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Feb 1, 2024
02/24
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liz, we are so happy that abigail has been brought home. i want to say to those of you who have been happy with the other hostage families, you have watched their families reunited, i know how hard it must be for you to watch knowing your loved ones are still in places unknown and conditions unknown. we pray for you and we will be waiting to greet you with them someday in the future. just yesterday i was proud to help lead the debate on the house floor on a bipartisan resolution we passed unanimously, demanding the release of the hostages. today is an important opportunity for all of our members to hear these stories and to redouble our efforts to do everything we possibly can to push for the remaining hostages, every single one of them to be released. and for the international committee of the red cross to be admitted to visit the hostages and countries around the world should join in demanding the immediate release of the remaining hostages. i want to mention how outrageous it is the red cross still has not been allowed in to meet with th
liz, we are so happy that abigail has been brought home. i want to say to those of you who have been happy with the other hostage families, you have watched their families reunited, i know how hard it must be for you to watch knowing your loved ones are still in places unknown and conditions unknown. we pray for you and we will be waiting to greet you with them someday in the future. just yesterday i was proud to help lead the debate on the house floor on a bipartisan resolution we passed...
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Jan 31, 2024
01/24
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and he fell on abigail, covering her. they thought that abigail had also been murdered. they locked themselves in a closet for 14 hours. it was a 6 annie 10-year-old reporting to us, and their grandmother was in bulgaria, on a trip to the kibbutz. her grandchildren, a 6 and a 10- year-old, locked in a closet. she asked, why is it dark? they said that hamas terrorists came here and killed our parents and abigail. she made them get out of the closet and show them, thousands of miles away, to show the body of her daughter who was killed. they spent 30 hours before they can actually be taken from this kibbutz. abigail managed to crawl out from under her father's body. there was no opportunity for us to understand. she crawled out from underneath her father's body, with his blood all over her. and they took her in, they locked her in a safe room with a mother, and he went outside, and he did not come back. what we learned, a few days later, was that the witness had seen a mother and children being taken from the kibbutz by hamas terrorists. that was it. we did not know anythi
and he fell on abigail, covering her. they thought that abigail had also been murdered. they locked themselves in a closet for 14 hours. it was a 6 annie 10-year-old reporting to us, and their grandmother was in bulgaria, on a trip to the kibbutz. her grandchildren, a 6 and a 10- year-old, locked in a closet. she asked, why is it dark? they said that hamas terrorists came here and killed our parents and abigail. she made them get out of the closet and show them, thousands of miles away, to show...
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Feb 1, 2024
02/24
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abigail did not come home to her parents. abigail came back to israel. and we are blessed by the miracle of her coming home to israel. but when she got home, her parents, who were both murdered on october 7th by hamas terrorists, were not there to greet her. on october 7th, her mother was gunned down in their home. her brother, michael, her sister was also there. we went outside, where their father was with abigail, who was three. they started to run. a terrorist and him down. he fell on abigail, covering her. the six-year-old and 10-year- old ran. they thought abigail was murdered. they locked themselves in a closet for 14 hours. those 14 hours, we had two people reporting to us. they were a six-year-old and it 10-year-old about what happened that day. their grandmother, was in bulgaria on the trip. she called her grandchildren. it was dark. she said, why is it dark? she knew it was daytime. it was a beautiful day. they said, because there are hamas terrorists here, and they killed our parents. she made them get out of the closet to show her. thousands
abigail did not come home to her parents. abigail came back to israel. and we are blessed by the miracle of her coming home to israel. but when she got home, her parents, who were both murdered on october 7th by hamas terrorists, were not there to greet her. on october 7th, her mother was gunned down in their home. her brother, michael, her sister was also there. we went outside, where their father was with abigail, who was three. they started to run. a terrorist and him down. he fell on...
