30s Ad: $38 - $46
60s Ad: $44 - $52
CPM Category: Business
Different podcast categories command different CPM (cost per mille) rates based on advertiser demand and audience value.
customer support for Europe, Middle East & Africa:
+44 20 7330 7500
customer support for Asia Pacific:
+65 6212 1000
Addresses
No addresses found.
Form
A contact form is available on this page.
You can fill out the form at
this link.
General Website Emails
Emails found on general website pages (e.g., about, info), not the main contact page.
No website emails found.
Externally Sourced Emails
Emails discovered using automated web scraping across the internet.
No external emails found.
RSS Emails
Email addresses extracted directly from the website's or podcast's RSS feed(s).
No RSS emails found.
Recent Hosts, Guests & Topics
Here's a quick summary of the last 5 episodes on Wall Street Week.
Hosts
David Westin
Previous Guests
Larry Summers
Lawrence Henry Summers is an American economist, academic, and former government official who served as the 27th president of Harvard University from 2001 to 2006. He has held various prominent positions, including Secretary of the Treasury under President Bill Clinton and Director of the National Economic Council under President Barack Obama. Summers is known for his work on economic policy, international finance, and his advocacy for education reform.
Lawrence Henry Summers is an American economist, academic, and former government official who served as the 27th president of Harvard University from 2001 to 2006. He has held various prominent positions, including Secretary of the Treasury under President Bill Clinton and Director of the National Economic Council under President Barack Obama. Summers is known for his work on economic policy, international finance, and his advocacy for education reform.
Robby Starbuck
Robby Starbuck is a conservative activist investor and entrepreneur known for his involvement in various investment initiatives that align with faith-based values. He has been vocal about the intersection of faith and finance, advocating for investment strategies that reflect personal beliefs and ethical considerations. Starbuck has gained attention for his commentary on the role of values in investment decisions and has been active in promoting conservative causes.
Robby Starbuck is a conservative activist investor and entrepreneur known for his involvement in various investment initiatives that align with faith-based values. He has been vocal about the intersection of faith and finance, advocating for investment strategies that reflect personal beliefs and ethical considerations. Starbuck has gained attention for his commentary on the role of values in investment decisions and has been active in promoting conservative causes.
Lawrence H. Summers
Lawrence H. Summers is an American economist who served as the 71st Secretary of the Treasury under President Bill Clinton. He has also held positions as the President of Harvard University and the Chief Economist at the World Bank. Summers is known for his work on economic policy, international finance, and macroeconomic issues.
Lawrence H. Summers is an American economist who served as the 71st Secretary of the Treasury under President Bill Clinton. He has also held positions as the President of Harvard University and the Chief Economist at the World Bank. Summers is known for his work on economic policy, international finance, and macroeconomic issues.
Ana Botin
Ana Botin is a Spanish banker and the Executive Chairman of Banco Santander, one of the largest banks in the world. She has been instrumental in the bank's international expansion and digital transformation. Botin is recognized for her leadership in the financial sector and her advocacy for sustainable banking practices.
Ana Botin is a Spanish banker and the Executive Chairman of Banco Santander, one of the largest banks in the world. She has been instrumental in the bank's international expansion and digital transformation. Botin is recognized for her leadership in the financial sector and her advocacy for sustainable banking practices.
Topics Discussed
Harvard University
Larry Summers
Donald Trump
federal funding freeze
government tyranny
women's sports
NWSL
WNBA
sports as an asset class
investment opportunities
Robby Starbuck
faith-based investments
tariffs
US sovereign wealth fund
TikTok
national security
air traffic control
EU capital markets
private equity
high-end tuna market
Trump tariffs
global economy
trade war
retaliation
US markets
China
European Union
Japan
Vietnam
manufacturing
trade barriers
Bloomberg, the global business and financial information and news leader, gives influential decision makers a critical edge by connecting them to a dynamic network of information, people and ideas. The company’s strength — delivering data, news and analytics through innovative technology, quickly and accurately — is at the core of the Bloomberg Terminal. Bloomberg’s enterprise solutions build on the company’s core strength: leveraging technology to allow customers to access, integrate, distribute and manage data and information across organizations more efficiently and effectively.
Subscribe now for:
⭐ Life at Bloomberg content
📊 Financial data content
🔎 Bloomberg Terminal tips & tricks
📹 Exclusive video tutorials
💻 Top Bloomberg Terminal features & functions
🚀 New financial products & business solutions
Harvard Fights Back; Investing in Women's Sports; Faith-Based Investments
Hosts
Hosts of this podcast episode
David Westin
Guests
Guests of this podcast episode
Larry SummersRobby Starbuck
Keywords
Keywords of this podcast episode
Harvard UniversityLarry SummersDonald Trumpfederal funding freezegovernment tyrannywomen's sportsNWSLWNBAsports as an asset classinvestment opportunitiesRobby Starbuckfaith-based investments
This week, Former Harvard University President Larry Summers assailed President Donald Trump over his deepening attacks on the school, slamming a “wildly extralegal” federal funding freeze earlier this week and warning of government “tyranny.”
