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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.

BTV Simulcast
Simulcast of Bloomberg Television

My Hustle - Technology
Meet the 25-year-old CEO of Genies, who built a new human race out of avatars, replete with its own virtual talent agency and celebrity clients. Three friends use advanced technology to turn game films into analytics for professional football teams. Finally, a 24-year-old NBA superfan merges the digital and sports worlds to create virtual player cards, or "moments."

QuickTake
About the Brazil-Argentina Not-a-Common Currency Idea

Markets
Why QT Is Forcing the ECB to Rethink Its Monetary-Policy Levers

Inflation & Prices
Cost-of-Pizza Shock Hits Italy as Surge Far Outstrips Inflation

Economics
Korea’s Economic Contraction Strengthens Case for Rate Hike End

Central Banks
BOJ’s Bond Purchases Lead to Some Being Thrown Out of Key Index

Business
Sands Promised $3.8 Billion Macau Investment as Part of License Renewal

Checkout
The World’s Biggest Luxury Spenders Are Label-Loving Koreans

Technology
Mega Factories Target Cow-Free Milk and Cheese to Plug Shortage

Cybersecurity
Russian, Iranian Hackers Pose as Journalists in Emails, UK Says

Technology
Elon Musk Expects Tesla’s Main Rival Will Be a Chinese EV Maker

City of London
The Tory Tax Problem May Be Britain’s, Too

Politics
US Reversal on Abrams Tanks Underscores Focus on NATO’s Unity

Investing
Hindenburg vs Adani: The Short Seller Taking on Asia's Richest Person

Savings & Retirement
Popular 401(k) Funds Rebound After Tanking in 2022

Cars
The Porsche Vision 357 Concept Car Is Giving Us Nissan Vibes

Deals
US Investment Firm MSP Sports Eyes Stake in Premier League’s Everton FC

John Authers
‘Peak Passive’ Seems Closer, But Just How Much?

Andy Mukherjee
The Adani Short Sale Puts Investor Trust in India in Doubt

Therese Raphael
Zahawi’s Careless Tax Error Is Sunak's Problem

The Big Take
The US Hasn’t Noticed That China-Made Cars Are Taking Over the World

Technology
DoubleClick Deal Started ‘Google’s March to Monopoly,’ US Says

Feature
How to Be 18 Years Old Again for Only $2 Million a Year

Equality
Emhoff Heads to Holocaust Sites to Fight Rising Antisemitism

Equality
Cities Forge On to Protect Lunar New Year Celebrations After Shootings

Zero
Transcript Zero Episode 24: Capitalism Meets Climate Change, with Chamath Palihapitiya

Zero
High-Octane Capitalism Meets Climate Change

Government
Zimbabwe Plans a New City for the Rich

CityLab
In ESG Fight, Texas Wants an ‘Honest’ Conversation With Wall Street

Transportation
NYC’s New Grand Central LIRR Stop Lets Long Islanders Skip Penn Station

Crypto
Looking to the Upcoming Coinbase Earnings Call in the Wake of the FTX Chaos (Podcast)

Crypto
There Is a Bitcoin Bar in New York City for Thirsty Crypto Fans (Podcast)

Crypto
Binance Says Signature Sets Transaction Minimum Amid Pullback
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More than 700 miles from Wall Street, the New York Stock Exchange’s backup data center on Cermak Road in Chicago is supposed to safeguard US markets, standing by at all hours in case disaster ever strikes the world’s largest venue for trading shares.
When markets are closed, it participates in a well-worn routine, with NYSE staffers turning on and off systems to ensure everything works. But heading into Tuesday, an NYSE employee failed to properly shut down Cermak’s disaster-recovery system — leading to a disaster.
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