WEBVTT - Introducing: Bloomberg Daybreak Europe Edition

0:00:02.240 --> 0:00:03.920
<v Speaker 1>Hi there, I'm Caroline Hipke.

0:00:03.840 --> 0:00:05.800
<v Speaker 2>And I'm Stephen Carroll. We know you're here for the

0:00:05.880 --> 0:00:09.360
<v Speaker 2>latest episode of Merin Talks Money, but we wanted.

0:00:09.119 --> 0:00:11.760
<v Speaker 1>To tell you about another podcast we think you'll like.

0:00:12.080 --> 0:00:14.600
<v Speaker 1>It's called Bloomberg Daybreak, Your Peedition.

0:00:14.920 --> 0:00:17.880
<v Speaker 2>Every morning, we bring you headline news from around the world.

0:00:17.880 --> 0:00:21.200
<v Speaker 1>Exclusive reporting from our global team of two thousand, seven

0:00:21.280 --> 0:00:23.439
<v Speaker 1>hundred journalists and analysts.

0:00:23.040 --> 0:00:26.759
<v Speaker 2>Plus newsmaking interviews with CEOs and global leaders.

0:00:26.880 --> 0:00:29.040
<v Speaker 1>All of this and more in just fifteen minutes in

0:00:29.120 --> 0:00:32.680
<v Speaker 1>your podcast feed every morning from seven am London time.

0:00:33.120 --> 0:00:36.320
<v Speaker 1>Just search for Bloomberg Daybreak your Petition and if you

0:00:36.320 --> 0:00:45.720
<v Speaker 1>can't wait that long, here's the latest episode. Good morning,

0:00:45.720 --> 0:00:48.440
<v Speaker 1>It's Tuesday, the sixteenth of January here in London. This

0:00:48.520 --> 0:00:51.879
<v Speaker 1>is the Bloomberg Daybreak You're a podcast. I'm Caroline Hipker.

0:00:51.640 --> 0:00:54.680
<v Speaker 2>And I'm Stephen Carroll. Coming up today, IOWA delivers a

0:00:54.760 --> 0:00:57.800
<v Speaker 2>resounding win for Donald Trump and his bid for the

0:00:57.840 --> 0:00:59.639
<v Speaker 2>Republican presidential nomination.

0:01:00.080 --> 0:01:03.760
<v Speaker 1>America and the UK worn commercial vessels to avoid the

0:01:03.800 --> 0:01:06.880
<v Speaker 1>Red Sea as a merchant ship is hit with a

0:01:06.920 --> 0:01:08.000
<v Speaker 1>ballistic missile.

0:01:08.520 --> 0:01:11.960
<v Speaker 2>Plus Musk wants more, The Tesla CEO says he needs

0:01:12.000 --> 0:01:17.040
<v Speaker 2>twenty five percent control before developing the firm's AI projects.

0:01:17.319 --> 0:01:19.640
<v Speaker 1>Let's start with a roundup of our top stories.

0:01:20.040 --> 0:01:23.000
<v Speaker 2>Donald Trump has cruised to victory in the Iowa Republican

0:01:23.040 --> 0:01:26.920
<v Speaker 2>presidential caucus, with Ron De Santis finishing a distant second

0:01:27.040 --> 0:01:31.360
<v Speaker 2>and Nikki Haley third. Ohio entrepreneur VIVK Gramaswami ended his

0:01:31.440 --> 0:01:36.080
<v Speaker 2>presidential bid after a disappointing showing. Republican political consultant Rick

0:01:36.160 --> 0:01:39.520
<v Speaker 2>Davis explains how the nomination race could now unfold for

0:01:39.600 --> 0:01:40.320
<v Speaker 2>Donald Trump.

