Your Evening Briefing
Your Evening Briefing
(Bloomberg) --
Canada prepares a combination of quotas and tariffs and the U.S. presses allies to end all imports of Iranian oil by November. Amid the chaos, bank stocks hit a record—for losses.
Here are today's top stories
The U.S. Supreme Court upheld President Donald Trump’s travel ban against mostly Muslim majority nations, giving him a victory on the controversy that's helped define his presidency.
Special Counsel Robert Mueller is accelerating the criminal probe of possible collusion between Trump's campaign and Russia with an eye toward conclusions—and possible indictments—by fall.
Trump accused Harley-Davidson of using new tariffs on trade as cover for an existing plan to shift some production abroad and threatened an unspecified "big tax" on bikes imported to the U.S.
Every winter, apiarists rent their hives to farmers in California, attracting the attention of very specialized thieves. From Bloomberg Businessweek's Heist issue: How to steal 50 million bees.
High-deductible health insurance plans that put patients on the hook for thousands of dollars are widespread, but some employers are beginning to have second thoughts.
Although Tesla is averse to publicizing management figures besides Elon Musk, he doesn't work alone. Here's the rest of the team of the embattled electric carmaker.
What's Joe Weisenthal thinking? The Bloomberg news director says it's hard to know what the future holds, so your best bet is to figure out what the market is saying at this very moment. Right now, the answer isn't good.
What you'll need to know tomorrow
- Bank of America was sued over a $102 million Ponzi scheme.
- Facebook paid $1 billion for Instagram in 2012. Now it could be worth $100 billion.
- Even Swedes are beginning to question the welfare state.
- Here's where Americans made the most money selling homes last year.
- Toyota thinks millennials will want to buy its internet-ready Corolla.
- Wall Street's newest hot commodity is a $185 sandwich.
- Fine art is easy to steal but impossible to sell.
What you'll want to read tonight
Transoceanic business-class tickets top $10,000 in some cases. But if you have airline miles or credit-card points that transfer to frequent-flier programs, they’re bookable for less than the cost of a coach seat. Here’s how to do just that for the best business-class cabins in the skies.
©2018 Bloomberg L.P.