1 00:00:03,760 --> 00:00:07,560 Speaker 1: This is Bloomberg Surveillance. The main focus now is to 2 00:00:07,720 --> 00:00:12,760 Speaker 1: prevent that this move in Britain encourages populist movements in 3 00:00:12,760 --> 00:00:15,800 Speaker 1: other countries. Nothing will change in the terms on which 4 00:00:15,840 --> 00:00:18,000 Speaker 1: Britain contray with the rest of the world for at 5 00:00:18,079 --> 00:00:21,840 Speaker 1: least two years. This project to knit the European countries 6 00:00:21,880 --> 00:00:24,200 Speaker 1: together in a kind of a United States of Europe 7 00:00:24,320 --> 00:00:26,599 Speaker 1: is up against it. In my view, it's not going 8 00:00:26,600 --> 00:00:30,800 Speaker 1: to work. Bloomberg Surveillance your link to the world of economics, 9 00:00:30,800 --> 00:00:34,760 Speaker 1: finance and investment on Bloomberg Radio. Good morning everyone, Michael 10 00:00:34,800 --> 00:00:38,600 Speaker 1: McKee and Tom Keane Bloomberg Surveillance Worldwide. We welcome all 11 00:00:38,600 --> 00:00:40,320 Speaker 1: of you this morning. Michael, you got your arm up 12 00:00:40,360 --> 00:00:42,199 Speaker 1: over there. You get some news coming. We've got some 13 00:00:42,240 --> 00:00:44,760 Speaker 1: news coming. It is Car Sales Day, the first month 14 00:00:45,000 --> 00:00:47,760 Speaker 1: day reports on June car sales from the Big Three. 15 00:00:47,800 --> 00:00:50,239 Speaker 1: The first of the Big three, as always, Fiat Chrysler 16 00:00:51,240 --> 00:00:53,960 Speaker 1: sales up six and a half percent. That's less than 17 00:00:54,000 --> 00:00:58,040 Speaker 1: the forecast consensus estimate of eight point nine percent. However, 18 00:00:58,160 --> 00:01:02,480 Speaker 1: once again sales are up for a Fiat Chrysler, so 19 00:01:02,920 --> 00:01:08,320 Speaker 1: they continue their trend to continue continually improving their business 20 00:01:08,440 --> 00:01:11,440 Speaker 1: with pounds Sterling and ninety four. You wonder where car 21 00:01:11,480 --> 00:01:15,039 Speaker 1: sales will be in the United Kingdom? Is an exports 22 00:01:15,080 --> 00:01:17,480 Speaker 1: an important proce. You know. One of the biggest employers 23 00:01:17,920 --> 00:01:21,119 Speaker 1: in England and the biggest car sales company in England 24 00:01:21,200 --> 00:01:24,080 Speaker 1: is the Ford Motor Company. So it happens in It's 25 00:01:24,120 --> 00:01:26,639 Speaker 1: not just Rolls. Royce happens in England. Matters a lot 26 00:01:26,800 --> 00:01:28,800 Speaker 1: in Detroit. And I saw Michels wait with his Bentley 27 00:01:28,840 --> 00:01:30,399 Speaker 1: the other day and I'm like, where did he get that? 28 00:01:30,440 --> 00:01:32,920 Speaker 1: Did he buy? The wheel was on the other side 29 00:01:32,920 --> 00:01:36,640 Speaker 1: of the car? Couldn't believe it. The for X Brief 30 00:01:36,680 --> 00:01:38,959 Speaker 1: this Morning, brought to you by Interactive Brokers for X 31 00:01:38,959 --> 00:01:43,080 Speaker 1: traders focus on tightness of spreads if cost matters. Visit 32 00:01:43,120 --> 00:01:46,280 Speaker 1: ib k R dot com slash for x to learn 33 00:01:46,319 --> 00:01:50,880 Speaker 1: about their forex e c N and includes fourteen fourteen 34 00:01:51,000 --> 00:01:54,920 Speaker 1: of the largest inter bank dealers Sterling one nine five, 35 00:01:54,960 --> 00:01:58,440 Speaker 1: Michels twas broke Yeah, one oh two sixty four euro 36 00:01:58,560 --> 00:02:00,720 Speaker 1: one eleven thirty five WI lee of it at that. 37 00:02:01,560 --> 00:02:04,400 Speaker 1: What is success? I think it is a mixture of 38 00:02:04,480 --> 00:02:07,160 Speaker 1: having a flare for the thing that you are doing, 39 00:02:07,280 --> 00:02:10,200 