

Bloomberg Daybreak: Europe Edition
Bloomberg
Bloomberg Daybreak Europe is the daily morning podcast that helps you understand the stories shaping Europe and the world before the day gets going.
Produced in the early hours each weekday, the show delivers fresh reporting, sharp analysis and clear context on politics, business and global markets by 7am London time. From decisions made in Brussels and London to developments across the global economy, Daybreak Europe connects the dots between power, policy and money.
Hosted by Stephen Carroll in Brussels and Caroline Hepker in London, and powered by Bloomberg’s global network of more than 3,000 journalists and analysts, the podcast goes beyond headlines to explain what is changing, why it matters and what could come next.
Trusted by professionals, business leaders and investors, but made for anyone curious about how economics and politics shape everyday life, Bloomberg Daybreak Europe is the essential way to start your morning informed and ahead.
Produced in the early hours each weekday, the show delivers fresh reporting, sharp analysis and clear context on politics, business and global markets by 7am London time. From decisions made in Brussels and London to developments across the global economy, Daybreak Europe connects the dots between power, policy and money.
Hosted by Stephen Carroll in Brussels and Caroline Hepker in London, and powered by Bloomberg’s global network of more than 3,000 journalists and analysts, the podcast goes beyond headlines to explain what is changing, why it matters and what could come next.
Trusted by professionals, business leaders and investors, but made for anyone curious about how economics and politics shape everyday life, Bloomberg Daybreak Europe is the essential way to start your morning informed and ahead.
Episodes
Mentioned books

Mar 11, 2024 • 16min
Biden's Red Line, Super Tuesday for Bonds, and a Brexit Hurdle
Your morning briefing, the business news you need in just 15 minutes. On today's podcast:(1) US President Joe Biden warned Israel against an invasion of the city of Rafah in southern Gaza as cease-fire talks between Israel and Hamas remained deadlocked at the beginning of Ramadan.(2) Job vacancies in England have fallen to their lowest in more than three years, reducing the hope that the UK economy will bounce back strongly from the recession that hit last year.(3) Before the cart, or even the horse, comes something else to put first: the Brexit paperwork. That’s what transporters outside the UK are dealing with as they move racehorses into England for this week’s Cheltenham Festival, one of the richest sports events in Europe.(4) Eight months after raising interest rates to a two-decade high, Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell and his colleagues are moving closer to dialing back their inflation fight.(5) Aramco raised its dividend despite a retreat in energy prices and lower production, a boost for Saudi Arabia as it faces a widening budget deficit. (6) Oppenheimer, the biographical film about the inventor of the atomic bomb, picked up a total of seven Academy Awards, including best picture and best director for Christopher Nolan. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Mar 9, 2024 • 39min
Daybreak Weekend: U.S CPI, UK Real Estate, Asia Tech Earnings
Bloomberg Daybreak Weekend with Tom Busby takes a look at some of the stories we'll be tracking in the coming week. In the US – a preview of U.S CPI and Retail sales data, and a look ahead to earnings from Adobe and Oracle. In the UK - a look ahead to a major real estate conference on the French riveria In Asia – a preview of Hon Hai and CATL earnings.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Mar 8, 2024 • 25min
State of The US President, Sexism in The City, and The Women Running EU's Tech Regulators
Your morning briefing, the business news you need in just 15 minutes. On today's podcast:(1) President Joe Biden sought to breathe new life into his reelection rematch against Donald Trump, delivering a spirited and sharply political State of the Union speech that sparred with Republicans and targeted an opponent he didn’t ever name.(2) Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell suggested the central bank is getting close to the confidence it needs to start lowering interest rates.(3) Over the past decade, data enforcement has exploded in prominence. It's women who run the regulators leading the charge against Big Tech. (4) European Central Bank President Christine Lagarde indicated policymakers may be in a position to lower interest rates in June as fresh projections showed inflation hitting the 2% target in 2025.(5) Banks and financial firms should be banned from using nondisclosure agreements in workplace sexual harassment disputes because they risk silencing victims while protecting perpetrators, British lawmakers have warned. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Mar 7, 2024 • 17min
Budget Impact, 4% Brexit Hit & Wall Street Capital Win
Your morning briefing, the business news you need in just 15 minutes. On today's podcast:(1) Chancellor Jeremy Hunt has handed millions of British workers a £10 billion a year tax cut paid for by stealing Labour's flagship policies and squeezing public services as he drew political battle lines for the upcoming election. (2) Britain's budget watchdog said a hit to the economy from leaving the European Union is unfolding as it expected. The Office for Budget Responsibility says its long-running prediction is "broadly on track" to show a 15% fall in trade and a 4% reduction in the UK economy's potential productivity compared to if the UK had stayed in the EU. (3) Wall Street banks are on the cusp of a sweeping regulatory victory after Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell signaled officials would scale back plans to make them hold more capital. (4) A missile strike on a commercial ship in the Gulf of Aden resulted in the first confirmed deaths of crew members since Houthi militants began a wave of attacks against commercial shipping in one of the world's busiest sea lanes. (5) Deutsche Bank has cut the bonus pool at its investment banking division by more than 10% after a slump in deals and a slowdown in trading last year. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Mar 6, 2024 • 16min
