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tv   Bloomberg Technology  Bloomberg  April 25, 2017 5:00pm-6:01pm EDT

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cooperation with immigration authorities. the government may ask the court of appeal of san francisco to overturn the ruling. former national security adviser michael flynn could be prosecuted for failing to report payments from russia. the chairman of the house oversight committee says there's a trip ore he cleared payment the secretary of state army. former attorney general sally yates will testify before a committee on russian interference in the 2016 election.the senate says ea is scheduled for may 8 with former national director james clyburn. will sign anmp executive order on the antiquities act to review national monument designations by his predecessors. the law gives the executives authority to designate national monuments. derek jeter is one person who to buy theoption miami marlins.
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day,l news 24 hours a powered by 2600 journalists and analysts, and more than 120 countries. i'm alisa parenti. this is bloomberg. "bloomberg technology," is next. ♪ caroline: i'm caroline hyde. this is "bloomberg technology." coming up, blair sets the time and a place to officially test its floating taxis. wentll you how it all down. plus, self driving if you share in phoenix. by arizona's capital is ground zero for monetizing after that -- alphabet. andy nfl teams up with wearable tech. how players can cash in using their own health data.
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first, the rally in stocks continue. let's go to abigail doolittle for more. up 7/10 of a percent, above the important figure. reporter: we are. another risk on day for major averages, especially the tech heavy nasdaq closing above success and. above 6000. alas tend a closed above a big round number for the first time, 5000, in march of 2000. it has taken 17 years for nasdaq to close above another big round number. down, this might be a more psychological level as opposed to an indication more gains are ahead. driving the nasdaq about 6000 today, we are looking at netflix, baidu, and biogen above. netflix is one of the top performers having its best days since october next year -- last
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year. that has to do with the companies deal with baidu, helping baidu trade higher. it will help netflix enter china, the only major market netflix has not been as of yet. and biogen, a big day. like the there really company's rare muscle disease drug, suggesting there could be more growth ahead. relative to the overall strength we are seeing weeks ago, there's talk about whether the reflation rally was reversing. let's go to the bloomberg and take a look at the chart. these are the three major averages out of the election. asdaq in blue on the top, leading the dow and s&p 500, of 16%. lots of strength for stocks at the end of april. caroline: and it's across-the-board globally.
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we saw asia rally, europe followed, and the u.s. garnering highs. talk to us about the earnings season. we are seeing a lot of the big players we will hear from also hitting new highs. reporter: it's interesting you should say that, because our equity strategist at bloomberg said she thinks the reason the tech center -- sector has resumed the uptrend is the positive earnings, but relative to the nasdaq technology earnings to come out later this week, we are looking at lots of big names including alphabet and microsoft. alphabet, everyone will be looking to see if the youtube ad revenue brings growth. microsoft, it could be the best third fiscal quarter report ever on both cloud and server business. let's not forget amazon. well.eport on thursday as
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the last quarterly report was a bit of venice, so estimates have been coming down for this report. our intelligence analyst says it could lead to upside and we will be looking to see what the cloud business looks like. let's go back into the bloomberg and take a look at a chart as to whether or not the strength in the next jack -- nasdaq can continue.this is the nasdaq relative to the 200 day moving average. 11% above that, basically the most matching over the last three years.look at that rfi on the bottom -- rsi on the bottom. this one is about 70. it has not started to back down, but it may suggest around the earnings period, perhaps some of the strength of the nasdaq could consolidate a lot of it. -- consolidate a little bit. caroline: bloomberg tech news reporter abigail doolittle, thank you. now, the promise of flying cars inching towards reality. uber kicked off its conference
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in dallas announcing it will test flying vehicles in dallas and dubai in three years.that's right. their chief product officer says the public will get to live in the era of flying cars. three years until they start testing, but this is still pretty ambitious. reporter: right. and another three years from now, they are trying to have a service filling. i think flying cars is one of the technologies that feels like it's over the horizon. it will be interesting to see if they can execute on it.they are striking out of partnership s and hedging their bets on which type of takeoff vehicle, and trying to create the infrastructure and ecosystem to make it happen. caroline: also talent. they have had higher risk from -- they has been hiring from nasa. reporter: i think it is
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important. it is optically important. as a savvye company technology company. i think it's not imminent enough to say it is key to their business. i think in a time of pr crisis, it helps motivate the company to say we are doing something exciting, we are helping convene these different companies to create flying cars. caroline: certainly, another moonshot helps in the valuation as well as, competition. i was speaking to brad stone earlier. we were talking about kitty hawk. everyone wants in on the flying car. reporter: hard to believe it is a coincidence that video from kitty hawk showing their flying cars working. a came out yesterday. uber's big announcement. it's not just self driving cars. in this case it is larry page, alphabet ceo, but this inherent competition between alphabet