0:01:41.040 --> 0:01:44.000
<v Speaker 3>If Trump does run the table and gets both Iowa

0:01:44.040 --> 0:01:47.920
<v Speaker 3>New Hampshire, a really unusual thing, then he's got four

0:01:48.520 --> 0:01:51.960
<v Speaker 3>weeks to consolidate his hold on South Carolina. And we've

0:01:51.960 --> 0:01:55.200
<v Speaker 3>seen early polling the campaign hasn't gotten to South Carolina yet,

0:01:55.480 --> 0:01:58.800
<v Speaker 3>so it's not reflective of a real campaign. But right

0:01:58.800 --> 0:02:01.760
<v Speaker 3>now he's twenty points ahead of Nikki Haley, who.

0:02:02.000 --> 0:02:02.680
<v Speaker 4>Calls it home.

0:02:02.800 --> 0:02:05.280
<v Speaker 3>So and then after that, the really next big thing

0:02:05.360 --> 0:02:08.880
<v Speaker 3>is Super Tuesday, so he could actually walk in the

0:02:08.919 --> 0:02:11.679
<v Speaker 3>Super Tuesday basically unchallenged at that point.

0:02:12.680 --> 0:02:16.239
<v Speaker 2>Bloomberg Politics contributor and partner at Stone Court Capital, Rick Davis,

0:02:16.280 --> 0:02:19.680
<v Speaker 2>speaking there allies and adversaries around the world, are closely

0:02:19.720 --> 0:02:23.040
<v Speaker 2>watching the twenty twenty four US presidential race, in which

0:02:23.040 --> 0:02:26.800
<v Speaker 2>Trump and Biden are offering starkly different visions for America's

0:02:26.840 --> 0:02:30.480
<v Speaker 2>global role. At December morning, consultant Bloomberg News poll showed

0:02:30.480 --> 0:02:33.440
<v Speaker 2>Trump leading Biden in the seven swing states that will

0:02:33.560 --> 0:02:35.760
<v Speaker 2>likely decide the outcome of the election.

0:02:36.840 --> 0:02:40.280
<v Speaker 1>Who The militants have attacked a US owned container ship

0:02:40.320 --> 0:02:42.560
<v Speaker 1>in the Red Sea. The vessel was hit by a

0:02:42.639 --> 0:02:47.280
<v Speaker 1>ballistic missile, but avoided significant damage or injuries to its crew.

0:02:47.760 --> 0:02:50.640
<v Speaker 1>The attack follows a warning from the US and UK

0:02:50.760 --> 0:02:54.760
<v Speaker 1>to merchant ships to avoid the area until further notice.

0:02:55.000 --> 0:02:59.400
<v Speaker 1>The EU Economy Commissioner Paulo Gentiloni sees the potential for

0:02:59.520 --> 0:03:02.600
<v Speaker 1>global economic fallout from the crisis.

0:03:03.760 --> 0:03:07.080
<v Speaker 5>What is happening in the Red Sea is not for

0:03:07.240 --> 0:03:15.240
<v Speaker 5>the moment apparently creating consequences on energy prises and inflation.

0:03:15.560 --> 0:03:20.200
<v Speaker 5>But we think that it should be monitored very closely

0:03:20.600 --> 0:03:25.720
<v Speaker 5>because these consequences could materialize in the coming weeks.

0:03:26.520 --> 0:03:29.959
<v Speaker 1>Paalo Gentiloni. There The latest attack in the Red Sea

0:03:30.040 --> 0:03:32.960
<v Speaker 1>comes after American and British forces bombed the hu Thies

0:03:33.040 --> 0:03:37.080
<v Speaker 1>in an effort to deter them from disrupting global shipping.

0:03:37.040 --> 0:03:40.400
<v Speaker 2>Prime Minister Rachisinak defended those joint air strikes in Parliament.

0:03:40.520 --> 0:03:43.120
<v Speaker 2>He told MPs that who these aggression was the biggest

0:03:43.160 --> 0:03:45.520
<v Speaker 2>attack on the Royal Navy for decades.

0:03:46.720 --> 0:03:49.880
<v Speaker 6>I stress that this action was taken in self defense.

0:03:50.720 --> 0:03:55.240
<v Speaker 6>It was limited, not esclatory. It was a necessary and

0:03:55.400 --> 0:03:59.880
<v Speaker 6>proportionate response to a direct threat to UK vessels and

0:04:00.080 --> 0:04:01.840
<v Speaker 6>therefore to the UK itself.

