tv Lunch Money Bloomberg January 21, 2014 12:00pm-1:01pm EST
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>> welcome to "lunch money." i am adam johnson. man, bills richest gates, he has committed his wealth and his life to solving the world's biggest problems. the billionaire founder and chairman of microsoft together with his wife has tackled extreme poverty and poor health in developing countries to the failure of america's education system. today bill gates joins michael bloomberg, majority owner of bloomberg lp for a conversation with betty liu. we are going to bring you the best of that interview which took place just after the and
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melinda released their annual letter, tradeking no coronations for the year 2025. -- no poor nations by the year 2035. >> i think it is dangerous people are focusing on the bad news and not seeing the progress we have made. it means the don't look at the practices. they make them less generous. we are raising poor countries up. done on more to be health and agriculture. the track record to success, if you don't see that you are not going to participate in what we need to do. >> you say there will be no poor nations by the time we reach 2035? >> almost none. landlocked countries in africa, north korea, it will be less than 10. -- down to to e
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about a quarter of them. if we focus on them we can make it really exceptional. melinda gates try to debunk three myths. one, poor countries are doomed wo, foreign aid is a waste, and three, saving lives leads to overpopulation. number twod to ms. that foreign aid -- to myth number two that foreign aid does not help. >> people are sleeping without a roof over their head. fewer people are illiterate. life expectancy is generally longer. by any measure things are better. that does not mean every place or every person and there'll always be a bottom 20%. we will always redefine what the bottom 20% means. up to say that with foreign aid and all the money -- for example, through the hill and gates that bill and melinda gates foundation -- through the
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bill and melinda gates foundation -- >> a big part of point he got myths is busting them. betty asked bill gates how he plans to change that respects perspective. emily want to spread the word, if people should feel great -- >> we want to spread the word. headlines are what mislead you. bad news is a headline and gradual improvement is not. a reductionelebrate of malaria deaths? when did we celebrate gdp growth ? we all must have to speak out and say despite how bad we feel about what is not yet done, we have some approaches where cynicism is holding us back. andle think of corruption
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think about the big part of the budget. if you ask people, they will say 25% or certainly above 10%. >> one of the myths about much aidid is that so goes to government in africa. they waste that aid. passgive corrupt regimes a to not doing the things they need to do. what you say to that? them a historically during the cold where there was a lot of money that was friendship money to make sure that that guy was our bad guy versus the soviet bad guy. nobody expected that human lives with them prove dramatically. now we do not have that agenda. wille can go and say, what this do for nutrition? what will this do for kids to fully develop physically and mentally and help these countries be self-sufficient?
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so many are focusing on the tough cases. with the right vaccines and the right seeds and philanthropists coming in with their businesslike mentality like mike and i have, i think every year we are going to be smarter about how we do it. >> we also have bigs that have big problems. solving them does not mean getting 100% of them. if we brought smoking gun in a good part of this world to medically, that will save an enormous number of lives. having said that, there are also places where the smoking industry has managed to get poor people who do not know that it is bad for their health to increase the rate of smoking. are you making progress he? yes. -- making progress? yes. should you be disappointed? no. smoking will kill one billion people the century. we made progress and you have to admit that. if you are not willing to acknowledge what works, you're not going to be able to know how
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to help others. >> have you been surprised at the turnaround in the public onw on issues like smoking? issues like obesity, for instance? and even now, the legalization of marijuana and how rapidly people's perceptions have changed. >> we still have a long ways to go. if you take a look at these companies, the tobacco companies target those that do not have the information, do not have the infrastructure. industry can give them advice as to how to improve their lives and extend their lives. so much of the tragedy in this world is self-inflicted. wars, there is genocide, there is starvation and people getting shot all the time. before theydied should because of their own behavior. that is what we have to work on, educating them and giving them the tools, explaining and counteracting the special interests who make money by selling products to them or getting them to do things that
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are dangerous. federal government and state government tends to move money around. cities are where you pick up the garbage, were you educated kids, were you bring down crime, where you enact health measures that you can actually see. can buy it, how it is labeled, how you can lose it -- can use it. climate change has all been done it has all been done at the city level. those are not done at the federal or state level. there really done at the city level. >> i have always wants to know this from you, you have such a huge arsenal. oath of you have a huge arsenal of resources. -- both of you have a huge arsenal resources. how do you pick the causes you get behind? >> i think the greatest inequity is how poor children don't get
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to grow up and achieve their potential. either they die or they sadly do not have enough food that their brain develops. have decided that most of the money is going to go to that cause. unfortunately there are things like vaccines that will help six andoid them getting we are seeing products -- and we're seeing progress. because it is this injustice, because these things were not being done at the level they should be, once you pick an area you develop expertise to my you go out and see the people. that is going to be our lifeline. >> to someone trigger you? -- did someone trigger you to think about this area? >> i think he listens to his wife.
