We have three Bloomberg Terminals in the Brandeleone Lab for Data and Visualization Services in Bostock Library. These operate under the Bloomberg for Education license (see below), and a Duke NetID is required to log into the computers before logging into the Bloomberg Service.
NOTE: Remote access was temporarily available to Educational License users as a COVID expediency, but this ended in June 2022. You will need to use the Terminals in person.
Go to Instructions for Starting Bloomberg
Bloomberg Professional is the online financial data service founded back in 1981 by Michael Bloomberg, formerly the mayor of New York City.
The Center for Data and Visualization Sciences of the Duke University Libraries has three Bloomberg Terminals in the Brandaleone Lab for Data and Visualization Services in The/Edge on the first floor of the Bostock Library. The terminals are made possible with the generous assistance of the Duke Financial Economics Center in the Duke Department of Economics.
Temporary remote access was available to help mitigate COVID-19 restrictions, but this ended for educational customers in June 2022. You must use the Terminals in person.
The Bloomberg service is available in Bostock Library whenever Perkins/Bostock Library is open. There are Terminals also at the Ford Library at the Fuqua School of Business. The service is available only to Duke students, faculty, and staff.
Bloomberg Professional provides current and recent historical financial data on individual equities, stock market indices, fixed-income securities, currencies, commodities, futures, and foreign exchange for both international and domestic markets.
It also provides news on worldwide financial markets and industries as well as economic data for the countries of the world. Additionally, it provides company profiles, company financial statements and filings, analysts' forecasts, and audio and video interviews and presentations by key players in business and finance (the Bloomberg Forum).
The Bloomberg Excel Add-in is a tool that delivers Bloomberg data directly into an Excel spreadsheet for custom analysis and calculations.
Bloomberg for Education doesn't have the full functionality of the commercial version of Bloomberg Professional. For instance, there is a lag in stock quotes and data that makes it incompatible for real-time analysis or trading, it has more limited downloading capabilities, and of course there's no online trading.