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Chapter 1: What is the main topic discussed in this episode?
The UK stands apart as a place to do business, not because of one advantage, but many working together. Over 10 trillion pounds in capital, four of the world's top universities, a 10-year industrial strategy in action, its stability with dynamism, global reach with local depth. It all adds up to greater growth. Find out more at business.gov.uk slash growth.
News when you want it with Bloomberg News Now. I'm Dan Schwartzman.
Chapter 2: What are the latest developments in US/Iran nuclear talks?
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has proposed terms for President Trump for a de-escalation deal with Iran ahead of its nuclear talks tomorrow in Switzerland. Israel says the Islamic Republic should not possess enriched material or nuclear enrichment capabilities. Netanyahu also suggesting limiting Iran's range of ballistic missiles.
Meanwhile, President Trump's newly created Board of Peace is expected to meet in Washington this week to talk about rebuilding Gaza. Trump says members will discuss $5 billion worth of commitments, even though some reports estimate construction could cost up to $70 billion.
Axios reports that Defense Secretary Pete Hegsteth is on the verge of cutting business ties with Anthropic and designating the AI company a, quote, supply chain risk, meaning that others wanting to do business with the military would have to cut ties with Anthropic.
The company's CEO wants to ensure its clawed AI model is not used to spy on Americans en masse or used to fire weapons without humans. Anthropic and the Pentagon have held talks for months on the terms under which the military can use the software, with Claude currently the only AI model available in the military's classified systems.
Secretary of State Marco Rubio is making the rounds in Eastern Europe, meeting with Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban in Budapest. While speaking to the press, Rubio was asked about U.S. efforts and Russia's war in Ukraine.
The United States' interest is to see the war end, and we want to do what we can to make it end. We're the only nation on Earth that apparently can get both sides to the table to talk.
Peace talks are expected to continue this week. The stop-off in Hungary follows Rubio's visit to Slovakia and the Munich Security Conference in Germany. But Hungary and Slovakia represent friendly territory for Rubio as he pushes to shore up energy agreements with both countries. There could be a second bidding war for Warner Bros. Discovery.
Its board is reportedly weighing Paramount's new offer, which includes a breakup fee if Warner ends its deal with Netflix and a backstop on Warner's debt financing. Bloomberg's Tony Juszczyk says Netflix could get the short end of the stick here.
The Paramount offer, the most recent one, which they now seem to have taken up, does have some what seem like pretty big incentives, including debt financing and the breakup fee offer. And so that's a new twist here.
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Chapter 3: What terms did Israel propose for de-escalation with Iran?
Right now it's trading around $67,000. The second largest digital token, Ether, is trading close to $2,000. But Bitcoin's tanked more than 40% from its all-time peak in October. And according to data from CoinGecko, the broader crypto market has lost almost $2 trillion in value over that same period. It's led some analysts to question whether prices have found a floor.
Monica Ricks, Bloomberg Radio.
U.S. natural gas tumbling to a four-month low as warmer weather forecasts weigh on heating demands. Futures from March delivery slumped as much as 7.4% in early Asian trading. India is hosting a major artificial intelligence summit this week as it pushes to shape global rules and show its own AI ambitions.
It starts today in New Delhi and brings leaders and tech chiefs together in what organizers are calling the first big AI summit in the global south. India is presenting itself as a bridge between rich countries and developing ones. Markets are closed in the U.S. for the President's Day holiday, but Wall Street will have its eyes on Amazon,
when trading resumes on Tuesday as its stock is riding a nine-day losing streak the longest in nearly two decades, with shares plummeting 18%. Investors are worried about Amazon's artificial intelligence spending plan this year, as the company wants to invest $200 billion on data centers, chips, and other equipment to support its AI ambitions.
Meanwhile, in Europe, the FTSE in London finished up a quarter of a percent, the CAC in Paris closed a tenth of a percent higher, while the DAX in Germany lost close to a half percent. In Asia, the Nikkei in Japan finished down a quarter of a percent. The Hang Seng in Hong Kong ended up a half percent, while China's CSI 300 lost one and a quarter percent. At the Milan Cortina Olympics, the U.S.
women's hockey team knocks off Sweden 5-0 and will play the winner of Canada and Switzerland for the gold medal. Right now, Norway leads the medal count with 27 total. The U.S. has won 17. The U.S. with five gold medals, Norway with 12. That's news when you want it with Bloomberg News Now. I'm Dan Schwartzman and this is Bloomberg.
As a place to do business, the UK stands apart. Not because of a single advantage, but a uniquely powerful combination of many. As one of the world's leading financial centres, the UK puts over £10 trillion to work every day, fuelling innovation across every sector. Home to four of the world's top universities, it provides exceptional talent and breakthrough research.
This sits alongside a clear 10-year industrial strategy, unlocking smarter regulation and making it faster and easier to operate. Stability with dynamism.
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Chapter 4: How is Anthropic's AI technology impacting military contracts?
Global connectivity with local depth. It all adds up to greater growth.
Visit business.gov.uk slash growth. Hello, I'm Stephen Carroll. I'm in Brussels, where many of Europe's biggest decisions get made.
And I'm Caroline Hepke in London. We're the hosts of the Bloomberg Daybreak Europe podcast.
We're up early every weekday, keeping an eye on what's happening across Europe and around the world.
We do it early so the news is fresh, not recycled, and so you know what actually matters as the day gets going.
From Brussels, I'm following the politics, policy and the people shaping the European Union right now.
And from London, I'm looking at what all that means for markets, money and the wider economy.
We've got reporters across Europe and around the globe feeding in as stories break.
So whether it's geopolitics, energy, tech or markets, you're hearing it while it happens.
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Chapter 5: What are the implications of the Pentagon's dispute with Anthropic?
And it fits into your morning.
You can find new episodes of the Bloomberg Daybreak Europe podcast by 7am in Dublin or 8am in Brussels, Berlin and Paris on Apple, Spotify, YouTube or wherever you get your podcasts.