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2023-02-15 15:29:04 By :

Anchored by Anna Edwards and Mark Cudmore, Bloomberg Markets Europe is a fast-paced hour of news and analysis, building towards the drama and excitement of the start of the cash trade across the continent.

Overnight on Wall Street is morning in Europe. Bloomberg Daybreak Europe, anchored live from London, tracks breaking news in Europe and around the world. Markets never sleep, and neither does Bloomberg News. Monitor your investments 24 hours a day, around the clock from around the globe.

The weight of expectation from wearing Brazil's sacred number 9 jersey has devoured many prodigious talents. But now a wunderkind from the favelas of Sao Paulo has accepted the challenge. We chart his rise from the concrete pitches of Jardim Peri to the immaculate surfaces of the Premier League, as he tries to emulate his hero El Fenomeno and win the World Cup.

UK Inflation Falls More Than Expected as Fuel Prices Drop

Glencore to Pay Out $7.1 Billion After Coal Drives Record Profit

Central Bankers in Bunkers Keep Ukraine’s War Economy Afloat

Ex-RBA Chief Criticizes Lowe for Misjudgement of Expectations

Australian Central Bank Chief Parries Critics, Refuses to Quit

Musk Aiming to Find Successor as Twitter CEO Toward End-2023

Zantac’s Maker Kept Quiet About Cancer Risks for 40 Years

ASML Says Ex-Employee in China Misappropriated Chip Data

Indonesia’s Indosat Nearing Towers Deal With Mitratel, Sources Say

Musk Aiming to Find Successor as Twitter CEO Toward End-2023

Sunak Isn’t Considering Backdating Pay Increases for NHS Workers

Hong Kong to Force Broadcasters to Run Patriotic Content on Air

Xi’s Consumer Boom Thwarted by Secret Trades, Debt Misuse

Powell Takes Home the Same Paycheck as the Average Wall Street Associate

Moët Hennessy Buys Château Minuty In Big Bet on Luxury Rosé

In Which Winnie the Pooh Stars in an R-Rated Slasher Movie

Central Banks Dabbling in Crypto Smacks of Mission Creep

Travel Prices Are Soaring. Travelers Don't Care

The OPEC+ Oil Plan for 2023 Brings New Inflationary Risks

Aiming to Be the Next Emirates, Air India Makes Record Jet Buy

Zantac’s Maker Kept Quiet About Cancer Risks for 40 Years

ChatGPT Becomes a New Target for Right-Wing Commentators

Discrimination Is Pushing French Muslim Professionals to Jobs Abroad

UK, US Broke Human-Rights Laws With Island Evictions, HRW Says

How to Power a Plane With Leftover Chinese Hot Pot

China’s Coal Emissions Are a Mystery in Fog of Conflicting Data

Subarctic Sweden Is at the Forefront of a $100 Billion Green Tech Boom

NYPD Tactics Raise Concern of Return to ‘Stop and Frisk’

Caviar and Wagyu Now on Offer at Upscale Japan Vending Machines

Wall Street is Looking Bullish on Crypto (Podcast)

A Closer Look at the Winklevoss Twins and Gemini (Podcast)

Biggest Crypto Staker Warns on DeFi Challenges After SEC’s Kraken Crack Down

An old control room in the Silmet factory in Sillame.

 Photographer: Peter Kollanyi/Bloomberg

A company in Estonia is building a new plant to try and challenge China’s grip on rare earth magnets, a vital component of electric vehicles.

On the edge of Sillamae, a town of just over 12,000 people in northeast Estonia, sits a grassy hill with a secret.

It’s here, on the Baltic Sea coast close to the Russian border, where the past is buried. And it’s here, according to one company, where the future lies if Europe wants to loosen China’s grip on the supply of components to industries seen as critical to the continent’s economy.