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versus google versus uber. caroline: the videos are spectacular. none of them really look like a car to me at the moment. they look like motorbikes. reporter: that's why everyone takes that calls them vertical takeoff and landing. it is safely packaged in a small vehicle that looks nothing like a car. we are just attached to that idea. "back to the future." reporter: exactly. we are not replacing the inside city uber trip. caroline: san jose to san francisco in 15 minutes would be a joy for some of the vc community. this is a three day event in dallas from uber. it really is the great and good from the industry trying to think forward. reporter: partnerships with the
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manufacturers in dallas and dubai. there are batteries so they can try and better charge cars, and even the real estate creating partnerships. the cars would literally land here. it's trying to bring a lot of people together. i think they have five different manufacturers they partner with, and there will probably be more. uber the idea isuber -- the idea is uber can bring people together and have organizational powers with these players trying to build flying cars, and they benefit when they have the network at the end of the day. you call the car on their app, and they make money without doing the heavy lifting in terms of rmb. caroline: what is first, autonomous are flying? thank you very much from "bloomberg technology." we will be able to continue monitoring events out of the uber conference this week. another story we are watching, thator that's -- out for
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step, testing out self driving tech. and sticking of the car tech theme, nissan has joined automated bmw self parking in allowing the driving data collected by mobilized chips to be used in a app. installing the tech and sharing the data.mobilized chairman has called the technology the missing piece of fully autonomous driving. coming up, nfl players can sell their health data.the technology behind it , and the money to be made, next. all reminders of "bloomberg technology," are live streaming on twitter. check us out 5 p.m. in new york and 2 p.m. here in san francisco. this is bloomberg. ♪
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caroline: the company is taking its tech talents to the nfl. the wearable analyzes data and helps athletes in training. this is another way for athletes to course -- score big. why sell personal health information? whoop ceoehind it, joins us. you are paring up with nfl players association, kobani the data. talk to us about the business opportunities here. isour core mission at whoop
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to empower athletes. meeting with the nfl players association and understanding their needs, especially around player safety and health, we felt there was an opportunity to partner. the nfl players association has become an investor in whoop.we are distributing whoop to every incoming and current player in the nfl. this is the first time a pro sports league has partnered with a wearable technology company. it will be exciting to see the data and ultimately improve player safety. caroline: player safety paramount, but talk to us about the other area the data will be used. i'm imagining those who want to sleeplook at how much players are getting, how well they are recovering, and the selling of it at the end. >> we are going to work really close with the nfl players association and the players to ultimately collect and control the data. beyond that, to look at the
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commercialization. to your point, you can imagine a lot of potential buyers of this data. you think about broadcasters and the engagement they could create withstands to talk about the recovery of players before games. you've got the offensive line peaking physically and the defensive line rundown, how can that affect the quarterbacks passer rating? there's a lot of interesting ways a broadcaster could be talking about this information. if you think beyond that, fantasy football is becoming a really popular industry. how can the data be used to empower fantasy football and connect with fans? beyond those industries, there's a whole host of health applications in terms of having the first data set of its kind continuously around professional athletes. in the process, as this data gets more personal, it also gets
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much more lucrative. what's unique about this istnership with the nfl pa it will give players the opportunity to generate meaningful revenue from the value of their data. --oline: they can spin springboard off of it. this is not the first time significant athletes have used whoop. it was implied at the olympics, and in baseball. why not more commercialization or sports teams wanting to send this sort of deal? think the nfl pa was pretty innovative and forward thinking about where the technology can go for the game. i think every league and the players association needs to decide for themselves what is the right process to evaluate technology. we went through a very rigorous competition with the nfl players association, and they had just formed a group called one team collective. it was a technology advisory