Speaker 1: knowing that it is not enough that you have got 40 00:02:10,240 --> 00:02:14,000 Speaker 1: to have hard work and a certain sense of purpose, 41 00:02:14,200 --> 00:02:18,000 Speaker 1: Margaret Thatcher from a few years ago, John Michaelsway with 42 00:02:18,040 --> 00:02:23,680 Speaker 1: a terrific essay, truly heartfelt essay that those four those 43 00:02:23,720 --> 00:02:27,760 Speaker 1: against on his England. I make jokes about it, but John, 44 00:02:27,840 --> 00:02:33,440 Speaker 1: congratulations on this essay. The photo of Baroness Thatcher speaks 45 00:02:33,520 --> 00:02:38,680 Speaker 1: volumes about your emotion as well. Is Michael Gove or 46 00:02:39,720 --> 00:02:43,280 Speaker 1: Theresa May or You're not running, are you? I was 47 00:02:43,320 --> 00:02:45,720 Speaker 1: thinking about it. We could run together as a as 48 00:02:45,720 --> 00:02:47,840 Speaker 1: a joint ticket, which would be the obvious ownset. We 49 00:02:47,880 --> 00:02:49,720 Speaker 1: have a Canadian bank governor of the Bank of England, 50 00:02:51,639 --> 00:02:54,680 Speaker 1: a small step to Tom Keane as king. Maybe where 51 00:02:54,760 --> 00:02:58,280 Speaker 1: is the certain sense of purpose going forward? As Baroness 52 00:02:58,320 --> 00:03:01,359 Speaker 1: Thatcher spoke of. Is that sets the purpose? I think 53 00:03:01,400 --> 00:03:02,960 Speaker 1: to be fair, right, I think to be fair to 54 00:03:03,000 --> 00:03:05,720 Speaker 1: Michael Gove and Theresa May both in different ways have 55 00:03:05,760 --> 00:03:08,960 Speaker 1: a certain sense of purpose. Michael Gove. Is he's a 56 00:03:08,960 --> 00:03:12,040 Speaker 1: friend of mine? Isn't he's a ideal logue? I mean, 57 00:03:12,240 --> 00:03:15,200 Speaker 1: here's somebody who believes very very firmly in things, and 58 00:03:15,360 --> 00:03:19,840 Speaker 1: for instance, I think he would be holy convinced that 59 00:03:20,040 --> 00:03:22,799 Speaker 1: Brexit is within the tradition of Margaret Thatcher. He would 60 00:03:22,840 --> 00:03:26,160 Speaker 1: see it as a tradition trying to build a liberal, 61 00:03:27,240 --> 00:03:31,399 Speaker 1: better Britain that could sit outside the Leviathan of Brussels. 62 00:03:31,440 --> 00:03:33,520 Speaker 1: That that's very much the way he goes and that's 63 00:03:33,639 --> 00:03:35,200 Speaker 1: very much the sort of Britain he would like to 64 00:03:35,200 --> 00:03:38,720 Speaker 1: build in Michael his humility in his comments today of 65 00:03:38,840 --> 00:03:41,520 Speaker 1: saying he doesn't have the baboom, he doesn't have the 66 00:03:41,560 --> 00:03:46,040 Speaker 1: pop and the other candidates was something, yeah, I think 67 00:03:46,040 --> 00:03:48,160 Speaker 1: that's I think that's true. I think he's always been 68 00:03:48,240 --> 00:03:52,200 Speaker 1: a he's always been somebody who's been a thinker rather 69 00:03:52,240 --> 00:03:54,800 Speaker 1: than necessarily a leader. It's worth it's worth pointing out 70 00:03:54,880 --> 00:03:57,040 Speaker 1: in his favor, he was the guy who got ahold 71 00:03:57,080 --> 00:04:00,200 Speaker 1: of the education brief and pushed through a very health 72 00:04:00,320 --> 00:04:04,960 Speaker 1: education thing past the school teachers, who are almost as 73 00:04:05,000 --> 00:04:07,760 Speaker 1: powerful a lobby in Britain as they are in America. 74 00:04:08,040 --> 00:04:10,000 Speaker 1: And he did push. He pushed that very hard. It 75 00:04:10,080 --> 00:04:15,000 Speaker 1: did result in him getting extraordinarily unpopular teachers. So he 76 00:04:15,080 --> 00:04:18,840 Speaker 1: was removed by Cameron, who was another a very close 77 00:04:18,880 --> 00:04:22,440 Speaker 1: friend of his, and put into a different post. Theresa 78 00:04:22,480 --> 00:04:25,279 Speaker 1: May is much more and more sort of solid figure. 