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Apr 22, 2024
04/24
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abigail 34%. microsoft decent relative to the single digits for many quarters for a lot of big tech companies at 16.1%. take a look at tesla. the stock is down more than 40% on the year. earnings are expected to decline by 29%. we have news coming out the company has decided to disband a newly created marketing unit for the purposes of ads. now that unit is no longer around. tesla deeply and cost-cutting mode. we will be waiting for more on that on tomorrow's earnings call. katie: abigail doolittle, thank you so much. regulation for stablecoin is getting a fresh push in congress. it may not be enough to address national security concerns. tim massad joins us next. this is bloomberg. ♪ how am i going to find a doctor when i'm hallucinating? what about zocdoc? so many options. yeah, and dr. xichun even takes your sketchy insurance. xi-chun, xi-chun, xi-chun! you've got more options than you know. book now. abigail: this is bloomberg markets. i am abigail doolittle. your looking at a live shot of t
abigail 34%. microsoft decent relative to the single digits for many quarters for a lot of big tech companies at 16.1%. take a look at tesla. the stock is down more than 40% on the year. earnings are expected to decline by 29%. we have news coming out the company has decided to disband a newly created marketing unit for the purposes of ads. now that unit is no longer around. tesla deeply and cost-cutting mode. we will be waiting for more on that on tomorrow's earnings call. katie: abigail...
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Mar 31, 2024
03/24
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what would the tutor abigail say? >> there is something we need to talk about. >> when simon heard text messages were in question, she knew why detectives were there. the pupil of hers. >> do you know what i am talking about? >> i try to help him turn his life around. >> when the subject turned to the specifics of the relationship with the detective felt was outlined in those photos and text messages. >> he calls you baby girl and you call him baby boy, do you think that is appropriate? >> i care so much for him, do not know what to say about it. >> who initiated it? >> we never had sex. >> i know you you had sex, i can read the text messages and he told me. that is not in question, i want to know who initiated it. >> i am not answering that. i do not know what your definition is. >> her response was i do not know what your definition of sex is. >> that she tell you what her definition was? >> she ended the interview. >> the detective confiscated abby's iphone and later that day the diocese of grand rapids fired her f
what would the tutor abigail say? >> there is something we need to talk about. >> when simon heard text messages were in question, she knew why detectives were there. the pupil of hers. >> do you know what i am talking about? >> i try to help him turn his life around. >> when the subject turned to the specifics of the relationship with the detective felt was outlined in those photos and text messages. >> he calls you baby girl and you call him baby boy, do...
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Apr 17, 2024
04/24
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abigail: office and retail is problematic. another portion of your business which is important in new york city is the affordable housing and transitional housing. i know that is becoming a larger part of your business. it is a real collaboration between private and public. martin: there is an endless amount of demand for affordable housing. when i say affordable i mean deep affordable, not workhorse -- workforce housing. we need the budget for new york to be able to facilitate the development for larger multifamily housing that helps support the affordable space. transitional falls within the same range. there is a need for transitional housing in new york and across the usa. it is really important to be able to work together with government agencies and the private sector to solve that problem. abigail: very quickly, your business is also in texas, florida and north carolina. is not just a result of the pandemic or were you already there and you planned to expand? martin: we have been focusing on those markets for the last t
abigail: office and retail is problematic. another portion of your business which is important in new york city is the affordable housing and transitional housing. i know that is becoming a larger part of your business. it is a real collaboration between private and public. martin: there is an endless amount of demand for affordable housing. when i say affordable i mean deep affordable, not workhorse -- workforce housing. we need the budget for new york to be able to facilitate the development...
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Feb 11, 2024
02/24
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abigail eventually prevailed, not surprisingly, and james was educated after abigail. the next first lady, to show any interest in civil rights and equality for african-americans was mary lincoln, who had come from a slaveholding family that some of her family fought for the south. but mary saw the horrors of slavery, and many of her family members did free their enslaved workers. mary seamstress elizabeth keckley was a free african american and she informed mary of the plight of many of the former enslaved workers who were fleeing to the north during the civil war and that they were living in poverty. they were starving. and mary personally gave hundreds of dollars of her own money to those individuals to keep them fed and clothed. and she also wrote letters on behalf of some of these freed slaves for government positions, including for elizabeth keckley. between the civil war and eleanor roosevelt, who really was the first lady who took so many stances on this issue, there was lucy hayes, who you just heard about in a recent op ed white house history happy hour. lizz
abigail eventually prevailed, not surprisingly, and james was educated after abigail. the next first lady, to show any interest in civil rights and equality for african-americans was mary lincoln, who had come from a slaveholding family that some of her family fought for the south. but mary saw the horrors of slavery, and many of her family members did free their enslaved workers. mary seamstress elizabeth keckley was a free african american and she informed mary of the plight of many of the...
