Geetha Ranganathan, Bloomberg Intelligence Analyst on US Media, recaps Netflix earnings. Todd Gillespie, Bloomberg Finance Reporter, discusses staffing moves at Goldman Sachs. Anurag Rana, Bloomberg Intelligence Technology Analyst,
Netflix Inc. may have a hard time topping its mammoth 2024, but Wall Street is optimistic about offerings that include major names in entertainment and sports.
Netflix Inc. shares soared to a record high on Wednesday after the streaming giant reported its biggest quarterly subscriber gain in history, buoyed by its first major live sporting events and the return of Squid Game.
Dave Lee is Bloomberg Opinion's US technology columnist. He was previously a correspondent for the Financial Times and BBC News. Two things Netflix Inc. said it would never do are now the core ...
Bloomberg Daybreak Weekend with Tom Busby takes a look at some of the stories we'll be tracking in the coming week. • In the US – a preview of what comes next for the U.S economy when Donald Trump takes office,
Many Brits are eligible for a free or discounted TV Licence. This includes those aged over 75 and claiming Pension Credit, students living away from home, those living in residential care or sheltered accommodation, and people who are blind or severely sight-impaired. You can learn more about TV Licence exemptions here.
UK is thinking of making households who use streaming services like Netflix and Disney pay a license fee as part of plans to fund the British Broadcasting Corp.
Bank of Montreal is stepping into a booming product category that offers exposure to popular global stocks while hedging against currency volatility, becoming the second Canadian bank to do so.
The UK government is considering overhauling the BBC licence fee, especially with streaming on the rise, as part of a bigger plan to secure the broadcaster’s future. With more people flocking to streaming,
NEW: The Government is considering making people who only use streaming services like Netflix and Disney pay the BBC licence fee [ @BloombergUK] The same source added that if there were an obvious alternative model, the license fee would have been scrapped already.
Currently, UK residents only have to pay for a TV licence if they watch live TV, and not if they only watch pre-recorded programmes via streaming services such as Netflix, Disney Plus, Apple TV+, Prime Video and Paramount Plus. (If they watch live shows on those platforms though, such as Netflix's WWE programming, they do require a licence.)