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group. hundreds of companies apply to ultimatelyhem and five pitched to them. we wanted to have the ability to go into partnership discussion. you will see the other players associations probably take notice of the deal. we are looking forward to having more conversations there, and begun.onversations have at the lead level as well, it's an opportunity to connect better with fans, an opportunity to key players in the game for a longer period of time when they can understand their health. i think everyone stands to benefit, in my opinion, from this technology and the data. caroline: what about others wanting in? and thinking of fitbit or job on.are we going to see other wearable devices trying to offer themselves to sports teams? >> first and foremost, the technology has to be able to dailytand the athlete's
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lifestyle. what makes whoop unique is the focus on recovery. we can tell an athlete how prepared their body is for strain or to perform, and we do a lot to optimize around the rate of recovery. what are you doing the other 20 hours of the day to perform better as an athlete? that's a story that hasn't been told yet in sports.is the real differentiator in this deal, because that data, the other 20 hours of the day when the athlete is not playing, that's the athletes data. we are collecting that data for the first time in getting the athlete the ability to monetize it. that's what's so special. caroline: we will see what kind of opportunities arrive. whoop ceo, thank you for having -- being with us. now, presidential runoff candidate and manual micron -- emmanuel macron has been hit
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repeatedly by cyberattacks. attackscro blames the on a group that has hit more than a dozen countries. no specifichas russian involvement. coming up, weibo has run rampant in rural china, helping businesses. we will hear exclusively from a ceo, next. can find our tv function at tv on the bloomberg. you can find interviews from our television coverage and dive into any of the securities are bloomberg functions we talk about.this is for subscribers only. check it out, tv . this is bloomberg. ♪
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caroline:caroline: now a story we are watching for you. remember when jack ma pledged to create one billion. -- one million jobs in the u.s., trump? with president there is an update. he announced the launch of a new program to make good on the pledge. alibaba will hold a conference in june. lure this is the first part of a bring smallto -- businesses to work with alibaba. weibo is no nest china's twitter. the chinese telecom giant says there is a rapid uptake of weibo in rural areas. our tech advisor -- we spoke with the ceo about what he plans to keep driving forward. >> last year we grew independent venue by -- revenue by 110%.
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that is actually very big. it's continuing this year. you will see there was still be significant growth. reporter: weibo, the messaging service that provides so much of your revenue stream, you've done a very successful job in growing users. how much more have you done the strategy and where are the new markets? >> we will still grow faster than most competitors in user ,rowth, but our overall basis we will focus on time spent competition. we will keep increasing products and more offerings in terms of video. we have tremendous growth in terms of video uses in short
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video last year, and live streaming. we just started beta testing with video stories similar to what snapchat has. this is the area we will be focused on. video is the key for future growth. reporter: you think there's too much money flooding into the tech sector. are you suggesting there are bubbles in china's tech sector, and if so, where? >> it's everywhere. not just one particular area. i was talking about the internet in general. especially in the last five or six years, we see a tremendous amount of money pouring into the market, whether from vc, foreign funds, or local funds. there's too much money. whenever there's a new concept emerge, for example live streaming, for example news app,
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or the so-called shared economy there areber model, hundreds of companies being treated. in theory, these companies will never be successful. but everybody, whenever there's a new concept, they think it will work. they don't want to miss it. there's a lot of money pouring into creating new companies and businesses. the result is that in a huge competition in terms of market , you have to put in cash to get the market share to be bigger. a lot of it is irrational. caroline: alice charles chou, senior --sina chairman. if you like bloomberg news,
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check us out on the radio. you can check us out on the bloomberg news radio app, bloomberg.com, and in the u.s. on sirius xm this is bloomberg. . ♪
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alisa: i'm alisa parenti. you are watching "bloomberg technology." at the u.s. holocaust memorial museum's national day of remembrance today, president trump that his administration
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will confront anti-semitism and stamp out precious he also accused. -- stand out prejudice. he also accused holocaust deniers. the administration also math the court of appeals to overturn the ruling. the u.s. secretary general sense -- says there has been $1.1 billion to help yemen. and add better addressing the conference -- crisis that has been overshadowed by syria's war. pope francis will arrive in cairo as a friend and messenger of peace twin bombings of. 44tic christians killed people. he hopes the pilgrimage will be an embrace of consolation to christians in the middle east. the tsa says that u.s. will not
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make changes to the in-flight flight ban on electronics devices. the homeland security device -- says the band took place march 21 and prohibits march -- devices larger than a cell phone global.news powered by more than 2600 journalists and analysts in more than 120 countries. i'm alisa parenti, this is bloomberg. it is after 5:30 p.m. here in new york. we are joined by bloomberg's paul allen. he has a look at the markets. aul: good morning. trading resumes in australia and new zealand after the holiday. it looks like it will be a good day. asx futures pointing up half of 1%.we are keeping an eye on bhp at the open, the world's biggest miner. have this morning, we will consumer price numbers out of well.lia as
