Bloomberg doesn’t chase headlines. It creates the data that becomes the headline.
When you need to know what’s actually happening in markets — not speculation, not opinion, but verified information backed by the Bloomberg Terminal’s proprietary data — you watch Bloomberg. Stream it live on BusinessTech.news and get the intelligence that drives $32 trillion in daily trading volume.
Why Bloomberg Stands Apart
Michael Bloomberg built a financial information empire by solving a simple problem: traders needed better data, faster. In 1981, he launched the Bloomberg Terminal. Today, 325,000 financial professionals pay $24,000 annually per seat to access it.
Bloomberg Television extends that philosophy to broadcast. Where other networks rely on wire services and analyst speculation, Bloomberg reports from its own infrastructure — Terminal data, proprietary indices, exclusive access to decision-makers who trust Bloomberg’s discretion.
The result: coverage that treats viewers like professionals, not consumers. No theatrics, no market cheerleading, no dumbing down complex topics. Just intelligent analysis delivered by people who understand how markets actually work.
Watch Bloomberg Live
[live_stream stream_name=”bloomberg_live”]Programming for Serious Market Participants
Bloomberg Television operates on a 24-hour global schedule, following markets as they open and close around the world. Coverage shifts seamlessly from Asia to Europe to the Americas, maintaining consistent quality regardless of time zone.
Bloomberg Surveillance (6am-9am ET): Tom Keene, Jonathan Ferro, and Lisa Abramowicz set the table for U.S. trading. They don’t just report what happened overnight — they analyze how overnight moves set up today’s opportunities and risks. Expect detailed discussions of yield curves, currency flows, and cross-asset correlations. This isn’t beginner content.
Bloomberg Markets: The Open (9am-10am ET): Jonathan Ferro tracks the market open with precision. When gaps occur, he explains the mechanics. When volume surges, he identifies the catalyst. This is real-time market structure analysis, not emotional reaction to price movement.
Bloomberg Markets (10am-5pm ET): Rotating anchors including Alix Steel, Romaine Bostick, and Sonali Basak provide continuous coverage through U.S. trading hours. Bloomberg’s strength shows here — instant access to CEOs, policymakers, and analysts who prefer Bloomberg’s intelligent questioning over other networks’ soundbite culture.
Bloomberg Technology (5pm-6pm ET): Caroline Hyde and Ed Ludlow focus exclusively on tech. Not gadget reviews or app launches — enterprise software, semiconductor supply chains, cloud infrastructure, quantum computing. Technology coverage for people who invest in technology, not consume it.
Bloomberg Markets: The Close (3pm-5pm ET): Final two hours of U.S. trading demand different coverage. Institutional flows accelerate, algorithmic activity peaks, index rebalancing creates opportunities. Bloomberg tracks these mechanics in detail.
Bloomberg: Balance of Power (5pm-6pm ET): David Westin analyzes the intersection of politics, policy, and markets. When Congress debates tax policy, this show explains market implications. When regulators propose rule changes, Bloomberg maps the impact before it happens.
The Bloomberg Difference
Bloomberg journalists don’t trade. That matters. The network explicitly prohibits employees from trading securities to avoid conflicts of interest. Compare that to some competitors where on-air personalities actively manage portfolios while recommending stocks.
Bloomberg also doesn’t accept advertising from companies it covers. Independence costs money — advertising revenue would help margins. But Bloomberg prioritizes credibility over profit maximization, which shows in coverage that doesn’t pull punches.
The Terminal integration gives Bloomberg reporters data advantages. When a central bank makes unexpected policy moves, Bloomberg’s reporters access historical precedents, correlation analysis, and economic models instantly. They’re not calling analysts for opinions — they’re running the analysis themselves.
Anchors Who Know Their Subject
Tom Keene holds a degree in economics and a master’s in international relations. He doesn’t interview bond traders — he debates them with substantive knowledge of fixed income markets.
Lisa Abramowicz spent years covering credit markets before moving to television. When she questions a corporate treasurer about refinancing strategy, she understands covenant structures and credit ratings.
Francine Lacqua anchors from London with deep knowledge of European markets, regulatory frameworks, and cross-border capital flows. She interviews ECB officials as equals, not supplicants.
