The only daily news program focused exclusively on technology, innovation and the future of business hosted by Ed Ludlow from San Francisco and Caroline Hyde in New York.
Bloomberg Chief Washington Correspondent Joe Mathieu delivers insight and analysis on the latest headlines from the White House and Capitol Hill, including conversations with influential lawmakers and key figures in politics and policy.
Series focused on the designers, artists, and craftspeople behind some of the world’s most impressive bespoke creations
Powell Says Fed Can’t Shield Economy From a Debt Default
Powell Holds Fire on Markets Breaking Loose From Fed Control
Fed Traders See Pivot From Rate Hikes to Rate Cuts in Second Half
Key Takeaways From Fed Decision to Raise Rates a Quarter Point
Fed Slows Rate Hikes, Signals Further Increases Are Coming
Rivian Cuts 6% of Workforce, Spares Blue Collar Workers
America Has Come a Long Way From an Early Electric Car Casualty
Meta Sales Beat Expectations as Facebook Grows; Shares Soar
Ecopetrol Mulls Sustainability-Linked Bond From Power Grid Unit
Cyberattack on Software Firm ION Snarls Derivatives Trading
George Santos Met Crypto Millionaires in the Hamptons and Snapped Up Campaign Cash
Bolsonaro’s Son Says His Father Isn’t Fleeing Brazilian Justice
Alleged Usain Bolt Fraudster Asked Him for Loan to Repay Victims
Sales of Brooklyn Luxury Homes Over $10 Million Surge 333%
Why Our Love for Zombie Apocalypse Shows Just Won’t Die
Finnair Retires Duty-Free Trolley as On-Board Shopping Fades
Mapping the World, One Centimeter At a Time
Fed Pivot Is Dead. Long Live the Fed Pirouette.
Is China’s About-Face Real? Better Ask the Chinese
A 3D Printer Isn’t Cool. You Know What’s Cool? A 3D-Printing Factory
Wall Street: We Want Lower Rates. The Fed: Not So Fast
Facebook Won’t Be Trump’s Salvation
After DeSantis Threats, College Board Revises AP African American Studies Course
Pay Transparency Is Spreading as Bills Crop Up From Hawaii to Vermont
Climate Change Gets a Funny New Streaming Show
Gas Stoves Are Back Under Scrutiny With New US Limits Proposed
Where People Are Happiest — and Saddest — in Big Cities
Hochul Wants a Payroll Tax Boost to Fund NYC Subways, Transit
What Should a New Penn Station Look Like?
Texas Bitcoin Miners Face Damage, Higher Power Costs From Ice Storms
Is China Poised to Relax Its Crypto Ban? (Podcast)
Bankrupt Crypto Firm Celsius Says Some Users Can Withdraw Assets
An old control room in the Silmet factory in Sillame.
 Photographer: Peter Kollanyi/Bloomberg
A company in Estonia is building a new plant to try and challenge China’s grip on rare earth magnets, a vital component of electric vehicles.

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On the edge of Sillamae, a town of just over 12,000 people in northeast Estonia, sits a grassy hill with a secret.
It’s here, on the Baltic Sea coast close to the Russian border, where the past is buried. And it’s here, according to one company, where the future lies if Europe wants to loosen China’s grip on the supply of components to industries seen as critical to the continent’s economy.

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