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they are expected to show inflation returning to the middle of the reserve bank of band.lia's target the rba governor will be giving a speech later tonight. he may address the inflation numbers. nikkei futures also looking positive. keep an eye on japan post, book a $3.6 billion write-down charge on an australian asset acquired and saysor $5 billion, it might have been too much. i'm paul allen in sydney. more from "bloomberg technology," next. ♪ caroline: this is "bloomberg technology." i'm caroline hyde. as we discussed at the top of the hour, another banner day if
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you are long equities. stocks training in the best today performances. novemberthe nasdaq closing above 6000 for the first time ever.cory johnson has been looking at all the key movers. the thick of earnings seasons upon us, at the same time this crescendo back into tech stocks, t-mobile is an interesting one fighting against at&t. and other mobile company coming out with numbers. probably the biggest are in technology right now is the big change going on in telecommunications. the reason we care about earnings is because it lets us see what companies are actually doing. while he see from verizon last week and t-mobile yesterday, at&t today, a dramatic shift in the business. the stock after hours surged initially, then it was down. we saw the same with t-mobile yesterday.
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they have a much more interesting report. the biggest change from at&t was the same thing we saw from verizon last week, which is the number of subscribers shrunk, and the postpaid subs shrunk. point, small percentage but a very dramatic change why is it happening. ?because of all the things t-mobile is forcing on the industry, which data,nges by unlimited the ability to switch between phones, things carriers refused to do in the past. it wasn't too long ago you only had the iphone on at&t. let carriers create around users. now users can get whatever phone they want and don't want to pay for data. they are willing to jump from carrier to carrier. the result is subscriber losses big time.
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the post-market trade might not , butus a lot about this jon leger out there today had an instagram saying holy -- i won't say everything he said, because i want to keep my job, but he said holy whenever, at&t missed consensus by 100,000. i wonder where they went? they went to t-mobile. you have subscribers willing to move around. caroline: it's interesting you are mentioning apple. one of the key movers in europe was an apple supplier. the volume on the stock was phenomenal. we are seeing up 20% in trading. again, down earnings, down to how we are seeing the overall backlog of orders. this is a company not just depending on apple. europe.ing ams in cory: it hardly trades at all in
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the u.s. maybe if you hundred shares. caroline: it's a small stock, butcaroline: has clearly moved significantly. significantly on the back of china, netflix, another record. that istflix is a stock not a very big company in terms of revenues, but moving fantastically with the announcement that reed hastings has talked about for many quarters. they finally struck a deal with baidu. the stock surged tremendously. very positive on the market. shares of netflix up over 5%. the growth story for netflix has been about international growth. international has become a big part of the company. the question is, where can they go next? maybe china is possible. caroline: lastly, texas instruments keeping an eye on the chipmaker. cory: they are hitting on also
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interfered. texas instruments off to the races in terms of revenue growth. change.story is the dramatically turning around from a shrinking business to a growing business into the double digits 13%, revenue growth on year-over-year basis. the stock continues to benefit from strong results. caroline: up 40% in the past year. what a whirlwind. cory johnson, thank you very much. about a quarter of the nasdaq has come so far. a german company reported sales topping analysts estimates for the fourth straight week. businesses and upending more on cloud software. bloomberg matt miller and guy johnson spoke to the see a fellow -- cfo from headquarters in germany. they started by asking how the
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business software company is faring in one of the top markets, the u.s. >> the u.s. in particular did remarkably well, double-digit growth in software and the crowd. -- cloud. we are strong in emerging markets as well, good news for sap. reporter: that is your established market, established products doing well. what about the new s4 suite? how is that running how?many people are running back in production and what are your goals? s4 had a remarkable first quarter as well. we were up in significant digits. thousands of customers. we are seeing more and more go
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live.this has a soft fortifying effect as customers come back as references spreading the news to other prospects. we see our growth rates accelerating. of the key reasons why the software license is growing. hana more importantly also invigorates growth across the entire portfolio, including the cloud solutions. you can see this effect in the order entry from deals above the 5 million euro mark was actually up 17% of total revenue in 27% q1 2017., to that is a fortifying effect across the entire portfolio. reporter: good morning. what would a 50% u.s.