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May 27, 2024
05/24
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we spoke to a 13-year-old from aylesbury, abigail. this could applyj aylesbury, abigail. this could apply to her. she says that a lot of people are confused by it. also it scares a lot of them and they worry they are going into another war. it hasn't been very well communicated. the policy hasn't been well communicated. i will communicate it again and that what this is about is giving young people the opportunity to work in their local areas and to benefit society, civic society and make sure that all of us in this country together are all contributing to the general well—being of our areas. that is it. we are hoping that by working with charities or education bodies, or health bodies or whatever it baby, that career path, life skills, resilience, all of these things which are really important and somebodymy development as they go through their teams will be by this experience. i think people will really, really enjoy being even further embedded in their local areas. i further embedded in their local areas. ., further embedded in their local areas. . , ., , . areas. i w
we spoke to a 13-year-old from aylesbury, abigail. this could applyj aylesbury, abigail. this could apply to her. she says that a lot of people are confused by it. also it scares a lot of them and they worry they are going into another war. it hasn't been very well communicated. the policy hasn't been well communicated. i will communicate it again and that what this is about is giving young people the opportunity to work in their local areas and to benefit society, civic society and make sure...
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Mar 23, 2024
03/24
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abigail, madre de 2 niñas, pagó 3.000 , asegura. no cabía de felicidad, la cual dice no le duró mucho, pues asegura su abogado no le asistió, por lo que abigail decidió pedir una segunda opinión sobre su caso de inmigración. en casos como este. de acuerdo a la abogada valdez clayton, los inmigrantes tienen todo el derecho de consultar con otro abogado y asegurarse que su caso de inmigración sirva en proceso. cualquier abogado. tenemos licencia. podemos repasar el caso, decirle mira, todo está bien. ya vimos todo. ya lo ya se registró con inmigración. o si algo está mal, poner en alerta. y es lo mejor que hizo abigail. ellas vio la señales y dijo. quiero una segunda opinión. y efectivamente , nada se había hecho en 2 años. abigail corre el riesgo de que su caso de violencia doméstica para solicitar una visa ya no fuera válido. según la abogada. sí, porque ya no es urgente, ya no es reciente, ya no hay peligro hacia ella. este entre más años pasa y pasa y por eso es que le están dando la visa u para que ella coop
abigail, madre de 2 niñas, pagó 3.000 , asegura. no cabía de felicidad, la cual dice no le duró mucho, pues asegura su abogado no le asistió, por lo que abigail decidió pedir una segunda opinión sobre su caso de inmigración. en casos como este. de acuerdo a la abogada valdez clayton, los inmigrantes tienen todo el derecho de consultar con otro abogado y asegurarse que su caso de inmigración sirva en proceso. cualquier abogado. tenemos licencia. podemos repasar el caso, decirle mira,...
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Feb 15, 2024
02/24
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abigail: it is bit of a mixed bag here. take a look at shake shack, heading to its best day since march of 2020. gaddy is down 15%. as far as what is going right for crocs and shake shack. they had a record year. they exceeded earnings expectations right across the board. as for shake shack, they returned to better profitability but their operating margin was 20% and store growth outlook is pleasing to investors. let's take a look at yeti because demand is cooling for the yeti containers we all use. consumers, the sticker is pretty shocking. you're can i really have to want that high quality and consumers are shunning the higher price. plus, their forecast fell short and you can see here, revenues are pretty lumpy and the fourth quarter. sonali: coming up, we will dig further into retail. a big day for the consumer. stick with us, this is bloomberg. ♪ were you worried the wedding would be too much? nahhhh... (inner monologue) another destination wedding?? why can't they use my backyard!! with empower, we get all of our fi
abigail: it is bit of a mixed bag here. take a look at shake shack, heading to its best day since march of 2020. gaddy is down 15%. as far as what is going right for crocs and shake shack. they had a record year. they exceeded earnings expectations right across the board. as for shake shack, they returned to better profitability but their operating margin was 20% and store growth outlook is pleasing to investors. let's take a look at yeti because demand is cooling for the yeti containers we all...