This expertise matters. Bloomberg interviews extract information because subjects know they can’t hide behind talking points or corporate speak. The questions come from genuine understanding, not rehearsed scripts.
Stream Bloomberg on BusinessTech.news
Cable subscriptions bundle Bloomberg with channels you won’t watch. Streaming services charge $70-80 monthly for access. Bloomberg’s own app requires cable authentication.
BusinessTech.news provides direct access without friction. No account required, no subscription fees, no regional restrictions. Bookmark this page, and Bloomberg Television becomes instantly accessible whenever markets move.
The stream adapts to your device and connection automatically. Watch on desktop during trading hours, mobile when traveling, tablet as second-screen while working. Same quality, zero configuration.
Global Markets, Global Coverage
Bloomberg operates studios in New York, London, Hong Kong, Tokyo, Singapore, Sydney, San Francisco, Washington, and Mumbai. When Asian markets open, Bloomberg’s Hong Kong team takes over. When European trading begins, London anchors lead. Coverage follows the sun, maintaining expertise in each market.
This global infrastructure means Bloomberg doesn’t just report on international markets — it operates in them. Anchors understand local regulations, market microstructure, and institutional behavior because they work in those markets daily.
For international viewers, Bloomberg provides coverage that doesn’t default to American perspectives. If you’re trading from Singapore or Frankfurt, Bloomberg’s international feeds deliver more relevant analysis than U.S.-centric networks.
Data That Drives Decisions
Bloomberg’s coverage integrates Terminal data seamlessly. On-screen graphics show real-time price action, volatility indices, correlations, and custom analytics. When anchors reference specific data points, viewers see the same charts Terminal subscribers see.
The Bloomberg Dollar Index, Bloomberg Commodity Index, and various proprietary indicators appear throughout programming. These aren’t marketing tools — they’re actual benchmarks used by institutional investors for portfolio management and risk assessment.
Alternative Access Options
Bloomberg.com offers limited free streaming, though coverage focuses on specific events rather than continuous programming. The Bloomberg mobile app provides excellent article and data access but requires Bloomberg Professional Services subscription for full live streaming.
Streaming services including YouTube TV, Hulu + Live TV, and Sling TV carry Bloomberg Television, but monthly costs range from $40-80. If you specifically need Bloomberg access without paying for comprehensive channel packages, BusinessTech.news offers the most direct path.
Essential Questions
Is this the official Bloomberg Television stream?
Yes. The same broadcast distributed through cable and satellite providers.
Does this require account creation?
No. The stream loads immediately. No registration process.
Can I watch from outside the United States?
Yes. No geographic restrictions apply. The stream works globally.
Does this work on mobile devices?
Yes. The stream adapts automatically to different screen sizes and connection speeds.
Is there streaming delay versus cable?
Approximately 30-45 seconds due to internet routing. For most analysis and decision-making, this delay is immaterial.
What’s BusinessTech.news’ relationship with Bloomberg?
Independent aggregation. Bloomberg doesn’t sponsor or endorse this platform. We provide access to publicly available streams.
Why offer this without charge?
BusinessTech.news serves professionals requiring quality financial news access. Reliable streams build audience engagement that supports our platform’s sustainability.
Can I cast to television?
Yes, using Chromecast, Apple TV, or any browser-based casting protocol.
Does this include Bloomberg Radio content?
This is Bloomberg Television. For radio, check our separate audio streams.
How does Bloomberg Television differ from Bloomberg Quicktake?
Bloomberg Television is the primary financial news channel. Bloomberg Quicktake focuses on shorter-form video and international news. This stream provides Bloomberg Television.
Can I pause or rewind?
This is live television. You’re watching the current broadcast, not on-demand content.
Does coverage include market opens in other regions?
Yes. Bloomberg follows markets globally. Asian market opens, European sessions, and U.S. trading all receive dedicated coverage.
Access Bloomberg Now
The Bloomberg Television live stream is running above. Bookmark this page for permanent access to financial news delivered with the precision and depth that serious market participants require.
No subscriptions. No authentication barriers. Just direct access to the network that defines professional financial news coverage.