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linda has a lot of good ideas. we have been doing a lot of things under her guidance trying to advance the causes of getting the kids so they can get going. there are lots of good ideas. you cannot do everything. you have to decide what your core competencies are, what do you want to do it internally. in a lot of cases their foundation administers funds and in other cases they give funds. in our case there will be more donating of funds. if we are working with them on a lot of public-health issues. >> when you were mayor, you had certain metrics by which you can measure the success of your own projects and initiatives. money, how do you measure success? >> not everything is going to work quickly so you have to have some patience. number two, if you do something in the scientific world and it turns out to be a failure, that
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in some senses a success because you don't have to go down that path again. unfortunately in the world i came from you are labeled a failure. that is not the case in the way science works. there are a lot of people around who are trying to apply metrics. in some cases you can and in some cases you just have to do it on faith. i have no doubt this'll help and i am willing to make that bet. if it doesn't work, don't be stubborn but don't walk away from it too quickly. >> how about you, bill? >> each project with a commitment like our smoking groups come a day come in and talk about how we are going to get the prevalence down. is going very very well. -- it is going very very well. we back a lot of different scientists. if one approach fails for an important problem we have a
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portfolio type approach. -- thecesses we have had farming productivity has doubled -- that gives you a blitz to keep trying. you can go out to the country and meet the people who are growing more rice than they ever did before. going to have more power exclusive interview with bill gates and mike bloomberg. here about where they choose -- here about how they choose where to donate. ♪
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>> welcome back to "lunch money." we have been bringing you the exclusive conversation with bill gates and mike bloomberg. mr. bloomberg, founder and majority owner of bloomberg lp, a parent of bloomberg news, is heading to africa. but he asks him if he has -- asks bill gates if he has any advice for mr. bloomberg. >> mike has been super generous
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on malaria research. i hope you will feel good going in and seeing that the death rate is down, seeing -- we have been talking to the people on the ground for which tools to deliver. africa is fantastic. that city needs a lot of help. that is why both of us are drawing more of our philanthropy to help those countries that have great means. >> one of the grace -- one of the places melinda is has 60,000 people per dr.. we have 500 people per dr.. if you need an emergency operation, you just die. we have been training people to do appendectomy's, which turns out to be veritably simple operations. -- be relatively simple operations. you are not going to cure everything, you are not going to be able to do open heart surgery but you are going to do things that can be enormous.
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>> what do you hope to do or see their? the organization i am participating in is a group of -- sharing best practices. they all have the same problems. the all have to educate and protect and improve the health of people. all through africa and latin america and asia and europe and america -- we all have very similar problems. some of them are different in magnitude. you don't have to go very far from right where we are sitting, just go to haiti and look at the terrible tragedy that has taken place there. the world pledged all this money and yet it is still there with diseases that i felt were eradicated -- that i thought were eradicated. there living in tents and not having the ability to be a charge -- be in charge of their own destiny. >> many people watching this
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interview are big admirers of your work. i am curious to know who you admire. are there leaders you look up to? >> well, we learn from each other. both early members of the group having pledge. giving pledge. george soros has done innovative work. of most amazing are the people out in the field, who spend big parts of their life in africa, taking these tools we send back and make sure they get out there. of >> you have to separate people's political interest from their willingness to help. george soros is clearly a liberal in some ways. the koch brothers are very conservative. they help out hospitals. you don't have to agree with everything.
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they all deserve credit. there are an awful lot of people. there are people who aren't even millionaires and right small checks and give their time and go out there and work and lobby their of elected officials to take government money and try to improve the health of everybody. they deserve and enormous amount of credit as well. >> that maybe feeds into what you are talking about with the misperceptions. people feel like their lives have not been improved. the average american does not feel like their life has been improved. how can the care about the problems you are talking about? is are youestion willing to spend a little less than one percent on saving lives for a few thousand dollars per life? the european governments tend to be voices generous on these issues as the united states is. be twice as generous on these issues as the united states is.
