On rising asset prices. Spurring a little of a stock selloff. Well this worry the fed . Share buybackhe days after dan lopes hedge fund bought a big stake in the business. Will this keep the activist investor at bay or spur him on . Hour less than half an away from the start of cash trading. Lets take a look at what the bloomberg is telling us about where we sit right now. At the moment and looks like we are starting off on a negative story. Feeding off what we saw yesterday. I will show you an interesting [inaudible] is outperforming. Uropean forces are down we will see a continuation of what we saw a little bit of yesterday. That was the equity market selloff. Lets move to the gmm. Heres what we can see happening around the world and dress in lines around some of these Asset Classes. The s p 500 down and the dax down. 8 of 1 . That is the bank drop to what we are seeing today. Interestingg some stories developing particularly in the commodities currencies, what is happening with chin
Brexit could make it worse. Good morning. This is bloomberg surveillance and im Francine Lacqua in london. Lets get to your markets. European stocks are down a little bit, dragged down by basic resources. They seem to be cooling off after recent gains, but the single currency is edging higher. Oil is significant because opec and nonopec producers are meeting in abu dhabi, talking about compliance cuts. Government bonds are bixed with the dollar. Meanwhile come over in south africa we need to look at rand. There is a secret ballot vote on jacob zuma, the president. I think we have the results of that voting at 1 00 p. M. U. K. Time. Reporter chinas trade surplus widened for a fifth month in july. It keeps the spotlight on a trade gap President Trump aims to narrow. Japan has recorded a 36th consecutive surplus, beating economist estimates. That was supported by returns on overseas investments and a trade balance the return to positive territory. North korea condemned the latest round of
Any of us or fish or mammals or its in some worms which come from a very Different Branch of the animal kingdom. Thats also interesting to those because those warms cause severe tropical diseases and if you kill all, you are able to kill the diseases, a different story. But yeah, a lot of biology that we dont understand. Why is it so good at jumping from host to host . Is it just because it spreads vertically throughout the population like i talked about with mosquitoes, is it also because its really good at jumping horizonly from one host to another. Maybe it gets infected by something. These are all questions theres actually a huge a thriving area of research. Still has a lot of unanswered questions. So weve so weve gone from cow poo to fecal transplants and back again. Thank you all for coming who are out of time. R i hope you all all come. [applause] [inaudible] cspan created by americas Cable Television companies and brought to you as a Public Service by your cable on satellite pr
Its too much i cant do it. He kept doing it and i said it doesnt matter whether we understand. We will talk. Then the second thing the breathless notes from the underground and he started talking about himself. We developed the incredible relationship then he wrote moby dick and i am trying to think now he couldnt stop you just kept reading out loud. We talked about everything and before i knew it he brought the comrade. Was he not a big time reader prior to this . He failed things in high school. He was just awful. It developed and then he ended up teaching kids at the city college to read and write to coach them. Then he started writing himself and now he writes a lot. I think its because the characters are so egotistical that he gave me strength. The first one well, anyway the well let it go at that. But its great if you are feeling low if you are a man. I dont know if it would help women. His Upper West Side book is angry and funny all at once. He lived around here a long time ago
A Loyola University professor. And now, it is my pleasure to introduce mr. Jonathan jarvis, the 18th director of the National Park service. Thanarvis oversees more 1000 National Parks that attract 80,000 visitors every year. He has reinvigorated the he isal park service, and a recognized world leader in cultural and restorative management. Please quiet down, thank you, and welcome mr. Jonathan jarvis. [applause] Jonathan Jarvis good afternoon. It is a great honor for me to be here with you at this incredible luncheon to celebrate the legacy and contributions of African Americans to the memory of the United States of america. I would to thank a few folks for us. Dr. Evelyn higginbotham, barbara done, sylvia ferris. In 2016, the National Park service and foss allah are celebrating your centennial. This is held by africanamerican memories. The theme is directly connected to the National Park service and it caused us to reflect on the legacy of African Americans. Our National Parks, especi