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.
We join a group of filmakers from Germany as they seek out a shy schoolboy in the Philippines who harbors dreams of escaping poverty through surfing. After that we take a look at a unique hotel that offers surfers everywhere the perfect way to sample the waves in comfort, even in remote locations.
Europe Car Sales Slump to Worst June in Decades on Supply Issues
El Al Welcomes ‘Positive’ Saudi Decision to Lift Restrictions
VW’s Battery Unit Faces Supply-Chain Hurdles in Road to IPO
Alibaba Leads Drop in China Tech Shares as Regulatory Fears Grow
VW Risks Flurry of Consumer Claims After EU Top Court Ruling
Sri Lanka’s Lawmakers to Elect New President Within A Week
EU Stalls on Ukraine Aid as Fears Spike of Gas Crisis at Home
Wall Street Texting Habit Sticks Banks With Rare $1 Billion Bill
Supply of US Homes for Sale Rises for First Time in Three Years
The Best Frozen Drinks for Keeping Cool in the London Heat
Impressive Fountain Pens and Pencils to Up Your Epistolary Game
Britain’s Aspiring Leaders Are Far Too Quiet on Brexit
A Tory Dark Horse’s Momentum Draws Fire From the Right
No, BMW, We Shouldn’t Have to Pay Extra to Heat Our Seats
Countries Around the World Scramble to Ease Pressure at the Pump
Taking On Chicago’s Gun Violence With Public-Health Strategies
Ditch the Office, Dude—the #VanLife Commune Is Calling
Allred Urges Voters to Take Abortion Battle to Midterm Elections
NYC Unveils Ferry Fare Plan to Have Poor Pay Less, Tourists More
Texas Sues to Block a Biden Rule on Emergency Abortions
Texas Confident Stressed Grid Will Hold Up Amid Summer Heat
House Passes Crew Mandate Called ‘Gut Punch’ to Offshore Wind
Finance Hub That Hoped to Rival Canary Wharf Ends in Liquidation
NYC, Chicago Waste Millions on Gunshot Detection Technology, Report Says
Want to Be a Better CEO? Live Closer to the Office
Crypto Exchange CoinFlex Set to Allow Limited Withdrawals
NFT Marketplace OpenSea Cuts 20% of Staff as Crypto Job Losses Deepen
Crypto Deal Delay Casts Doubts Over Oldest Thai Bank’s Makeover
Across the globe, farmers are using new seeds, adding irrigation and swapping crops in the race against climate change.
Jody Brown’s ranch in Queensland, Australia.
For Australian cattle farmer Jody Brown, the most chilling evidence of drought is the silence. Trees stand still, the warbling of birds gone. Lizards and emus have long departed, while kangaroo mothers, unable to sustain offspring, kick baby joeys from their pouches, leaving them to perish in the devastating heat.
“You just feel like you’re in some kind of post-apocalyptic scene,” 37-year old Brown said from her family’s ranch in Queensland’s central west. The constant dryness means her cattle herd has dwindled to around 400, down from 1,100 at its peak in 2002, and at times there have been no animals on the land at all. The native grasses, once green sustenance, have disintegrated into grey ash.