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the voters are not going to be willing. recently in the budget compromise, polio got annexed a $15 million per year. some progress has -- polio got an extra 15 million per year. >> it is very self-serving. do you cure diseases elsewhere where you are not likely to catch the disease? we live in a world where diseases can spread very easily. around thestability world it is self-serving because our safety depends on a world that gets along. there is a passionate -- a compassionate part of this. you come back to right where we started with this interview. things are better. we can make a difference. you are not going to cure everything overnight or even ever.
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but to sit back and say it is hopeless, that is not true. one of the things bill points out, the better educated people do not overpopulate the world. a lot of poor people have lots of kids because they think they will not survive and there's not going to be a breadwinner doma wrote to take care of them. -- breadwinner down the road to take care of them. it leads to a much more rational world and leads -- and let's us do with real-world problems. >> we will have more of our exclusive interview with bill gates and mike bloomberg, including the chairman's take on funding a new ceo for microsoft. we will be right back. ♪
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the conversation is mostly about their fight against global poverty. it is not often you get to ask the chairman and cofounder of microsoft what he thinks about the company and the search for a new ceo. him what he thinks and he is still staying involved. >> i am on the board. the board is doing some important work right now. the foundation is the biggest part of my time. help part-time work into as a board member. you?w involved are >> there is nothing new to say. it is a good board. >> do you feel a sense of urgency at all? that way.s feel you always want to pick the best person.
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they will move at the right pace. have had the fortune of having the mayor come back to this company. we are very happy to have him back. ever hit your vision of ever going back to microsoft going full -- going back to microsoft full-time? >> my wife melinda and i are enjoying that. i am not going to change that. i will help out part-time. >> there is a lot more to this exclusive conversation with bill gates and michael bloomberg, including their thoughts of the state of technology. you can watch all of it on bloomberg.com or go to our award-winning tablet app. coming up in the next half hour, financial leaders gathering in for -- -- in davos plus, what makes a great leader?
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some of the biggest in business tell us what they think. >> it is 26 minutes after the hour, which means bloomberg television is on the markets. we take a look at where stocks are trading paid a relatively mixed day for the market. the nasdaq is up i 1/10 of a percent while the dow is down by half a percent. off --as a steeper still steeper selloff. overall european stocks at a six-year high. one stock we do want to highlight is alcoa. jpmorgan trading from neutral
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money" on "lunch bloomberg television, also streaming live on bloomberg. tom and your tablet smartphone. today's moving pictures of or the video is the story. video of protesters clashing with police in kiev. the protests have turned increasingly violent since the prime minister push through anti-protest laws. protesters threw molotov cocktails at police who responded by throwing rubber bullets and smoke bombs. violence in thailand as well were a state of emergency has been declared in bangkok. the move gives security forces more power to control violence during antigovernment protests.
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ms traders want the prime minister to resign and have requested february 2 elections be postponed. thailand, customs officials discovered rhino horns in luggage said to be worth at least $600,000. they were stashed in a suitcase on their way to vietnam where they are ground into powder for use as an aphrodisiac. the number of rhinos killed for their horns has been soaring. south africa says at least 1000 of the animals were killed last year alone. leaders areld. gathering in topless for the world economic forum. brian moynihan sat down with erik schatzker and stephanie ruhle this morning. the first question was how do you repair reputations at banks like his? >> if you say what is the purpose of the financial institution, to help our customers with their lives. we've done everything we can and as we continue the compliance and risk infrastructure, you
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won't find those types of things repeat, but you are still finding them. >> you say you felt the worst of the mortgage litigation and settlement was behind the of a. >> if you look at a lot of different cases, because we are the biggest because of the countrywide acquisition, we were deep into this earlier on. fannie mae and ready mac come up we settled with the private label litigation two and half years ago. still uncertainties and we have investigations by we department of justice and will deal with that but the reality is what we were able to and had to get to over the last few years to clean the balance and 11, starting and 10 we did a lot of work and it cost a lot of money. a lot of the work has been spent . >> people see numbers like $17
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billion. brian moynihan has to write a $17 billion check. when you saw jamie dimon had to write a $13 billion check, did you say oh or i know what that feels like? >> you always say both, probably. betweenlarities companies have be sorted out case-by-case. i said before, we have a lot of experience in this, so you have to take it case-by-case and brick by brick. if you look at the fundamental putback risk, you've talked a lot about that. behow tough is it going to for bfa to manage through the paper of quantitative easing? is it a challenge or opportunity? --clients losing money that's an opportunity but we saw clients going from 152 160 basis
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points, it's a doubling of rates since late last summer. people are anticipating what the fed is going to do and the advent flow based on the economic news. our job is to be in the middle and help people move money around. it is the client business. trading,roprietary that's what you see in the flows as a post to principal risks. >> all of this talk can make you thursday. that's where monocyte or bruise come in. hans nichols take this in. >> thanks for coming. >> welcome to the brewery. >> thank you.
