Bloomberg Markets Americas. Live from New York, is focused on bringing you the most important global business and breaking markets news and information as it happens.
Bloomberg Markets live from New York, focused on bringing you the most important global business and breaking markets news and information as it happens.
Meet the scientists trying to reverse aging. While the world wrestles with the coronavirus and climate change, there’s another challenge facing humanity: aging. As we live longer lives, more of our final years are marked by poor health, which means increased suffering and higher healthcare bills. But some scientists believe we might be able to solve this problem, and make later life more enjoyable.
Here’s What Happened in the City of London This Week
US Business Activity Contracts, Matching Lowest Level Since 2020
Bank of Italy Raises Inflation Forecasts on Energy Price Hikes
Fed’s Williams Says Tight Labor Market Warrants Higher Rates
Global Recession Risks Rise as Central Banks Raise Rates
Short Sellers Are Zeroing In on Europe’s Embattled Landlords
Verizon Lost Its Network Superiority — Now It’s Paying the Price
Musk Disables Twitter Spaces After Clash With Journalists
Surprise Corporate Actions by Indian Tech Darlings Spur Scrutiny
Amazon Signs Deal With Games Workshop for Warhammer 40k Films
South Africa Latest: Ramaphosa ANC Conference Opening Disrupted
Hungary Seeks to Speed Ukraine’s EU Membership, Keep Russia Ties
New York Weed Is One Thing That’s Cheaper These Days
Goldman Weighs Up to 4,000 Job Cuts in Potential 8% Pullback
Vatican Returns Parthenon Sculptures to Greece After Centuries
The NFL’s Two Luckiest Teams Will Face Off This Weekend
New Roommate? Why You Should Make Your Adult Kid Pay Rent
The SEC Wants to Upend the Stock Market. Is It Worth It?
Abortion Clinics Shouldn’t Have to Stand Alone
Hollywood Loves Its Never-Ending Blizzard of Cheap Christmas Movies
Seven Takeaways From Businessweek’s Cocaine-Smuggling Cover Story
How a Cocaine-Smuggling Cartel Infiltrated the World’s Biggest Shipping Company
Nobel Prize-Winning Economics Professor Faces Harassment Inquiry
Denmark’s Woman-Run Cabinet Is Nordic Laggard in Gender Equality
US Grid Faces a New Threat as Regulators Balk at Higher Bills
Shutting Huge Copper Project Shows Why Miners Worry About Starting Them
Doctors Take On Gun Violence With Push for Assault-Weapons Ban
Santa Claus, the Spirit of the Mall, Is Back
In New York Neighborhood, Police and Tech Company Flout Privacy Policy, Advocates Say
This Week in Crypto: SBF Arrested (Podcast)
Crypto Firm Amber Raises $300 Million to Tackle Damage From FTX
What Crypto’s Decline Means for the Future of Bitcoin ATMs (Podcast)
Emma Court
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The US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention is expanding charts that doctors use to track kids’ growth and development to include Body Mass Index as high as 60.
The agency said it was making the change “to enable consistent, meaningful tracking” as severe obesity among children increases, to 6.1% of children in 2018 from about 1% in the early 1970s.