Fortune | FORTUNE 09月26日 17:55
企业领导者寻求共识与价值,规避政治风险
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面对不确定的政治环境,美国企业领导者正从公开政治发声转向寻求行业内部及跨行业的共识与合作。他们倾向于通过行业协会和非公开聚会获取洞察,担心公开表态可能使公司成为目标。同时,领导者们强调回归核心价值观和文明对话,尽管当下社会 civility 似乎处于低谷,但仍有希望通过教育、沟通和耐心来弥合分歧。在经济方面,新的贸易政策和AI投资的可持续性成为关注焦点,而科技巨头如亚马逊和Accenture也在进行战略调整。

📈 **规避政治风险,转向内部合作:** 鉴于政治环境的不确定性,许多美国企业领导者选择减少公开政治表态,转而寻求美国商会等行业协会以及非公开会议的交流与合作,以获取共同的见解和策略。这种转变源于担心作为CEO的公开言论可能使公司成为政治攻击的目标,因此,海外的商业往来和投资也变得更加低调。

🤝 **聚焦核心价值与文明对话:** 尽管社会 civility(文明礼仪)似乎处于低点,但许多领导者仍对弥合分歧抱有希望。他们强调通过教育、信息分享、建立关系和持之以恒来促进跨越不同观点的对话。这种努力旨在重建信任和理解,正如Points of Light和Clinton Global Initiative等组织所倡导的那样。

💡 **AI投资与经济政策的挑战:** 文章指出,AI行业的巨额投资可能面临可持续性问题,其所需收入远超当前市场规模。此外,美国政府正在实施新的贸易政策,包括对芯片、药品和家具等产品征收高额关税,并计划将部分关税收入用于支持受影响的农民,显示出复杂的经济调控策略。

Seeking comfort and influence in numbers. Instead, U.S. leaders seem to be increasingly turning to industry groups, such as the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, and off-the-record gatherings for shared insights and strategies. Leaders want to speak up but feel that doing so as a CEO may make their company a target. Overseas trips and investments are being done with less fanfare, and there’s a desire to connect across industries on shared challenges.

Staying out of politics. While many CEOs have prioritized rubbing elbows with this Administration, I’ve talked to three this week who say they are taking fewer trips to D.C. right now. “I don’t see the point,” one told me at dinner. “Data is not driving decision-making in this Administration.” Then again, there’s plenty of evidence that getting close to the President can pay off, the most recent example being yesterday’s executive order transferring 50% ownership of TikTok’s US operations to investors with close ties to Trump. 

Focusing on core values and civility. It might feel as if civility is at an all time low, but many leaders have hope. I spoke with Points of Light chairman Neil Bush this week about the bipartisan push for civic engagement that his father George H.W. Bush imbued in the organization’s mission. Bill Clinton spoke about it in opening the Clinton Global Initiative this week. Sheryl Palmer, CEO of home-building giant Taylor Morrison, underscored the need to engage with those that may not share your views when speaking to us before an audience of leaders at Deloitte’s North America Next Generation CEO program for the latest episode of Fortune’s Leadership Next podcast. “It’s about education, informing, relationships, and perseverance, because none of this stuff happens fast.”

Contact CEO Daily via Diane Brady at diane.brady@fortune.com

Top news

Trump imposes new tariffs on chips, drugs, furniture and trucks

The president is planning to impose a dizzying new array of import taxes, ranging from 25% to 100% on pharmaceutical products, large “semi” tractor-trailer trucks, kitchen cabinets and other home furnishings, and, according to the WSJ, semiconductor chips. The chip policy will require tech hardware companies to make the same number of chips in the U.S. as those they import, and any imported excess will face an as-yet undecided tariff.

Trump proposes some tariff revenue to help farmers

President Donald Trump told reporters on Thursday that his administration will give a portion of the country’s tariff revenue to farmers “who are, for a little while, going to be hurt until the tariffs kick into their benefit.” China received nearly a quarter of the U.S. soybean exports in 2024, but has not ordered any U.S. soybeans since May.