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>> your beer will be drank by all the captains of finance and heads of state. you have an important job. >> i think so. you have to make a high-quality beer. >> is it hard to brew when you are this high up? lex yes. we have to pressure cook to be a solution. >> this is the malt and barley that has been cooked. quite good. >> it taste like a beer. >> after fermentation, a goes to the storage tank. another seven or eight weeks.
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especially airing the world economic forum, there is a lot of champagne and wine that is --nk, but >> beer for breakfast, champagne for lunch and wine for dinner. lex exactly. >> you can watch our full coverage of dominoes. morrow, we will speak of -- speak with a member of bain capital partners. like thesedon't look in dominoes. the high price of storing data in the cloud, that's coming up next. then we will hear from the likes of bob mould and ben moshe a on how they got had.
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>> in company, it is all about the cloud. lenovo is in talks for a server business for price between $3.5 point $5nd four billion. they are looking to expand into storage equipment and servers. ibm sold its pc business to lenovo back in 2005. software giant sap has been moving into servers, but it is coming at a price. sap pushed back its profitability target by two profitsaying operating will probably reach 35% of sales by 2017. why theeo tells us delay is worth it. >> wouldn't you rather have a career -- a courageous management team that says let's go for market share in the cloud and be the cloud company and ambitionthe 35% margin
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and capture the market share? what we decided to do is accept the cloud revenue stream as you said. of years,rst couple it flattens out the margin, but by year three, it kicks in and that's why in our intermediate guidance, we said we would hit it to 35% ambition. a 3.5l also deliver billion cloud company to the world. that's the largest mega-cap cloud company in the world and that is sap. >> it's not just tech companies taking a hit. unilever says slowing growth in emerging markets will hurt sales this year will stop the maker of dubs so and then jerry ice cream gets a lot of its income from india and china. in spite of it all, the ceo is bullish.
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>> in these emerging markets, there's lot aspiration and consumers are trading up. significance among the people entering the middle class urbanizationd requires consumer change in the europe and the u.s., consumers have to downsize to change that behavior. we have different strategies for different regions. but how ceos do their work is a lesson in leadership. betty liu got it down on paper and is out with a new book about what ceos say what you need to know how to get ahead. the biggest names in business answer a different question each day. today, what helps with your hardr? >> you have to work . there's just no getting away from that. you have to prepare like crazy.
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>> it probably sounds counterintuitive, but your family has to come first. just the easy fix, the guy who went to harvard or the woman went to princeton, but the teams that work together, the balance of understanding what it takes to win goes so much farther. >> being a math major, i solved problems everyday. >> i'm dyslexic, so school was very hard for me and taught me persistence. the editing dyslexia does for you is gives you more creativity about how you look at problems and think about problems. we think about problems much differently than the majority of people do. >> having the courage to do different things. my father died when i was 10 and left my mom with four kids and $250,000 of debt in 1954. she taught us we could succeed and go forward. that has been the against attribute of my success.
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i took a lot of interest in marketing when i was in marketing and tried to work on as many cross functional things as i could. morel week, we will have from those interviews on how to get ahead will stop if you are headed to vegas and want to know how to beat the house, meet the whale. he made $15 million playing back -- laying blackjack. ♪
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stadium. close to $99 million was wagered on the super bowl according to the nevada control board. it can go even higher this year as the brokers -- as the broncos face the seahawks. thember that denver broke record for the largest point spread. don johnson knows a thing or two about betting in vegas and trish regan went behind-the-scenes. it's the story about how one no- name card shark became a vegas legend, winning $15 million in the matter of months will stop >> every gambler knows when you play at the casino, the art -- that on star not in your favor. thehouse always wins and rules are set in stone. >> if you play the big six wheel , the wheel right in front of the casino, you don't have much of a chance. mgm which iteo of
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owns a third of the casinos on the vegas strip. but let's say you're going to spend a thousand dollars will stop theoretically, we are going to win 20% of the money you circulate. >> on average, you will lose 20% of the money you play. but what if you could change the rules and twist the odds? >> we will negotiate for high- end players. johnson is a blackjack player who won $15 million in atlantic city in a single winning streak. >> i beat them big. >> is because he's in industry insider who knows what to negotiate before he stepped into the casino. for starters, he wants a that's. >> they were letting me play $25,000 a hand. $75,000 a swing, it's not hard to win $4 million. >> it's also not that hard to lose $4 million.
