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Jun 26, 2016
06/16
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FBC
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the germans called it rat e.n.krig.killed 242 german soldiers, the most famous, a super sniper brought stalingrad to find the siber siberia. it was brought to the big screen in "enemy at the gates." >> translator: my brother fought with him. he proved himself a great sniper. >> russians are now getting airplanes from the united states. do they play any role in the defense of stalingrad. >> the overall increase of receipts of weaponry play a significant if not critical role of the ability of the red army to defend in 1942. >> translator: we knew that america and great britain were helping us. >> in stalingrad, hitler suffered his first major defeat. two massive thrusts to the north and south of the city encircled the remainder of the 6th army. >> turning points to russia. >> 22 german divisions encircles and the defenses are being shattered. >> 800,000 german soldiers died at stalingrad and a brutal day in february 1943, the general surrendered the remaining 110,000 troops. they looked more dead than alive. it was the be
the germans called it rat e.n.krig.killed 242 german soldiers, the most famous, a super sniper brought stalingrad to find the siber siberia. it was brought to the big screen in "enemy at the gates." >> translator: my brother fought with him. he proved himself a great sniper. >> russians are now getting airplanes from the united states. do they play any role in the defense of stalingrad. >> the overall increase of receipts of weaponry play a significant if not...
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Jun 11, 2016
06/16
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CSPAN3
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she was spying on the germans. so, here we have a german typewriter that she used to write notes to send information to the allies as well as a crystal radio receiver next to it. which she used to send out illegal messages or i should say rather listen to the bbc, illegal radio broadcast, in legal under the nazi regime. we have an interesting piece in here as well. you may notice this pink and red liberation sash. there was given to an american lieutenant in september of 1944. it symbolizes the outpouring of joy that the french people had as the allies began to move through their country and liberate them from nazi rule. but down here on the end is a special artifact that we have. it is the medal of honor that was awarded to walter ehlers. he was a friend of this museum. he passed away by a year ago. he was the last, at the time, medal of honor recipient from the normandy landing. he received his medal of honor for actions that took place about three days after the initial landings. and then besides the medal of ho
she was spying on the germans. so, here we have a german typewriter that she used to write notes to send information to the allies as well as a crystal radio receiver next to it. which she used to send out illegal messages or i should say rather listen to the bbc, illegal radio broadcast, in legal under the nazi regime. we have an interesting piece in here as well. you may notice this pink and red liberation sash. there was given to an american lieutenant in september of 1944. it symbolizes the...
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Jun 5, 2016
06/16
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CSPAN2
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pop, pop, pop, the german misses. clouse does one shout, shoes, wounds the austrian falls over and clouse is off. now quickly needing to ski because he knows more men are coming clouse skis off a cliff in the middle of the night, 50, 60 feet he thought, lands, breaks his arm, dislocated shoulder, gets up, skis another for distance into the morning number one pull to a village. i will leave out the story where he lands himself into a hotel that the gestapo takes over that evening. the second thing i would raise is the theme of sacrifice. how much these men sacrifice for the war, for what they were doing. she underlined for one, his two brothers were taken by the gestapo in prison outside of oswald for almost one year. his best friend was seized, interrogated, tortured, over the span of two months trying to find out information about what it was doing. but the person i will bring out here is mostly -- after the operation he decides he is going to stay in norway, his going to build resistance which was essential because
pop, pop, pop, the german misses. clouse does one shout, shoes, wounds the austrian falls over and clouse is off. now quickly needing to ski because he knows more men are coming clouse skis off a cliff in the middle of the night, 50, 60 feet he thought, lands, breaks his arm, dislocated shoulder, gets up, skis another for distance into the morning number one pull to a village. i will leave out the story where he lands himself into a hotel that the gestapo takes over that evening. the second...
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Jun 25, 2016
06/16
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CSPAN2
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lost 200 soldiers who could not break free in the german enemy. it's a thrilling-nail biting book and makes you proud to be an american. >> what else? >> this one is in the mountains in eastern afghanistan, and this one is called the chosen by greg who is a veteran's reporter at usa today, name may be familiar to you, a dc favorite. a single company of u.s. pair troopers that was chosen to put it nicely to go and try to win minds and they were faced with 15 months of constant fighting, heroic unit. two of them returned to win the medal of honor. >> keep going. what else you've got? >> eteve -- steve harding, nothing a publisher likes better someone they can rely onto stick with them and he's a house author for us. this is a book that had the delicious subtitle, i want to read it so i get it right, a sunken ship, a vanished crew and the final mystery of pearl harbor. there was a cargo ship name it had cynthia olso, in that went missing between seattle and honolulu and perhaps the ship sinking was the first casualty of that war so it's a wonderful h
lost 200 soldiers who could not break free in the german enemy. it's a thrilling-nail biting book and makes you proud to be an american. >> what else? >> this one is in the mountains in eastern afghanistan, and this one is called the chosen by greg who is a veteran's reporter at usa today, name may be familiar to you, a dc favorite. a single company of u.s. pair troopers that was chosen to put it nicely to go and try to win minds and they were faced with 15 months of constant...
