Bloomberg Audio Studios, podcasts, radio news.
Single best idea. It's going to be a short edition because I have to communic host midtown given the UN meetings. Uh, that's a challenge to say. At the least New York City. The island of Manhattan is just packed with dignitaries and escorts and blocks shut down in the rest. Tomorrow, David Goer and myself at the Earthshot Innovation Awards at the Park A Plaza Hotel, with good conversations with a solid tilt towards geopolitics and international relations. On the market now,
John Stolfus an important voice. He's at OpCo with decades of experience. It's not so much that he's a bull. It's not so much that he said be in the market. It's as Stolfus is rationalized through the might of the American economy. He continues that view. Here is John Stulphus of OpCo.
You know, Tom, I usually prefer to do that in December because but then and this year we'll be beyond the election. But I would suspect likely higher as long as we don't get that. Barton Biggs and the old days would have called a bolt from the blue or a socked to the jaw. We'd have to think that things are just basically improving if we can just keep it moderate growth with resilience in jobs and economic growth
in corporate earnings. I think we're good to go as long as we avoid getting complacent, and as long as we can avoid having the bolt from the blue hit US. I think considerably higher and well beyond the fifty nine hundred target.
Probably John Sofas with OpCo. Matthew Winkler, the founder of Bloomberg News, joined us today for spirited discussion on the state of a swing state, Wisconsin, and in that conversation, Matt Winkler highlighted how everyone's been wrong over the last eighteen months within polling over the state of the American consumer. John Sophizer continuing the theme of resilience, a decent economy,
a solid economy. I don't know, but little talk there of a recession, A talk incredibly challenging geopolitics at this time. We touch upon it. David Gerr's been a foundation to our coverage there. But over the weekend, just what was witnessed with the new fear of all this technology on the border of northern Lebanton, pagers and walkie talkies and all that. What a joy to speak to Daniel Tannenbaum
today at Oliver Wyman. He's truly expert on geopolitics, our fears summed up over decades, and much of it wrapped around the idea of sanctions in their efficacy over the war in Ukraine. Here's Dan Tannembaum in these uncertain times on sanctions.
That's a bit of the question that I'm hearing and that I'm having discussions with people throughout the week, is have US sanctions lost their potency? If I think about before the Iran deal was enacted and then ultimately scrapped, there was a pretty healthy fear in most pockets of the world of being on the wrong side of US sanctions because the fines were substantial, the embarrassment was significant.
With Russia, I'm not seeing the same fear Venezuela. We continue to sanction from a US standpoint, but Durou still in power. So how do you actually bring the fear factor back to sanctions?
Daniel Tanbaum Oliver why I'm in there and his expertise sanctions, and he was really brilliant on the uncertainty to supply chains given some of our geopolitics, and of course that addressed here in New York in a coming hours and days at the UN meetings. We're on YouTube subscribed Bloomberg podcasts and your commute beforehand on Serious XM, on Apple car Play, Android Auto, new technology across this nation and worldwide.
I should point out as well, good morning to all ninety nine one FM in Washington, our flagship and congested New York Bloomberg eleven three to zero, and I should point out in ninety nine FM in Boston we did touch upon the fact that Boston College won this weekend on Apple Podcasts, on YouTube podcasts single best Idea,