0:04:02.520 --> 0:04:04.760
<v Speaker 2>Whishi si Nakada that he hopes the air strikes would

0:04:04.800 --> 0:04:09.000
<v Speaker 2>de escalate the conflict. However, the world's largest shipping association BIMKO,

0:04:09.160 --> 0:04:12.040
<v Speaker 2>as warning disruption in the area could last for some time.

0:04:12.280 --> 0:04:15.000
<v Speaker 2>The number of ships passing through the Southern Red seasons

0:04:15.000 --> 0:04:17.600
<v Speaker 2>Friday has fallen by more than half compared to the

0:04:17.600 --> 0:04:19.239
<v Speaker 2>corresponding period a month earlier.

0:04:20.120 --> 0:04:24.560
<v Speaker 1>Iran has launched missile strikes against targets in northern Iraq

0:04:24.720 --> 0:04:28.040
<v Speaker 1>and Syria. Bloomberg's Dan Schwartzmann has the details.

0:04:28.680 --> 0:04:30.919
<v Speaker 4>Four people were killed and six others wounded in an

0:04:31.000 --> 0:04:33.960
<v Speaker 4>Iranian missile attack in the northern Iraqi city of Airbil.

0:04:34.320 --> 0:04:37.960
<v Speaker 4>The Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps has taken responsibility for the strike.

0:04:38.320 --> 0:04:41.760
<v Speaker 4>The state run Islamic Republic News agency says the Revolutionary

0:04:41.800 --> 0:04:45.279
<v Speaker 4>Guard launched ballistic missiles on the quote espionage basis of

0:04:45.320 --> 0:04:49.080
<v Speaker 4>anti Iranian terrorist groups in Iraq and Syria. In a statement,

0:04:49.120 --> 0:04:52.240
<v Speaker 4>the IRGC says the strike was in response to recent

0:04:52.240 --> 0:04:55.839
<v Speaker 4>targeted killings in the country. No American or coalition forces

0:04:55.880 --> 0:04:59.120
<v Speaker 4>stationed in Iraq and Syria were injured in the missile strikes.

0:04:59.320 --> 0:05:02.520
<v Speaker 4>The US also shout down three drones near Arabial Airport.

0:05:02.800 --> 0:05:04.760
<v Speaker 4>Dan Schwartzman Bloomberg Radio.

0:05:05.600 --> 0:05:08.880
<v Speaker 2>UK inflation will drop to one point five percent in May,

0:05:08.960 --> 0:05:12.159
<v Speaker 2>according to a forecast from Ing. The bank's view is

0:05:12.160 --> 0:05:15.120
<v Speaker 2>that easing pressure from food and energy bills could pave

0:05:15.200 --> 0:05:17.479
<v Speaker 2>the way for the Bank of England to cut interest

0:05:17.560 --> 0:05:20.159
<v Speaker 2>rates sooner. Boomberg James Wilcock has more.

0:05:20.360 --> 0:05:23.840
<v Speaker 7>The consensus view among economists has inflation falling to two

0:05:23.920 --> 0:05:27.760
<v Speaker 7>point one percent in mid twenty twenty five. IG's James

0:05:27.760 --> 0:05:29.839
<v Speaker 7>Smith thinks it will hit one point five percent in

0:05:30.000 --> 0:05:33.279
<v Speaker 7>just four months. He predicts falls and price rises in

0:05:33.320 --> 0:05:36.120
<v Speaker 7>nearly every major component and gas prices will bring the

0:05:36.120 --> 0:05:39.240
<v Speaker 7>Bank of England under target by May. If correct, the

0:05:39.320 --> 0:05:41.719
<v Speaker 7>data could be a booster if Ysunak, who has stated

0:05:41.760 --> 0:05:45.760
<v Speaker 7>political capital on bringing inflation under control in London, James

0:05:45.800 --> 0:05:47.040
<v Speaker 7>Wilcock Bloomberg Radio.

