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Odd Lots: How Rope Gave us Modern Civilization (Podcast)

Rope is easy to take for granted. It seems obvious and straightforward. But of course, it had to be invented. Early humans discovered that by twisting fibers around each other, the resulting structure would be something durable and strong. Without rope, all kinds of things aren’t possible, from lifting objects into the air to whaling or modern bridges. So how was it developed and what were the big breakthroughs in its history? On this episode, we speak with Tim Queeney, the author of the recent
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Brendan Greeley on the Real 500-Year History of the Dollar

The dollar is older than the US itself.

US dollar banknotes counted by a cash counting machine at a currency exchange in New Delhi, India, on Saturday, Aug. 30, 2025. The Indian rupee slumped to a record low versus the dollar on concern that 50% US tariffs will hurt the country's economic growth and corporate earnings.
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<strong>How the Invention of Rope Gave us Modern Civilization</strong>

One of the great general purpose technologies.

Ropes tying pillars of the central beam inside a minka house, restored and relocated by an architect Takumi Osawa, in Kawasaki, Kanagawa Prefecture, Japan, on Saturday, Oct. 29, 2022. Known in Japan as minka, these locally crafted structures with characteristic pitched roofs were built for hundreds of years to accommodate farmers, artisans and merchants. Photographer: Noriko Hayashi/Bloomberg
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AI Is Eating the Financial Market

One factor to rule them all.

The Nvidia RTX PRO 4500 Blackwell Server Edition GPU displayed on the exhibition floor at the Nvidia GTC conference in San Jose, California, US, on Tuesday, March 17, 2026. Nvidia Corp. Chief Executive OfficerΒ Jensen HuangΒ said the company is firing up manufacturing of H200 AI accelerators for customers in China, a sign of progress in the chipmaker’s effort to reenter the vital market.Β Photographer: David Paul Morris/Bloomberg
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Everything Is Warming Up

Inflation, but also growth.

Stacked cardboard on the assembly line during the grand opening of the Pratt Industries Macon Fruit and Vegetable Box Factory in Byron, Georgia, US, on Friday, Dec. 5, 2025. The factory is expected to produce a variety of corrugated boxes using 100% recycled materials from Pratt's paper mill. Photographer: Ben Hendren/Bloomberg
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Odd Lots: Why Susquehanna Builds Prediction Markets (Podcast)

Prediction markets that enable you to bet on pretty much everything are everywhere nowadays. But there’s still a big question over whether they can expand to include larger institutional investors like hedge funds. Part of the problem is that a lot of prediction market contracts are illiquid and trading volumes can sometimes be shallow. That’s where trading firm Susquehanna International Group comes in. In this episode, recorded live at New York’s City Winery, we talk to Jeremy Maletz, Susquehan
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Odd Lots Is Coming to Hong Kong

Come test your wits.

Visitors on the Sky Terrace 428 of the Peak Tower shopping mall on Victoria Peak in Hong Kong, China, on Friday, July 4, 2025. Hong Kong authorities intervened for the third time in a week to support the currency, which had dropped toward the weak end of its official trading band as the city’s interest rates touched a three-year low. Photographer: Paul Yeung/Bloomberg
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Odd Lots: The Hidden Plumbing of Commodity Finance (Podcast)

We talk about the commodity supply chain all the time. We talk about the ports and the trucks and the ships and all of that. But there’s another dimension to moving commodities all around the world, which is actually paying for it. Who funds the oil tanker and what happens when that tanker is, say, stuck in the Strait of Hormuz? Commodity finance underpins production, transportation and storage of a wide variety of the things that make the modern world, but you tend to only hear about it when th
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