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corporation tax rate mean for sap? well, of course, it would mean a lower effective tax rate as our business is growing in the u.s. any lowering of the corporate tax rate would be beneficial to sap. we had a good performance in q1 from an effective tax rate perspective. let's see what the future brings. still a lot of time that needs to pass until we see entirely clear u.s. tax reforms, but certainly any reduction in the corporate tax rate would benefit sap. reporter: what a change you itreporter: -- the way you invest in the business geographically? >> i>> would say we have always u.s.,ery committed to the not only has a distribution market, but also as an rmb rnd's center.
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we have thousands of employees in the u.s.. we doubled down on areas like successfactors. all of our business networks solutions are already seeing a lot of additional investment. of course, we are looking to continue this and believe with a friendly environment from an investment climate perspective as well as the surrounding regulatory conditions, there is no reason to hold back. we are actually quite bullish about the american market. caroline:caroline: that was the s.a.p. cfo. ceo of ericsson is promising to step up efforts to cut costs and get rid of unprofitable contrast. in a bid to revive the struggling swedish network provider, they promised to get -- get rid of more than $1 unprofitable networks. we have a new radio platform
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introduced about a year ago. we will target a 50% penetration for this year, and are well on track to do that. announced hecsson would take over as ceo on october 26. the stock has gained 28% since then. coming up, tim cook heading to space to find talent for the next augmented reality project. more details next. this is bloomberg. ♪
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caroline:caroline: google is attempting to combat the circulation of fake news. they are rolling out changes to search results. changes will include alterations to the search engine algorithm
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that choose which websites surface in response to a query. many claim both companies did not do enough to protect users from misleading information, fake news. and apple looks to space for the next augmented reality project. the silicon valley hired a nasa specialist to help. this is part of tim cook's vision to bring a our hardware to his vision. you help bring attention to the fact that ar is here. reporter: they have been building up this team. ar team building this with the goal of functionality to the iphone with wearables. now they are expanding that with
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jeff norris, known for his work with the are in space through nasa. if you can make it work with space, you can make it work on earth here it tell us something -- caroline: hello some of the mindbending things he's working on. reporter: he worked on lenses on the heads of astronauts in the international space station. mixed reality headsets. they can come up with new applications for nasa to use it to improve scientific discoveries on mars. he worked on the mars rover as one of his first projects at nasa. an vrdcently he used ar for people to allow people to think they are on mars and allow people to control things through the headsets. caroline: it shows the focus apple has on augmented reality. analysts saying there could be with us engineers dedicated to this.