0:05:48.000 --> 0:05:51.400
<v Speaker 1>Apple will remove the blood oxygen feature on its smart

0:05:51.400 --> 0:05:54.839
<v Speaker 1>watches to avoid a US ban if an appeal fails.

0:05:55.200 --> 0:05:58.960
<v Speaker 1>The International Trade Commission ruled in October that Apple's devices

0:05:59.160 --> 0:06:04.279
<v Speaker 1>violate the patance of medical equipment maker Massimo. Bloomberg's Mark

0:06:04.279 --> 0:06:07.640
<v Speaker 1>German says that Apple's challenge against that decision will be

0:06:07.760 --> 0:06:11.239
<v Speaker 1>crucial in giving the company more time to find a solution.

0:06:12.720 --> 0:06:15.080
<v Speaker 8>Well, if it's not immediate removal, Apple's going to have

0:06:15.120 --> 0:06:17.279
<v Speaker 8>about a year to figure out a solution, And I

0:06:17.320 --> 0:06:20.480
<v Speaker 8>would bet heavily that with a year's time, Apple would

0:06:20.480 --> 0:06:23.440
<v Speaker 8>be able to retain the feature on the watch indefinitely

0:06:24.279 --> 0:06:27.279
<v Speaker 8>and rework it to not have to violate Arsenal's patents.

0:06:27.279 --> 0:06:29.400
<v Speaker 8>In fact, I've been told that they're working on this

0:06:29.520 --> 0:06:32.440
<v Speaker 8>software fix that changes some of the underlying algorithms from

0:06:32.480 --> 0:06:35.320
<v Speaker 8>the wording inside the blood oxygen saturation and to get

0:06:35.360 --> 0:06:37.640
<v Speaker 8>that to happen. But for that's a matter at all.

0:06:37.880 --> 0:06:40.440
<v Speaker 8>It's really important for Apple that they win tomorrow, they

0:06:40.440 --> 0:06:41.160
<v Speaker 8>win that appeal.

0:06:41.960 --> 0:06:46.160
<v Speaker 1>Bloomberg's chief correspondent Mark German. There, Apple has increasingly used

0:06:46.200 --> 0:06:50.080
<v Speaker 1>health and safety features to market it smart watches, helping

0:06:50.320 --> 0:06:54.440
<v Speaker 1>to turn the line into a seventeen billion dollar business

0:06:54.480 --> 0:06:55.400
<v Speaker 1>for the tech giant.

0:06:55.800 --> 0:07:00.279
<v Speaker 2>Elon Musk says he's uncomfortable growing Tesla's AI capacity without

0:07:00.320 --> 0:07:03.960
<v Speaker 2>a larger share of voting control. The automaker is currently

0:07:04.000 --> 0:07:07.400
<v Speaker 2>investing more than a billion dollars into its Dojo supercomputer

0:07:07.560 --> 0:07:11.360
<v Speaker 2>project and working to develop humanoid robots. However, in a

0:07:11.400 --> 0:07:14.000
<v Speaker 2>post on his social platform x, Elon Musk said that

0:07:14.040 --> 0:07:17.400
<v Speaker 2>without twenty five percent of voting control, he'd prefer to

0:07:17.480 --> 0:07:22.160
<v Speaker 2>develop products independently. According to data compiled by Bloomberg, Musk

0:07:22.320 --> 0:07:26.120
<v Speaker 2>currently owns more than twelve percent of the company. One

0:07:26.120 --> 0:07:28.640
<v Speaker 2>of the things that caught my eye from the coverage

0:07:28.640 --> 0:07:30.360
<v Speaker 2>of Davos this morning, and it's one of the things

0:07:30.400 --> 0:07:32.080
<v Speaker 2>that I like about Davos because it does get you

0:07:32.120 --> 0:07:33.680
<v Speaker 2>a chance to get an insight into some of the

0:07:33.720 --> 0:07:36.800
<v Speaker 2>workplace trends that are happening. And this conversation that the

0:07:36.840 --> 0:07:39.000
<v Speaker 2>chair of PwC in the UK has been having about