79 00:04:25,360 --> 00:04:28,120 Speaker 1: She's slightly more akin in some ways to Angler Merkel, 80 00:04:28,800 --> 00:04:31,320 Speaker 1: and in some ways again, I think that makes her 81 00:04:31,400 --> 00:04:34,080 Speaker 1: quite an attractive candidate, because she might be the sort 82 00:04:34,080 --> 00:04:36,080 Speaker 1: of person you can imagine sitting down with Michael and 83 00:04:36,120 --> 00:04:38,400 Speaker 1: trying to hash out a deal, but doing it on 84 00:04:38,520 --> 00:04:42,320 Speaker 1: broadly equivalent levels. She has one difficulty is as sort 85 00:04:42,360 --> 00:04:44,880 Speaker 1: of home secretary, as we call it. She was the 86 00:04:44,920 --> 00:04:47,720 Speaker 1: person who was at least nominally in charge of immigration. 87 00:04:47,920 --> 00:04:50,400 Speaker 1: But the problem with immigration is that nobody is really 88 00:04:50,400 --> 00:04:52,560 Speaker 1: in charge with it because as long as Britakers within 89 00:04:52,560 --> 00:04:55,320 Speaker 1: the European Union, as many people from the British European 90 00:04:55,400 --> 00:04:58,480 Speaker 1: Union in general, can get into Britain as as they 91 00:04:58,520 --> 00:05:01,800 Speaker 1: want getting a lit have noticed for the essay you 92 00:05:01,880 --> 00:05:05,480 Speaker 1: wrote this week for Bloomberg dot Com Goodbye to All 93 00:05:05,520 --> 00:05:08,760 Speaker 1: that a sort of lament for uh the United Kingdom 94 00:05:08,880 --> 00:05:13,680 Speaker 1: that that was um and maybe at time still the 95 00:05:13,720 --> 00:05:17,039 Speaker 1: title from Robert Graves, which is one of one of 96 00:05:17,040 --> 00:05:19,200 Speaker 1: the many influences of Tom Keane, or maybe it was 97 00:05:19,240 --> 00:05:22,080 Speaker 1: the other way around. What struck me though in reading 98 00:05:22,080 --> 00:05:26,680 Speaker 1: it was that I wondered if I were reading the 99 00:05:26,760 --> 00:05:30,960 Speaker 1: lament of an Englishman who was coming from the perspective 100 00:05:30,960 --> 00:05:33,960 Speaker 1: of someone within England looking at at this because it's 101 00:05:33,960 --> 00:05:37,280 Speaker 1: a historian, you know that things go in cycles. You 102 00:05:37,560 --> 00:05:41,479 Speaker 1: praised the Thatcher era and the level to which she rose, 103 00:05:42,360 --> 00:05:45,920 Speaker 1: But if the Argentine generals hadn't invaded the Falklands, she 104 00:05:46,000 --> 00:05:47,880 Speaker 1: might have been a one term prime minister. We never 105 00:05:47,920 --> 00:05:51,560 Speaker 1: would have been talking about her. Accidents of history can 106 00:05:51,640 --> 00:05:54,480 Speaker 1: mean a lot. Yes, I think, I think maybe very quickly, 107 00:05:54,600 --> 00:05:57,440 Speaker 1: just I should quickly lay out the thesis. The thesis was, 108 00:05:57,480 --> 00:06:02,080 Speaker 1: this is the back in to nine Mrs Thatcher snuck 109 00:06:02,200 --> 00:06:05,480 Speaker 1: up on Britain. We most people then voted. Certainly I 110 00:06:05,560 --> 00:06:07,200 Speaker 1: was very young. I think I was too young just 111 00:06:07,279 --> 00:06:09,360 Speaker 1: to vote. But most people I knew who voted for 112 00:06:09,400 --> 00:06:11,160 Speaker 1: her voted for her as being a sort of hard 113 00:06:11,240 --> 00:06:15,679 Speaker 1: headed pragmatist who would deal with, you know, the mess 114 00:06:15,720 --> 00:06:17,960 Speaker 1: that labor had left, the winter of discontent and things 115 00:06:17,960 --> 00:06:20,520 Speaker 1: like that. In fact, as I put in the assay, 116 00:06:20,600 --> 00:06:22,839 Speaker 1: she was a much more idyllistic thing. She she called 117 00:06:22,920 --> 00:06:26,200 Speaker 1: back on the sort of ancient British idea of liberalism. 