Ebola, May, Merkel, ZTE, Vegas Knights, Netflix, Interview, Drones

Marc Ross Daily.png

Ebola, May, Merkel, ZTE, Vegas Knights, Netflix, Interview, Drones

Marc Ross Daily
May 22, 2018
Curation and commentary from Marc A. Ross

Reporting from Alexandria, Virginia

Marc Ross Daily  = Business News at the Intersection of Global Politics + Policy + Profits

Subscribe here
https://goo.gl/bSQKwA

TOP FIVE

✔️ Ebola vaccine arrives in Democratic Republic of Congo

✔️ UK Election this September?

✔️ Merkel to seek China as free-trade ally

✔️ Multinationals bow to China’s political sensitivities

✔️ US, China agree on outline to settle ZTE controversy

GEOECONOMICS

Ebola vaccine arrives in Democratic Republic of Congo: WSJ reports, health officials in the Democratic Republic of Congo began administering an experimental Ebola vaccine in the northwestern city of Mbandaka on, as the country battles to contain its ninth outbreak of the hemorrhagic fever.

Paraguay opened its embassy to Israel in Jerusalem Monday, becoming the third country to do so following the United States and Guatemala.

Santiago Times: Chile doesn’t recognize Maduro’s victory in Venezuela, says Piñera

UK Election? Buzz around Westminster is growing that PM May will call for a general election in September to secure more support for her Brexit plans. Such a move would require Parliment approving the decision.

Italy: Italy’s about to be ruled by a populist coalition that features “the high-spending ambitions of the left with the low-tax ambitions of the right,” writes Bloomberg's Clive Crook.

Trump trade threat looms large as Merkel heads to China: Reuters reports, Germany's Angela Merkel faces a delicate diplomatic balancing act when she travels to China this week on a visit clouded by U.S. President Donald Trump's trade threats and his decision to pull out of the Iran nuclear deal.

Bloomberg: Merkel to seek China as free-trade ally on Beijing trip

Reuters: China relieved US trade war is 'on hold'; U.S. business ambivalent

Multinationals bow to China’s political sensitivities
: FT reports, US calls Beijing’s demands ‘Orwellian nonsense’, but global groups are apologizing. The climbdowns by multinationals are part of a string of incidents that demonstrate that global groups are finding themselves in an awkward position as they try to balance the demands of a more assertive China and potential damage to their image in their home markets if they are seen to be conceding to Beijing.

Opinion: Trump is the gift that keeps on giving — to China
Caixin - Kent Harrington

"All bad management, a business guru once remarked, is taught by example. Donald Trump is teaching a master class on how not to serve as America’s chief executive. By abandoning the thoughtful policymaking of his predecessors in favor of a presidency modeled on reality TV, Trump has failed to articulate anything resembling a credible national strategy."

China plans to end all its limits on the number of children families can have as soon as this year.

China’s economic supremo has upper hand in US trade tussle: FT reports, Liu He passes his first big test in negotiations with US by putting trade war on hold.

US, China agree on outline to settle ZTE controversy: WSJ reports, the US and China have agreed on the broad outline of a deal that would save imperiled Chinese telecom giant ZTE, as the two sides move closer to resolving their trade dispute. The details are still being hammered out, the people said. If completed, the Trump administration would remove the ban on US companies selling components and software to ZTE, a penalty that has threatened to put the company out of business. Instead, ZTE would be forced to make big changes in management, board seats and possibly pay significant fines, the people said.

AFP: Donald Trump at center stage in Mexican presidential debate

Today
: The National Press Club will host former Mexican President Vicente Fox.

The Over | Under on Vicente Fox mentioning The Wall is 17. 

AMERICAN POLITICS

Steve Bannon is mad with The Globalists: He is among those displeased by the US-China trade truce. Trump "changed the dynamic regarding China but in one weekend Secretary Mnuchin has given it away," the former presidential adviser told Bloomberg. He suggested Mnuchin's views on trade were out of sync with Trump's populist base.

Chances of China trade win undercut by Trump team infighting: NYT reports, by the time American negotiators wrapped up high-level talks with a visiting Chinese delegation last week, President Trump’s ambitions for a multibillion-dollar trade agreement had, for the time being, shriveled into a blandly worded communiqué without any dollar figures. It was not clear that the talks set a path to success. Ceaseless infighting and jockeying for influence on the White House’s trade team helped deprive Mr. Trump of a quick victory on his most cherished policy agenda, several people involved in the talks said. The deep internal divisions carried over into how officials characterized the agreement and muddied the outlook for the next phase of the negotiations between Washington and Beijing.