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Jun 6, 2016
06/16
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CNNW
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maurizio arca here is german-italian. sort of.ardinian. >> maurizio: yes, i am. >> anthony: this is a whole different thing. >> maurizio: it is definitely. >> anthony: my father-in-law and his whole family are from nuoro. >> maurizio: really? >> anthony: so i am well familiar with sardinia, and i know that, you know, this is not a dialect, this is a language. >> maurizio: yeah, right. >> anthony: and there is some ambivalence about whether they even consider themselves italy. >> maurizio: they don't consider themselves as italian because they've always been left alone by the state, and i don't know italy. you know, i've been in sienna, i've been to rome, i've been to milano, but that's it. >> anthony: so italy is a more foreign country than germany. >> maurizio: yup. >> anthony: you couldn't find me an italian? i mean, what the --, man? >> anthony: celentano bar doesn't look like much, but what they're serving is deceptively good. antipasti, gratzi, carpaccio, tomatoes with pepper, parmigiana, grilled zucchini, mortadella. the ita
maurizio arca here is german-italian. sort of.ardinian. >> maurizio: yes, i am. >> anthony: this is a whole different thing. >> maurizio: it is definitely. >> anthony: my father-in-law and his whole family are from nuoro. >> maurizio: really? >> anthony: so i am well familiar with sardinia, and i know that, you know, this is not a dialect, this is a language. >> maurizio: yeah, right. >> anthony: and there is some ambivalence about whether they...
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Jun 12, 2016
06/16
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CSPAN2
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the other thing that you see the germans saying, and this is uniform, the germans would say the americansre brave, they fight bravely but they don't fight wisely. there is a saying, one of my favorite historians said the americans didn't win because of their tactics. they didn't win because of their weapons. or their spirit. they one because they were willing to smother german machine guns with their bodies. this is very accurate in the german writings that i have seen they remark and say the machine-gun mass that we found had 200 bodies in front of it. this happened over and over again. americans were not well trained. they went directly toward the hardest points rather than circling around them like most of the other combatants have learned to do. they went directly against trenches, machine-gun mass and other objectives. >> what was it like dealing with simon and schuster from and editing standpoint. and what's your next book? >> thank you. the simon & schuster people are wonderful. i cannot tell you the kind of support that i got. most people have a lot of interference. they did not i
the other thing that you see the germans saying, and this is uniform, the germans would say the americansre brave, they fight bravely but they don't fight wisely. there is a saying, one of my favorite historians said the americans didn't win because of their tactics. they didn't win because of their weapons. or their spirit. they one because they were willing to smother german machine guns with their bodies. this is very accurate in the german writings that i have seen they remark and say the...
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Jun 19, 2016
06/16
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CSPAN2
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he wants to fight when the germans came to occupy the village.so one day, he goes to his mother and says i'm going to go on a skiing trip up in the mountains. i'm having my rifle, i'm on my own, i'm going to hunt reindeer and i'll see you in three weeks. instead of going north, einar goessouthwest to the coast on his way , he crashes while skiing and how that happens, he didn't record it. he hurts his knee badly. but he reaches the coast, he joined together with a couple other guys and they have this ambition to hijack a steamer by gunboat and steamer across the north sea to reach scotland. >> a decent plan. the problem is, einar's knee is worse and worse and he's injured terribly so he goes to the doctor, he goes to hospital and says i need surgery on his knee. will you perform it today? and they say we will. you will need a week or two to recover and teach you the surgery andeinar says today, now, no anesthetic . so he writes of this experience of the pain, holding thesides of the hospital bed, worst pain he experienced but he had the surgery,
he wants to fight when the germans came to occupy the village.so one day, he goes to his mother and says i'm going to go on a skiing trip up in the mountains. i'm having my rifle, i'm on my own, i'm going to hunt reindeer and i'll see you in three weeks. instead of going north, einar goessouthwest to the coast on his way , he crashes while skiing and how that happens, he didn't record it. he hurts his knee badly. but he reaches the coast, he joined together with a couple other guys and they...
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Jun 22, 2016
06/16
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LINKTV
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how important is this too young russians and germans? >> one can't really say right now that the political situation in russia is especially bad or good. we want to focus on interpersonal relationships, not engaged in politics. >> even though many people put germany in a bad light right now , i think that inwardly many people still believe that this country is our friend. reporter: and to make sure this friendship last, it is especially important young people from both countries have every opportunity of getting to know each other better, like leah and gabor. brent: the former u.s. house speaker dennis hastert has reported to prison in the state of minnesota. he will serve a 15 month sentence. he was convicted of violating federal laws after paying hush money to an alleged sexual abuse victim. the illinois republican, now disabled, abused at least four boys when he coached wrestling at a high school more than 35 years ago. pastor was not charged with -- hastert was not charged with sexual conduct because the statute of limitations ran ou
how important is this too young russians and germans? >> one can't really say right now that the political situation in russia is especially bad or good. we want to focus on interpersonal relationships, not engaged in politics. >> even though many people put germany in a bad light right now , i think that inwardly many people still believe that this country is our friend. reporter: and to make sure this friendship last, it is especially important young people from both countries...
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Jun 2, 2016
06/16
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LINKTV
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anchor: in other news, a possible terror plot in the german city of dusseldorf has been foiled by germanuthorities. three syrian men are under arrest. they are said to have planned suicide attacks and a shooting spree, and have links to the so-called islamic state. prosecutors say one of the suspects travel to germany last year with a massive wave of refugees entering the country. reporter: at the heart of dusseldorf, a lively and busy part of the old town. the pedestrian zone is where the terrorists wanted to strike. a terror suspect under arrest in france revealed the plans to french authorities. >> this is an example of good coordination between security agencies. information is being passed on quickly, both within germany and internationally. this enabled the police to intervene in the early planning stages of an attack. reporter: the three syrian suspects were arrested in different parts of germany. the order for a terrorist attack in dusseldorf apparently came directly from the headquarters of so-called islamic state. does this mean germany has become a terror target? >> i think it
anchor: in other news, a possible terror plot in the german city of dusseldorf has been foiled by germanuthorities. three syrian men are under arrest. they are said to have planned suicide attacks and a shooting spree, and have links to the so-called islamic state. prosecutors say one of the suspects travel to germany last year with a massive wave of refugees entering the country. reporter: at the heart of dusseldorf, a lively and busy part of the old town. the pedestrian zone is where the...