118 00:06:26,240 --> 00:06:28,440 Speaker 1: In some way, it's not liberalism as in Nancy Pelosi, 119 00:06:28,560 --> 00:06:31,160 Speaker 1: but the liberalism of Adam Smith and John Stuart Mill 120 00:06:31,400 --> 00:06:34,400 Speaker 1: and those sort of people and she opened up free markets. 121 00:06:34,440 --> 00:06:36,960 Speaker 1: She pushed things very, very hard, and it was cathartic. 122 00:06:37,120 --> 00:06:40,240 Speaker 1: As you've just pointed out, she was very lucky. She 123 00:06:40,360 --> 00:06:42,520 Speaker 1: might well have been almost certainly would have been thrown 124 00:06:42,560 --> 00:06:45,919 Speaker 1: out um in three, but for the fact that the 125 00:06:46,000 --> 00:06:48,960 Speaker 1: Argentine Strather stupidly invaded the Falklands and she was able 126 00:06:49,000 --> 00:06:52,440 Speaker 1: to push them out and claim a victory. She she 127 00:06:52,440 --> 00:06:55,599 Speaker 1: she she was lucky. She wasn't always consistent, but she 128 00:06:55,760 --> 00:06:59,400 Speaker 1: was by most people stand as brutal in her desire 129 00:06:59,520 --> 00:07:02,200 Speaker 1: to sort of open Britain up. She probably went too 130 00:07:02,240 --> 00:07:04,760 Speaker 1: far in some places. A lot of the industrial North 131 00:07:04,839 --> 00:07:08,320 Speaker 1: that voted against voted for Brexit this time with the 132 00:07:08,360 --> 00:07:11,200 Speaker 1: areas she came from. And my thesis is that that 133 00:07:11,280 --> 00:07:13,480 Speaker 1: was the beginning of a sort of reversal of history. 134 00:07:13,560 --> 00:07:16,480 Speaker 1: That the Britain and I grew up in was one 135 00:07:16,520 --> 00:07:21,080 Speaker 1: where we just expected gentle gentlemanly decline um and then 136 00:07:21,080 --> 00:07:23,320 Speaker 1: it was just bound to gradually go down. That was 137 00:07:23,360 --> 00:07:26,840 Speaker 1: the whole atmosphere everything I saw that Sha completely shook 138 00:07:26,880 --> 00:07:28,680 Speaker 1: that up. And to be fair to her successors, to 139 00:07:28,720 --> 00:07:32,640 Speaker 1: be fair to John Major, Tony Blair, they opened that up. 140 00:07:32,680 --> 00:07:35,119 Speaker 1: Britain became the sort of capital of finance for Europe. 141 00:07:35,120 --> 00:07:38,840 Speaker 1: It became the capital also of of of talented people. 142 00:07:38,920 --> 00:07:42,240 Speaker 1: If I was to visit, you know that any of 143 00:07:42,280 --> 00:07:45,040 Speaker 1: the people in this room in Rome, or in Paris 144 00:07:45,520 --> 00:07:48,080 Speaker 1: or in Berlin, all their children would be trying to 145 00:07:48,120 --> 00:07:52,640 Speaker 1: go to London to be um, to to work there, 146 00:07:52,680 --> 00:07:55,880 Speaker 1: to study there. And for that extent, London rather bizarrely, 147 00:07:56,000 --> 00:07:58,520 Speaker 1: despite being the place which was at least happy with 148 00:07:58,600 --> 00:08:01,480 Speaker 1: the European Union, became as the capital of Europe. And 149 00:08:01,520 --> 00:08:04,960 Speaker 1: what I fear is that maybe, just maybe there's Brexit 150 00:08:05,040 --> 00:08:07,720 Speaker 1: vote is the end of that era. But could it 151 00:08:07,800 --> 00:08:11,520 Speaker 1: also not lead to a reinvention we could? I think again, 152 00:08:11,560 --> 00:08:13,480 Speaker 1: if Michael Gove was here, he would sit and say, 153 00:08:13,480 --> 00:08:15,840 Speaker 1: absolutely what we're doing is a d percent. In the 154 00:08:15,880 --> 00:08:18,120 Speaker 1: spirit of Margaret's action, she might well have voted for 155 00:08:18,160 --> 