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Viewsroom

Brexit | Pokemon Go | Minimum wage

Viewsroom

Reuters

News

4.458 Ratings

🗓️ 15 July 2016

⏱️ 26 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

New UK Prime Minister Theresa May is assembling a cabinet that may to deliver Brexit-lite. Meanwhile, the surprising success of Pokemon Go bodes well for much broader use of augmented reality. And Jamie Dimon has both selfish and smart reasons for boosting bank teller pay. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Transcript

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0:00.0

AI is incredible. They can teach you how to fry an egg and even write a poem, pirate style.

0:07.0

But it knows nothing about your work. Slackbot is different. It doesn't just know the facts.

0:14.0

It knows your schedule. It can turn a brainstorm into a brief and it doesn't need to be taught.

0:20.0

Because Slackbot isn't just another

0:22.4

AI. It's AI that knows your work as well as you do. Visit Slack.com forward slash meet Slackbot

0:28.8

to learn more. The views expressed on this podcast are those of the participants, not of Rogers News.

0:39.9

Welcome to the viewss Room, a weekly podcast brought to you by Reuters. I'm Rob Cox, the editor

0:44.7

of Breaking Views. Well, it's been a pretty exciting week here in the Global Views Factory.

0:50.6

The extraordinary unwinding of Archegos Capital, investor Bill Huang's family office, was one of the most amazing stories.

0:56.6

It's one of those ones that connects Breaking Views columnists from Hong Kong, New York, Zurich, London, Melbourne, and Washington to one big, hardworking family.

1:05.7

For this week's podcast, I grabbed a few of them to get their views on what the episode tells us about Wall Street and global

1:10.9

financial markets. Anthony Curry in Melbourne recalled the LTCM blow-up of the late 1990s, and of course

1:17.3

the great financial crisis of 2008. Jen Hughes in Hong Kong looks at what it means for one of the

1:22.4

big losers, Nomura, that got burned to the tune of about $2 billion by Archegos. And Liam Proud in London has written a piece about Credit Suisse, the biggest bank to take

1:31.3

a Huang hit, and how it will need to reconsider its strategy and structure as a new chairman takes over in a few weeks.

1:37.3

After that, I talked to Gina Chon and Washington to get a handle on what this whole thing tells us about regulation,

1:42.3

or rather the many holes in the framework

1:44.4

to keep financial markets stable. And Jen Saba, New Jersey checks in to talk about SpongeBob SquarePants,

1:51.3

or more accurately, Viacom, CBS, the media company whose precipitous stock decline may actually

1:57.4

have been the straw that broke the camel's back and set archiegos on its extraordinary

2:02.1

unwinding this week give a listen greetings melbourne hong kong and london got you all together

2:09.2

because all three of you jenn in hong kong leom in london and anthony and melbourne were all converging

...

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