Bloomberg Terminal Blackout Sparks Chaos—UK Debt Auction Stalls, Traders Left Blind
When the Bloomberg Terminal sneezes, global markets catch pneumonia—and today’s system outage just sent the UK Treasury into a coughing fit. The glitch torpedoed real-time pricing for a critical gilt auction, leaving dealers to place bids like they were back in the 1980s: on gut instinct and landline phones.
Meanwhile, hedge funds scrambled as live data feeds froze mid-session. No updates on sovereign bond yields. No corporate credit spreads. Just a spinning hourglass where $10 trillion in assets should be pricing—ironic, given terminals cost $24k a year per seat.
Pro tip for the Bank of England: maybe keep a backup carrier pigeon next time. Or just admit what we’re all thinking—sometimes the ’most reliable system in finance’ fails harder than a meme-stock portfolio.

Bloomberg experienced a system outage on Wednesday that delayed UK government bond sales and disrupted real-time market data for traders worldwide. The disruption affected customer activity and caused delays in the UK debt auction, impacting global markets. A Bloomberg spokesperson confirmed that their systems are now returning to normal and Terminal functionality has been fully restored following the earlier service interruption. Markets are expected to stabilize as operations resume smoothly.