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>> i did not have $4 million to lose all stop lex he negotiated a discount, 20% rebate on all his losses. those discounts, he turned his attention to the rules of the game. >> walk me through the rules they gave you that were advantageous. >> when standing on soft seven, if the dealer gets an 86, the dealer has to stand on hand instead of taking another card. doubling on any two cards. some places have rules that will not allow you to do that. handsing hands up to four . >> even with his rules, the 20% theount and the big bats, house still had a tiny advantage. in.there was a house built >> not satisfied, he figured out how to tip the game in his
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favor. >> if you can beat the dealer, you can beat house. lex there are not enough players that will deal $100,000 per hand. >> and you encourage them -- do you encourage them or distract them? >> are all kinds of distractions for dealers. i had stars or five or six or seven girls that would pose as a girlfriend to distract the dealers. but does it work? like there's always a circus going on. the more it looks like one giant party, the better it is for my side of the table. if there is a distraction and they make a stake, what's the worst that can happen? i get a free bet. >> and you know immediately what may have made a mistake. >> i think i've caught every mistake that's not in my favor and made them them to give me the free bet because those are the rules of the game. johnson took don
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on the casino industry in atlantic city. he won $15 million and became the legendary gamblers -- legendary gambler that the house. >> to see the rest of the story, watch the full one-hour documentary that debuts tonight at 9:00 p.m. eastern. anally, what are the odds of cowboy on a ski slope? turns out it's actually pretty good. inr 100 professional cowboys steamboat springs colorado at the stampede event will stop that's also today's mystery meat. ♪
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the sectors that remain positive our utilities, materials and energy. on the downside our telecom services and verizon i've fourth-quarter profits. demandket seeing strong is the super bowl game. i won't be buying them, but other people are. carol massar has been looking into the big numbers. >> we've seen prices go up a lot in the last couple of weeks. we are up at about 16%, so if you look at a ticket for the super bowl here in new jersey, it's going to cost $4000. >> they are going up. >> we talk to an event tracker and they see a lot of supply
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coming into the market, so that is going to push down prices. for prices to come down several hundreds of dollars over the next few weeks and if the weather, look outside -- we are all talking about how we're getting to work tomorrow. if the weather is not good on super bowl day, you will see prices come down more. the tickets for the super bowl were not that extraordinary compared to other super bowls. >> let's look at some history. 2009 -- the to first year they have been tracking. the average list rice on the day of the super bowl was about $2100. will.s the low end if you if you go to 2011, that's when you saw them go for about $3600. so you can see quite a range but what it showing you is that prices can come down.
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room togot a lot of move and fall even lower. what chris macvittie says is he thinking they are going to see toces of about 1500 dollars 1750 dollars. >> who would buy a ticket at $4000? -- they are hoping ticket prices are going to come down. >> what about the swedes? >> you have the enclosed room and amenities. seat is inpensive the lower club and that goes for about $27,000. the swedes where you are enclosed and have a lot of amenities. the most expensive suite is at 962 thousand dollars, almost a million dollars. >> we were talking on friday with the ceo and he said i go to these things for business. i'm not watching the game.
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the ceo says they are doing relatively well for the same type of reasons. greetingmeeting and people, so that maybe makes more sense will stop it is the first outside cold-weather day that they are doing, so it makes sense that maybe they want to snap up those enclosed areas. car andld rather buy a i can learn how to drive it. we are on the market again in 30 minutes. "bloomberg west" is up next. ♪
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but live from pier three in san francisco, welcome to the early edition of "bloomberg west." i'm emily chang. our focus is on innovation, technology, and the future of business. we have an excuse is interview you do not want to miss. microsoft chairman bill gates mikeng down with bloomberg, former mayor of new york. they cover a wide range of subjects from how they are using their wealth to change the world to the better, to
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