00:08:21,760 Speaker 1: a Brexit herself. But the danger is that for every 156 00:08:21,760 --> 00:08:26,520 Speaker 1: pro globalization person like go and arguably like Boris Johnson too, 157 00:08:26,520 --> 00:08:28,960 Speaker 1: although his beliefs are a little less certain, if we 158 00:08:28,960 --> 00:08:32,000 Speaker 1: could put it that way, for every single person who 159 00:08:32,000 --> 00:08:34,040 Speaker 1: would think this is you know about written being the 160 00:08:34,080 --> 00:08:37,480 Speaker 1: global cultural entrepos There are quite a lot of people, 161 00:08:37,640 --> 00:08:40,680 Speaker 1: or most of the Brexit vote, where people who said 162 00:08:40,720 --> 00:08:43,880 Speaker 1: we've had too much globalization, not the people who said 163 00:08:43,920 --> 00:08:47,280 Speaker 1: we haven't had enough, go is from that liberal we're 164 00:08:47,320 --> 00:08:49,400 Speaker 1: going through there in the US, certainly with Trump and 165 00:08:49,440 --> 00:08:52,240 Speaker 1: the whole question of whether popularism is other rise. But 166 00:08:52,240 --> 00:08:54,920 Speaker 1: you got back to the eighteen nineties, I mean, the 167 00:08:54,960 --> 00:08:57,040 Speaker 1: world was coming to an end. William Jennings Bryan was 168 00:08:57,040 --> 00:09:00,400 Speaker 1: going to around the country and and you know then 169 00:09:00,440 --> 00:09:03,320 Speaker 1: you got Teddy Roosevelt who adopted all that stuff. And 170 00:09:03,960 --> 00:09:05,400 Speaker 1: I heard you make a very good joke this morning 171 00:09:05,400 --> 00:09:08,560 Speaker 1: about about Tom Keene being an intern in seventeen eighties. 172 00:09:09,040 --> 00:09:11,840 Speaker 1: But back in an interesting perhaps the most interesting bit 173 00:09:11,840 --> 00:09:14,680 Speaker 1: which I didn't put in the essay, almost one interesting 174 00:09:14,720 --> 00:09:16,480 Speaker 1: bit relevant to that is there's a bit of John 175 00:09:16,480 --> 00:09:19,920 Speaker 1: Maynard Ken's where he looks back at a Londoner in 176 00:09:21,280 --> 00:09:24,040 Speaker 1: and the Londoners sitting in bed. It's the end of 177 00:09:24,120 --> 00:09:27,600 Speaker 1: the first great age of globalization, and he is sipping 178 00:09:27,640 --> 00:09:30,200 Speaker 1: his morning tea in bed, and he is able to 179 00:09:30,320 --> 00:09:33,840 Speaker 1: order from around the world everything. He can order any 180 00:09:33,960 --> 00:09:38,880 Speaker 1: any manufacture. There is no barriers of trade. That global currency, 181 00:09:38,920 --> 00:09:42,199 Speaker 1: effectively sterling, was that you have this fantastic open market 182 00:09:42,240 --> 00:09:43,959 Speaker 1: around the world and he already can think about it 183 00:09:44,080 --> 00:09:45,680 Speaker 1: is that actually can order the stuff around the world. 184 00:09:45,679 --> 00:09:48,360 Speaker 1: And in his newspaper there's a sort of headline at 185 00:09:48,360 --> 00:09:51,360 Speaker 1: the bottom saying Archdukes South shot in Sarajevo. But he 186 00:09:51,400 --> 00:09:53,640 Speaker 1: does not believe that the world is going to change, 187 00:09:53,679 --> 00:09:56,080 Speaker 1: except it's going to get more global and in some 188 00:09:56,160 --> 00:09:58,160 Speaker 1: ways where it's a sort of similar sort of moment. 