789 Folgen

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

Odd Lots Bloomberg

    • Wirtschaft
    • 4,6 • 32 Bewertungen

Anhören in Apple Podcasts
Erfordert ein Abo und macOS 11.4 (oder neuer)

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

Anhören in Apple Podcasts
Erfordert ein Abo und macOS 11.4 (oder neuer)

    Lots More With Luke Kawa on Memestock Mania 2.0

    Lots More With Luke Kawa on Memestock Mania 2.0

    Remember GameStop? The poster-child for 2021's memestock mania recently surged almost 5x in a matter of days — and it was all catalyzed by a few tweets from Keith Gill, aka "Roaring Kitty." So what's going on? How similar and how different was this move to what captivated the world's attention three years ago? On this episode of Lots More, we speak with Luke Kawa, markets editor at Sherwood Media, who was one of the first to chronicle the world of WallStreetBets and memestocks for Bloomberg News. He breaks down what we just saw and the lessons we can take away from it.
    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

    • 29 Min.
    How a DOJ Economist Approaches Antitrust in America

    How a DOJ Economist Approaches Antitrust in America

    The Department of Justice and the Federal Trade Commission have taken an invigorated approach to antitrust under the Biden administration, targeting companies for labor issues like non-competes, in addition to looking at more traditional measures of anti-competitive behavior, like higher pricing. But how does an economist examine the impact of monopoly practices on the overall economy, or take into account new and different measures of their effects? In this episode, we speak with Ioana Marinescu, principle economist at the DOJ's Antitrust Division, about how she analyzes these thorny issues and what she's learned from specific recent cases, like Activision/Overwatch League, or Penguin Random House’s attempted acquisition of Simon & Schuster.
    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

    • 45 Min.
    Introducing: Big Take Asia

    Introducing: Big Take Asia

    We’re taking The Big Take to Asia. Each week, Bloomberg’s Oanh Ha tells a story from the home of the world's most dynamic economies - and the markets, tycoons and businesses that drive the ever-shifting region. 
    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

    • 1 Min.
    How to Succeed at Multi-Strategy Hedge Funds

    How to Succeed at Multi-Strategy Hedge Funds

    Multi-strategy hedge funds are all the rage right now. But there's also a lot of confusion about what exactly they do, and how the the so-called "pod shops" differ from more traditional hedge funds. In this episode of the podcast, we speak with Giuseppe 'Gappy' Paleologo, a long-time veteran of the space. In addition to writing books about quantitative finance, Gappy was director of risk and quantitative analysis at Citadel and head of enterprise risk at Millennium, among many other jobs. He walks us through what multi-strat traders actually do all day, what makes for a good multi-strat candidate, and how to win in the pod shop game.
    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

    • 48 Min.
    Jeff Currie on Why Copper Is His Highest-Conviction Trade Ever

    Jeff Currie on Why Copper Is His Highest-Conviction Trade Ever

    Copper has long been touted as a big winner from the world's drive towards electrification. All those electric vehicles and new grids need lots of the metal to work. At the same time, since it takes years for new copper mining capacity to actually come on stream, many people expect a long-term shortage of the metal to materialize. But despite all that excitement, copper prices actually fell over the past few years. Now, copper bulls are getting another chance as the metal surges towards a new record. So why didn't the thesis play out before? And what does the mismatch between short-term prices and long-term supply actually mean for the world? In this episode, we speak to Jeff Currie, a long-time copper bull and commodities veteran who's now at Carlyle Group. We talk to him about why copper is his highest-conviction trade ever, plus the outlook for oil and big changes in petrodollars.
    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

    • 41 Min.
    Pierre Andurand Says the World Could Run Out of Cocoa Inventories

    Pierre Andurand Says the World Could Run Out of Cocoa Inventories

    Pierre Andurand made his name trading oil and other energy-related assets, but wild swings in the price of cocoa have recently lured the founder of Andurand Capital Management into a new market. He bet on cocoa earlier this year and saw the trade pay off as the price of the beans surged to a record $12,000 a ton. Prices have since fallen back to around $7,800, but Andurand sees scope for further upside as extreme deficits in the building blocks of chocolate loom. In this episode, we talk about how he entered the cocoa market, how he formed his investment thesis, and potential interest in other soft commodities, like coffee and orange juice. We also talk about copper, where a similar story of structural shortages is now playing out in prices.
    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

    • 45 Min.

Kundenrezensionen

4,6 von 5
32 Bewertungen

32 Bewertungen

lavendergarten ,

Too many great podcasts, too little time - this is my favorite

I came to know Odd Lots with the debate between Perry Mehrling and Zoltan Pozsar, afterwards it became my regular program on the way to work. Absolutely educational, often very entertaining. If you have limited time for podcasts and unlimited interest in economics, corporates, finance, this is the one worth listening.

leonawaang ,

Great topics

This is the very few podcasts in the website which has the ability to talk the semiconductor industry in depth, and introduce the very cutting edge technology in this field. Thank you a lot! Keep going!

htzwolf ,

Prof. Willy Shih

Great episode as most are, thank you. Food for thought: If China plans to produce to be self-sufficient and export, doesn’t that complement America’s historical pattern of producing mostly to meet domestic market needs and then import where there are shortfalls? We are not famous exporters, but never had to be. Maybe the shortfalls are getting to strategically big and so we have to beef up our own production. China may not need those export markets, but it has helped pay for their plans and would be hurt if American demand diminished.

Top‑Podcasts in Wirtschaft

Alles auf Aktien – Die täglichen Finanzen-News
WELT
Handelsblatt Morning Briefing - News aus Wirtschaft, Politik und Finanzen
Teresa Stiens, Christian Rickens und die Handelsblatt Redaktion, Handelsblatt
OHNE AKTIEN WIRD SCHWER - Tägliche Börsen-News
Noah Leidinger, OMR
Kampf der Unternehmen
Wondery
OMR Podcast
Philipp Westermeyer - OMR
Finanzfluss Podcast
Finanzfluss

Das gefällt dir vielleicht auch

Masters in Business
Bloomberg
Money Stuff: The Podcast
Bloomberg
Bloomberg Surveillance
Bloomberg
Capital Allocators – Inside the Institutional Investment Industry
Ted Seides – Allocator and Asset Management Expert
The Meb Faber Show
Meb Faber
The Memo by Howard Marks
Oaktree Capital Management

Mehr von Bloomberg

Bloomberg Surveillance
Bloomberg
Masters in Business
Bloomberg
Bloomberg Businessweek
Bloomberg
Bloomberg Intelligence
Bloomberg
Trillions
Bloomberg
Wall Street Week
Bloomberg