TOP NEWS
HKEX Out
Hong Kong Exchanges & Clearing has pulled its $36.6 billion bid for London Stock Exchange Group, following the acquisition target's board's rejection of the deal. LSE is now free to complete its $14.5 billion acquisition of Refinitiv Holdings, which HKEX wanted scrapped under its proposals. Wall Street Journal
SoftBank Wounds
SoftBank's recent rough patch may have lost it more than $5 billion, analysts have calculated. The Japanese conglomerate is a big backer of Uber and Slack, whose shares have performed badly, and WeWork's abortive IPO showed that company's worth to be a lot less than SoftBank hoped when plowing money into it. Bloomberg
Trump Taxes
A U.S. district judge ruled yesterday that President Trump could not block the release of his tax returns to the Manhattan district attorney—but an appeals court swiftly granted the president a temporary stay on that decision, pending a fuller consideration of the matter. Washington Post
Tackling Huawei
The U.S. does not have any telecommunications equipment company that can rival Huawei, and is now realizing the national security implications of that situation. So it is reportedly considering ways to funnel money to Nokia and Ericsson, the European companies that do rival the Chinese giant. Financial Times
What Workers Want
Employees of the future seem to want a lot more from their jobs than a steady paycheck. Steve Kimble, CEO and chairman of Deloitte Tax, shares his thoughts on our changing corporate culture and the many things he believes motivate workers today.
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AROUND THE WATER COOLER
German Manufacturing
Germany's expected economic contraction for Q3 may not be as steep as feared, judging by an unexpected boost to industrial output in August. Economists had been expecting a 0.1% drop, but got a 0.3% rise instead, thanks to the production of intermediate and capital goods. July's reading was also revised to represent a smaller drop in output than previously thought. Reuters
Brexit Debt
The U.K.'s Institute for Fiscal Studies, a think tank, has warned that a no-deal Brexit would push British debt to levels not seen in the last half-century—even if the event is "relatively benign." It is urging the government to avoid any plans to permanently cut taxes. IFS director Paul Johnson: "The government is now adrift without any effective fiscal anchor." BBC
HP's Fortunes
Fortune's Erik Sherman takes a close look at HP's decision last week to restructure and boost dividends and share buybacks. The driver seems to come largely from changes in the ink market—as one UBS analyst said, "People are going offline and buying off-brand." Fortune
Vaping Cancer
More bad news for the nascent vape industry, in the form of the first study to definitively link nicotine-vaping with cancer. The study involved mice. Lead researcher Moon-Shong Tang warned that with e-cigarettes, it is "foreseeable" that "all kinds of disease" might emerge. CNBC
This edition of CEO Daily was edited by David Meyer. Find previous editions here, and sign up for other Fortune newsletters here.
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