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2023-02-15 17:07:21 By : Ms. Shaw Wang

Bloomberg Surveillance: Early Edition with Francine Lacqua live from London, bringing insight on global markets and the top business stories of the day.

Overnight on Wall Street is morning in Europe. Bloomberg Daybreak Europe, anchored live from London, tracks breaking news in Europe and around the world. Markets never sleep, and neither does Bloomberg News. Monitor your investments 24 hours a day, around the clock from around the globe.

You've spent a small fortune on the squad, got state-of-the-art facilities and employ a dietician and a psychologist--but today you'll win nothing without an analytics team to crunch the numbers from every aspect of your players' performances.

Barclays Docked Bonus Pool By £500 Million Over Control Issues

Russia’s Dark Tanker Fleet Gets Stretched Sailing Thousands of Miles: Oil Strategy

Norway’s Growth Tops Central Bank View, Adding to Hike Bets

UK Inflation Slows More Than Expected as Fuel Prices Drop

Japan’s Kishida Says Right BOJ Decisions Vital as Markets Change

Australia State Promises New Laws to Prevent Drilling Off Sydney

Zantac’s Maker Kept Quiet About Cancer Risks for 40 Years

Buffett’s Quick $3.7 Billion Sale of TSMC Stock Spooks Investors

Elon Musk Says He May Lead Twitter for Almost Another Year

ASML Says Ex-Employee in China Misappropriated Chip Data

Jordan Sends First Top Envoy to Syria Since 2011 to Discuss Aid

Tax Probe at BBC India Offices Continues in Wake of Modi Film

Xi’s Consumer Boom Thwarted by Secret Trades, Debt Misuse

Powell Takes Home the Same Paycheck as the Average Wall Street Associate

Moët Hennessy Buys Château Minuty In Big Bet on Luxury Rosé

In Which Winnie the Pooh Stars in an R-Rated Slasher Movie

The Creeping Menace of Central Banks' Crypto Dreams

Travel Prices Are Soaring. Travelers Don't Care

The OPEC+ Oil Plan for 2023 Brings New Inflationary Risks

Aiming to Be the Next Emirates, Air India Makes Record Jet Buy

Zantac’s Maker Kept Quiet About Cancer Risks for 40 Years

ChatGPT Becomes a New Target for Right-Wing Commentators

Two 15-Year-Olds Charged With Murder of Brianna Ghey as Police Probe Hate Crime

Discrimination Is Pushing French Muslim Professionals to Jobs Abroad

To Go Climate-Positive, Ikea Needs to Fix Its Furniture Glue

How to Power a Plane With Leftover Chinese Hot Pot

Taking a Brighter Approach to Housing in Johannesburg

Subarctic Sweden Is at the Forefront of a $100 Billion Green Tech Boom

NYPD Tactics Raise Concern of Return to ‘Stop and Frisk’

Wall Street is Looking Bullish on Crypto (Podcast)

A Closer Look at the Winklevoss Twins and Gemini (Podcast)

Biggest Crypto Staker Warns on DeFi Challenges After SEC’s Kraken Crack Down

As the city gets ready to celebrate WorldPride, here are the top spots to imbibe before, during and after the festivities.

At Bar Planet, there’s no shortage of martinis. 

More than half a million people are expected to descend on Sydney in mid-February over the two-plus weeks of WorldPride, an event that’s expected to inject A$112 million ($78 million) into the state economy and provide a much needed boost to the harbor city’s night life.

WorldPride, which includes the 45th anniversary of the renowned Mardi Gras parade, is going to be one of the biggest events the city of 6 million has hosted since Covid-19 restrictions kept residents in their homes—and visitors away from Australia’s shores—for two years.