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.
Street Art pioneer FUTURA started painting his name on walls as a coping mechanism to deal with his struggle around identity. But as he turned a signature into a brand he quickly realized that it could also be a business. And that’s where things got interesting.
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Gradually Then Suddenly, New Questions Confront China
Five Steps to Stop the Nosedive at Credit Suisse
Frederick the Great’s Advice for Ukraine Negotiations
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How McDonald’s Won Russia—and Then Lost It All
There Has Never Been a Better Time for Billionaire Schadenfreude
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LA Pays $20 Million for Black Couple’s Beach Tract Taken in 1924
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Indonesia to Start Crypto Exchange Ahead of Regulatory Shift
FTX’s Collapse Blurs the Future of Blockchain Gaming (Podcast)
Alex Barinka
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TikTok, the viral video-sharing app owned by China’s ByteDance Ltd., said certain employees outside the US can access information from American users, stoking further criticism from lawmakers who have raised alarms about the social network’s data-sharing practices.
The company’s admission came in a letter to nine US senators who accused TikTok and its parent of monitoring US citizens and demanded answers on what’s becoming a familiar line of questioning for the company: Do China-based employees have access to US users’ data? What role do those employees play in shaping TikTok’s algorithm? Is any of that information shared with the Chinese government?