0:07:39.040 --> 0:07:42.440
<v Speaker 2>how the rise of AI actually means that more junior

0:07:42.480 --> 0:07:45.080
<v Speaker 2>staff should spend more time in the office. His logic

0:07:45.200 --> 0:07:47.080
<v Speaker 2>is is that a lot of the tasks that treat

0:07:47.120 --> 0:07:49.080
<v Speaker 2>people used to get trained up on are now being

0:07:49.120 --> 0:07:52.440
<v Speaker 2>taken over by the technology, which means face to FaceTime

0:07:52.600 --> 0:07:54.880
<v Speaker 2>is even more important. He says it could actually to

0:07:54.920 --> 0:07:57.520
<v Speaker 2>help people accelerate them up the career ladder if they're

0:07:57.520 --> 0:08:01.160
<v Speaker 2>spending more time in the office, meeting people, interacting with people.

0:08:01.600 --> 0:08:03.000
<v Speaker 2>And he says that you need to be in the

0:08:03.000 --> 0:08:04.640
<v Speaker 2>office for five days a week if you want to

0:08:04.640 --> 0:08:07.440
<v Speaker 2>succeed in your career, which I'm quite sure plenty of

0:08:07.520 --> 0:08:08.560
<v Speaker 2>people would disagree with.

0:08:08.800 --> 0:08:12.040
<v Speaker 1>Yeah, okay, but very interesting advice perhaps the younger people

0:08:12.040 --> 0:08:14.560
<v Speaker 1>in the office that you need that FaceTime, that learning time,

0:08:14.680 --> 0:08:17.640
<v Speaker 1>I mean interesting if you get paid more sooner in

0:08:17.680 --> 0:08:18.320
<v Speaker 1>your career.

0:08:18.480 --> 0:08:19.200
<v Speaker 7>That's the office.

0:08:19.640 --> 0:08:20.560
<v Speaker 4>Here's the crux of it.

0:08:20.640 --> 0:08:22.560
<v Speaker 2>Yeah, people might be interested and if they get that

0:08:22.600 --> 0:08:25.760
<v Speaker 2>sort of motivation. Let's get more to know now though,

0:08:25.760 --> 0:08:28.080
<v Speaker 2>On the US political story this morning, Donald Trump has

0:08:28.080 --> 0:08:31.200
<v Speaker 2>won the first Republican Party caucus of the campaign in Iowa.

0:08:31.320 --> 0:08:34.080
<v Speaker 2>Our executive editor for US Government, Michael Sheppard joins us

0:08:34.120 --> 0:08:36.520
<v Speaker 2>now from Iowa for more. Michael, great to have you

0:08:36.559 --> 0:08:38.560
<v Speaker 2>with us on the program. So the polls are predicted

0:08:38.840 --> 0:08:41.440
<v Speaker 2>Donald Trump would win big. He did. Were there any

0:08:41.559 --> 0:08:43.080
<v Speaker 2>surprises in his vote?

0:08:44.440 --> 0:08:46.800
<v Speaker 9>Well, Steven, I thank you for having me. Our team

0:08:46.880 --> 0:08:50.680
<v Speaker 9>is still hard at work parsing the results and figuring

0:08:50.679 --> 0:08:53.760
<v Speaker 9>out what's going to come next. As for surprises, look,

0:08:53.800 --> 0:08:56.760
<v Speaker 9>results in any election are always a surprise, as polls

0:08:56.800 --> 0:08:59.160
<v Speaker 9>can sometimes get it wrong ahead of time. And then

0:08:59.200 --> 0:09:02.720
<v Speaker 9>Tonight's caucuses, it was unclear beforehand just how much support

0:09:02.840 --> 0:09:06.880
<v Speaker 9>Donald Trump would get. Iowa voters were famously independent minded,

0:09:07.120 --> 0:09:09.600
<v Speaker 9>but he did end up with fifty one percent of

0:09:09.720 --> 0:09:12.280
<v Speaker 9>votes from caucus goers. And that's even more than the

0:09:12.360 --> 0:09:15.760
<v Speaker 9>support that was projected in the final poll of a

0:09:16.000 --> 0:09:20.480
<v Speaker 9>local authoritative local newspaper taken days before tonight's caucuses.

