► Subscribe to the Financial Times on YouTube: http://bit.ly/FTimeSubs Private equity firms have come of age since their corporate raider days and are increasingly vying for retail investors’ cash. But what do they do? And what risks do investors face? John Authers, senior investment columnist, explains. ► FT Markets: http://bit.ly/1J5HNd3 ► FT Business: http://bit.ly/1KUK08s ►
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April 30 — Tesla is a young company, but it’s already made history. Bloomberg takes a quick look back at some of Tesla’s milestones since its founding in 2003.
The loudest band in the rock world also rocks the merchandising world, managing what Gene Simmons calls a billion dollar business.
The green paste you’ve been eating with your sushi isn’t really wasabi. If you check the ingredients on the packet, you might see a mixture of sweetener, horseradish and perhaps a small percentage of the real thing. Real wasabi is hard to come across and it can cost $250 per kilo. So what actually is
Technology giants are creating thousands of new millionaires as they list on the stock exchange through much-hyped IPOs. FT tech correspondent Hannah Murphy meets residents struggling to keep up as the city’s wealth gap widens. ► Subscribe to FT.com here: http://bit.ly/2GakujT ► Listen to our podcasts: https://www.ft.com/podcasts Follow us on Twitter: https://twitter.com/fincancialtimes Check us out
The Dutch capital Amsterdam is widely known for being bike-friendly. But it wasn’t always a model cycling city. Public outrage at rising traffic casualties in the Seventies caused city planners to rethink their approach to urban design. Video by Gloria Kurnik
Though millions of people have visited Disneyland, few know about three secret locations inside the park. Cristina Alesci goes inside the most sacred spaces in the “Happiest Place on Earth,” all with special ties to Walt himself.
Singapore’s Changi Airport just opened ‘Jewel,’ a $1.3 billion mall boasting the world’s tallest indoor waterfall, an IMAX movie theatre, and a hotel. MORE TRAVEL CONTENT: Inside America’s First Private Terminal For Millionaires 9 Of The Most Exclusive Spots In Disney Parks Why Amtrak Is So Expensive | So Expensive —————————————————— #Singapore #Airport #BusinessInsider Business
Read ‘Lockheed hails progress on hypersonic military aircraft’ here: bit.ly/1V1IrhG ►Subscribe to the Financial Times on YouTube: http://bit.ly/FTimeSubs Flying one of the world’s fastest and most sophisticated weapons is usually a ride reserved for military personnel and dignitaries. Carola Hoyos reports from Saab’s headquarters in Sweden on what it is like to fly in one
Brothers Marc and Shanon Parker took their love for sci-fi and comic books and started Parker Brothers Concepts, where they build outrageous, street-legal vehicles for Hollywood and TV shows.
Conde guitars have been inspiring artists from Leonard Cohen to Bob Dylan. They are made in a humble basement workshop in Madrid by a third generation of artisans. Video by Gloria Kurnik and Leila Hussain MADE is a Bloomberg Digital Original series focusing on craftspeople and their premium wares, all made the hard way.
Much of the film Interstellar is centered around the existence of a wormhole and black hole, which happen to be two of the most perplexing things in the universe. Astrophysicist and StarTalk Radio host Neil deGrasse Tyson explains how wormholes and black holes really work. ————————————————– Follow BI Video on Twitter: http://bit.ly/1oS68Zs Follow BI Video
► Try the Financial Times for 4 weeks for just £1. Start your trial now – http://bit.ly/2ry7Tkz ► Read more at https://on.ft.com/2FiDi0B House of Commons Speaker and MP for Buckingham John Bercow voted Remain in the 2016 referendum on whether the UK should leave the EU. ► Subscribe to FT.com here: http://bit.ly/2GakujT ► Subscribe to
In a small workshop in Florence, Saskia Wittmer crafts leather shoes that are as unique as each customer. MADE is a series of simple, lovely short films that demonstrate how everyday luxury objects are created. Video by Leila Hussain.
20 years ago, Bruce Francisco and his business partner bought an old Cold War missile base in the Adirondacks. After a few million dollars in renovations, the silo is now a luxury home.
