Anchored by Anna Edwards and Mark Cudmore, Bloomberg Markets Europe is a fast-paced hour of news and analysis, building towards the drama and excitement of the start of the cash trade across the continent.
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.
Alchemist got his start as the teenaged sidekick to Cypress Hill and the Soul Assassins. Though his rap group, The Whooliganz, would be dumped by their label before they could even release their first album, Al did not let the setback stop him.
Global Banking Fallout Is Vindication for China Stocks Bulls
Sanofi’s Blockbuster Dupixent Succeeds in High-Stakes Lung Trial
Philippines Shifts to Smaller Rate Hike Amid Global Banking Woes
ECB’s Muller Sees More Hiking, But Bulk of Moves ‘Behind Us’
Singapore Core Inflation Stays Unchanged at 14-Year High
Michael Jordan considering sale of Hornets; no deal imminent
Singapore Fintech Wins Asia’s Largest Fundraise Since SVB’s Fall
Tencent Resumes Slim Growth As China’s Internet Sector Stirs
Toshiba Accepts $15 Billion Buyout Bid From JIP, Nikkei Says
Space Startup’s 3D-Printed Rocket Fails to Reach Orbit
China’s New Premier Puts Focus on Manufacturing on First Trip
Malaysia Plans to End Life Sentencing in Slew of Prison Reforms
FDIC Delays Bid Deadline for Silicon Valley Private Bank
SVB’s Big Bet on Troubled Private Bank Ends on the Auction Block
New Zealand Government to Invest in Gin Distillery, Film Studio
Delta, United Offer to Trim Flights at Busy Airports This Summer in Deal With FAA
UBS, Switzerland, and Those Angry AT1 Investors
Stuck in a Time Warp With Janet and Jerome
Ukraine’s Survival May Be Decided by America's GOP
What Happens When Sexting Chatbots Dump Their Human Lovers
Iranian Activists Want Tech Companies to Ban the Ayatollah
A Visual Guide to How America Uses Freight Trains
Airlines Told to Reward Managers Hiring Women as Progress Stalls
Australia to Hold Historic Indigenous Referendum by December
New Zealand to Review Emissions Trading to Counter Forestry Bias
UK Set for Massive Rollout of EV Chargers in Net-Zero Push
Pennsylvania County Accuses Tech Giants of Fueling Youth Mental Health Crisis
LA’s City Hall Leads a New Fight Against an Old Foe: Homelessness
New Jersey-to-NYC Commuters Face Disruption as Bus Route Set to End
Bitcoin Retreats; Justin Sun-Linked Coins Drop After SEC Charges
Circle USDC Stablecoin Redemptions Rise to About $6 Billion
Miami and New York’s Crypto CityCoins Meet Quiet Demise
An employee uses a fork lift to move discarded plastic bottles ready for crushing and recycling at the Alternative Waste Solutions factory in the UK.
Tougher EU targets on packaging waste could provide a framework for better global plastics policies.
When UN negotiations over a global agreement on plastic waste convene for a second session this spring, the European Union will bring evidence that it practices what it preaches.
In November, the European Commission proposed sweeping packaging regulations that would require companies selling products in EU countries to make their packaging easier to reuse, recycle or in some cases compost. Takeaway food, hot and cold drinks, wine and other alcohol would have to be provided at least partly in reusable packaging by 2030, and the rules would limit unnecessary empty space in packaging. The EU’s overall goal: to reduce packaging waste by 5% by 2030, compared to 2018 levels, and by 15% by 2040.