0:09:21.360 --> 0:09:24.480
<v Speaker 1>Okay, so that for Donald tormp. What about Rohn de Santis,

0:09:24.520 --> 0:09:26.679
<v Speaker 1>who came in second, What does it mean for his

0:09:26.800 --> 0:09:29.000
<v Speaker 1>campaign and indeed for Nicky Hayley.

0:09:30.480 --> 0:09:33.880
<v Speaker 9>Well, let's start with Ron DeSantis. And that's a good question, Caroline.

0:09:33.840 --> 0:09:37.040
<v Speaker 9>I'm glad you asked that about him, because for Ron DeSantis,

0:09:37.120 --> 0:09:40.840
<v Speaker 9>this is a vindication of his all out bet on Iowa.

0:09:40.920 --> 0:09:44.040
<v Speaker 9>He really banked on trying to win the Hawkeye state.

0:09:44.679 --> 0:09:46.800
<v Speaker 9>He spent so much time in the months ahead of

0:09:46.840 --> 0:09:50.640
<v Speaker 9>the caucuses. He visited all ninety nine counties in the state,

0:09:51.040 --> 0:09:56.600
<v Speaker 9>crisscrossing visiting so many different voters. He set up an

0:09:56.640 --> 0:10:01.000
<v Speaker 9>extensive ground operation. He brought in allies from Florida by

0:10:01.000 --> 0:10:04.079
<v Speaker 9>the bus load and planeload to go door to door

0:10:04.280 --> 0:10:08.320
<v Speaker 9>days before the caucuses in freezing cold temperature. So it

0:10:08.440 --> 0:10:12.040
<v Speaker 9>showed some motivation and actually had some effect. Now for

0:10:12.120 --> 0:10:15.160
<v Speaker 9>Nikki Haley, look, the last thing she needed heading into

0:10:15.280 --> 0:10:18.600
<v Speaker 9>New Hampshire, where she has bet big as a stepping

0:10:18.640 --> 0:10:21.439
<v Speaker 9>stone to her home state of South Carolina. The last

0:10:21.440 --> 0:10:24.400
<v Speaker 9>thing she needed was a third place finish. She had

0:10:24.400 --> 0:10:26.760
<v Speaker 9>hoped to do well enough to Iowa to really use

0:10:26.800 --> 0:10:29.800
<v Speaker 9>it as a launching pad into New Hampshire and then

0:10:29.880 --> 0:10:33.680
<v Speaker 9>South Carolina. But it didn't work out exactly as she

0:10:33.760 --> 0:10:36.920
<v Speaker 9>had hoped. And that last poll I just mentioned taking

0:10:37.040 --> 0:10:40.160
<v Speaker 9>days before the vote, had actually shown her finishing ahead

0:10:40.200 --> 0:10:41.680
<v Speaker 9>of DeSanto's.

0:10:41.040 --> 0:10:45.800
<v Speaker 2>Here and they field already narrowing after this caucus. Vivia

0:10:45.840 --> 0:10:48.680
<v Speaker 2>Gramaswami dropping out of the race. What went wrong for

0:10:48.720 --> 0:10:49.400
<v Speaker 2>his campaign?

0:10:50.720 --> 0:10:54.520
<v Speaker 9>Well, you know, Vivek Ramaswami never really caught fire with

0:10:54.920 --> 0:10:57.920
<v Speaker 9>more than just the segment that he really appealed to

0:10:58.080 --> 0:11:03.920
<v Speaker 9>the very independent minded in even more libertarian voters and

0:11:04.640 --> 0:11:08.959
<v Speaker 9>in places like Iowa and South Carolina, it was hard

0:11:09.000 --> 0:11:12.080
<v Speaker 9>for him to fit in. His message just didn't take hold,

0:11:12.720 --> 0:11:18.160
<v Speaker 9>and he in essence sort of acknowledged that during his speech.

