Odd Lots

Bloomberg's Joe Weisenthal and Tracy Alloway explore the most interesting topics in finance, markets and economics. Join the conversation every Monday and Thursday.

https://bloomberg.com/podcasts/odd_lots

Eine durchschnittliche Folge dieses Podcasts dauert 42m. Bisher sind 778 Folge(n) erschienen. Alle 3 Tage erscheint eine Folge dieses Podcasts.

Gesamtlänge aller Episoden: 21 days 20 hours 4 minutes

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Ben Smith on the End of an Era for Digital Media

[transcript]


The 2010s saw the rise of a number of digital media startups like BuzzFeed News, Gawker Media, Vice, Business Insider and others who were set to usher in a new era of news consumption, displacing legacy outlets like the New York Times and the Wall Street Journal. Now, by and large, that dream seems to have died. Gawker is gone. BuzzFeed News is closed. Vice has filed for bankruptcy. Insider recently had layoffs...


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 May 12, 2023  49m
 
 

The Fed Hiked Rates Rapidly and Housing Is as Broken as Ever

[transcript]


The Federal Reserve has hiked rates rapidly over the last 18 months, and yet inflation remains surprisingly high. Perhaps what's most surprising is that even in the most rate sensitive area of the economy -- housing -- the surge in mortgage rates hasn't had a significant cooling effect. Prices have barely budged and even the homebuilders have been booming again after a brief dip in late 2022...


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 May 11, 2023  47m
 
 

Inside the Battle for Chips That Will Power Artificial Intelligence

[transcript]


Nobody knows for sure who is going to make all the money when it comes to artificial intelligence. Will it be the incumbent tech giants? Will it be startups? What will the business models look like? It's all up in the air. One thing is clear though — AI requires a lot of computing power and that means demand for semiconductors...


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 May 8, 2023  58m
 
 

Care Work in the United States Has Been Broken for Years

[transcript]


Disruptions caused by the pandemic have revealed deep flaws in our supply chain for physical goods. Certain market failures that have been left to fester for years were suddenly exposed. But some parts of the economy were broken long before the pandemic, particularly anything having to do with care work...


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 May 4, 2023  49m
 
 

The White Oak Shortage That Could Ruin the Bourbon Industry

[transcript]


Some supply chain crises are acute. A bottleneck at the ports. A shortage of semiconductors. These can get fixed, to some extent, with concerted policy choices. But other crises are slower moving and don't have one easy fix. In the coming years, the bourbon supply chain could be under threat, due to a shortage of the specific type of wood used in the barrels made for aging the liquor...


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 May 1, 2023  47m
 
 

Why the Desire to Move Away From the Dollar Is Getting Real

[transcript]


There's been a lot of discussion about the possibility of "de-dollarization," or the idea that the world could move away from using the dollar as the de facto global reserve currency. Some of this desire makes sense...


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 April 27, 2023  38m
 
 

Here Are the Signs of a Slow-Moving Credit Crunch

[transcript]


The big headlines from March's banking crisis have receded and balances at some of the Federal Reserve's emergency lending facilities, like the discount window, are starting to fall. But if you look closely, there are still signs of strain in the depths of the financial system. And of course, there are still plenty of worries about whether deposit outflows from banks will lead to a broader credit crunch that could tip the US economy into recession...


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 April 24, 2023  45m
 
 

Pot Lots Part 3: Righting the Wrongs of the Past

[transcript]


Marijuana has been legalized in a number of places in the US now, but what New York is trying to do with its legal weed market is somewhat unique. Not only is the state trying to use legalized weed to raise tax revenue and create a new industry with lots of new jobs, it’s also trying to use its legalized cannabis market to rectify some of the wrongs of the past...


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 April 20, 2023  33m
 
 

Pot Lots Part 2: The Business of Big Cannabis

[transcript]


In some respects, selling legalized cannabis should be like many other consumer goods business. You make a product people recognize and then sell it to as many of them as possible. But even if attitudes towards pot -- and the laws that govern it -- are changing in the US, there are still a ton of issues facing this new market. In the second episode of this three-part Odd Lots series, we take a closer look at the business of big cannabis...


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 April 20, 2023  22m
 
 

Pot Lots Part 1: Birth of a Marijuana Market

[transcript]


New York City has long been seen as a holy grail for the legal weed industry, with millions of potential customers. And last year New York state started handing out licenses for its first recreational cannabis shops, the culmination of a series of moves that have seen marijuana decriminalized after decades of being illegal...


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 April 20, 2023  22m