Insight and analysis of top stories from our award winning magazine "Bloomberg Businessweek".
Climate change is increasingly threatening cities with catastrophic flooding. Many are now looking to Rotterdam, and its long history of innovation when it comes to holding water at bay.
Why Margin Calls and Bot Liquidations Are Roiling Crypto
UK Petrol Prices: The Great Outsourcing Trend That Caused This
China Electric-Vehicle Stocks Are All the Rage, Trouncing Tesla
Blackstone-Led Group Provides $5 Billion of Debt for Zendesk
Roe Ruling Discussions Turn Contentious Inside Tech Giants
Xi to Attend Hong Kong Anniversary Event, Lee’s Swearing-In
Ex-Colombian Finance Chief Ocampo Joins Petro’s Team of Advisers
Tourmaline Surge Propels Mike Rose’s Stake Past C$1 Billion
Billionaires Bill Gates, George Soros Slam Supreme Court’s Abortion Decision
Carnival Shares Cruise Higher on Gains in Revenue, Bookings
Disney to Keep Formula One TV Rights at a 1,500% Premium
Overturning Roe Is Just the Start of the Shocks
Can Companies Still Cover Abortion Travel Costs?
Ending Roe Is Institutional Suicide for Supreme Court
Why You Should Quit Your Job After 10 Years
A Sci-Fi Novel’s Eerily Accurate Predictions About Today’s Tech
The NSA Is Funding Summer Camps to Teach Kids to Be Cyber Pros
How Green Became the International Color of Abortion Rights
Ghislaine Maxwell Seeks to Bar Some Accusers From Sentencing
What Happens When Women Get Illegal Abortions in Post-Roe America
Singapore's Rich Face Delays and High Prices for New Luxury EVs
Dutch to Cut Amsterdam Airport’s Capacity Over Noise Pollution
Amid a Weekend of Demonstrations, Asian Americans Will Have Their First National Rally
Local Officials Beef Up Abortion Sanctuary Cities
Sweltering Cities Can’t Keep Enough Swimming Pools Open
Thiel-backed Bitpanda Cuts Hundreds of Jobs on Crypto Tumult
Almost $4 Billion in Bitcoin Miner Loans Are Coming Under Stress
Ukraine Is Fighting the First War Funded by Crypto Philanthropy
When a top Biden administration official was in Cape Town for a mining conference last month, he heard from a number of African nations desperate for foreign investment to help dig up critical minerals like lithium, manganese and cobalt.
At the same time, Under Secretary of State Jose Fernandez said, mining companies told him that they were reluctant to invest in some key resource-rich countries because of poor governance standards and a lack of transparency.