UK Budget Tax Cuts & Trump's Super Tuesday Win
Your morning briefing, the business news you need in just 15 minutes.On today's podcast:(1) Jeremy Hunt plans to put personal tax cuts at the center of his annual budget on Wednesday as he navigates tight public finances to deliver on Conservative demands for a pre-election giveaway to boost the ailing governing party’s standing with voters.(2) President Joe Biden and Republican frontrunner Donald Trump are set for a rematch in a general election race that few Americans are excited about and that Wall Street donors tried in vain to avert.(3) A Citigroup reorganization aimed at streamlining the bank and making it more competitive with its peers has gone swifter than expected, Chief Executive Officer Jane Fraser said, as she set out positive guidance for the year ahead.(4) OpenAI fired back at a lawsuit filed against it by Elon Musk in a blog post Tuesday, using the billionaire’s own emails to show he backed the company’s plans to become a for-profit business and that he insisted it raise “billions” of dollars to be relevant compared with Google.(5) Birmingham City Council has signed off on the largest-ever package of budget cuts by a UK local authority See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Mar 5, 2024 • 23min
Why Britain Isn’t Such a Basket Case Anymore, at Least to Investors
Your morning briefing, the business news you need in just 15 minutes.On today's podcast:(1) There’s a new sense of optimism in the UK as a global investment destination ahead of a general election later this year. A two-month investigation by Bloomberg Radio's Caroline Hepker has many of London's business elite increasingly upbeat about the future of the economy.(2) China set its annual growth target at around 5%, raising expectations for the nation’s top leaders to unleash more stimulus as they try to lift confidence in an economy hampered by a property slump and entrenched deflation.(3) JPMorgan Chase's chief market strategist Marko Kolanovic joins in a chorus of rapidly piling up warnings from Wall Street that are hearkening back to the dot-com boom of the late-1990s, or the post-pandemic mania of 2021, when stock prices quickly ballooned and then burst.(4) A bank group spearheaded by Morgan Stanley held discussions with Elon Musk and his team about refinancing a roughly $12.5 billion debt package that supported the tech billionaire’s take-private of the social media platform X, according to people with knowledge of the matter.(5) The US Supreme Court said Donald Trump can appear on presidential ballots this year, putting an end to efforts nationwide to ban him under a rarely used constitutional provision barring insurrectionists from holding office. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Mar 4, 2024 • 16min
Hunt's Budget Inflation Risk & Germany's Property Bubble
Your morning briefing, the business news you need in just 15 minutes. On today's podcast:(1) UK Chancellor of the Exchequer Jeremy Hunt said his budget will be "prudent" and "responsible," as he tried to temper expectations of Conservative MPs who want eye-catching tax cuts to give their party a pre-election boost. (2) Bond investors are positioning for a potential rise in inflation if Chancellor of the Exchequer Jeremy Hunt cedes to pressure to deliver pre-election giveaways in this week's spring budget. (3) The UK government plans to lower the threshold to qualify as a so-called angel investor in a bid to bolster funding for small- and medium-sized businesses, the Treasury said in a statement. (4) China is set to announce its 2024 growth target and outline its strategy for supporting the slowing economy at the nation's most high-profile annual political gathering this week. (5) US Vice President Kamala Harris has called for a temporary cease-fire between Israel and Hamas as talks drag on over a deal to release hostages taken during the Oct. 7 attacks. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Mar 2, 2024 • 37min
Daybreak Weekend: Jobs Report, Jay Powell Speaks, Government Spending
Bloomberg Daybreak Weekend with Tom Busby takes a look at some of the stories we'll be tracking in the coming week. In the US - Jobs Report, Jay Powell on Capitol Hill and Target earnings In the UK - the government is preparing to present its tax and spending plans for the coming year In Asia - China's top political advisory body and legislature will be gathering for their annual two sessions See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Mar 1, 2024 • 41min
Is There A Bullish Case For Britain?
The UK’s reputation as a global investment destination hit rock bottom last April, when Microsoft President Brad Smith said The European Union was a more attractive place to start a business.Yet 10 months later, A host of FTSE100 CEOs tell us confidence is recovering. And for all the talk of British decline, official figures suggest the UK remains the top investment destination after the US, trumping even China.Our Bloomberg Radio anchor Caroline Hepker has spent the past two months talking to Britain's business elite. Here's what they told her. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Mar 1, 2024 • 17min
Galloway Wins In Rochdale, China Economy & Sticky Inflation
Your morning briefing, the business news you need in just 15 minutes. On today's podcast: (1) Left-wing disrupter George Galloway won a seat in the UK Parliament in a special election that underscored how the Israel-Hamas war has exacerbated community tensions and sowed division across British politics. (2) Scores of Palestinians were killed and injured on Thursday during an outbreak of violence in which Israeli troops opened fire near a convoy of food trucks attempting to deliver humanitarian aid in northern Gaza. (3) China's factory activity shrank for the fifth straight month in February, suggesting weak demand remains an obstacle for the economy. (4) The Federal Reserve's preferred gauge of underlying inflation rose in January at the fastest pace in nearly a year, helping explain policymakers' patient approach to start cutting interest rates. (5) UK retail traffic fell the most since the pandemic due to train strikes, squeezed budgets and one of the wettest Februarys on record, fueling concerns about the strength of the economy. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.


