Economy and Trade
A break for Huawei. The U.S. Commerce Department is expected to extend a reprieve given to Huawei Technologies allowing the Chinese telecoms giant to continue purchasing from U.S. companies so that it can service existing customers. The move would be a significant concession from Trump officials who had previously insisted the 90-day extension granted Huawei in May was only a temporary stay of execution. Reuters
Jets for Taiwan. The White House is pressing ahead with an $8 billion sale of F-16 fighter jets to Taiwan, a move sure to rankle in Beijing and complicate trade negotiations. The sale would be the largest and most significant sale of weaponry to Taiwan in decades. Washington Post
Mayday. Rupert Hogg, the CEO of Hong Kong's flag carrier airline, Cathay Pacific, resigned Friday afternoon. Hogg had come under pressure from Beijing to prevent staff from engaging in Hong Kong's protests; so far four staff members have been fired for related activity. Hogg and one of his deputies, who also resigned, said they are stepping down to "take responsibility" for the recent "challenging weeks." South China Morning Post
Nothing personal. China appeared to reject overtures from Trump for a "personal meeting" with Xi Jinping, after the U.S. President made the mistake of linking the protests in Hong Kong to the ongoing trade war. A statement from the Ministry of Finance said that China had no choice but to consider retaliatory measures for Trump's – now postponed – implementation of 10% tariffs on the remaining $300 billion basket of Chinese imports. Fortune
Data dumps. Economic data for July was weak. Urban unemployment returned to its highest level since records began and industrial production expanded at its slowest rate – 4.8% – since 2009. Retail sales growth declined as well. The weak data comes after China's slowest quarterly growth in nearly 30 years. WSJ
Dark times ahead. JP Morgan's chief economist Bruce Kasman says there's a 40% chance of recession in the next six to nine months. Kasman pointed to the faltering European and Chinese economies and the U.S.-China trade war as instigators of the possible global economic downturn. And he doesn't think China can hold out much longer against the hits it's taking from U.S. tariffs, saying, "But boy, we just haven't seen how far the latest damage is going to be." CNBC
Innovation and Tech
Bytedance searches. Bytedance launched a search engine this week that sits within its signature news aggregating service, Toutiao. The search engine, Toutiao Search, skims content from Bytedance's suite of apps – which includes short video app, TikTok – as well as the broader worldwide web. Fortune
Tencent stumbles. Bytedance appears also to have sucked ad revenue away from Tencent, as the latter missed earnings expectation for the second quarter, sending shares tumbling 4%. However, Tencent's ad revenue still grew 16%. The company, which derives most of its income from gaming, is still recovering from a nine month freeze on game approvals that began in March last year, decimating company stock. Bloomberg
Huawei spies? Huawei staff in Uganda reportedly helped government officials spy on musician-turned-politician Bobi Wine, who is mounting an opposition to the long-standing incumbent. For some the story seemed like a smoking gun but the Journal noted it found no indication that corporate executives were aware of the situation in Uganda. Huawei has vehemently denied the Journal's findings. Wall Street Journal
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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China's AI Dreams Aren't for Everyone FP
Alibaba's Strong Results Suggest Chinese Consumers Are Still Spending NYT
China Ramps Up Brazil Soybean Imports, Rebuffing U.S. Crops Bloomberg
Politics and Policy
Black hands. Senior police officers in Hong Kong disputed Beijing's claims that foreign "black hands" are orchestrating protests in the city, saying they can't see evidence for that on the ground. Protests in Hong Kong have descended further into violence as they drag into their eleventh week. Beijing has responded by positioning armed forces on the border and has begun condemning the demonstrators as close to terrorists. Telegraph
Meltdown. The U.S. Department of Commerce added China's largest state-owned nuclear power company, China General Nuclear Power Group (CGN), to its feared "entity list." U.S. companies are prohibited from selling to blacklisted "entities." The Commerce Department says CGN is diverting U.S. nuclear tech to China's military. Chinese state media denies it. CNBC
This edition of CEO Daily was edited by Eamon Barrett. Find previous editions here, and sign up for other Fortune newsletters here.
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