Plus, the growing investment in women's sports...will leagues like the NWSL and WNBA continue to generate billions of dollars in revenue?
And, a broader look at sports as an asset class and the increase in investment opportunities. We hear from conservative activist investor Robby Starbuck as we look at the role of faith in investment decisions.
This week, Former Harvard University President Larry Summers assailed President Donald Trump over his deepening attacks on the school, slamming a “wildly extralegal” federal funding freeze earlier this week and warning of government “tyranny.”
Plus, the growing investment in women's sports...will leagues like the NWSL and WNBA continue to generate billions of dollars in revenue?
And, a broader look at sports as an asset class and the increase in investment opportunities. We hear from conservative activist investor Robby Starbuck as we look at the role of faith in investment decisions.
Larry Summers' Tariff Analysis, a US Sovereign Wealth Fund, Air Traffic control
Hosts
Hosts of this podcast episode
David Westin
Guests
Guests of this podcast episode
Lawrence H. Summers
Keywords
Keywords of this podcast episode
tariffsUS sovereign wealth fundTikToknational securityair traffic control
This week, former Treasury Secretary Lawrence H. Summers examines tariffs through a historical lens and poses hypotheticals for the current administration. And, how will the US pull off creating a sovereign wealth fund? Plus, we take a look at TikTok and whether it's a threat to national security. Later, we dive into our nation’s air traffic control system...is it safe?
This week, former Treasury Secretary Lawrence H. Summers examines tariffs through a historical lens and poses hypotheticals for the current administration. And, how will the US pull off creating a sovereign wealth fund? Plus, we take a look at TikTok and whether it's a threat to national security. Later, we dive into our nation’s air traffic control system...is it safe?
Summers on Tariffs, EU Capital Markets, Business of Tuna
Hosts
Hosts of this podcast episode
David Westin
Guests
Guests of this podcast episode
Lawrence H. SummersAna Botin
Keywords
Keywords of this podcast episode
tariffsEU capital marketsprivate equityhigh-end tuna market
This week, we dissect President Trump’s tariffs with former Treasury Secretary Lawrence H. Summers, and how EU’s capital markets might fare with Santander’s Ana Botin. Plus, we take a look at how private equity is growing the high-end tuna market.
This week, we dissect President Trump’s tariffs with former Treasury Secretary Lawrence H. Summers, and how EU’s capital markets might fare with Santander’s Ana Botin. Plus, we take a look at how private equity is growing the high-end tuna market.
On today's episode: President Donald Trump imposed the steepest American tariffs in a century as he steps up his campaign to reshape the global economy, sparking threats of retaliation and a selloff in markets around the world.Trump announced Wednesday he will apply at least a 10% tariff on all exporters to the US, with even higher duties on some 60 nations, to counter large trade imbalances with the US. That includes some of the country’s biggest trading partners, such as China — which now faces a tariff of well above 50% on many goods — as well as the European Union, Japan and Vietnam.“For years, hard-working American citizens were forced to sit on the sidelines as other nations got rich and powerful, much of it at our expense,” Trump said during an event in the White House Rose Garden to unveil the so-called reciprocal tariffs. “Now it’s our turn to prosper.”The move marks a dramatic escalation in Trump’s trade war, one that risks triggering retaliation from other countries and upends calculations for businesses and consumers at home. China and the EU, America’s largest trading partner, both said they were preparing to take countermeasures in response.The US president has embraced tariffs as a tool to assert US power, revive manufacturing at home and exact geopolitical concessions — counter to the decades-old consensus that lower trade barriers help to foster ties among nations and prevent conflicts. Economists say the near-term result of his measures will likely be higher US prices and slower growth — or perhaps even a recession.Global financial markets were hit by a sweeping selloff after Trump’s announcement, with US equity futures slumping as much as 4%.Gold hit an all-time high and the traditional haven Japanese yen soared, while China maintained its daily support of the yuan. Ten-year Treasury yields fell toward the closely-watched 4% level, their lowest since October.Read More: Fear Grips Markets as Trump Tariffs Raise Risks to Global GrowthLess than three months after returning to the White House, Trump has already erected trade barriers that are bigger by some measures than those imposed in the notoriously protectionist 1930s. Bloomberg Economics calculates that the effective tax rate the US now charges on more than $3 trillion of imported goods may climb to around 23% — higher than any point in more than a century.A statement published Wednesday by the United States Trade Representative explained the Trump administration calculated its raft of new tariffs primarily based on existing trade balances. Countries running a trade surplus with the US faced a flat 10% rate regardless, as did nations where trade was roughly even.There’s a small difference in the tariff rates