189 00:09:58,200 --> 00:10:01,439 Speaker 1: People voted for this thing somewhat by accident, but it 190 00:10:01,480 --> 00:10:04,280 Speaker 1: could have very very big ramifications. John, do you believe 191 00:10:04,960 --> 00:10:07,240 Speaker 1: this is from the Economist tower in St James? Do 192 00:10:07,240 --> 00:10:09,640 Speaker 1: you believe that the elites and changed St James Street 193 00:10:10,000 --> 00:10:13,040 Speaker 1: in London or of all different pace skills, they really 194 00:10:13,080 --> 00:10:15,880 Speaker 1: are going to move to Europe? I think quite. I 195 00:10:15,920 --> 00:10:20,120 Speaker 1: think what will happen is two things. One, there is 196 00:10:20,160 --> 00:10:25,120 Speaker 1: a vast sort of soft power element of Britain which 197 00:10:25,160 --> 00:10:27,600 Speaker 1: is hard to shake. People have children at British schools, 198 00:10:28,120 --> 00:10:31,160 Speaker 1: people who moved there. But there are some structural things, 199 00:10:31,200 --> 00:10:34,360 Speaker 1: you know you that Britain has. It doesn't have particularly 200 00:10:34,400 --> 00:10:38,280 Speaker 1: great infrastructure, we're not particularly big unproductivity in some areas. 201 00:10:38,800 --> 00:10:41,840 Speaker 1: Um the reasons that made it a default option for 202 00:10:41,880 --> 00:10:45,200 Speaker 1: anybody who is young and not never in Europe may change. John. 203 00:10:45,320 --> 00:10:48,800 Speaker 1: Thank you so much. John. Michael tweet with Bloomberg this morning. 204 00:10:52,120 --> 00:10:53,640 Speaker 1: Let's check in with Michael Byron. Now I'll get the 205 00:10:53,720 --> 00:10:56,280 Speaker 1: latest world and national headlines. Michael by time, Thank you 206 00:10:56,400 --> 00:10:59,760 Speaker 1: very much. A Justice Department officials says Attorney General Lauretta 207 00:11:00,400 --> 00:11:05,520 Speaker 1: expects to accept whatever recommendation prosecutors make in the investigation 208 00:11:05,559 --> 00:11:09,120 Speaker 1: into Hillary Clinton's handling of emails while she was Secretary 209 00:11:09,160 --> 00:11:12,400 Speaker 1: of State. It comes after a private discussion Lynch had 210 00:11:12,559 --> 00:11:16,839 Speaker 1: aboard her plane Monday with former President Bill Clinton. It's 211 00:11:16,880 --> 00:11:20,720 Speaker 1: been criticized as an appropriate by Republicans and some Democrats. 212 00:11:21,000 --> 00:11:23,360 Speaker 1: A federal judges putting on the whole key portions of 213 00:11:23,360 --> 00:11:27,040 Speaker 1: a new Florida abortion law. The law blocks public funding 214 00:11:27,120 --> 00:11:31,640 Speaker 1: for planned parenthood and greatly increases inspection requirements aboard the 215 00:11:31,679 --> 00:11:35,600 Speaker 1: abortion clinics. A new poll shows that European citizens want 216 00:11:35,679 --> 00:11:39,000 Speaker 1: the EU to be more involved in the fight against terrorism. 217 00:11:39,080 --> 00:11:42,280 Speaker 1: In the poll announced by the European Parliament in Brussels, 218 00:11:42,480 --> 00:11:46,120 Speaker 1: it says eight percent of the EU should intervene more 219 00:11:46,520 --> 00:11:49,720 Speaker 1: than it has now been in the anti terrorism experts 220 00:11:50,000 --> 00:11:53,280 Speaker 1: Michael Barr, This is Bloomberg, Tom, Michael Bars. Thanks so much. 221 00:11:53,280 --> 00:11:55,160 Speaker 1: We didn't get to John Nichols Way, but I can 222 00:11:55,200 --> 00:11:57,720 Speaker 1: assure you it's his fault. There isn't a third runway 223 00:11:58,000 --> 00:12:05,880 Speaker 1: at Heathrow. Will continue Bloomberg's surveillance. This is Bloomberg Market Drivers, 224 00:12:06,080 --> 00:12:08,560 Speaker 1: brought to you by Bank of America. Mery Lynch committed 225 00:12:08,559 --> 00:12:11,120 Speaker 1: to bringing higher financed, lower carbon name the most innovative 226 00:12:11,120 --> 00:12:13,679 Speaker 1: investment bank for climate change and sustainability by the banker. 227 00:12:13,920 --> 00:12:16,240 Speaker 1: That's the power of global connections. Bank of America n A, 228 00:12:16,480 --> 00:12:16,920 Speaker 1: F D I C