There is a particular feeling that comes with arriving in Davos in January. The snow, the quiet, and the sense that the year is about to accelerate.
Last year, I arrived as the world was watching a new U.S. president take office and trying to make sense of a pivotal moment in AI’s evolution. The themes were nascent. The questions were just beginning. Returning now, it is striking how quickly those uncertainties have become the core of global leadership conversations.
This evening, Bloomberg House opens with a reception hosted by JP Zammitt, and we begin a week of discussions shaped by that transformation.
In advance of Davos, Bloomberg brought together insights from across our newsroom, data, and client conversations to better understand the forces likely to shape decision making in the year ahead. That work is reflected in our new report, Leaders Insights: Defining Forces of 2026, which is helping frame some of the discussions taking place on the ground this week. The focus spans AI’s expanding role in governance and strategy, geoeconomic realignments reshaping risk frameworks and global planning, rising defense investment influencing national priorities and corporate strategy, and the convergence of energy transition, electrification, and AI driven demand.
These themes are no longer theoretical. They are shaping how leaders allocate resources, assess risk, and communicate with stakeholders in real time.
At Bloomberg, I see these dynamics daily in the questions our clients ask, the trends our journalists cover, and the strategic decisions we face ourselves. Davos offers an important moment to listen closely, compare perspectives, and challenge assumptions.
I'm looking forward to the conversations ahead and to carrying these insights into the work that follows.
#WEF2026 #BloombergHouse #FutureOfAI #Geoeconomics #EnergyTransition