The deathstalker is one of the most dangerous scorpions on the planet, and what makes it so dangerous also happens to be the most expensive liquid in the world. Why? Special thanks to Emran Alkhiyami. See more from Emran: https://www.instagram.com/ealkhiyami/ —————————————————— #ScorpionVenom #Deathstalker Business Insider tells you all you need to know about business, finance,
►Subscribe to the Financial Times on YouTube; http://bit.ly/FTimeSubs Rohit Jaggi test drives a new breed of motorcycle, the MonoTracer E, an all-electric cabin motorcycle that could banish range anxiety for ever. ► FT Technology News: http://bit.ly/1LNlR4g ► The World Of Transport: http://bit.ly/1JD6JHj ► Human Evolution’s Creative Drive: http://bit.ly/1MVUIgb
April 7 — Charles Masson lives restaurants, from legendary years spent at New York’s La Grenouille to his current directorship of Chevalier at the new Baccarat Hotel. Here he reveals the five ingredients every great dining room needs to succeed. (video by Zach Goldstein, Paul Cavrel) (Source: Bloomberg) –Subscribe to Bloomberg on YouTube: http://www.youtube.com/Bloomberg Bloomberg
Mark Zuckerberg releases video of his acceptance into Harvard’s class of 2002.
Japanese sword-making is a tradition that goes back centuries, and one that’s carried on to this day. Each sword takes dedication, skill and can take over 18 months to create. The resulting blades can be worth thousands of dollars. So what makes them so expensive? Becoming a swordsmith in Japan takes a 5-year apprenticeship, and
If mobile payment apps became as popular in the U.S. as they are in China, banks would lose a projected $43 billion in revenue annually. Bloomberg QuickTake explains how cheap and easy payments by phone are threatening one of the banking industry’s most profitable businesses. Video by Robin Fall
FT columnist Lucy Kellaway has been writing on the strange and indecipherable language of chief executives and their companies for over 20 years. She looks back at a career of deriding the hot air and asks: has it made any difference? ► Subscribe to FT.com here: http://bit.ly/2r8RJzM ► Subscribe to the Financial Times on YouTube:
CNN’s Jon Sarlin explores the different ways that the social media giant has kept competitors at bay — and why that could now spell trouble.
While most people associate the Playboy Mansion with scantily clad playmates and sex-fueled debauchery, it served as the childhood home for Hugh Hefner’s sons. Now 23, Hefner’s youngest son, Cooper, recounts his childhood spent in what many consider to be a sort of adult fantasyland. For Cooper, it was quite the opposite: a child’s wonderland
US President Donald Trump has called a partial ceasefire in hostilities with the Chinese telecoms group. But in an interview before Mr Trump’s comments, Ren Zhengfei, chairman of Huawei, told FT Global China editor James Kynge his company would survive by relying on business outside the US. And Huawei is still expected to reduce reliance
To tackle Thailand’s trash problem, Universal Biopack uses a unique formula to create zero-waste packaging from cassava and bamboo.
There are now over 6,000 ETFs on 60 exchanges and ETFs exist for everything from corporate bonds to gold bars to oil futures. Like the USB port or a gas pump, ETFs have basically standardized the entire universe of investing so that everything under the sun now trades like shares of Apple. But what, exactly
The E-4B “Nightwatch” is nicknamed the Doomsday Plane. It’s designed to survive a nuclear blast. In the event of nuclear war, the militarized Boeing 747 will become the command center for the US President, Secretary of Defense and the Joint Chiefs of Staff. MORE MILITARY CONTENT: Inside A $3M Doomsday Condo What It Takes To
► Subscribe to the Financial Times on YouTube: http://bit.ly/FTimeSubs Deflation has dogged Japan for two decades. Shinzo Abe is finally trying to grasp the nettle and do something about it. David Pilling, the FT’s Asia editor, discusses with John Authers whether Mr Abe’s gamble will be worth the risk. ► Authers’ Note: http://bit.ly/1Gj930D ► FT
Sept. 7 (Bloomberg) — Michael Burry, the former head of Scion Capital LLC who predicted the housing market’s plunge, talks with Bloomberg’s Jon Erlichman about his investments in agricultural land, real estate and gold. (This is an excerpt. Source: Bloomberg)
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