Good morning. Franceâs centrist and left-wing parties are racing to stop the momentum of the countryâs far right following the first round i [View in browser](
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Good morning. Franceâs centrist and left-wing parties are racing to stop the momentum of the countryâs far right following the first round in a legislative election. Boeing is ending decades of separation as it moves to buy Spirit Aero, while BlackRock is expanding its private asset capabilities. And a boom in 24-hour stock trading is rattling Wall Street. Hereâs what traders are talking about  â [Morwenna Coniam]( Want to receive this newsletter in Spanish? [Sign up to get the Five Things: Spanish Edition newsletter](. French far right As speculation swirls over candidacy for the US Presidential vote later this year, itâs[Franceâs election]( which is dominating international headlines today after the far-right National Rally led by Marine LePen scored an emphatic victory in the first round of the countryâs legislative ballot. Still, polls suggest an absolute majority is not the most likely outcome after next weekâs second round of voting. Thatâs lent relief to European markets, with French stocks rebounding and the euro climbing to its highest since mid-June. Boeing buys Spirit Aero Early gains in US equity futures fizzled ahead of construction spending and manufacturing due later. Among notable movers, Spirit AeroSystems advanced in pre-market trading after [Boeing agreed to buy it back]( for $37.25 a share in an all-stock deal that values the supplier at $4.7 billion. The deal, with a total transaction value of about $8.3 billion, unwinds a two-decade separation and comes as Boeing tries to fix its manufacturing defects. BlackRock chases private assets In other deals news, [BlackRock will acquire private capital database provider Preqin]($3.2 billion in cash, as the worldâs largest money manager accelerates its push to become a major player in alternative assets. The acquisition deepens BlackRockâs ability to oversee risks and analyze data across fast-growing markets for private assets, and also expands its Aladdin technology systems. 24-hour trading The amateur-investing revolution that has swept US markets since the pandemic is helping fuel a boom in overnight stock trading, with the likes of Robinhood Markets and Interactive Brokers having adopted ways to offer the buying and selling of American shares 24 hours a day, five days a week. That has effectively eliminated the traditional eight-hour overnight break, and the move has proved so popular that others are taking note. You can read more about the trend â and associated concerns â in [todayâs Big Take](. Biden campaign pushes back Turning to the US election, [President Joe Bidenâs campaign]( is going on the attack against donors, consultants, officials and media voices who are calling on him to drop out of the 2024 race after his devastating debate performance. Aides spent the weekend publicly dismissing suggestions that Biden reconsider his candidacy or take dramatic steps to overhaul his operation. They also angrily denounced the suggestion Biden and his family might entertain a discussion of leaving the race as they traveled to Camp David for a private getaway. What Weâve Been Reading This is whatâs caught our eye over the past 24 hours. - Boeing has until the end of the week to decide on whether to [plead guiltyÂ](
- The Fedâs[rate-cut delay](wonât hold back the tide of global easing
- The US Supreme Court will rule Monday on [Trumpâs immunity claim](
- [Bank of England](Â Governor Andrew Bailey gets a second in commandÂ
- [Nigel Farage](plots his path to power with a takeover of the UKâs Tories And finally, here's what Joeâs interested in this morning Does it feel to you like the world's gone crazy? If so, then you should check out the new episode of the [Odd Lots podcasts]( that Tracy Alloway and I did with [Dan Davies](. Dan is probably one of the most interesting people I've had the pleasure of talking to over the years. He's an analyst, banking expert, author, and just all-around expert on things. His most recent book is the [The Unaccountability Machine: Why Big Systems Make Terrible Decisions - and How The World Lost its Mind](. Using a lens from the field of [cybernetics](, his basic argument is that as the world has gotten more and more complex -- too difficult for any human or groups of humans to understand -- we've created numerous Accountability Sinks which are designed to allow large organizations or governments to pass the buck for when something goes wrong. So for example, if your flight is delayed for hours, and you can't get an answer on whether the flight is going to be canceled or not, or even what the underlying issue is, it's because actually nobody knows. No individual can give you an answer. Instead there's some faceless, nameless system, or set of rules driving the situation that gets the blame. If you think about finance, there are numerous accountability sinks. Ratings agencies. Investment committees. Indexes. Index designers. Proxy advisors. Consultants of all types. The list could go on. In a sense, all of these things exist so that accountability for some decision or some outcome could flow through to someone else. Sometimes these things end up in disaster, and (almost) everyone can wash their hands of blame or responsibility. And again, the argument is that this the inevitable result of complexity beyond the realm of human comprehension. When things go bad, there's nobody who can say "I screwed up" in part because nobody did screw up. And people go crazy, because nobody knows with whom they're supposed to be frustrated. One of the other really interesting ideas from our conversation with Dan is that the hollowing out of so-called "middle management" has contributed to these problems. Everyone likes to imagine that organizations are filled with wasteful "email jobs" (David Graeber had a [more colorful term](). But, per Dan, these jobs play a role in maintaining the knowledge of the organization that otherwise is so hard to comprehend. And so one theory is that when you look at the troubles at a company like Boeing, a lot of it might have to do with drives for efficiency -- thinning out management ranks -- that caused the organization to lose internal knowledge and accountability. Anyway. It was a blast talking to Dan. Check out the episode on [Apple](, [Spotify](, or elsewhere. Follow Bloomberg's Joe Weisenthal on X [@TheStalwart]( [Bloomberg Markets Wrap: The latest on what's moving global markets. Tap to read.]( Follow Us Like getting this newsletter? [Subscribe to Bloomberg.com]( for unlimited access to trusted, data-driven journalism and subscriber-only insights. Before itâs here, itâs on the Bloomberg Terminal. Find out more about how the Terminal delivers information and analysis that financial professionals canât 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 Five Things to Start Your Day: Americas Edition newsletter. If a friend forwarded you this message, [sign up here]( to get it in your inbox.
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