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Jun 26, 2016
06/16
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CSPAN3
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bought atrue that he german newspaper in order to get some german votes? mr. silverman: superb question. lincoln was a politician. in his defense, i do not use that in the nasty sense that i might describe someone today as a politician. lincoln understood and there was a german newspaper, several german newspapers in illinois at the time and one was going bankrupt. the editor was a man by the name of theodore canisius. lincoln said -- i will buy the press, the machinery, i will buy everything and you can continue ,our newspaper along the lines in german, as long as you do not violate one aspect of the republican party platform. and so consequently, the transaction was struck. who like to abraham lincoln, and in fact would have a diplomatic position, published the newspaper. republicanit was a outreach to the german population in and around springfield, illinois designed so that they could read in their native language that lincoln was the proper candidate and they would get with a needed from lincoln. the sad part of all of this is that not one single issue of
bought atrue that he german newspaper in order to get some german votes? mr. silverman: superb question. lincoln was a politician. in his defense, i do not use that in the nasty sense that i might describe someone today as a politician. lincoln understood and there was a german newspaper, several german newspapers in illinois at the time and one was going bankrupt. the editor was a man by the name of theodore canisius. lincoln said -- i will buy the press, the machinery, i will buy everything...
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504
Jun 5, 2016
06/16
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CSPAN2
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let's line up 50,000 or 100,000 of the top german commanders, and let's shoot them.that'll be justice. churchill was horrified. and roosevelt said something like, oh, let's have a compromise. let's shoot 49, 500. [laughter] didn't go over well with churchill. but what's interesting, it goes back and forth, and eventually stalin and roosevelt decide they do want a trial for different reasons. stalin loved show trials. in the '30s he had show trials. they were fake trials. but roosevelt really wanted this principle, and churchill was aware of the danger, the trap of show trials, and he suddenly -- in some recently declassified document withs we found out -- that at one point he was considering a plan to just have summary executions of a few top leaders and some just imprisoned without trial. so this went back and forth. eventually, the trials happened, as we know. nuremberg, dachau and so forth. and it was unprecedented, but every step of the way it's been controversial right up to today's. >> uh-huh. and what did they, i mean, what were the reasons they opted to go fo
let's line up 50,000 or 100,000 of the top german commanders, and let's shoot them.that'll be justice. churchill was horrified. and roosevelt said something like, oh, let's have a compromise. let's shoot 49, 500. [laughter] didn't go over well with churchill. but what's interesting, it goes back and forth, and eventually stalin and roosevelt decide they do want a trial for different reasons. stalin loved show trials. in the '30s he had show trials. they were fake trials. but roosevelt really...
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Jun 17, 2016
06/16
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LINKTV
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germans, you as always address me as a german, so what of the german supposed to do? five years ago, you could differentiate between insane euroskeptics and rational eurocritics. this firm me has been a very frustrating part of the european union in the last 10 years, that criticism was like a teflon coating in brussels, it just dripped off. there are european critics in britain who are very rational, intelligent people, and they have never been listened to. and suddenly in the last reel we have britain being listened to, this and this is a good idea. ulrike: tell me. what exactly would have had to change in europe in order to somehow improve the situation in britain? my perspective is completely different. everything that britain wanted has been done by the eu. that's the problem. there is not one single proposal, not even from cameron, eu should do to keep britain in the eu. my impression is, the whole debate in britain doesn't have anything to do with the reality of the eu. it's about britain, and the situation there. peter: before we continue about the british per
germans, you as always address me as a german, so what of the german supposed to do? five years ago, you could differentiate between insane euroskeptics and rational eurocritics. this firm me has been a very frustrating part of the european union in the last 10 years, that criticism was like a teflon coating in brussels, it just dripped off. there are european critics in britain who are very rational, intelligent people, and they have never been listened to. and suddenly in the last reel we...
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Jun 14, 2016
06/16
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CNBC
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explain why. >> yeah, german investor, german savers are desperate for some form of income out therend they're not getting it from anywhere. the fund managers are promoting the fact that they can't get anything from their portfolios as well. it's going farther out. we had bill gross warning at the start of the week, about $10 trillion worth of government bonds out there in negative territory. that figure is old hat. it's even bigger than that. look at this, two-year paper, .115%. german ten-year, first time ever, the stalwart of the european bond market, this is the big one, this is the daddy of the european bond market it's now gone negative. negative 0.27. if you want a return you have to go 30 years to germany to get over half a percent. this isn't about brexit. this is about financial depression. the desperate expert and will draghi to force people from these assets to these assets. and other risky ones. the problem with these ones is that people are selling down the bonds to buy the equities. because look at these equity markets. three-month lows on the equity markets as well. b
explain why. >> yeah, german investor, german savers are desperate for some form of income out therend they're not getting it from anywhere. the fund managers are promoting the fact that they can't get anything from their portfolios as well. it's going farther out. we had bill gross warning at the start of the week, about $10 trillion worth of government bonds out there in negative territory. that figure is old hat. it's even bigger than that. look at this, two-year paper, .115%. german...
