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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
Markets Today has everything you need to know as markets open across Europe. With analysis you won't find anywhere else, we break down the biggest stories of the day and speak to top guests who have skin in the game. Hosted by Anna Edwards, Tom Mackenzie and Mark Cudmore.
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.
Breaking Bread is a series aimed at finding common ground across a deeply divided America. Alexander Heffner, journalist and long-time host of PBS's The Open Mind, journeys from Maine to North Carolina and New Mexico to the Dakotas, sitting down for meals and candid conversations with powerful political figures on both sides of the aisle. Focusing on America's shared heritage rather than partisan talking points, Heffner seeks to draw out lawmakers by incentivizing empathy and compromise in pursuit of a new consensus.
Nissan Pledges £2 Billion to Expand UK Electric-Vehicle Hub
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The Revenge of the Zero-Rate World Is Coming
New Zealand Per-Capita Retail Sales Fall to Three-Year Low
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Swisscom’s Fastweb Is Said to Explore Deal for Vodafone Italy
Swisscom’s Fastweb Is Said to Explore Deal for Vodafone Italy
Foxconn Founder Gou Drops Out of Taiwan Presidential Race
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
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Billionaires Eye Renting in London as Interest Rates Dent Buying
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Make noise! A murder and a movie stir Italians to loudly demand an end to violence against women
Hypercar Maker Pagani Says Europe Should Learn From China on EVs
Diamond Rolex, Anyone? This Holiday Season May Call for It
Humanity Needs an OpenAI Board That Will Still Say ‘No’
Palantir's NHS Deal Faces a Trust Deficit
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
Arsenal Outpaces Rivals in Attracting Crowds to Women’s Football
South Africa’s Climate Pact to Channel Money to Coal Belt
COP28 Holds Key to Global Carbon Market That Could Help Improve Offsets
EU to Put Forward Plan for €584 Billion Overhaul of Power Grids
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 majestic Victorian building near Cadogan Square in London’s affluent Chelsea neighborhood. 
These ornate buildings pioneered high-density living for affluent Londoners in the Victorian and Edwardian eras — and their virtues are being rediscovered today. 
(This article is part of Bloomberg CityLab’s ongoing series exploring the iconic home designs that shaped global cities. Read more from the series and sign up to get the next story sent directly to your inbox.)
In the 1870s, a striking change was occurring in the residential habits of London’s elite. After centuries of living close to the ground in houses, Charles Dickens Jr. (son of the famous writer) observed that wealthy residents were starting “to avail themselves of the continental experience … and to adopt the foreign fashion of living in flats.”

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