Bloomberg Daybreak Middle East
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
Whistle Season 1
Series focused young entrepreneurs making their mark
Real Estate
Europe Is Bracing for a Sharp and Abrupt Real Estate Reversal
Business
Qantas Mayday Alert, Flight Turnbacks Put Safety Reputation Under Spotlight
Jobs
Nearly 20% of US Firms Expect to Reduce Headcount, Survey Shows
Central Banks
BOJ’s December Meeting Was Suspended at Government’s Request
Inflation & Prices
Freezing Weather Sends Some UK Workers Back to the Office
Inflation & Prices
New Zealand’s Inflation May Have Peaked, Reducing Rate Pressure
Greener Living
Six New EV Models Offer US Buyers More Options
Technology
Activist Elliott Takes Multibillion-Dollar Salesforce Stake
Technology
Revolut to Start Offering Irish Customers Local Bank Accounts
Politics
Millions in Pakistan in Nationwide Blackout as Grid Fails
Politics
How India's Bid to Reform Bankruptcy Law Affects Payouts to Creditors
Taxes
White Americans Collect 92% of Benefits From Investor Tax Breaks
Wealth
Robert Smith Scours Globe for $20 Billion Comeback After Tax Case
Pursuits
Emirates Airline to Raise Service to Australia on Higher Demand
Concerts
What It Was Like to Attend Beyoncé’s Explosive Concert in Dubai
John Authers
Active Fund Managers Beat Michael Jordan, For Once
Lionel Laurent
The Crypto Crackdown Is Just Getting Started
Bobby Ghosh
Yemen’s Fragile Truce Needs More than Talks to Survive
Feature
The Coyotes Working the US Side of the Border Are Often Highly Vulnerable, Too
Sustainability
How Microbes Can Help Solve the World’s Fertilizer Problems
Business
Carlsberg’s New Lager Is Made for a Warming World
Equality
Welsh Rugby Union Accused of 'Toxic Culture' of Sexism by Ex-Employees
Equality
Crowded Clinics, 8-Hour Drives and Abortion Pills Are New Reality on Roe's 50th Anniversary
Green
Bill Gates Is Backing an Aussie Startup Trying to Stop Cows Burping Methane
Green
Congo Opposition Leader Says He’d Scrap Oil Drilling in No. 2 Rainforest
Housing
Milan Luxury Real Estate Booms as Bankers Leave London for Italy
Design
London’s Historic Smithfield Market Meets a New Chapter
Culture
Red Tape Is Slowly Killing Hong Kong’s Street Food Stalls
Crypto
Binance Says Signature Sets Transaction Minimum Amid Pullback
Crypto
Meme, Crypto Revival to Hit a Wall as Recession Risk Looms: Q&A
Crypto
Bitcoin Reaches Highest Since August Amid Second Weekend Surge
Gift this articleExitSubscriber Benefit
Subscribe
The pause in the stock market’s strong start to 2023 underscores the main question vexing much of Wall Street: When will it be safe to start buying again?
Yes, markets have grown increasingly confident that the slowdown in inflation will allow the Federal Reserve to soon end the cycle of aggressive interest-rate hikes that last year drove the S&P 500 index to the worst drop since 2008. But at the same time, those higher rates could drive the economy into a recession and slam the brakes on any growth.
Comments
0 comment