Smoke
Pelé Was the Most Important Soccer Player of All Time
Americans Are Still Drinking Too Much
Futuristic Vertical Farming Startups Are Struggling in the Tech Downturn
China’s $1.3 Trillion Housing Crackdown Leaves Few Winners
The Chatbots Are Coming for Google
NYC’s Housing Works Aims for $1 Million a Year in Sales at City’s First Legal Pot Shop
JPMorgan to Extend Ukrainian Refugee Program Into Next Year
US Ignored Own Scientists’ Warning in Backing Atlantic Wind Farm
Republicans Ramp Up Anti-ESG Campaign for 2023
The Cities Keeping Their Car-Free Spaces
Why Child Care Centers in New York City Are Shutting Their Doors
How Jersey City Got to Zero Traffic Deaths on Its Streets
US Probes How $372 Million Vanished in Hack After FTX Bankruptcy
Would You Buy an NFT From a Vending Machine? (Podcast)

Subscriber Benefit
Subscribe
Sign In
One of the most closely watched indicators of trader sentiment on Binance’s market-leading derivatives exchange suggests that anxiety over additional fallout from this year’s crypto market meltdown has grown.  
The seven-day average of open interest for Bitcoin perpetual futures has dropped 40.3% from the start of November as of Wednesday, according to researcher CryptoCompare. Open interest is the total number of futures contracts held at the end of the trading day. Bitcoin perpetual contracts — which, unlike traditional calendar futures, don’t expire — have long been a favorite of crypto speculators because they allow them to more easily maintain leveraged bets. 

source

Write A Comment