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this is big. reporter: our report said there are several hundred people working on it. maybe they can hit the 1000 number if they talk about people from other teams contributing, but i don't think the core team is about that. allainly they are going to ends of the world, all ends of the atmosphere, the solar system to get people familiar with the are on this project. it is similar to what they did when they sold the apple watch. they hired ulcers of people from all projects -- all sorts of people from all projects. caroline: it's not just a figurehead of jeff norris. mike rothwell is spearheading this. there is talent across the board. reporter: they hired people from oculus, microsoft. organization in new zealand helped create graphics for lord of the rings and other movies. it really contributes a lot to
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ar, having the right graphics for user interfaces, maybe gaming, they have specialists from every industry you can think of. caroline: fascinating. i know you will be all over every inch of the way, bringing augmented reality to reality thank you. . . up, show business could because to the first shot down in a decade. the details behind the writers guild of america writers strike. is bloomberg. ♪
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caroline: it may be bad news for tv and movie lovers. the writersguild of america has started a strike that could start as soon as next week. the current contract starts -- expires monday of next week, and if in agreement is not met, there could be consequences. bring us up to speed on what
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writers are feeling. reporter: last night, we got the votes results. an overwhelming turnout from the 12,000 members of the writers guild across america voting for strike action. they basically want better compensation for their work in the tv and film business, which has changed radically over the past several years. particularly that thing at the heart of this is how they get paid for tv shows, for example. forave seen a digital shift digital distributors, which have much shorter series of shows. instead of 20 episode seasons of your favorite show, they might be less than 14 episodes, but writers are getting paid the , and youfor less work are hearing about more burdens put on writers like exclusivity for shows. it freezes them out of writing for other opportunities.
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that's what the writers are pushing for. caroline: i see. and the timing is pretty precarious. we have upfront coming up. it is a key time that cable companies start selling to advertisers. how much could this cream crimpising -- advertisers? reporter: i got off the phone this morning with one who says it depends how long the writers strike goes on for. there were negotiations between the writers guild and the association that represents major media companies like walt disney and cbs. they've got several weeks to come to a compromise. if they don't, there will be a walkout. sorry, not several weeks, several days.
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it depends how long. there's already talk like shows like "the walking dead," being affected, where you see a season split across a year. hollywood is a busy place. there is so much more content filling out more platforms like netflix and amazon. , letu think about those alone on broadcast networks, it is a huge pipeline, and also hollywood movies pumping out installment after installment of blockbuster films. writers have a crucial role in hollywood and they are using their leverage. caroline: i'm thinking of when this happened last, 2007. how could it be different? if they did sacrifice millions in payments, like they did in 2007? reporter: the numbers i lookreporter: at say the writers lost nearly $300 million in compensation from work they lost , but the industry itself, there were estimates that say the impact was $2 billion.
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the repercussions can be huge. some are still trying to repay loans. caroline: fascinating. we will see if it comes down to the wire. we will tune in with you. twitter is set to report earnings before wednesday's u.s. opening. the social media company may be the preferred communications tool for president trump, but it is facing its third revenue declines since going public. scarlet fu took a look at twitter with the latest edition of the numbers don't lie. reporter: twitter stock has been a steady decline. the blue line, revenue, staggered to a 1% gain last quarter. so far, things have not improved since jack dorsey over as ceo in 2015. revenue growth is not forecast positive mental 28. analysts expect a 14% drop in of the fiscalter
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year. t 2017orsey originally se at the year twitter would stop losing money. twitter says it's focused on making progress. the sales headwinds, as user growth stalls chordata showed that the app users have started falling. the question to what extent seeters numbers extent -- this stagnation. you have competition from instagram and snapchat that may cause ad spending to draw. there's one study that shows 11% of mobile marketers plan to on twitter. that has wall street worried. the third lowest
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percentage of analyst by ratings. disney and others have backed away from a deal with twitter. problem is perspective buyers may not see a clear return on investment since twitter has not been able to revive user growth. that was bloomberg's scarlet fu. we will be all over those numbers tomorrow. that does it for this edition of "bloomberg technology." we will have full coverage of twitter's earnings results, plus an all-important interview with drew houston, ceo of dropbox. all episodes of bloomberg technology are live streaming on twitter. check us out at bloomberg tech tv. this is bloomberg. ♪
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♪ announcer: from our studios in new york city, this is "charlie rose." charlie: we begin tonight with a series of programs leading up to president trump's 100th day in august -- office, april 29. the 100 day mark has represented an important symbolic milestone since president roosevelt. as he nears his 100th day, the administration continues to pursue an ambitious agenda. the president is looking to move this week on a second effort to repeal and replace the affordable care act. in the face of a possible government shutdown, he plans to

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