Bloomberg Morning Briefing Americas |
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Good morning. Hamas releases all remaining living hostages as Donald Trump arrives in Israel to celebrate the peace deal. US-China trade tensions ease. And how ‘sideways’ succession is reshaping global wealth. Listen to the day’s top stories. -- Marcus Wright and Hellmuth Tromm | |
Markets Snapshot | | Market data as of 05:54 am EST. | View or Create your Watchlist | | Market data may be delayed depending on provider agreements. | | |
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Warner Bros. rebuffed Paramount’s initial takeover approach of about $20 per share as too low, people familiar said. Elsewhere on the corporate front, Jefferies defended its dealings with First Brands Group and said its exposure to the bankrupt auto-parts supplier was small. Javier Milei. Photographer: Tomas Cuesta/Getty Images President Javier Milei’s finance chief said the US Treasury’s backstop of Argentina’s peso is unflinching as the libertarian leader prepares to travel to Washington ahead of a crucial midterm vote. The US “is willing to continue buying pesos and bonds, and all options are on the table,” Economy Minister Luis Caputo told a Buenos Aires-based TV channel. | |
Deep Dive: The US Shutdown, Week Three | |
The US Capitol on Wednesday, Oct. 1, the day the shutdown started. Photographer: Pete Kiehart/Bloomberg Trump said he’s directing the Defense Department to use funds his administration has identified to deliver paychecks to US troops on Oct. 15 despite the ongoing government shutdown. - The military payday had been shaping up as a as a key pressure point in the ongoing standoff between Republicans and Democrats over a stopgap spending measure.
- Trump’s hardball tactic of ordering permanent layoffs has hardened Democrats’ deep distrust of Republicans and risks prolonging the impasse. JD Vance told Fox News that the longer the shutdown goes on, the more significant the permanent layoffs will be.
- More than a quarter of a million federal employees missed scheduled paychecks last week, with another 2 million expected to go without pay as the shutdown enters its third week.
- The shutdown is even starting to put a damper on tourism. Sunday marked the first day that the Smithsonian Institution museums, which include the National Zoo, were closed because of the impasse.
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Signage at a Tricolor dealership in Phoenix on Sept. 24. Photographer: Ash Ponders/Bloomberg Borrower beware: It is, by almost any measure, a golden era for US credit markets. Companies are selling debt at a near record clip and investors are pocketing the best returns in years. But in recent months, a flurry of meltdowns from Tricolor to Saks has exposed cracks in that edifice. | |
Big Take Podcast | | | | |
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Traders on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange. Photographer: Michael Nagle/Bloomberg The US stock market’s meteoric rise has investors wondering if a replay of the dot-com crash is coming, Nir Kaissar writes. But unlike that era, this rally rests on solid earnings—with about 95% of S&P 500 firms expected to boost profit next year. | |
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Our daily word puzzle with a plot twist. Today’s clue is: Where some side swipes occur? Play now! | |
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Renata Kellnerova and Petr Kellner in 2020. She unexpectedly inherited one of the world’s biggest fortunes when her husband died in a helicopter crash in 2021. Photographer: Roman Vondrous/AP Photo 'Sideways' Succession: A growing number of women are taking the reins of vast fortunes after the deaths of their spouses. Their rise is reshaping how global wealth is managed and passed on, from finance to luxury goods. Yet the wealth industry, critics say, still treats these women as peripheral. | |
A Couple More | | | | | |