Bloomberg Audio Studios, podcasts, radio news.
The single best idea and thank you for the comments just in the last twenty four to forty eight hours on these markets. I just said to Paul Sweeney as we finished out the program, I've been doing this for way long, and I have never seen, whatever your politics, where we're waiting on single headlines out of the news, out of the White House. I just I can't remember when it was like this, and we'll have to see
as we go forward. Thanks to all of our team, particularly the Markets team just met and just burned it up like all nighters. The Markets team here at Bloomberg for their coverage of the not agony, but the angst that is out there. Cam Dawson very busy with New Edge, I had of moments to notice we got it this morning. Here's Cameron Dawson on this present market.
We do think that this is perfectly normal and something that we should be getting used to through the course of the year. When you came into this year with valuation so high, sentiment so stretched to the upside, positioning very very long, very bullish, it just meant that there was a lot that was needed to drive this market much higher, but there wasn't a lot that was needed
to cause a normal kind of correction. Corrections in the seven to ten percent variety happen even without recessions, even without periods of weaker growth. Volatility is a feature of being an equity market investor, and really the challenge or the opportunity is is what you do with that volatility as it typically runs its course. So this is an opportunity we think to continuously upgrade the quality of portfolios by names that are the classic throwing the babies out
with the bathwater, with people indiscriminately selling. But it also comes with the message of when it comes to volatility, get used to it. This year, the.
Hallmark of Bloomberg is to identify the win of a headline, of a conversation, of an insight, but also keep up with the news. Cameron Dawson of New Edge earlier this morning, and literally, as we're taping single best idea here, we have a set of headlines out from the President. He's increasing Canadian steel and aluminum tariff to fifty percent five zero Michael McKee literally on Bloomberg Television. With market reaction to this, it is a movable feast politicians of all
persuasions are dealing with this. What a joy to agreed in our studios today. The centrist Democrat from Connecticut here, the governor of Connecticut, Ned Lamont.
I think we found in Connecticut Republicans and Democrats find places we can agree. Let's say we did the biggest tax cut ever last year. It was middle class people and beyond it was not for rich people. That was an area where Republicans and Democrats could get together. Five hundred million dollars tax cut. What we're doing in terms of making sure that we educate people for the jobs that are out there right now, there's a disconnect. I'm
finding pretty good balance between Republicans and Democrats there. Look, there's a certain incentive to say no, that's what the nature of the opposition party is. I don't think that's good for Democrats at the national level, and I don't think that's good for Republicans at our state level.
Nettlemont there of Connecticut, and we opened that discussion with a conversation on a relatively expensive electricity that is in Connecticut, and much of that from over the border to the north on your commute across Canada and your commute across this nation. It is Bloomberg surveillance and of course out on YouTube, our YouTube podcasts at single best. Idea seven