Bloomberg's Jonathan Ferro hosts the return of Real Yield. Featuring a round-table includingSchwab's Collin Martin, Skybridge Capital's Troy Gayeski, and Morgan Stanley's Matt Hornbach. (Source: Bloomberg)
Coinbase President and COO Emilie Choi discusses the company's stock price volatility following its IPO. She also talks about Tesla deciding not accepting Bitcoin anymore, the environmental effects of mining cryptocurrencies and government regulation. She speaks with Emily Chang on "Bloomberg Technology." (Source: Bloomberg)
A single tweet from Elon Musk, announcing that Tesla Inc. would stop accepting Bitcoin as a form of payment, wiped hundreds of millions of dollars out of cryptocurrency markets. Some of that has been recovered, namely in Dogecoin, following yet another endorsement from Musk and Coinbase Global Inc. officially bringing Dogecoin onto its platform. But Bitcoin is still down and Square Inc. halted Bitcoin purchases altogether. Bloomberg's Ed Ludlow and Joe Weisenthal report. (Source: Bloomberg)
Singapore plans to close public schools this week and move to home-based learning. Indoor dining at restaurants has been banned and working from home will now be the default. Meanwhile in Taiwan, authorities encouraged people to stay at home over the weekend. Indoor family and social gatherings in Taipei will be limited to five people. Haslinda Amin reports on “Bloomberg Daybreak: Asia.” (Source: Bloomberg)
The wild ride for crypto investors continues after Elon Musk implied that Tesla Inc. has sold or may sell its bitcoin holdings. Bloomberg’s Joanna Ossinger reports on “Bloomberg Daybreak: Asia.” (Source: Bloomberg)
Dogecoin jumped on renewed support from Elon Musk, adding to a volatile week for digital currencies that’s been whipped up largely by the Tesla Inc. chief executive officer himself. Abigail Doolittle breaks down the wild week in crypto. (Source: Bloomberg)
One of the most iconic brands in financial television returns for today's issues and today's world. This edition of Wall Street Week features David Westin's interviews with Dallas Fed President Robert Kaplan, BNY Mellon Wealth Management CEO Catherine Keating, U.S. Energy Secretary Jennifer Granholm, Financial Times Editorial Board Chair Gillian Tett, Aperture Investors Chairman & CEO Peter Kraus, and Former Treasury Secretary Lawrence H. Summers. The conversations highlight the implications of the unexpected jump in CPI, the disruption to oil and gas shipments after a ransomware attack to the Colonial pipeline, and Elon Musk's decision to stop taking Bitcoin payments at Tesla because of the fossil fuels involved in mining Bitcoins.
(Source: Bloomberg)
Novavax Inc. CEO Stan Erck says manufacturing challenges are behind the delay in the company's plan to file for authorization of its Covid-19. He speaks on "Bloomberg Markets: European Close." (Source: Bloomberg)
Health authorities are starting to accept something that’s been argued by many researchers for more than a year: the Coronavirus can spread through the air. The World Health Organization and the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention have tweaked their advice which now calls for an overhaul of ventilation systems. Bloomberg’s Jason Gale reports on “Bloomberg Daybreak: Asia.” (Source: Bloomberg)
Nancy Baxter, head of the Melbourne School of Population and Global Health, discusses the coronavirus pandemic and vaccination rollouts across the world. Global cases passed 162.6 million, with deaths exceeding 3.37 million. Baxter speaks with Paul Allen and Shery Ahn on "Bloomberg Daybreak: Australia." (Source: Bloomberg)
Core Scientific CEO Kevin Turner says Bitcoin is 100% carbon net neutral and blockchain technology is driving the push into renewable energy. He speaks with Bloomberg's Amanda Lang and Alix Steel on "Bloomberg Markets." (Source: Bloomberg)
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