November 26, 2024

The fast-paced program is the quintessential market close show leading up to the final minutes and seconds before the closing bell on Wall Street with the latest news, data and expert analysis.
Insight and analysis of top stories from our award winning magazine “Bloomberg Businessweek”.
Ramon Abbas perfected a simple internet scam that helped him launder millions of dollars, riches he shamelessly flaunted on Instagram. Better known as @Hushpuppi, the young Nigerian became a fixture among the global elite as fashion houses showered him with gifts. But his fame would ultimately be his downfall
Bank of Canada Plans to Add Outsider to Rate-Setting Council
Covid Test Expired? You May Still Have Time to Use It
Singapore’s Grab Shows Revival Signs as Sales Top Estimates
Peloton Tumbles After Bleak Forecast Casts Doubt on Comeback
Geely Premium EV Brand Zeekr Is Exploring IPO Options, Sources Say
Omicron’s Mutations Impaired Vaccine Effectiveness, CDC Says
Lula Seeks to Win Over Brazil’s Middle-Class Voters as Support Stalls
Hedge Fund Sculptor Calls Founder’s Lawsuit ‘Full of Falsehoods’
Mexico Is Top Google Search for American Vacation-Home Seekers
Chinese Expats Looking for Safety, Luxury Apartments Turn to Ehomie
NFL News Dominates Headlines, Even During the Offseason
Some Free Brokers Are Cheaper Than Others
Don’t Read This! You’ve Read Too Much on Jackson Hole.
Did Congress Really Rebuff the Supreme Court on Climate Rule?
Hope You Enjoyed the Summer Rally
How Deadly Bacteria Spread in a Similac Factory—and Caused the US Formula Shortage
The Future of Shipping Is … Sails?
London Underwriter Wins Swiss Re Suit After Boss Leered at Her
Toronto Shelter Says One-Third of Its Residents Are Students
London Students Pull Ahead in Key Exams, Widening UK’s Education Gap
Desert Flooding Damages Los Angeles to Phoenix Highway
Europe’s Record Heat Wave Will Be Summer Norm by 2035
To Combat Crime, Houston Calls for Mandatory Video Surveillance
Even Schools Flush With Cash Can’t Keep Up With Teacher Shortage
Cities Brace for This Season’s Colliding Climate Disasters
Cboe Is Teaming With Virtu, Jane Street to Build Crypto Business
Crypto Volatility Seen Leading to Purge of ‘Merge Frontrunners’
The Highs and Lows of Being a Bitcoin Maximalist
Netflix Inc.’s kids programming and new movies will stay commercial free when the company introduces its advertising-supported service, according to people familiar with the plans.
Netflix has told partners it won’t run ads during original kids programs, said the people, who asked not to be identified because the company is still working out the details. In addition, some studios that have licensed Netflix the rights to kids programs won’t allow the company to run commercials in them. The company has decided original movies should stay ad-free, at least at first, the people said, which should allay the concerns of top filmmakers.

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