Bloomberg This Weekend: Big Tech Selloff, Trump's AI Stake Interest, and Bitcoin Pressure
By
Rodrigo Santos Andrade
If you only eat one bagel today, this is the bagel.
Summary
Bloomberg This Weekend covers a broad market selloff led by Big Tech, with former President Trump expressing interest in the US government taking stakes in AI companies. The episode also discusses Bitcoin's decline adding pressure to publicly traded crypto accumulation companies. The show features conversations with lawmakers, business leaders, and cultural icons across news, politics, lifestyle, and culture.
Key quotes
· 3 pulledBitcoin's slide this week is adding fresh pressure to one of the most ambitious financial experiments to emerge from the recent crypto boom: publicly traded companies created to accumulate digital assets on behalf of investors.
David Gura, Christina Ruffini and Lisa Mateo bring you unique discussions and in-depth conversations with lawmakers, business leaders and cultural icons.
Bloomberg This Weekend gives you insight to make sense of the world.
You might also wanna read

Tech Stocks Lose $770 Billion in Market Value Following Trump Tariff Threats
Major technology companies including Amazon, Nvidia, and Tesla experienced significant stock price declines of around 5% each, resulting in

Silicon Valley's Coordinated Support for David Sacks Amid White House AI Policy Controversy
The article examines the political influence of billionaire venture capitalist David Sacks in the Trump White House, particularly regarding
Tech CEOs Meet with President Trump to Discuss Chip Manufacturing and AI Investments
President Trump hosted a meeting with top tech CEOs including Sam Altman, Tim Cook, Sundar Pichai, David Sacks, and Mark Zuckerberg, where e

Tech Companies Commit to AI Education Initiatives at White House Event
Major tech companies including Amazon, Google, and Microsoft are committing to help prepare Americans for an AI-dominated future through edu

Amazon Leads Tech Stock Sell-Off as AI Investment Concerns Mount
Amazon shares fell over 5% after the company forecast significant capital expenditure increases, contributing to a broader tech sell-off as

Major Tech Companies Sign Pledge with Trump to Prevent Data Centers from Raising Electricity Costs
Seven major tech companies including Google, Meta, Microsoft, Oracle, OpenAI, Amazon, and xAI signed a 'rate payer protection pledge' with P
