Tuesday, February 3, 2026

Preference center link

Hello there,

We received a request to change your subscription preferences. If you would like to change your preferences, use the link below.

This link will expire after 24 hours.

Update my preferences

If you didn't make this attempt to change your subscription preferences please ignore this email.

Have a Lite Day!

Software apocalypse

Bloomberg Evening Briefing Americas
View in browser
Bloomberg

Wall Street sentiment around software stocks went from bearish to doomsday with traders dumping shares as fears pile up about the potential destruction coming via artificial intelligence.

The anxiety was underscored Tuesday after AI firm Anthropic released a productivity tool for in-house lawyers, sending legal software and publishing firms tumbling. Selling pressure was evident across the sector with London Stock Exchange Group falling 13%, while Thomson Reuters plunged as much as 21%. CS Disco sank as much as 14% and Legalzoom.com declined 19%.

Concerns around software aren't new: Last fall, Apollo Global Management's John Zito stunned an audience in Toronto when he said the real threat for private capital markets wasn't tariffs, inflation or a prolonged period of elevated interest rates. Rather, he said, "the real risk is—is software dead?"

Months later, investors are heading for the exits. "We call it the 'SaaSpocalypse,' an apocalypse for software-as-a-service stocks," said Jeffrey Favuzza, who works on the equity trading desk at Jefferies. "Trading is very much 'get me out' style selling." And here are a few of the alternative investment firms that got hit bad as a resultJordan Parker Erb

What You Need to Know Today

The Epstein Files
Goldman Defense of Lawyer's Epstein Ties Provokes Unease at Bank
Recently released files show that before Kathy Ruemmler became the bank's general counsel, she accepted tens of thousands of dollars in gifts from Jeffrey Epstein.

Bank of America has kicked off the sale of investment-grade dollar bonds, adding to a flurry of offerings by major Wall Street banks. Said to be offered were six-year fixed- and floating-rate notes as well as an 11-year fixed-rate security. Initial price talk for the latter was a premium 1 percentage point above Treasuries.

Bank of America is the last of the six big Wall Street firms to sell debt following January's release of fourth-quarter results. The group combined to offer $50.5 billion of high-grade notes last month, according to data compiled by Bloomberg, led by a record $16 billion deal from Goldman Sachs.

Sales of US high-grade notes have started this year at a record pace, part of a global boom as borrowers take advantage of reduced borrowing premiums.


The European Union is set to pitch the US on a critical minerals partnership to curb China's influence. The EU is said to be prepared to sign a memorandum of understanding with the US to develop a "Strategic Partnership Roadmap" within three months.

The partnership aims to jointly find ways to source critical minerals, which are needed for most modern technologies, without relying on China. Both the US and EU have become tethered to abundant, cheap Chinese minerals, giving Beijing leverage over their supply chains.

As part of its push, the US pressed some EU member states to sign bilateral deals. In response, the European Commission asked the bloc's countries to stick together, and EU capitals gave the commission a mandate to negotiate an agreement.


Josh D'Amaro Source: Image Group LA/Disney General Entertainment Con

Disney said Josh D'Amaro will succeed Bob Iger as chief executive, passing the reins at a key moment as the company transitions from traditional TV viewing to the streaming era.

Park chief D'Amaro, a 28-year-veteran of Disney, will succeed Iger effective March 18, the company said Tuesday. Iger will stay on the board and serve as a senior adviser until his retirement on Dec. 31.


Bloomberg Opinion
Trump's Base Is Tiring of Him at a Bad Time
Cracks are opening in the foundation of the president's coalition. That could be crucial in November's midterm elections.

A rally in Walmart shares pushed the retailer into the $1 trillion club for the first time ever, vaulting the big-box store into a category typically occupied by Big Tech firms such as Nvidia and Alphabet.

The chain has flexed its massive scale and supplier network to keep prices low and grab market share across the income spectrum. While Walmart has maintained its appeal to households looking for value, its online offerings are drawing new, wealthier shoppers seeking convenience.

The US government is preparing to issue a general license allowing companies to pump oil in Venezuela, part of the Trump administration's plan to ease sanctions and rebuild the nation's moribund energy industry following the US attack on Caracas and rendition of President Nicolas Maduro. The American strike killed about 100 people, Venezuela authorities said.

