TOP NEWS
Power Lines
A California investigation has concluded that PG&E Corp failed to properly inspect and maintain its power lines, one of which ended up starting the state's deadliest wildfire a year ago. From the report: "The identified shortcomings in PG&E's inspection and maintenance of the incident tower were not isolated, but rather indicative of an overall pattern of inadequate inspection and maintenance of PG&E's transmission facilities." Wall Street Journal
UniCredit Cuts
UniCredit will shed 8,000 jobs in a drive to increase shareholder value. Italy's biggest bank wants net profits to rise from $5.2 billion this year to $5.5 billion in 2023, while also returning $8 billion to investors via share buybacks. As part of the push, UniCredit will shutter around 500 branches. Bloomberg
Crypto Senator
Kelly Loeffler, the CEO of the Intercontinental Exchange-owned Bitcoin-storage-and-futures outfit Bakkt, is reportedly to be tapped as interim senator for Georgia. Governor Brian Kemp apparently wants Loeffler, a big GOP donor, to occupy the seat of Senator Johnny Isakson, who is leaving due to ill health. However, President Trump wants Rep. Doug Collins, a big backer of his during the House impeachment inquiry, to take the role. WSJ
Huawei Shift
Huawei is planning to move a major research center from the U.S. to Canada, founder Ren Zhengfei has revealed. Ren also said Huawei intended to build more European manufacturing capacity for its 5G equipment, in order to put minds at rest about the security of its products (which the U.S. is lobbying everyone to avoid). CNBC
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.
Learn more
AROUND THE WATER COOLER
Dexcom Outage
Dexcom, a maker of Internet-connected glucose monitoring systems, suffered a service blackout on Friday evening—sending many parents of diabetic children into a panic. Dexcom is under fire particularly over its failure to communicate with customers about the issue, until hours after it struck. Fortune
Foxconn Chat
Foxconn founder Terry Gou, who stepped down as the Taiwanese Apple supplier's chief this year, is visiting the U.S. and said he will be chatting with administration officials about investment and the U.S.-China trade war. He will also be attending the White House Christmas party. Foxconn pleased Trump with plans to create 13,000 jobs in Wisconsin, but has since adjusted those plans, partly because it can't find enough workers. Reuters
Hong Kong
Law Ka-chung, the former chief economist at China's state-owned Bank of Communications, says he was forced out of BoCom's Hong Kong branch because he is a Hong Konger. Law said the pro-democracy protests in the city have prompted deep divisions between the band's mainland and local staff, and "they don't think it's appropriate for a Hong Kong guy to speak on behalf of a Chinese bank." Financial Times
Opioid Crisis
The New York Times has a devastating piece on the opioid crisis, viewed through the lens of an Ohio class-of-2000 yearbook. Former student Jonathan Whitt: "Kids were selling Oxys at school for $3 a pill. By the time I was 19, I was looking in every medicine cabinet and bathroom. All of my close friends, we all turned into drug addicts." NYT
This edition of CEO Daily was edited by David Meyer.
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