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Jun 21, 2016
06/16
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KCSM
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. >> gordon is familiar with german red tape.even wrote a song about it a few years back, "only one dream per person." the song describ how germans would organize paradise if they were to run it -- very efficiently, of course. positive to say about his homeland, especially not the brexit debate. martin: i mean, boris johnson and his nazi-remarks for example. this whole thing has devolved into entertainment. >> arthur taylor has a contingency plan. he could marry his girlfriend, get a finnish passport, and remain an eu citizen. but this plan has a snag. hanna-maija: that's something i don't consider this to be a legitimate reason to get married. arthur: when you talk about plans you have together as a couple, you don't usually have to consider geopolitics. >> arthur taylor is not the only brit in germany who's worried about the future. there are 10,000 in berlin alone. almost everyone at this meeting of expats is considering applying for german citizenship. >> once i heard about the referendum, i got worried -- so i applied for ci
. >> gordon is familiar with german red tape.even wrote a song about it a few years back, "only one dream per person." the song describ how germans would organize paradise if they were to run it -- very efficiently, of course. positive to say about his homeland, especially not the brexit debate. martin: i mean, boris johnson and his nazi-remarks for example. this whole thing has devolved into entertainment. >> arthur taylor has a contingency plan. he could marry his...
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575
Jun 5, 2016
06/16
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CSPAN2
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were only beginning to grasp the magnitude of what happen. >> so was the particular focus on the german people to kind of show them the evils that have been done in their name in? >> yes. that was the priority of first. and why we fight this war. but there was immediate opposition, for instance in the united states there is opposition from both the left and right which that this is a victors justice. for the people who went into the concentration, and liberated them, they said no, this is not victors justice, this is just justice. >> lawrence you are the legal expert here, the charges before the international military tribunal at noon burke were crimes against peace, war crimes and crimes against humanity. at least some of these word new terms. did the international legal community consider these to be well-founded in existing law? or some of them particularly controversial? >> is and he said the whole trial was developed in controversy. we have to remember that this is the first international criminal court in human history. in certain respects not only were the 21 individual defendant
were only beginning to grasp the magnitude of what happen. >> so was the particular focus on the german people to kind of show them the evils that have been done in their name in? >> yes. that was the priority of first. and why we fight this war. but there was immediate opposition, for instance in the united states there is opposition from both the left and right which that this is a victors justice. for the people who went into the concentration, and liberated them, they said no,...
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Jun 15, 2016
06/16
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KCSM
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yields on german funds have been dropping as demand goes up.tuesday, they fell below zero for the first time. >> now that the brexit situation is making people so desperate for a situation that they are taking into account even getting a negative return on their money. that is extra demand. we will see how long that stays in there. >> shares declined on wall street. the u.s. central bank wants to raise rates, but supporters say this is unlikely with the growing chance for a brexit in britain. >> let's bring in our wall street correspondent in new york. european markets under heavy pressure there. why are investors in the u.s. still relatively calm? trade is not as important as many european -- the issue possible under brexit's first the european markets. but, the markets and the global economy are intertwined. if europe gets into deeper trouble, that will be felt on this side of the atlantic. >> let's say there is a brexit. with all the turmoil and uncertainty on european markets, would not be more money flowing towards wall street as well? jen
yields on german funds have been dropping as demand goes up.tuesday, they fell below zero for the first time. >> now that the brexit situation is making people so desperate for a situation that they are taking into account even getting a negative return on their money. that is extra demand. we will see how long that stays in there. >> shares declined on wall street. the u.s. central bank wants to raise rates, but supporters say this is unlikely with the growing chance for a brexit...
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Jun 2, 2016
06/16
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LINKTV
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catherine: armenia's president toe an exclusive interview german papers in which he urged the german government to stay the course. he says germany has a special responsibility. inre are numerous documents the german archive detailing the country's involvement. germany was an ally with the ottoman empire. the president goes on to say that germany is a powerful state and its voice is heard globally. onto our bigmove story in france with the fallout from the french football player allegations that he was left off the french squad for euro 2016 because of racism. catherine: he is a polarizing figure. wasral months ago, he accused of being involved in a plot to blackmail one of his teammates over a sex tape. that is being investigated. if we look at the cover, it says it all. a dangerous game here. he is french but of algerian dissent and that is why he is saying he was excluded, not because of his legal woes. he has accused the coach for bowing to pressure of a racist party in france, a nudge here at the national front party. the sports minister got involved in this big debate, saying t
catherine: armenia's president toe an exclusive interview german papers in which he urged the german government to stay the course. he says germany has a special responsibility. inre are numerous documents the german archive detailing the country's involvement. germany was an ally with the ottoman empire. the president goes on to say that germany is a powerful state and its voice is heard globally. onto our bigmove story in france with the fallout from the french football player allegations...
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Jun 1, 2016
06/16
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LINKTV
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take the proposed takeover of a german robotics firm.oliticians are calling it a key asset that they don't want to let go. >> these robots are in demand around the world by carmakers -- carmakers increasingly rely on automation and the manufacturing process. they want to use the robots for home production while eventually selling service robots for consumers to use at home. but the german government worries that a chinese takeover could rob them of even t tech -- more technical know-how and since the data. >> germany is not in the business of selling off to get his is. >> media reports say that the economic menace is trying to form an alliance of countries to prevent the sale. the german industrial giant has so far failed to offer a counter bid. daniel: that's all the business will -- business news. you have news from the world of sports? >> absolutely. 95 new soccer rules come into effect worldwide today. the board in charge of the reggio -- relations since 1886. at their meeting in march they were more active than ever. some suggest th
take the proposed takeover of a german robotics firm.oliticians are calling it a key asset that they don't want to let go. >> these robots are in demand around the world by carmakers -- carmakers increasingly rely on automation and the manufacturing process. they want to use the robots for home production while eventually selling service robots for consumers to use at home. but the german government worries that a chinese takeover could rob them of even t tech -- more technical know-how...
