Trade and Economy
Our savior. President Trump declared he was "the chosen one" to tackle China on trade. "And you know what? We're winning," he added, admitting that the trade war could cause some harm on the U.S. economy but used the opportunity to pressure the Fed to cut interest rates further. The White House is still planning to hold face-to-face negotiations with China next month, even as tensions rise. Reuters
Tariff ticker. China promised to put tariffs on $75 billion worth of U.S. imports if President Trump proceeds with his own threat of new levies. China's tariffs would target auto and agricultural products primarily and be imposed at 5% starting September 1 then raise to 10% in December. New York Times
Market jitters. Trump's tweets ordering U.S. companies to "immediately start looking for an alternative to China" sent stocks into a tailspin. The Dow plummeted, closing down 623 points, or 2.4%. The S&P 500 closed 2.6% down and the Nasdaq Composite finished 3% lower. CNBC
There may be trouble ahead. A survey of 14 economists concluded that President Trump's next round of tariffs on Chinese imports — that's 10% on $300 billion worth of goods — would push China's GDP growth below 6%, which would be the slowest annual expansion since 1990. The economists divined the extra tariffs would cut 0.5 percentage points from China's growth, which is already tipped to slow to 6% next year. Bloomberg
Money down. The yuan fell to its lowest rate in 11 years on Thursday, closing at 7.0875 against the U.S. dollar on Thursday. On Friday it closed at 7.10. The yuan dipped below the psychologically meaningful 7:1 mark in June, although some economists say there is no real danger of letting the yuan weaken that far. The head of China's central bank agreed and has been allowing the yuan to trade around the mark as the trade war intensifies. Reuters
Innovation and Tech
Unfollow. Twitter, Facebook and YouTube all suspended or deleted hundreds of accounts that the platforms believe are part of a coordinated effort by China to spread government propaganda. Twitter has gone a step further and announced it will stop allowing state media, from any country, to pay for promoted content. Fortune
Smart move. The Department of Commerce issued another 90-day reprieve for Huawei, which was placed on a trade blacklist in May. Rotating Chairman Eric Xu said the company is used to working under that Sword of Damocles. Yesterday Huawei unveiled what it calls the world's most powerful A.I. processor which will, amongst other things, help it take a bigger share of the cloud computing market. Fortune
Sounding Board
With CEOs facing radical disruption and increasingly complex strategic challenges, a good board can be crucial to company success. But how can you make sure the relationship is productive and, most importantly, strategic? Deloitte explains.
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In Case You Missed It
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A Year After IPO, Meituan Works to Unify Its Message Caixin Global
How Hong Kong's Protests Are Roiling the World's Booming Bubble Tea Market Fortune
China's central bank releases 3-year fintech development plan TechNode
Politics and Policy
Cathay turbulence. Staff at Cathay Pacific, Hong Kong's de facto flag carrier airline, have complained of a "white terror"—or political persecution—raging at the company. Cathay CEO Rupert Hogg resigned last week after Beijing pressured the company to deliver a list of staff that participated in protests in Hong Kong. This week, one of Cathay's subsidiary airlines, Cathay Dragon, fired the leader of its air steward union, Rebecca Sy, due to pro-protest posts Sy made on her personal Facebook page. Hong Kong Free Press
Confucius says... Australia's New South Wales state cut ties between its public schools and the Confucius Institute—an educational outreach organization funded by the Chinese government. The Confucius Institute has been accused of using funding to promote pro-Beijing curricula overseas. New South Wales did not find proof of "actual political influence" but admitted the institute was pretty shady. Fortune
This edition of CEO Daily was edited by Eamon Barrett. Find previous editions here, and sign up for other Fortune newsletters here.
Hong Kong
Shattered calm: Protesters in helmets and gas masks squared off against riot police in Hong Kong Saturday, as the city's protests returned to violent again after nearly two weeks of relative calm. Demonstrators in the industrial neighborhood of Kwun Tong blocked roads and surrounding the police station, sawing down a video-surveillance pole. Police responded with tear gas. Wall Street Journal
He's back: Simon Cheng, a Hong Kong citizen employed as a trade and investment officer of the British consulate in Hong Kong, has been freed after being detained in the southern Chinese city of Shenzhen for 15 days. Shenzhen police posted on an official Weibo account that Cheng had been released, after admitting to committing an offense. On Thursday, police said Cheng been punished for soliciting a prostitute. But they have offered no evidence for the charge, which has been met with skepticism in Hong Kong. Wall Street Journal
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