The new license could be issued by the Treasury Department as soon as this week, days after the US issued a separate general license allowing companies to buy and sell Venezuelan oil. The move is a key step to attract companies with US ties to step in and revitalize output in Venezuela, which holds among the world's largest reserves. Oil majors have reacted with caution, with ExxonMobil calling the country "uninvestable."


Bloomberg Opinion
Xi's Military Purge Might Be Dangerous for the US
The Chinese leader has completely and ruthlessly consolidated control over the armed might of his nation, James Stavridis writes. What does it mean for the chances of an assault on Taiwan?

The partial US government shutdown came to an end this afternoon as expected, but a new fight—over the future of the embattled Department of Homeland Security—is just beginning. It's only funded through Feb. 13 as Congressional Democrats seek major reforms of its immigration enforcement arms.

Republicans in Congress are already backing away from earlier signs of compromise, and publicly defending the practices of the agencies in the aftermath of the killings of two US citizens. The Speaker of the House himself reportedly said that the Immigration and Customs Enforcement agency, whose agent Jonathan Ross shot dead Nicole Good on a Minnesota street last month, and similar agencies not be subject to the same legal constraints as other law enforcement agencies. 

Mike Johnson of Louisiana said he opposes codifying that immigration agents must obtain judicial warrants, as generally required under the Fourth Amendment to the US Constitution, before forcibly entering American homes. Johnson also joined another hard-right Republican, Texas Senator John Cornyn, in rejecting Democratic demands that immigration agents unmask themselves, despite a flood of allegations regarding illegal and unconstitutional conduct as part of President Donald Trump's immigration dragnet.

Bloomberg Opinion
ICE Isn't Just Breaking the Law. It's Trying to Rewrite It
The agency is now authorizing its agents to arrest anyone they suspect of being undocumented, Noah Feldman writes, even if they don't have a warrant and the person isn't a flight risk.

New Year Sale: Save 60% on your first year

Enjoy unlimited access to Bloomberg.com and the Bloomberg app, plus market tools, expert analysis, live updates and more. Offer ends soon.

What You'll Need to Know Tomorrow

Middle East
US Says Jet Shot Down Iranian Drone That Neared Carrier in Arabian Sea
Bloomberg Opinion
This Tax-Refund Bonanza Won't Do What Bessent Says It Will
Finance
PayPal Shares Plunge After CEO Announcement, Profit Miss
Crypto
Bitcoin Drops to Lowest Price Since Trump's Election
Bloomberg Opinion
South Carolina's Measles Milestone Is Everyone's Problem
US
A Mamdani-Style Candidate Looks to Win Over New Jersey's Suburbs
Bloomberg Podcasts
Thailand's Cannabis Experiment Faces Moment of Truth at Polls

For Your Commute

Technology
Inside Xbox, a Game Studio Is Trying to Reinvent Itself
Microsoft's Obsidian Entertainment is searching for ways to make games more quickly and on smaller budgets.

Bloomberg Invest: Join the world's most influential investors and financial leaders on March 3-4 in New York. Powered by insights from the Bloomberg Terminal and one of the largest global newsrooms, this flagship event examines how artificial intelligence disruption, geopolitical uncertainty, shifting central bank policy and the convergence of public and private markets are reshaping global finance. Don't miss sharp, forward-looking conversations with top CEOs, asset managers and industry titans in the heart of the financial district. Learn more.

More from Bloomberg

Enjoying Evening Briefing Americas? Get more news and analysis with our regional editions for Asia and Europe. Check out these newsletters, too:

Explore all newsletters at Bloomberg.com.

Follow Us

Before it's here, it's on the Bloomberg Terminal. Find out more about how the Terminal delivers information and analysis that financial professionals can't find anywhere else.  Learn more.

Want to sponsor this newsletter? Get in touch here.

You received this message because you are subscribed to Bloomberg's Evening Briefing Americas newsletter. If a friend forwarded you this message, sign up here to get it in your inbox.
Unsubscribe
Bloomberg.com
Contact Us
Bloomberg L.P.
731 Lexington Avenue,
New York, NY 10022
Ads Powered By Liveintent Ad Choices

Preference center link

...