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60
Jun 4, 2016
06/16
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KCSM
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only 50% still think the german chancellor is doing a good job.er performance also reflects on her party, the conservative cdu, and the bavarian sister party, the csu. if elections were to be held now, only 32% would vote for the cdu. that's the lowest approval rating of years. the social democrats support rises slightly to 21%. the right wing afd stays stable at 15%. the greens would get 13% of the vote. the liberal free democrats would make it back into parliament with 6%. sarah: a change of pace, we will head to the united states where there was some disappointing results for the u.s. economy when it comes to jobs data. daniel joins us with more on that. daniel: u.s. job stats were released. the overall unemployment rate looks great, falling from 5% to 4.7% last month. it's a number many countries would be glad to achieve. experts are looking at how fast the country is adding on new jobs. just 38,000 posts were added in may, the lowest amount in almost six years. that figure falls way short of economists expectations and raises doubt about an i
only 50% still think the german chancellor is doing a good job.er performance also reflects on her party, the conservative cdu, and the bavarian sister party, the csu. if elections were to be held now, only 32% would vote for the cdu. that's the lowest approval rating of years. the social democrats support rises slightly to 21%. the right wing afd stays stable at 15%. the greens would get 13% of the vote. the liberal free democrats would make it back into parliament with 6%. sarah: a change of...
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Jun 25, 2016
06/16
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CSPAN2
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french forces had just capitulated to the germans. nazi soldiers were marching down the champs Élysees and bunking in paris. at this point hitler occupied or made vassal states of virtually all of scandinavia and western europe. that day was in many ways of turning point in pushing back the forces of tyranny. it is thanks to three speeches the took place this very day 75 years ago. two -- to remain among the most celebrated in modern history and one is little known today. speaking to the house of commons that they elevated winston churchill, warned that hitler would shortly turn his full fury on the british isles which my wife made me promise that i would not do a winston churchill imitation. so what he growled was the battle of britain is about to begin. upon this battle depends the survival of christian civilization. he called for resistance for, he said, if we fail, then the whole world, including the united states, he was making sure americans heard him including the united states, including all the we have known and cared for wou
french forces had just capitulated to the germans. nazi soldiers were marching down the champs Élysees and bunking in paris. at this point hitler occupied or made vassal states of virtually all of scandinavia and western europe. that day was in many ways of turning point in pushing back the forces of tyranny. it is thanks to three speeches the took place this very day 75 years ago. two -- to remain among the most celebrated in modern history and one is little known today. speaking to the house...
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Jun 14, 2016
06/16
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BLOOMBERG
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eye 74
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the german 10-year making a 1.4145.nd sterling, francine: this is what i am most interested in, the germanr climbing. to bloomberg quickly. on the u.s. economy, this goes to the idea that it is not just exit -- just brexit remain mania. trending the crisis, we come back. we just get above, and then we have recently rolled over. you really wonder what that says not only about the u.s. but also the united kingdom, the small business economy. francine: i did put a line -- there it is. pink.n see the u.k. is in the white is japanese. the german 10-year -- negative. i do not know if it is a blip or if it is negative. it is a 10-year paper. tom: george goncalves joins a spirit he has agreed to stay over for this section. this morning, we did not know about microsoft, linkedin. robert nardelli joins us. he has provided infinite wisdom , linkedin, economics, and finance. there be honest, i think is a lot on this reporting. i wonder about the salvation of microsoft saving linkedin. i will do that later in the hour. bring up the chart on the long-term 10-year. george goncalves lives this. a guy like
the german 10-year making a 1.4145.nd sterling, francine: this is what i am most interested in, the germanr climbing. to bloomberg quickly. on the u.s. economy, this goes to the idea that it is not just exit -- just brexit remain mania. trending the crisis, we come back. we just get above, and then we have recently rolled over. you really wonder what that says not only about the u.s. but also the united kingdom, the small business economy. francine: i did put a line -- there it is. pink.n see...
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Jun 10, 2016
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a german defender was in the stadium at the time.e says he will not allow his family to attend any games during the tournaments. while fans concentrate on the party and security chief focus on keeping everyone safe, the footballers warm-up for the game. coaching a charity pitch in the heart of the french capital. brent: we spoke to our correspondent in paris earlier in estimate for more on the mood in the french football capital. >> right behind me, you can see thousands of people have come to the center of the fan zone. people have been pouring in and there are thousands. so many activities from table football to football themselves and facepainting, everything. food and drink, so much available. the parties getting started and people are in a good mood. brent: when we come back, more news. stick around. ♪ brent: welcome back. u.s. president barack obama has endorsed his onetime political rival hillary clinton. saying she is uniquely qualified to succeed him at the white house. the two will campaign together starting next week. clin
a german defender was in the stadium at the time.e says he will not allow his family to attend any games during the tournaments. while fans concentrate on the party and security chief focus on keeping everyone safe, the footballers warm-up for the game. coaching a charity pitch in the heart of the french capital. brent: we spoke to our correspondent in paris earlier in estimate for more on the mood in the french football capital. >> right behind me, you can see thousands of people have...
