Connecting decision makers to a dynamic network of information, people and ideas, Bloomberg quickly and accurately delivers business and financial information, news and insight around the world
Americas+1 212 318 2000
EMEA+44 20 7330 7500
Asia Pacific+65 6212 1000
Connecting decision makers to a dynamic network of information, people and ideas, Bloomberg quickly and accurately delivers business and financial information, news and insight around the world
Americas+1 212 318 2000
EMEA+44 20 7330 7500
Asia Pacific+65 6212 1000
Bloomberg Markets Asia. Live from Hong Kong, bringing you the most important global business and breaking markets news information as it happens.
Live market coverage co-anchored from Hong Kong and New York. Overnight on Wall Street is daytime in Asia. Markets never sleep, and neither does Bloomberg. Track your investments 24 hours a day, around the clock from around the world.
Powerful stories, revealing conversations and animated explainers to help make sense of the world.
GIC-Backed AESC Said to Target $10 Billion Value in New Round
Xi Tolerance for Property Pain Nears Limit as Rescue Takes Shape
Sri Lanka Cuts Rates to Spur Economy as Debt Plan Awaited
Malaysia Seen to Go on Lengthy Key Rate Pause as Inflation Cools
Villeroy Says ECB Won’t Raise Rates Again, Excluding Surprises
Cathay Pacific Expects First Annual Profit Since 2019
South Africa Faces Backlash Over Law to Bolster Small Firms
Swisscom’s Fastweb Is Said to Explore Deal for Vodafone Italy
Shell Set to Face UK Trial Over Devastating Nigerian Oil Spills
Russia ‘Spits’ on EU Sanctions in Escalating Propaganda Battle
Anthony Levandowski Reboots Church of Artificial Intelligence
Altman Is Back at OpenAI, But Questions Remain as to Why He Was Fired in First Place
Inside the Coups and Concessions That Brought Altman Back to OpenAI
China Tells WHO Known Germs Are Causing Kids’ Pneumonia Surge
New Zealand Coalition Government Ponders Deeper Reforms to RBNZ
Warren Buffett Says His Will Is Going to Be ‘Simple’ and Public
Billionaire Movie Mogul Builds Next Hollywood in Southeast Asia
Hypercar Maker Pagani Says Europe Should Learn From China on EVs
Venice rolls out day-tripper fee to try to regulate mass crowds on peak weekends
India Is Making Too Many Disasters in the Himalayas
Huawei and Xiaomi Are Paving the Way for an Apple EV
Orban's Putin-Lite Act Gets a Dutch Echo
How Elon Musk Spent Three Years Falling Down a Red-Pilled Rabbit Hole
The Utah Jazz Enter Their Experimental Post-Cable Phase
X Scrambles to Minimize Damage From Antisemitic Posts
South Africa’s Climate Pact to Channel Money to Its Coal Belt
Elon Musk Calls Swedish Tesla Strikes ‘Insane’ as Impact Spreads
EU to Put Forward Plan for €584 Billion Overhaul of Power Grids
Taylor Swift Concert Tragedy Highlights Dangers of Climate Change
Berlin’s Leading Party Proposes a Return of Urban Maglev Trains
Instead of Reopening the I-10 Freeway, LA Should Have Reimagined It
No, Really. Building More Housing Can Combat Rising Rents
A $200,000 Pet-Rock NFT Shows How Crypto Is Relapsing Into FOMO
Singapore Plans More Rules to Curb Retail Crypto Speculation
Two Crypto Platforms Linked to Justin Sun Hit by Hacker Attacks
A flurry of Wall Street prognosticators ramped up their outlooks for US equities from June through September after failing to call a big rally that shaped markets in the first part of the year.
A Federal Reserve pause, seasonal tailwinds, an earnings-led rally. Many of the reasons that got Wall Street strategists increasingly bullish coming into the end of the year now look like wishful thinking.
As Israel’s war with Hamas escalates, souring traders’ risk appetites and dragging the S&P 500 Index into a correction, some mainstay equity optimists are scaling back their positive views on what the final months of 2023 will bring.
Wall Street Cuts S&P 500 Expectations as Geopolitical Risk Rises – Bloomberg
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