Morning Briefing: Americas
Bloomberg Morning Briefing Americas
View in browser
Bloomberg

Good morning. Treasury boss Scott Bessent wants you to stop worrying about the stock market. Donald Trump schedules a call with Vladimir Putin. And Queen Charlotte requests the pleasure of your company at Netflix’s latest money spinner.  Listen to the day’s top stories.

Markets Snapshot
S&P 500 Index Futures 5,675.5 -0.29%
Nasdaq 100 Index Futures 19,873.25 -0.23%
Bloomberg Dollar Spot Index 1,263.71 -0.16%
Market data as of 06:47 am EST. View or Create your Watchlist
Market data may be delayed depending on provider agreements.

Relax! US Treasury chief Scott Bessent said he’s not worried about the recent equity downturn. “Corrections are healthy,” he told NBC. Traders still don’t seem convinced. Futures indicate stocks are in for another rough day. And even though valuations of big technology companies have fallen from lofty heights, buyers aren’t interested.

Speaking of tech, Baidu unveiled Ernie X1, a new AI model it says excels in logic, dialog and complex calculations. Oracle is accelerating talks on a deal to run TikTok’s US operations, Politico reported. Vice President JD Vance told NBC he expects an agreement before the April 5 deadline. And chuck out those charging cables—Apple’s upcoming iPhone 17 “Air” looks set to foreshadow a move to slimmer models without charging ports. 

The ChatGPT Edge: Why Regular People Are Embracing $200 AI Bills
Americans are turning to artificial intelligence to supercharge their work and hobbies. They’re willing to pay for it too.

Donald Trump said he’ll speak with Russia’s Vladimir Putin tomorrow in his push for a deal to end fighting in Ukraine. Some 25 allied leaders agreed to tighten restrictions on the Russian economy to add to the pressure. Elsewhere, Trump ordered military strikes on sites controlled by Yemen’s Houthi militants. Defense chief Pete Hegseth vowed they’d be “unrelenting” until the group stops shooting at vessels in the Red Sea.

On home soil, the Trump administration said it arrested and expelled hundreds of alleged members of Venezuela’s Tren de Aragua gang to El Salvador, even as a federal judge ordered a halt to some deportations. The move comes after El Salvador offered the use of its infamous prison built specifically to house gang members.

Deep Dive: DEI by Stealth

President Trump signs an executive order in the Oval Office on Jan. 20, 2025.  Photographer: Jim Lo Scalzo/EPA

Donald Trump’s executive order dismantling diversity, equity and inclusion efforts is making waves at international companies in Europe, Asia and beyond—but only on the surface.

Related Stories
How Trump Is Fueling the Backlash Against DEI

The Big Take

Illustration: Jinhwa Jang

A decade after being engulfed by a controversy that culminated in multiple enforcement actions, Wall Street’s infamous dark pools are touting an even more opaque way to trade. So-called private rooms are gated venues that take the core benefit of dark pools—the ability to hide big equity deals so they won't impact prices—and add a layer of exclusivity, specifying exactly who can partake in any trade.

Big Take Podcast
Nvidia’s High Brings Fears of Fall

Opinion

Sam Altman, chief executive officer of OpenAI. Photographer: Kosuke Okahara/Bloomberg

Tech giants should stop trying to build godlike “artificial general intelligence,” Parmy Olson writes. A more worthwhile aspiration would be narrower and more concrete—such as building systems that reduce medical diagnostic errors or cutting energy grids’ carbon emissions.

More Opinions
John Authers
Selling the Family Silver, American-Style
Javier Blas
The Oil Industry Is Over a Half-Empty Barrel
Erin Lowry
Gen Z Is Taking ‘Micro-Retirement.’ Don’t Laugh

Bloomberg Tech: Join top tech decisionmakers and influencers on June 4-5 in San Francisco. Decode technology’s evolving role across business, culture and healthcare as we discuss the advances transforming industries and how they impact society. Learn more.

Before You Go

https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2025-03-14/hollywood-studios-embrace-live-experiences-amid-film-tv-gloom
The Queen’s Ball: A Bridgerton Experience in New York in 2023. Photographer: Ilya S. Savenok/Getty Images

Dearest gentle reader… Hollywood studios are pushing far beyond the screen to bring live-event experiences to fans. From Bridgerton-themed parties to Harry Potter tours in Shanghai, top studios are leaning on in-person attractions to deepen viewer relationships and create buzz around their shows and movies.

A Couple More