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Mar 20, 2024
03/24
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abigail: it is doing a-ok. this has been one of the big paradoxes since the pandemic when would prices get so high consumers would back away. what we are looking at here is the s&p 1500 composite index up 20%. the apparel index in white outperforming a little bit of a dip this year having to do with that hot cpi number and more of an investor call there as opposed to consumers. you can see overall very well supported. if we go under the hood just a little bit and we adjust retail sales for inflation we will see it comes down to earth a little bit but is still very healthy. what we are looking at retail sales nominal. up 29% -- adjusted for inflation. white is nominal. up 51% over the last five years or so. again the retail consumer doing very well. you can see the big pandemic dip but up and away. if we look at employees in the manufacturing of apparel, not surprising given the fact the manufacturing sector has gone down just 20, 25 years ago we had 800 thousand workers in the manufacturing industry now just a
abigail: it is doing a-ok. this has been one of the big paradoxes since the pandemic when would prices get so high consumers would back away. what we are looking at here is the s&p 1500 composite index up 20%. the apparel index in white outperforming a little bit of a dip this year having to do with that hot cpi number and more of an investor call there as opposed to consumers. you can see overall very well supported. if we go under the hood just a little bit and we adjust retail sales for...
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May 1, 2024
05/24
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we are joined by abigail doolittle. abigail: if we look at the shares of eli lilly and novo nordisk the huge gains over the last few years. novo nordisk up 200%. eli lilly up more than 300%. not as much for astrazeneca. pfizer is down although they did put up a good quarter of guidance, but over the last three years that stock underperforming. one area of potential growth in the future for these stocks be medicare advantage. right now it's not covered but the fda did approve will go ovi to improve the risk of heart attacks and stroke in overweight people and this could clear the path for approval from medicare for at least will go ovi and maybe the other loss drugs. take a look at the number of people this could bring to these drugs potentially in 2020 4 million people are expected to be enrolled in medicare advantage and the numbers only go in the right direction. let's take a look at those stocks in perspective once again here we have the s&p 500 and the health care index both higher over the last three years. take a
we are joined by abigail doolittle. abigail: if we look at the shares of eli lilly and novo nordisk the huge gains over the last few years. novo nordisk up 200%. eli lilly up more than 300%. not as much for astrazeneca. pfizer is down although they did put up a good quarter of guidance, but over the last three years that stock underperforming. one area of potential growth in the future for these stocks be medicare advantage. right now it's not covered but the fda did approve will go ovi to...
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Feb 13, 2024
02/24
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abigail doolittle has more. abigail: this is what triggered the selloff and brought back a positive -- possible crisis. a strong word. some sort of crisis for regional banks and commercial banks, commercial real estate. they hold about 80% of those loans. money centered banks, 20%. over the last year, the big banks are higher. these regional banks are lower. as for the specific pressures we are facing relative to the regional banks in the commercial real estate area, values are depressed especially for areas like office and some retail. low occupancy, rising rates. about $1.5 trillion is due by the end of 2025 and regional banks hold about 80% of that. the question is will the loans go bad. there are other sources of funding. there is probably more room for the market but for the regional banks, certainly tough. >> for more on challenges facing the property market is ran eliasaf, northwind group founding and managing partner, a private equity firm with about $3 billion in assets. we were talking about this idea
abigail doolittle has more. abigail: this is what triggered the selloff and brought back a positive -- possible crisis. a strong word. some sort of crisis for regional banks and commercial banks, commercial real estate. they hold about 80% of those loans. money centered banks, 20%. over the last year, the big banks are higher. these regional banks are lower. as for the specific pressures we are facing relative to the regional banks in the commercial real estate area, values are depressed...
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Feb 23, 2024
02/24
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abigail: speaking of easy money, we saw the hot cpi, ppi, pce next week. it seems traders are thinking the fed will not cut quite as quickly. they might hike in the future. that could be a real inflection point or game changer. what are you seeing? i know you love to take a look at bonds, treasuries, and yields. do you think we are going to be higher for longer at this point? >> that seems to be the consensus. markets get things wrong all the time. and the fed gets things wrong. treasuries are very difficult trade. treasuries used to be a boring market. there used to be grabbing and picking at straws to find something to talk about. the last couple of years have been the opposite. i think we are going back to boring treasury markets where things trade logically. i don't know what the fed is going to do, the yields are relatively attractive. if you look at dividend yields versus the s&p and 10-year note. like i said, i think stocks can be frothy. if that is the case, treasuries are a good place to be. seasonal low is due in treasuries. and the chart looks g
abigail: speaking of easy money, we saw the hot cpi, ppi, pce next week. it seems traders are thinking the fed will not cut quite as quickly. they might hike in the future. that could be a real inflection point or game changer. what are you seeing? i know you love to take a look at bonds, treasuries, and yields. do you think we are going to be higher for longer at this point? >> that seems to be the consensus. markets get things wrong all the time. and the fed gets things wrong....
