TOP NEWS
Libra Troubles
Facebook's Libra project has had a very bad last few days. First it was key partners such as Visa and Mastercard pulling out. And now, more evidence of the regulatory pushback that scared them away: a draft G7 report effectively saying the project must not proceed until Facebook can prove the virtual coin is legal, and that it protects consumers and shuts out money launderers or terrorism financers. BBC
Turkey Sanctions
President Trump is about to levy sanctions on Turkey for the incursion into northern Syria that the U.S. effectively green-lit a week ago. As most observers predicted, Turkey used the abrupt withdrawal of American troops from the area to attack Kurds whom it accuses of being tied to an insurgency within Turkish borders. Now the Kurds have turned to Assad's regime for protection from the Turkish invasion. Reuters
WeWork Financing
SoftBank is reportedly trying to take control of WeWork through a financing package that would keep the office-space firm afloat and seize much of the voting power that's still held by founder Adam Neumann. Wall Street Journal
Vatican Probe
Vatican police are investigating the financing of a London luxury property development project by $200 million in Vatican money. So far, they have seized documents and computers from the Holy See's Secretariat of State and suspended five employees. Financial Times
More Confident CMOs
Many CMOs struggle to find a voice at the executive table. How can they elevate their influence and fully realize the role's potential? Deloitte explores.
Read more
AROUND THE WATER COOLER
Brexit Paralysis
As last-minute Brexit negotiations continue with the outcome uncertain, Fortune takes a look at how three years of uncertainty has harmed British businesses. Thanks to a Brexit that hasn't even happened yet, many companies' expansion plans have been put on ice. Meanwhile, large firms have stopped talking about the subject, for fear of alienating customers from one or the other side in the debate. Fortune
Chinese Exports
Chinese imports and exports fell last month by more than was expected. Shipments were down 3.2%, where analysts had expected a 2.8% drop. Imports were down 8.5%, and analysts had thought it would only be 6%. The drop in imports from and exports to the U.S. was of course substantially larger. South China Morning Post
Hunter Biden
Joe Biden's son, Hunter, is quitting as director of a Chinese private-equity firm where President Trump alleged (sans evidence) that he engaged in inappropriate conduct. He also said he will avoid serving on foreign boards if his father becomes president. Wall Street Journal
Catalan Leaders
Spain's Supreme Court has jailed nine Catalan separatist leaders over the banned 2017 referendum and independence declaration. They were found guilty of sedition, rather than the more serious charge of rebellion, and four were also convicted of misusing public funds. Former Catalan deputy leader Orio Junqueras got the harshest sentence of 13 years. Reuters
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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