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Jun 2, 2016
06/16
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a sign of just how popular the move is with german voters.t is seen as a human rights issue here, but also part of germany's own difficult history. in 1915, germany was an ally of the ottoman empire, and many speeches in parliament today focused on german guilt in not preventing the massacres. but the german government's move is controversial in turkey, where the killings are widely seen as part of the fighting during the breakup of the ottoman empire, not genocide. >> nobody other than historians should discuss genocide. this is not something you decide in parliament. if they say this is genocide, what has been inflated on the turks for years would be the biggest genocide. even today, there is genocide in myanmar, and no one even talks about it in parliament. >> if you look at what hitler did in germany, what we did is nothing compared to that. but of course, that would be if we committed genocide, which we didn't. damien: turkey's political leaders now worn the issue will heighten tension between germany and turkey at a particularly sensiti
a sign of just how popular the move is with german voters.t is seen as a human rights issue here, but also part of germany's own difficult history. in 1915, germany was an ally of the ottoman empire, and many speeches in parliament today focused on german guilt in not preventing the massacres. but the german government's move is controversial in turkey, where the killings are widely seen as part of the fighting during the breakup of the ottoman empire, not genocide. >> nobody other than...
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Jun 13, 2016
06/16
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german government 10 year 0.00. tom: i'm glad you brought up the german. we still have the yields down there as francia notes on the 10 year german, really getting down to the zero demarcation. let's get over to the bloomberg and look at what the pros look at. is a20 years, here stronger yen, weaker euro. this.e did not like benomics.n francine: global yields, i want to go back on the global 10 year and this is my chart of the hour. when you look at the blue line, it is the german 10 year. could gotouch zero, it into negative territory, and in white is the negative forecast. tom: to begin our perspective on orlando away from the headlines by thetinued news flow government and fbi, yesterday some international perspective. ihs jane's acclaimed terrorism and insurgency research center, we are thrilled to bring in the doctor this morning. and i look at this moment i think of what the british had in the 30's dust in the 1930's and into the 1940's -- in the 1930's and into the 1940's they had a guy named churchill. where is our churchill? i do not see it. four
german government 10 year 0.00. tom: i'm glad you brought up the german. we still have the yields down there as francia notes on the 10 year german, really getting down to the zero demarcation. let's get over to the bloomberg and look at what the pros look at. is a20 years, here stronger yen, weaker euro. this.e did not like benomics.n francine: global yields, i want to go back on the global 10 year and this is my chart of the hour. when you look at the blue line, it is the german 10 year....
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Jun 10, 2016
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a high-ranking german intelligence, snowden may not be the u.s. patriot that he wants the world to see. >> the committee was working late last night, questioning the head of the intelligence service. the topic was meant to be the role in supplying information to the united's dates. but it went way off-topic. i really enjoyed it. >> of them looking forward to this day for two years. he told the committee he thought edward snowden, who has temporary asylum might be a russians five trying to drive a wedge between the united states and europe. they offered no evidence to back this up. >> it is one thing to draw up conspiracy theories and quite another to go public with them especially if you are president of a german government body. you need to provide evidence. >> it was not an exercise in humility. perhaps he was thinking that offense is the best defense. the discussion continued during the break even though the media were watching. snowden was evidently following the proceedings because he promptly posted a tweet. and as the sharing data, he said
a high-ranking german intelligence, snowden may not be the u.s. patriot that he wants the world to see. >> the committee was working late last night, questioning the head of the intelligence service. the topic was meant to be the role in supplying information to the united's dates. but it went way off-topic. i really enjoyed it. >> of them looking forward to this day for two years. he told the committee he thought edward snowden, who has temporary asylum might be a russians five...
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Jun 21, 2016
06/16
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germans constitutional quote rules on the ecb bond buying program. janet yellen heads to capitol hill to answer questions on the right path. man isng's richest bullish on china. we bring you that interview. ♪ francine: welcome to "the pulse." live from bloomberg's european headquarters. i am francine lacqua. onto the board, we had a risk on move. things are a little bit risk off as these polls in the u.k. pointing to a a lot more uncertain outlook after the referendum on thursday. you can see the ftse down a touch. the yen 104.5. we'll get more on the markets. let's get straight to the bloomberg first word news with nejra cehic. nejra: europe's -- britain's referendum remains too close to call. several pulls -- separate polls show leads on both sides. thewhile the cofounder of leave eu campaign tells uncertainty reigns and no one knows what the outcome is going to be. cooks it is strong to leave. -- >> it is strong to leave. the fact of the matter is this referendum -- [laughter] george soros says the pound may slump against the dollar if it is voter
germans constitutional quote rules on the ecb bond buying program. janet yellen heads to capitol hill to answer questions on the right path. man isng's richest bullish on china. we bring you that interview. ♪ francine: welcome to "the pulse." live from bloomberg's european headquarters. i am francine lacqua. onto the board, we had a risk on move. things are a little bit risk off as these polls in the u.k. pointing to a a lot more uncertain outlook after the referendum on thursday....
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Jun 23, 2016
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that's according to the german interior minister. so as i mentioned a moment ago we had information he he had been arrested. we'll have to change that again, local news now reporting according to the interior minister that this gunman has been shot dead. >> okay, matt, thank you. and again, that would indicate a resolution. what it doesn't help us with is what this has done, a toll of dead or wounded. we have seen this obviously all too often in our country and we have seen this exact kind of venue, a mass shooting, aurora, colorado, number of us who covered that story will never forget that story, and the particular horror in that venue. but again,er german media reports the gunman who bar okayeded himself inside this movie theater complex appears to be off a major motor way and near shopping and other high population centers, has so far caused a number of wounded people to be treated. we don't know about a death toll. this is in the central or southwest portion of viernheim germany and came in within the last hour. we were busy wit
that's according to the german interior minister. so as i mentioned a moment ago we had information he he had been arrested. we'll have to change that again, local news now reporting according to the interior minister that this gunman has been shot dead. >> okay, matt, thank you. and again, that would indicate a resolution. what it doesn't help us with is what this has done, a toll of dead or wounded. we have seen this obviously all too often in our country and we have seen this exact...