first announced by Trump and more than a dozen of those listed in the annex that accompanied the White House executive order. For countries like South Korea, Myanmar, Pakistan and India, the rates in the annex are about 1 percentage point higher than the initial announcement.The 10% baseline charge on everyone takes effect after midnight Saturday. The higher duties on targeted countries — which replace, rather than add on top of the 10% rate — are due to kick in on April 9, the White House said.Read More: List of Reciprocal Tariffs by CountryFor now, the new measures don’t include Canada and Mexico, which are embroiled in a separate on-and-off tariff dispute with the US. They also won’t apply to some products that are subject to separate duties tied to so-called Sec. 232 investigations such as autos, semiconductors and lumber.The reciprocal tariffs were “much worse than we feared,” said Mary Lovely, a senior fellow at the Peterson Institute for International Economics. There’ll be “huge implications for rerouting of trade,” she said.The president, who’s sought to frame his trade plans as a boost for his blue-collar voters, was joined in the Rose Garden by union members and workers from various industries — including a retired autoworker who spoke on stage. Later, Trump brandished large boards during his 48-minute address to display each nation’s new rate.
On today's episode: President Donald Trump imposed the steepest American tariffs in a century as he steps up his campaign to reshape the global economy, sparking threats of retaliation and a selloff in markets around the world.Trump announced Wednesday he will apply at least a 10% tariff on all exporters to the US, with even higher duties on some 60 nations, to counter large trade imbalances with the US. That includes some of the country’s biggest trading partners, such as China — which now faces a tariff of well above 50% on many goods — as well as the European Union, Japan and Vietnam.“For years, hard-working American citizens were forced to sit on the sidelines as other nations got rich and powerful, much of it at our expense,” Trump said during an event in the White House Rose Garden to unveil the so-called reciprocal tariffs. “Now it’s our turn to prosper.”The move marks a dramatic escalation in Trump’s trade war, one that risks triggering retaliation from other countries and upends calculations for businesses and consumers at home. China and the EU, America’s largest trading partner, both said they were preparing to take countermeasures in response.The US president has embraced tariffs as a tool to assert US power, revive manufacturing at home and exact geopolitical concessions — counter to the decades-old consensus that lower trade barriers help to foster ties among nations and prevent conflicts. Economists say the near-term result of his measures will likely be higher US prices and slower growth — or perhaps even a recession.Global financial markets were hit by a sweeping selloff after Trump’s announcement, with US equity futures slumping as much as 4%.Gold hit an all-time high and the traditional haven Japanese yen soared, while China maintained its daily support of the yuan. Ten-year Treasury yields fell toward the closely-watched 4% level, their lowest since October.Read More: Fear Grips Markets as Trump Tariffs Raise Risks to Global GrowthLess than three months after returning to the White House, Trump has already erected trade barriers that are bigger by some measures than those imposed in the notoriously protectionist 1930s. Bloomberg Economics calculates that the effective tax rate the US now charges on more than $3 trillion of imported goods may climb to around 23% — higher than any point in more than a century.A statement published Wednesday by the United States Trade Representative explained the Trump administration calculated its raft of new tariffs primarily based on existing trade balances. Countries running a trade surplus with the US faced a flat 10% rate regardless, as did nations where trade was roughly even.There’s a small difference in the tariff rates first announced by Trump and more than a dozen of those listed in the annex that accompanied the White House executive order. For countries like South Korea, Myanmar, Pakistan and India, the rates in the annex are about 1 percentage point higher than the initial announcement.The 10% baseline charge on everyone takes effect after midnight Saturday. The higher duties on targeted countries — which replace, rather than add on top of the 10% rate — are due to kick in on April 9, the White House said.Read More: List of Reciprocal Tariffs by CountryFor now, the new measures don’t include Canada and Mexico, which are embroiled in a separate on-and-off tariff dispute with the US. They also won’t apply to some products that are subject to separate duties tied to so-called Sec. 232 investigations such as autos, semiconductors and lumber.The reciprocal tariffs were “much worse than we feared,” said Mary Lovely, a senior fellow at the Peterson Institute for International Economics. There’ll be “huge implications for rerouting of trade,” she said.The president, who’s sought to frame his trade plans as a boost for his blue-collar voters, was joined in the Rose Garden by union members and workers from various industries — including a retired autoworker who spoke on stage. Later, Trump brandished large boards during his 48-minute address to display each nation’s new rate.