Also: Zuckish efficiency, Adani saga, and green subsidies. Good morning.
The Fed’s modest rate increase yesterday has sparked hopes that the U.S. can get inflation back to 2% without a serious recession. Count me as skeptical. Wage inflation is still running close to 5%, and there’s not a lot of historical evidence to suggest you can beat that back without an economic slowdown.
But what’s interesting to me is that while businesses are clearly bracing for recession—a PwC survey I reported on recently found 73% of CEOs expecting a decline—they seem even more focused on the need for long-term transformation of their businesses, driven either by new technology or by the demands of the energy transition or by a retooling of their supply chains.
The question that raises is: How do you batten down for a recession and tool up for transformation, both at the same time? That was a topic we explored at virtual meeting of the Fortune CEO Initiative yesterday, sponsored by PwC. A few excerpts:
“I’ve been through cycle after cycle of both technological change and economic change. And my philosophy has always been that we have to always look to the long term. Because the one thing I know is that over 10 years, travel will pretty much grow a little bit faster than GDP. So I have to always say, ‘Let’s not worry too much about the short term. Let’s make sure that we’re going for the long term.’” —Glen Fogel, CEO, Booking Holdings
“My advice is: Get your company fit for growth. Do all the cost restructuring that needs to be done, then reinvest in growth. And that growth needs to be powered by technology. That will be the future.” —Mohamed Kande, global advisory lead, PwC
“If there is one thing we’ve learned during the pandemic, it is that the only way to be agile and to react every day…is really to empower teams on the front line. And that’s really the one theme that we have been consistently developing over the last years, and increasingly accelerating in the last 36 months.” —Alexis Garcin, CEO, Michelin North America
“The thing that I always, always try to overemphasize to my people is: Please, don’t get distracted by headlines. Don’t get distracted by noise. Focus on the North Star. Ultimately…the day-to-day debates about crypto shouldn’t take away from the long-term conviction we have around the asset class.” —Michael Sonnenshein, CEO, Grayscale
And speaking of crypto, we at Fortune are teaming up with Mark Wahlberg’s production company, Unrealistic Ideas, to tell the epic story of the crypto-rivalry between Sam Bankman-Fried and Changpeng Zhao that led to the monster meltdown of FTX. So stay tuned. This saga is better than fiction.
Other news below.
Alan Murray @alansmurray alan.murray@fortune.com
|
|
|
Leaders Follow Fortune - Be Better at Business for just $1 Subscribe to Fortune.com today and unlock market-moving business news, our iconic lists and rankings, including the Fortune 500, exclusive investment guides and more. Try Today |
|
|
Zuckish efficiency
Mark Zuckerberg just set the hearts of Meta’s investors aflutter by promising a “Year of Efficiency.” Meta’s share price, which has plunged 64% this year, soared by 19% in after-hours trading on the slogan’s unveiling. Which is remarkable, given that Zuck was also announcing a $4.3 billion Q4 loss and a 55% drop in profits, and he insisted his prioritization of the not-yet-a-thing “metaverse” hasn’t changed. (Bonus read: The FTC has reportedly lost an attempt to block Meta’s purchase of virtual-reality startup Within Unlimited.) Fortune
Adani saga
Remember that $2.4 billion share sale that Gautam Adani pulled off earlier this week despite his empire being targeted by short-seller Hindenburg Research over alleged fraud? The fully-subscribed Adani Enterprises secondary offering has been scrapped at the last minute, following a continued slump in share prices for companies in the Adani stable, including Adani Enterprises itself. “Given these extraordinary circumstances, the company’s board felt that going ahead with the issue will not be morally correct,” the company said. Fortune
Green subsidies
The European Union has unveiled its response to the American subsidy-fest that is the Inflation Reduction Act. The EU’s executive body said yesterday that its new Green Deal Industrial Plan would involve revising state aid rules. There will be a new “European sovereignty fund” later this year, which could help plaster over the EU’s big problem in responding to the U.S. green push: some of its countries, like Germany, are much better equipped to throw subsidies at their local companies than others are. Politico
|
|
|
Cyber: From Threat Assessment to Growth Enabler How are leaders across industries building long-term value from integrating cyber across the business? Deloitte’s 2023 Global Future of Cyber Survey found that cyber initiatives made a significant contribution to at least one key business priority. Explore the findings here.
|
| |
Thanks for reading. If you liked this email, pay it forward. Share it with someone you know. Did someone share this with you? Sign up here. For previous editions, click here. To view all of Fortune's newsletters on the latest in business, go here.
|
|
|
| |
|