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Jun 27, 2016
06/16
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i put to him that the german chancellor sounded conciliatory and even sad.imon: she is set up the british people's decision to leave the european union. all three leaders this afternoon said how mucucthey regreretted that that t was the way t thingd gone. but now it is time to look to what happens next and the question that has been on everyone's mind, how quickly can this formal process of britain's disentanglement from the eu begin? a lot of people saying they want to happen as quickly as possible, including both the social democrat leaders that we have seen this afternoon, the italian leader and the french president are both saying they want britain to start formal talks as soon as possible. chancellor merkel saying he will take about a time for the british to sort themselves out, that is clear. she is being pragmatic on that point because a new promised or will have to be in place before britain can take the process forward. brent: you mention we have these three leaders meeting today in berlin at of tomorrow's summit where we are going to see all of the
i put to him that the german chancellor sounded conciliatory and even sad.imon: she is set up the british people's decision to leave the european union. all three leaders this afternoon said how mucucthey regreretted that that t was the way t thingd gone. but now it is time to look to what happens next and the question that has been on everyone's mind, how quickly can this formal process of britain's disentanglement from the eu begin? a lot of people saying they want to happen as quickly as...
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Jun 8, 2016
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i have german in yellow, german 10 year now breaking near 0%..s. 10 -- the u.s. 10 year up above. the swiss twenty-year now at a negative yield. this is almost the mathematics of your economics where there is a inertial force. when does this break, or can it go ever lower? a tip pointt to be where the social and financial aspects make it fall apart. are we near that? carsten: we do see a rise of populism and opposition in germany. it is going to be a redistribution of wealth. tom: is the strength of german banking, you are with ing germany, i get the big banks are too big to fail. what about midsize and smaller banks across all of europe? carsten: i think when you look at germany, we will see not only by low interest rates but german by digitalization and to bigger -- too many banks. francine: will the ecb be able to contain the mess that europe is in? john: they are certainly doing scope,est and within the they are pushing the boundaries of what policies they use. they are doing their best to push inflation backup, get companies reinvesting, an
i have german in yellow, german 10 year now breaking near 0%..s. 10 -- the u.s. 10 year up above. the swiss twenty-year now at a negative yield. this is almost the mathematics of your economics where there is a inertial force. when does this break, or can it go ever lower? a tip pointt to be where the social and financial aspects make it fall apart. are we near that? carsten: we do see a rise of populism and opposition in germany. it is going to be a redistribution of wealth. tom: is the...
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Jun 13, 2016
06/16
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if we have less good access, that is going to impact our economy. -- >>e german chancellor the germangela merkel calls for -- meeting the premier, she says she would be -- the truth is being overshadowed by angst in our own .ountry at views of powerhouses are -- as bonds surged this year. morgan stanley says the rally has started to run but goldman sachs thinks benchmark yields may be poised to jump. the u.k. debate over leaving the european union drives demand for the safest assets. are poised tod make announcements this week. the company which oversees more than 630 billion euros of investments plan to raise its corporate debt holding. the german 10 year bond yield drops below 0.01% last week, the lowest on record. germany joined japan and switzerland and having negative yields. global news, 24 hours a day, powered by 2400 journalists in more than 150 news bureaus around the world. you can find more stores on the bloomberg at top . anna? manus? much. thank you very let's get up to speed on the markets. as fairly tough session. haidi lun has all of the news. there are a couple of
if we have less good access, that is going to impact our economy. -- >>e german chancellor the germangela merkel calls for -- meeting the premier, she says she would be -- the truth is being overshadowed by angst in our own .ountry at views of powerhouses are -- as bonds surged this year. morgan stanley says the rally has started to run but goldman sachs thinks benchmark yields may be poised to jump. the u.k. debate over leaving the european union drives demand for the safest assets. are...
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Jun 8, 2016
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this is a record low for german 10 year yield.bring the into the conversation we are having. philip, this is an example of a lack of growth in europe. this is an example of what is going wrong with europe, some would argue, and the inability to get growth going reflected in the german bond market. is it a struggle, do you think, to make a positive case? yes, british leadership is there somees, burderitain has won critical arguments. but nevertheless, the british people don't feel it. philip: well look, europe is not looking good. europe was originally construed to pull germany into something greater for itself. the euro is essentially creating germany in europe again. because of the way the euro favors germany on a structural basis, it is making it impossible for southern europe to grow. france has been weakened dreadfully. france, onlys in 38% of people are in favor of the european union with 62% against. that is higher than the u.k. i think we are on the brink of a european wide eurozone breakup. and the tragedy is, the euro has
this is a record low for german 10 year yield.bring the into the conversation we are having. philip, this is an example of a lack of growth in europe. this is an example of what is going wrong with europe, some would argue, and the inability to get growth going reflected in the german bond market. is it a struggle, do you think, to make a positive case? yes, british leadership is there somees, burderitain has won critical arguments. but nevertheless, the british people don't feel it. philip:...
