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Beware Of sharks
Charles Geisst is stronger on the history of predatory lending than on the economics.
A Hypercar Made To Measure
The $2.6 million Aston Martin Valkyrie is so precisely structured that buyers must come in for a fitting.
The Once And Future Financial Crisis
The lessons of the 1997 Asian meltdown might have prevented the one in 2008. Will they help China?
Goldman's New Boy Wonder
The CEO is betting that regulation won’t kill off the trading business
Crime And No Punishment
Why do white-collar criminals so often get away with it?
Savile Row Arrives Stateside
Huntsman, a 168-year-old British tailoring institution, sets up shop in New York City
In Congress, It's Do-or- Die Time For The GOP
Delays on the healthcare bill put tax reform by yearend in jeopardy
Welcome to Pride Night
Pro sports leagues fly the rainbow flag, hoping to cultivate a new market. “It totally makes sense that teams are being more proactive”
Trying to Speak India's Language(s)
Amazon is racing Apple and Google to appeal to consumers in local terms.
If America Were A Company Would You Keep This CEO?
In Washington, people struggling to come to terms with all the details of James Comey’s sacking and the claim that Donald Trump asked him to drop the FBI’s investigation into Michael Flynn have reached back to Watergate for comparison.
The Talking Cat And The Peroxide Corporation
Chinese industrial behemoths are acquiring western game studios.What’s going on?
A Good Kind Of Shock
Patients who once relied on heavy narcotics to treat their suffering are turning to costly surgical implants instead
Your Own Private Island
Tropical getaways have gotten so exclusive, you and your partner will be the only people at the resort.
Just A Drift
Shayna Texter wants to teach you about flat-track racing—the most exciting sport you’ve never heard of.
The Boss Who Wants To Kill His Agency
To liberals, Mick Mulvaney is a nightmare. To conservatives, he’s a savior.
The Pressure Rises In Catalonia
Separatists clash with authorities in advance of an Oct. 1 vote on independence
Ginni Rometty CEO, IBM
The leader of America’s oldest tech company talks to Bloomberg Businessweek Editor Megan Murphy about the promise and threat of AI (and Watson), Charlottesville, and being a role model
A Continent Divided
The region is entering an election supercycle in which anti-immigrant populist parties are likely to score substantial gains.
The ABCs Of India's GST
A new consumer tax promises to simplify business.
What Brexit Means For Banks
In the Square Mile, London's financial district ,things may be about to go pear - shaped.
The Toll of Cheap Clothing
Three years after the Rana Plaza disaster, work conditions are still substandard—and garments even cheaper.
What do we want? UBER Union
 A company-funded guild for drivers promises not to strike “This is just them planting something in the ground”.
The Female Libido Pill Is Back
Nothing about this billion-dollar drug’s journey was easy
Bibi's Blues
Buoyed by strong approval ratings, beset by corruption allegations, Benjamin Netanyahu could be heading for his fifth term as Israel’s prime minister—or to court
National Insecurity United State Of America
Global trade operates on trust— and using the loophole of “essential security” erodes the system
Making A Bundle In Virtual Real Estate
Manhattan’s price growth looks tame next to that of Genesis City’s digital market
How Do You Say Deja Vu In Chinese?
Beijing is heading down a questionable path we’ve seen before: Japan’s.
The SLO-MO Economy
Economist Marc Levinson argues that we won’t be replicating the postwar boom anytime soon.
Where Cadillac Is Still Prized
The once-dominant luxury car, fading at home, finds fans in China. “The brand is recognized in China as having long heritage and pedigree”.
Big Meat Braces For A Labor Shortage
Refugees help satisfy the need for low-skilled workers. “It remains a challenge to fully staff the plant”