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May 9, 2024
05/24
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bob fordi and abigail doolittle. coming up, we are going to take you live to the bloomberg technology summit with we work co-founder adam neumann. a lot going on in the real work -- the we work world. we are going to ask him all about it. that is up next. this is bloomberg. ♪ her uncle's unhappy. i'm sensing an underlying issue. it's t-mobile. it started when we tried to get him under a new plan. but they they unexpectedly unraveled their “price lock” guarantee. which has made him, a bit... unruly. you called yourself the “un-carrier”. you sing about “price lock” on those commercials. “the price lock, the price lock...” so, if you could change the price, change the name! it's not a lock, i know a lock. so how can we undo the damage? we could all unsubscribe and switch to xfinity. their connection is unreal. and we could all un-experience this whole session. okay, that's uncalled for. sonali: we are going to get a check on the markets with abigail doolittle because we do have an interesting move in b
bob fordi and abigail doolittle. coming up, we are going to take you live to the bloomberg technology summit with we work co-founder adam neumann. a lot going on in the real work -- the we work world. we are going to ask him all about it. that is up next. this is bloomberg. ♪ her uncle's unhappy. i'm sensing an underlying issue. it's t-mobile. it started when we tried to get him under a new plan. but they they unexpectedly unraveled their “price lock” guarantee. which has made him, a...
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Apr 4, 2024
04/24
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abigail: they do not. i have been hearing from sources and you told me earlier that banks will not let a lot of these properties go into default so they will work it out. we have been hearing from other sources that pc mbs market, they are not lending on commercial real estate basis. are you seeing and experiencing this? michael: it has opened up. the problem is if somebody is refinancing a loan that if rates were 3% and today they are 5.5 or six there is only -- there is no way to do that without a big injection of capital. there are loans available at valuations not driven by bad real estate or low rent, rent is higher. classe has gone up. -- class a has gone up and cap rates have gone up. the cmbs market is alive but limited, but the valuations are lower. that is why we are not seeing the same amount in those markets. abigail: for financing to return to what it had been, does that take the fed cutting rates, is that in their calculus of why they would cut rates while the economy was healthy and some are
abigail: they do not. i have been hearing from sources and you told me earlier that banks will not let a lot of these properties go into default so they will work it out. we have been hearing from other sources that pc mbs market, they are not lending on commercial real estate basis. are you seeing and experiencing this? michael: it has opened up. the problem is if somebody is refinancing a loan that if rates were 3% and today they are 5.5 or six there is only -- there is no way to do that...
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Apr 30, 2024
04/24
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we will do that with abigail doolittle. abigail: let's check in on the bloomberg agricultural index over the last month and a half or so and you can see there is a solid gain, up 5.4%. if we take a look on the year, a different picture, so those are some of the challenges on the year, some of the spot price is being down. if we turn to some of the stocks associated with agriculture we will see one on the year is up nearly 15%. scott's on the other hand -- scotts on the other hand is up, the lawn company. i don't know exactly that is the agricultural company we are talking about entirely today. but cnh and fmc down. a little bit of a mixed picture here, but where we have a very clear picture, coco on the year of course, a record rally. you have interviewed people around it. we have seen a big decline. the last few days, the worst decline on record going back to 1960. the last two days, down 27%. some liquidity causing the traders to exit and cocoa on this is tumbling. katie: thanks to abigail doolittle. joining us now is the
we will do that with abigail doolittle. abigail: let's check in on the bloomberg agricultural index over the last month and a half or so and you can see there is a solid gain, up 5.4%. if we take a look on the year, a different picture, so those are some of the challenges on the year, some of the spot price is being down. if we turn to some of the stocks associated with agriculture we will see one on the year is up nearly 15%. scott's on the other hand -- scotts on the other hand is up, the...
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Apr 8, 2024
04/24
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patrick clark and abigail doolittle joined me to discuss what is going on to the world of blackstone and real estate. if you think about how the last year has gone, how do you put this into context about what we have seen in the last year and are things changing? patrick: they are changing because blackstone is changing its behavior and when blackstone starts buying come of the market takes note. you heard john gray's say if you wait too long you might miss the buying opportunity and once interest rates start coming down everyone expects there will be a huge rush to deploy capital. prices are going to get lifted up by that and blackstone wants to be ahead of that. shelley: you've see the -- sonali: i'm interested in how this is lifting more boats. patrick: we have a lot of other -- abigail: we have a lot of other multifamily reits across the board. to your point, in terms of blackstone and john gray saying they are getting into real estate, this is well telegraphed. kkr, a lot of the other big players in this space have been talking about the idea of raising money for the opportunity
patrick clark and abigail doolittle joined me to discuss what is going on to the world of blackstone and real estate. if you think about how the last year has gone, how do you put this into context about what we have seen in the last year and are things changing? patrick: they are changing because blackstone is changing its behavior and when blackstone starts buying come of the market takes note. you heard john gray's say if you wait too long you might miss the buying opportunity and once...