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Jun 25, 2016
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. >> gordon is familiar with german red tape.en wrote a song about it a few years back, "only one dream per person." the song describ how germans would organize paradise if they were to run it -- very efficiently, of course. positive to say about his homeland, especially not the brexit debate. martin: i mean, boris johnson and his nazi-remarks for example. this whole thing has devolved into entertainment. >> arthur taylor has a contingency plan. he could marry his girlfriend, get a finnish passport, and remain an eu citizen. but this plan has a snag. hanna-maija: that's something i don't consider this to be a legitimate reason to get married. arthur: when you talk about plans you have together as a couple, you don't usually have to consider geopolitics. >> arthur taylor is not the only brit in germany who's worried about the future. there are 10,000 in berlin alone. almost everyone at this meeting of expats is considering applying for german citizenship. >> once i heard about the referendum, i got worried -- so i applied for citi
. >> gordon is familiar with german red tape.en wrote a song about it a few years back, "only one dream per person." the song describ how germans would organize paradise if they were to run it -- very efficiently, of course. positive to say about his homeland, especially not the brexit debate. martin: i mean, boris johnson and his nazi-remarks for example. this whole thing has devolved into entertainment. >> arthur taylor has a contingency plan. he could marry his...
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Jun 7, 2016
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and turkey's president launches another attack on germany accusing german m.p.'s of being terrorist sympathizers after they voted to recognizing the killing of armenians 100 years ago as a genocide. welcome to the program. we begin with an alleged plot to unleash a wave of terrorist attacks at the european football championships in just five days. sporting venues were targeted along with mosques and synagogues. the alleged aim, maximum mayhem and loss of life. ukrainian authorities say they have thwarted this plot, arrested a french right-wing extremist and confiscated an arsenal frightening in its destructive capacity. reporter: hidden camera footage of the suspect shows him packing a small bandwidth explosives. ukraine's security services says it has been following the frenchman since december after he made contact with armed groups with the aim of buying weapons and explosives. special forces detained him at the border crossing with poland. >> ukraine's security service has managed to prevent a series of 15 terrorist attacks planned for the territory of france
and turkey's president launches another attack on germany accusing german m.p.'s of being terrorist sympathizers after they voted to recognizing the killing of armenians 100 years ago as a genocide. welcome to the program. we begin with an alleged plot to unleash a wave of terrorist attacks at the european football championships in just five days. sporting venues were targeted along with mosques and synagogues. the alleged aim, maximum mayhem and loss of life. ukrainian authorities say they...
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Jun 9, 2016
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german football's top two divisions have sold its domestic tv rights.is set to earn over 4 billion euros over the next four years, that is almost double the amount netted in the previous deal. >> it is big business in germany and now business is bigger than ever. germany's top-flight soccer league handed out broadcast rights for the next four seasons here the deal will earn the league almost 1.4 billion euros a year until 2021. is the biggest deal in history and one that says helps cement their place among the world footballing elite. england's premier league as around 3.2 billion euros per season. followed by spain ast -- at 2.2. they may be a distant third and broadcast revenue by the new deal was still a critical win. >> we reached our goals with this deal. we are among the top three soccer nations worldwide in terms of income. now it is up to the teams to invest the money wisely. >> like keeping german talent at home. german teams haven't struggling to hold onto stars in the face of lucrative contracts from abroad. they look to nenew advertisingg re
german football's top two divisions have sold its domestic tv rights.is set to earn over 4 billion euros over the next four years, that is almost double the amount netted in the previous deal. >> it is big business in germany and now business is bigger than ever. germany's top-flight soccer league handed out broadcast rights for the next four seasons here the deal will earn the league almost 1.4 billion euros a year until 2021. is the biggest deal in history and one that says helps cement...
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Jun 26, 2016
06/16
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if you are a german leader right now, two words.chance and i would add a few more words, "it is just not oing to happen anytime soon." they both have to sort out their internal problems. europe has to decide who is going to represented. angela merkel? the founding six? that is far from clear at this stage and the u.k. has to figure out what it wants to do as well. as questions are unresolved. markets are going, excuse me, i would like some clarity. friday may look he nine. the markets are looking for political leadership and the points we are trying to make is there is very little of that going around right now. will carry on the conversation coming up next. in ble is scheduled to meet july. will they cut rates to a new record low and will governor carney still be governor carney at that point. we will talk about that and monetary policy next on bloomberg . >> welcome back, you're watching bloomberg . let's talk about what is happening surrounding the economy on where we go next. us, he isella joins the lead u.k. economist.
if you are a german leader right now, two words.chance and i would add a few more words, "it is just not oing to happen anytime soon." they both have to sort out their internal problems. europe has to decide who is going to represented. angela merkel? the founding six? that is far from clear at this stage and the u.k. has to figure out what it wants to do as well. as questions are unresolved. markets are going, excuse me, i would like some clarity. friday may look he nine. the markets...
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Jun 21, 2016
06/16
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you have 10 year german bonds basically at zero.hat is in the environment of an inflation target of the ecb, of close to 2%. if we have a long-term rate and we are 50 year bonds, belgium and others being sold at yields just at the inflation target, this could signal that markets believe that the inflation target, even in the longer term, maybe decades, if that were to case -- if this would be to be the case, eurozone would be with problems. it is a call to see how this spreads between the periphery and the core because if we do not go back, if the ecb loses control over the longer term over inflation, the spreads are inexplicably tight. of --ne: give me a sense made leaps and bounds in terms of reforms. how much is it in the eye of the storm when it comes to brexit? because of its significant dependence in terms of trade? moritz: we have measured the other sovereigns in europe. the vulnerability toward brexit. island is -- ireland is top of the list. they have a lot of exposure, not only on trade, but it is the most exposed in terms
you have 10 year german bonds basically at zero.hat is in the environment of an inflation target of the ecb, of close to 2%. if we have a long-term rate and we are 50 year bonds, belgium and others being sold at yields just at the inflation target, this could signal that markets believe that the inflation target, even in the longer term, maybe decades, if that were to case -- if this would be to be the case, eurozone would be with problems. it is a call to see how this spreads between the...