Trump’s charm and threats may not be working on China. Here’s why. NYT reports, China has called President Trump’s bluff. Chinese negotiators left Washington this weekend with a significant win: a willingness by the Trump administration to hold off for now on imposing tariffs on up to $150 billion in Chinese imports. China gave up little in return, spurning the administration’s nudges for a concrete commitment to buy more goods from the United States, and avoiding limits on its efforts to build new high-tech Chinese industries. https://nyti.ms/2rXosHi

WP - Catherine Rampell: It’s been amateur hour on China negotiations: The Trump administration is supposed to be negotiating with China. But right now it more often seems to be negotiating with itself. China knows what it wants out of these bilateral negotiations; the White House plainly does not. Trump officials have offered shifting and at times contradictory demands and objectives, further complicated by administration infighting, public turf wars, reversals, retractions and clumsy errors. In short: Over here on Team USA, it’s been amateur hour. https://wapo.st/2rXfiKW

How China acquires ‘the crown jewels’ of US technology: Politico reports, the US fails to adequately police foreign deals for next-generation software that powers the military and American economic strength. A six-month Politico investigation found that the Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States, the main vehicle for protecting American technology from foreign governments, rarely polices the various new avenues Chinese nationals use to secure access to American technology, such as bankruptcy courts or the foreign venture capital firms that bankroll US tech startups. https://politi.co/2IGIOLb

Legal fees: WP reports, the Republican National Committee paid nearly half a million dollars to a law firm that represents former White House communications director Hope Hicks and others in the Russia investigations, according to a new federal filing.

Trump’s tweets include grammatical errors. And some are on purpose: BG reports, The hallmark of President Trump’s Twitter feed is that it sounds like him — grammatical miscues and all. But it’s not always Trump tapping out a Tweet, even when it sounds like his voice. West Wing employees who draft proposed tweets intentionally employ suspect grammar and staccato syntax in order to mimic the president’s style, according to two people familiar with the process.

Twitter bots most likely played a large role in both the 2016 presidential election and the Brexit vote, according to the National Bureau of Economic Research.

Barack and Michelle Obama sign production deal with Netflix: TechCrunch reports, Former U.S. President Barack Obama and Michelle Obama have reached an agreement to produce films and series for the streaming service. Netflix’s official announcement makes it sound like that continues to be what the Obamas have in mind, with Chief Content Officer Ted Sarandos describing them as “uniquely positioned to discover and highlight stories of people who make a difference in their communities and strive to change the world for the better.”

ENTERPRISE

Small brands nibble at Campbell’s business: WSJ reports, as Americans become more adventurous with the grocery cart, food aisles are undergoing a transformation that is forcing big food companies to keep up with $10 bottles of juice and sophisticated-tasting cookies. 

Lyft plans to seek permits to run an electric scooter service in San Francisco.

Facebook breakup? Progressive and pro-consumer groups are calling on the Federal Trade Commission to force the separation of Instagram, Facebook Messenger and WhatsApp from the Facebook mothership.

Thanks, UBER: Investors poured more than $21 billion into the company, which has yet to turn a profit. Uber posted $4.5 billion in losses last year alone, subsidizing rides in an all-out effort to establish a monopoly. 

I for one am happy to have fancy VCs subsidize my transportation needs.

Sony is to spend $1.8 billion on buying EMI Music Publishing.

Adobe is shelling out $1.68 billion on Magento Commerce, maker of tools for operating online stores.

Netflix has 125 million subscribers worldwide.

Larry Culpepper, the badly dressed football fanatic in Dr Pepper commercials, is reportedly not returning this season.  

TRENDS

Boston wants Amazon, but is there room? WSJ reports, the possible arrival of Amazon’s second headquarters in East Boston is triggering both hopes and apprehension in a neighborhood already dealing with fallout from surging costs in a growing city.

Drones are "potentially as disruptive as the internet": From a loyal reader in Cincinnati, Dezeen released a short documentary setting out how drones could revolutionize the way people travel, transform how buildings are designed and built, and radically alter the form cities take. Watch the 18-minute doc here: http://bit.ly/2ICPRZv

For me droids > drones

Financial crisis may have hit ’80s generation the hardest: WSJ reports, Fed research finds wealth levels 34% below what they would be if the last recession hadn't occurred for those born in the '80s.

