Bloomberg Daybreak: US Edition Podcast Por Bloomberg arte de portada

Bloomberg Daybreak: US Edition

Bloomberg Daybreak: US Edition

De: Bloomberg
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Listen for today's top stories, with context, in just 15 minutes.

Each morning, hosts Nathan Hager and Karen Moskow bring you the latest headlines on US politics, foreign relations, financial markets and global economics. The show is recorded at 5AM ET each weekday, so you get the freshest reporting on the stories that matter. Get informed from Bloomberg's 3,000 journalists and analysts. Listen and subscribe to Bloomberg Daybreak: US Edition.

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Economía Política y Gobierno
Episodios
  • Daybreak Weekend: Delta Earnings, UK Tax Season, China Data
    Apr 3 2026

    Bloomberg Daybreak Weekend with Host Nathan Hager take a look at some of the stories we'll be tracking in the coming week.

    • In the US – a look ahead to earnings for Delta Airlines and a focus on 3 stocks for the week ahead.
    • In the UK – a look ahead to the new tax year in the UK.
    • In Asia – a look ahead to China CPI and PPI data.

    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

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    38 m
  • Daybreak Holiday: Bank Earnings, Taxes and Candy
    Apr 2 2026

    On this special Good Friday Holiday edition of Bloomberg Daybreak, host John Tucker discusses:

    • Big bank earnings with Bloomberg Intelligence Senior US Banks Analyst Herman Chan and Bloomberg Intelligence Financials Analyst Neil Sipes
    • A year after Elon Musk set out to slash jobs at the IRS, the agency is struggling to meet demands amid a busy filing season. For more, we hear from Bloomberg Law Reporter Erin Slowey.
    • Well you may be seeing a little less of the candy this Easter.. That's because sales are projected to drop.. For details, we speak with Bloomberg's Diana Rosero-Pena.

    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

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    37 m
  • Trump Wants Iran 'Back To The Stone Age,' Moon Mission Liftoff
    Apr 2 2026

    Today's top stories, with context, in just 15 minutes.
    On today's podcast:
    1) President Trump finally tried to sell the American public on his Iran war. But his primetime address five weeks into the messy conflict instead underscored the US president’s growing defensive posture, as pressure mounts on global shipping routes, gas prices and his political party. Trump said the US operation was close to completion, in an attempt to reassure a skeptical public. Still, the speech lacked new announcements — most notably a precise timeline for an exit. He also pledged more aggressive actions in the next two to three weeks, including potential strikes on electrical plants. The president also did not present any new arguments or explanations for the war, instead reiterating his desire to destroy Iran’s military and nuclear capabilities. Likewise, there was no concrete plan for reopening the Strait of Hormuz, a vital energy thoroughfare. While he said diplomatic discussions continue, he shared no breakthroughs on ending the conflict. Treasury yields climbed and the dollar pushed higher as Trump’s remarks triggered gains in crude oil. US equity futures retreated.
    2) European allies are skeptical President Trump will actually pull the US out of NATO. But they still fear the president’s renewed threats to do so are eroding the military alliance at a precarious moment. Trump on Wednesday capped mounting US critiques of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization with a suggestion that he was strongly considering leaving the alliance. His comments came after Secretary of State Marco Rubio, typically seen as Washington’s NATO defender, chided the alliance for its “very disappointing” response to the war in Iran. While the rhetoric isn’t particularly novel — Trump and his cohort have long bashed NATO allies as free-loaders who don’t help the US — the president’s latest ire is posing a greater risk to the alliance as his war in Iran deepens and he looks for people to blame, according to officials familiar with discussions among allies.
    3) NASA’s crew of astronauts launched to space and reached a stable orbit, kicking off a landmark journey that will take them closer to the lunar surface than anyone has been in more than 50 years. The initial phase of the 10-day mission to lap the moon, a multibillion-dollar feat about a decade in the making, clears a major hurdle for NASA and its legacy aerospace contractors as the agency works to establish a base on the lunar surface and ultimately venture to Mars. The crew’s Lockheed Martin Corp.-built Orion capsule, stacked on the shoulders of Boeing Co.’s Space Launch System rocket, thundered off the launchpad at 6:35 p.m. local time at Kennedy Space Center in Florida. The rocket system, taller than the Statue of Liberty, reached speeds of around 17,500 miles per hour as it hurtled to space. It blazed a trail of fire and smoke as it climbed and eventually shed its spent side boosters, which provided extra thrust.

    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

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    15 m
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Though informative, by the time the podcast is released, it's old news as I start my day fairly early. This used to be my "go to" morning news feed as I could get a 15 min synopsis and skip the sports. Now, I have to go to the live feed; which is endlessly irritating as they don't have a consolidated news entry and often fill the day with fluff and sports references . I'd rather sit through an hour of a dry BBC documentary. At least I'm guaranteed news at the top of the hour.

Usually a day late.

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