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Apr 9, 2024
04/24
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avalarahhh ahhh abigail: this is "bloomberg markets." i'm abigail doolittle. looking up in zabul room. tom vilsack, secretary of agriculture, joins bloomberg tv 12:30 new york time. this is bloomberg. ♪ katie: it's time for our daily "wall street week" conversation. alternative investment are having their time in the spotlight as investors search for yield and liquidity. how should investors be balancing the risk? christian olson is head of the alternative markets group at goldman sachs, along with david westin. we are looking forward to this. david: they are in the spotlight can it is not as if we don't know the goods. there is a lot of talk about alternatives and money flowing in alternatives. why now should we talk about putting more money into alternatives, and who should talk about it? >> couple different questions there. i spent the last 25-plus years at the intersection of wealth management and alternative investments, and it has never been more interesting. if you step back and look at what has happened to the private investment world, you are gone f
avalarahhh ahhh abigail: this is "bloomberg markets." i'm abigail doolittle. looking up in zabul room. tom vilsack, secretary of agriculture, joins bloomberg tv 12:30 new york time. this is bloomberg. ♪ katie: it's time for our daily "wall street week" conversation. alternative investment are having their time in the spotlight as investors search for yield and liquidity. how should investors be balancing the risk? christian olson is head of the alternative markets group at...
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Apr 14, 2024
04/24
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pleasure to be here to introduce you to abigail. i want to cover three basic things in this conversation. okay? okay. now you got. describe the problem that you write about in bad therapy. what is it? how got here. and maybe how we can get out. so what was the spark that? started this book and tell us a couple the most surprising things discovered. sure it's. it's great to be here. you know, i'm crazy about city journal and the manhattan institute. always a joy to write for them. and and, of course, to be here with one of my absolute heroes emily coffee. it's just a great. so thank you so book. they always sort of pair these things in the press, you know, and but the book in some ways is not very surprising. right? the book that anything that is power ful, any intervention that is powerful all that is efficacious can help. it can also necessarily harm. right. that's true of any intervention. now, how did i get to. so so that's the claim. the therapeutic interventions kids are getting. how did i get here? so with the last book, i too
pleasure to be here to introduce you to abigail. i want to cover three basic things in this conversation. okay? okay. now you got. describe the problem that you write about in bad therapy. what is it? how got here. and maybe how we can get out. so what was the spark that? started this book and tell us a couple the most surprising things discovered. sure it's. it's great to be here. you know, i'm crazy about city journal and the manhattan institute. always a joy to write for them. and and, of...
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Mar 15, 2024
03/24
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BLOOMBERG
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joining us now is abigail doolittle. abigail: we do have the stock down on this report. they did a preannouncement in february but the stock up 50% from the time. some of those gains are coming off today relative to what they reported. the outlook is seen a little bit light but most in the list are saying it's conservative. that's good news. for the opportunity ahead for this electric vehicle charging station company, take a look at this work on electric vehicles and growth expected. if we bring ourselves to current times, 2020 2, 20 23, turning 24 were looking at 17 million vehicles potentially. a big marketing opportunity there and maybe the outlook will prove conservative. katie: bloomberg's abigail doolittle and for more on the ep landscape we are joined by brenda jones the ceo of blink charging. let's talk about that outlook you are targeting 165-170 million for 2024 compared to the 170 million expected by analysts. how did you get to the outlook? brendan: looking at and see trends, our previous performance in the growth rate moving forward through next year. the u.
joining us now is abigail doolittle. abigail: we do have the stock down on this report. they did a preannouncement in february but the stock up 50% from the time. some of those gains are coming off today relative to what they reported. the outlook is seen a little bit light but most in the list are saying it's conservative. that's good news. for the opportunity ahead for this electric vehicle charging station company, take a look at this work on electric vehicles and growth expected. if we...