0:11:18.640 --> 0:11:22.720
<v Speaker 9>He said in the campaign, his speech tonight and endorsing Trump,

0:11:22.760 --> 0:11:26.199
<v Speaker 9>he said, in tonight's race, there are two America First candidates.

0:11:26.720 --> 0:11:29.240
<v Speaker 9>Now there's only one with me leaving, and that of

0:11:29.280 --> 0:11:32.040
<v Speaker 9>course is pointing to Donald Trump. So he was signaling

0:11:32.040 --> 0:11:35.480
<v Speaker 9>that many of the positions that he was espousing were

0:11:35.520 --> 0:11:38.800
<v Speaker 9>already ones that were reflected by Trump, and he has

0:11:38.840 --> 0:11:41.040
<v Speaker 9>now thrown his support for the former president.

0:11:41.600 --> 0:11:45.640
<v Speaker 1>Okay, just lastly and briefly then, the key things to

0:11:45.720 --> 0:11:48.480
<v Speaker 1>watch out for next as we move towards the New

0:11:48.520 --> 0:11:52.600
<v Speaker 1>Hampshire primary that takes place next week, Well, this.

0:11:52.600 --> 0:11:55.880
<v Speaker 9>Is really crucial for the DeSantis campaign to make the

0:11:55.920 --> 0:11:58.840
<v Speaker 9>most of New Hampshire, where they haven't invested nearly as

0:11:58.920 --> 0:12:02.559
<v Speaker 9>much time as Nicky Haley has. She is the endorsement

0:12:02.679 --> 0:12:06.480
<v Speaker 9>of the governor there, who's been campaigning very aggressively in

0:12:06.520 --> 0:12:11.400
<v Speaker 9>the Granite state for her. She also enters that state

0:12:11.480 --> 0:12:15.280
<v Speaker 9>Desantus does too, facing a very different electorate. It's not

0:12:15.440 --> 0:12:18.760
<v Speaker 9>nearly as conservative as Iowa, so we could see a

0:12:18.760 --> 0:12:23.520
<v Speaker 9>different result that could pivot and actually leave Nicky Haley

0:12:23.600 --> 0:12:26.360
<v Speaker 9>ahead of Rondasantas but behind Trump. But we'll have to

0:12:26.440 --> 0:12:30.840
<v Speaker 9>see there. Trump is seeking to turn his absolute majority

0:12:30.920 --> 0:12:34.840
<v Speaker 9>win tonight into something that will allow him to pivot

0:12:34.920 --> 0:12:38.800
<v Speaker 9>sooner to this general election matchup with Joe Biden in November.

0:12:40.280 --> 0:12:43.000
<v Speaker 2>This is Bloomberg Daybreak Europe, your morning brief on the

0:12:43.080 --> 0:12:46.120
<v Speaker 2>stories making news from London to Wall Streets and beyond.

0:12:46.400 --> 0:12:50.400
<v Speaker 1>Look for us on your podcast feed every morning on Apple, Spotify,

0:12:50.480 --> 0:12:52.439
<v Speaker 1>and anywhere else you get your podcasts.

0:12:52.480 --> 0:12:55.520
<v Speaker 2>You can also listen live each morning on London Dab Radio,

0:12:55.559 --> 0:12:57.880
<v Speaker 2>the Bloomberg Business app, and Bloomberg dot.

0:12:57.679 --> 0:13:01.040
<v Speaker 1>Com, our flagship New York station, so available on your

0:13:01.080 --> 0:13:05.800
<v Speaker 1>Amazon Alexa devices. Just say Alexa play Bloomberg eleven thirty.

0:13:06.040 --> 0:13:07.319
<v Speaker 1>I'm Caroline Hepka and.

0:13:07.280 --> 0:13:09.920
<v Speaker 2>I'm Stephen Carol. Join us again tomorrow morning for all

0:13:09.960 --> 0:13:12.360
<v Speaker 2>the news you need to start your day right here

0:13:12.400 --> 0:13:17.920
<v Speaker 2>on Bloomberg Daybreak Europe