$6.2 billion deal overshadows Kimmel’s return to TV

Behind Jimmy Kimmel’s return to the airwaves is a $6.2 billion merger that the White House must approve, and a set of complex relationships between right-leaning affiliate chains Nexstar and Sinclair and the conservative election districts where their audiences are based.

Accenture “exiting” staff who cannot retrain for age of AI 

“We are exiting on a compressed timeline people where reskilling, based on our experience, is not a viable path for the skills we need,” chief executive Julie Sweet told analysts. Accenture booked $5.1 billion in AI projects in the last year, up from $3 billion the year before.

Evidence that AI investment is unsustainable

The WSJ has a must-read feature on whether the AI industry is in a bubble. Its central thesis is that the amount of investment going into AI far outstrips the revenues needed to cover it. Here’s the killer stat: “Consultants at Bain & Co. estimated the wave of AI infrastructure spending will require $2 trillion in annual AI revenue by 2030. By comparison, that is more than the combined 2024 revenue of Amazon, Apple, Alphabet, Microsoft, Meta and Nvidia, and more than five times the size of the entire global subscription software market.”

Amazon’s $2.5 billion settlement with FTC is a tiny fraction of its revenue

Amazon’s $2.5 billion settlement with the Federal Trade Commission over the tech giant’s alleged use of deceptive practices that the commission said for years tricked millions of consumers into signing up for a Prime membership without their knowledge may be welcomed inside the company’s HQ: The price equals less than two days of sales.

NATO on high alert over Russian aggression

European officials have warned President Putin that its military forces will shoot down Russian fighter jets invading its airspace, according to Bloomberg. The move comes after Moscow flew three jets over Estonia recently, in addition to drone incursions over Poland. At the same time, NATO is tracking a Russian spy ship off Europe’s western coast that appears to be mapping undersea communications cables.

Trump gives green light to $14 billion TikTok deal

The president signed an order forcing the social media company to divest its U.S. assets to American business interests. The transaction itself is not yet signed off.

Starbucks’ $1 billion restructuring

Starbucks announced a $1 billion restructuring plan on Thursday designed to return the chain to the hangout spot it was in the 1990s. CEO Brian Niccol hopes that the move, which will see the closing of more than 100 locations in North America and lead to hundreds of job cuts, will attract Gen Z back.

Kraken crypto exchange raises $500 millionThe crypto exchange Kraken has completed a $500 million funding round, Fortune has exclusively learned, as co-CEO Arjun Sethi plans an IPO for next year.

Elsewhere: There is talk that ex-U.K. prime minister Tony Blair could run Gaza if a Trump peace deal is accepted (don’t hold your breath!).

The markets

S&P 500 futures were flat this morning. The index closed down 0.5% in its last session. STOXX Europe 600 was up 0.24% in early trading. The U.K.’s FTSE 100 up 0.44% in early trading. Japan’s Nikkei 225 was down 0.87%. China’s CSI 300 was up 0.6%. The South Korea KOSPI was down 2.45%. India’s Nifty 50 was down 0.91% before the end of the session. Bitcoin declined to $109.7K.

Around the watercooler

Google backs $3 billion deal with Bitcoin miner as Big Tech looks to crypto for compute by Ben Weiss

The August home sales mystery: Top analyst says ‘implausible’ housing market data ‘defies credulity’ by Nick Lichtenberg

Elon Musk just sold Grok to U.S. government for 42 cents – and signals warmer ties with Trump by Eva Roytburg

HSBC claims a quantum computing breakthrough in bond trading: ‘we are on the cusp of a new frontier’ by Beatrice Nolan

CEO Daily is compiled and edited by Joey Abrams and Jim Edwards.

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企业领导力 地缘政治 AI投资 贸易政策 CEO business strategy political landscape AI investment trade policy
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