December 4, 2019
Good morning. The Conference Board has put out a report looking at CEO succession that has some interesting takeaways. Among them: Separately, Coupa CEO Rob Bernshteyn came by the Fortune offices yesterday, and shared some interesting data culled from his company's tracking of some $1.5 trillion worth of business spending. Overall spending was up slightly from the previous quarter, but health and life sciences spend took a sharp dive. The reason? Bernshteyn suspects it's uncertainty about future health care policy. More news below. Alan Murray TOP NEWS
Pichai Up Google CEO Sundar Pichai is taking over the reins at parent company Alphabet, too. Google co-founders Larry Page and Sergey Brin are stepping down, though they will remain on the board (and keep controlling Alphabet through their special voting stock). Fortune China Patience President Trump roiled the markets yesterday by saying he would be fine with waiting until after next year's presidential election before striking a limited trade deal with China. Chinese officials say talks are still on track. If the two sides don't reach some sort of agreement by the end of next week, the U.S. is set to drastically increase its tariffs on Chinese imports. Wall Street Journal Uighur Bill China is most displeased after the U.S. House of Representatives approved a bill (by 407 votes to one) that forces the Trump administration to condemn abuses against Uighur Muslims in the Xinjiang region, and to impose sanctions on the province's Communist Party secretary, Chen Quanguo. Beijing says the bill is malicious. CNBC Tech Tax U.K. Prime Minister Boris Johnson is sticking by his plans to introduce a French-style digital tax, despite the fury that the Trump administration has directed at Paris over the issue. Johnson: "We need to look at the operation of the big digital companies and the huge revenues they have in this country and the amount of tax that they pay… They need to make a fairer contribution." BBC
AROUND THE WATER COOLER
Online Drugs India is pushing for enforcement of a ban on online medicine sales. The ban was instituted via a court order one year ago—on the basis that regulations are still being finalized and unregulated online sales could lead to abuse—but some states have apparently not been cracking down as they ought to. Reuters Car Cuts Bloomberg reckons automakers are cutting over 80,000 jobs in the coming years, based on recent announcements. The cuts are concentrated in the U.S., U.K. and Germany, although faster-growing economies are also feeling the effects. The reasons include weakening demand and the vast investments that are required to introduce the next generation of car technology. Bloomberg Reform Capitalism Here are two new pieces about reforming capitalism. The first comes from WEF founder Klaus Schwab, who argues that climate activist Greta Thunberg is partly responsible for a turn away from shareholder capitalism. The second comes from the Financial Times ' Martin Wolf, who prescribes five measures: "refurbish" competition policy; tweak finance rules, including by eliminating the tax-deductibility of interest; reform corporate law to combat "myopic" behavior; fight inequality; and take the money out of politics. FT Designer Babies Remember last year's scandal when a Chinese scientist "created" a pair of gene-edited twins? He Jiankui's research has just been released and scientists say he may have failed in his aim of immunizing the twins against HIV. What's more, the editing may have created unintended mutations. South China Morning Post This edition of CEO Daily was edited by David Meyer. Industry Adopts Blockchain Most industry leaders no longer ask "Will blockchain technology work?" They ask "How can we make blockchain technology work for us?" Read Deloitte's new report to see how leaders in individual industries are adopting blockchain to create long-term value.
WE NEED YOUR HELP Know a standout female leader at your company or another? Tell us about her! We're taking nominations for Fortune's upcoming Most Powerful Women Next Gen Summit, where we convene ascending leaders to converse about business, share advice, and connect with one another. It's Dec. 10-11 in Laguna Niguel, Calif. Submit your nominations to MPWNextGen@fortune.com. They can register here.
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Wednesday, December 4, 2019
CEO Daily: Changes in CEO Succession
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