CULTURE

Guardian: Interview magazine closes, ending a 50-year survey of Manhattan cool

PODCAST

Exchanges at Goldman Sachs: Beyond VR & AR: Get to know Extended Reality (XR):  It’s not a matter of if Extended Reality (XR) will touch all aspects of our lives—it’s a matter of when, says Heather Bellini of Goldman Sachs Research. By 2025, XR is projected to generate over $100 billion in sales, with the consumer and e-commerce sectors being its biggest beneficiaries. The technology carries broad implications for healthcare, education and real estate as well. “Ultimately, this AR/VR/mixed reality movement will change the way we interact with technology forever,” Bellini says. You can listen to the podcast here: http://bit.ly/2rZA23L

SPORT

LAT: It wasn't supposed to happen this way, but the Golden Knights are bound for the Stanley Cup Final

The Knights are better than your hockey team
: 538 reports, the Vegas Golden Knights became just the second-ever expansion team in the post-1960 histories of the NHL, NBA, NFL or MLB to reach the championship in their very first season of existence. The Knights dispatched the Winnipeg Jets after winning four games of their series to the Jets’ one. The 1967-68 St. Louis Blues are the only previous team to pull it off.

Space Needle hockey: The NHL is asking $650 million of an ownership group from Seattle to expand to that city and add a 32nd franchise to the league.

A closer look at the technology inside the 2018 World Cup soccer ball: The Telstar 18 is a high-tech, look-alike cousin of the ball that forever changed soccer. But the biggest innovation of the new model is one you can’t see: Each ball is embedded with an NFC — near-field communication — chip that allows interaction with the ball via a smartphone. https://lat.ms/2IYHjv2

Spain’s La Liga opposes the SoftBank consortium’s proposed expansion of FIFA’s tournaments.

Independent: Next Arsenal manager: Unai Emery set to for job after Mikel Arteta talks stall

US-China, North Korea, Italy, Venezuela, Mexico, European Union, Shoplifters

Marc Ross Daily.png

US-China, North Korea, Italy, Venezuela, Mexico, European Union, Shoplifters

Marc Ross Daily
May 21, 2018
Curation and commentary from Marc A. Ross

Reporting from Alexandria, Virginia

Marc Ross Daily  = Global Business News at the Intersection of Politics + Policy + Profits

Subscribe here
https://goo.gl/bSQKwA

TOP FIVE

✔️ US and China step back from brink of trade war

✔️ US college degrees lose mystique among Asian students

✔️ Venezuela's Nicolas Maduro won a new six-year term

✔️ Trump grappling with risks of proceeding with North Korea meeting

✔️ Ford’s Hackett faces tough test in trying to drive change

GEOECONOMICS

US and China step back from brink of trade war: FT reports, the US has stepped back from the brink of a trade war with China after Washington halted plans to impose tariffs on up to $150bn of imports, according to the US Treasury secretary. “We’re putting the trade war on hold,” Steven Mnuchin said in a television interview on Sunday. 

The Dow set to leap 200+ points, amid easing U.S.-China tensions that have roiled global markets this year.

@JessicaStoneTV: NEXT STEP: @SecretaryRoss heading to #China at end of June after #oecd for next round of #china #tradetalks @cgtnamerica

@sdonnan: Reminder: Donald Trump has proclaimed this World Trade Week!


US and China tout trade talks as success, but leave the details for later: NYT reports, Trump administration officials had said during negotiations this week that China was prepared to make up to $200 billion in additional purchases. Notably absent from Saturday’s announcement were any dollar figures — or a sense of the scale of the agreed-upon increases. The White House said that China had committed to buying more agriculture and energy exports, but noted that American officials would at some point go to China to work out the details of their agreement.

Treasury, USTR send mixed messages over tariffs on Chinese imports: WSJ reports, mixed signals from officials could further complicate the Trump administration’s trade agenda. Several hours after Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin told Fox News on Sunday that the US was “putting the trade war on hold” and wouldn’t assess tariffs on Beijing while the two sides talked, US Trade Representative Robert Lighthizer put out a statement saying that tariffs remained an important tool to “protect our technology.”

Reuters: China air force lands bombers on South China Sea island

“The United States remain committed to a free and open Indo-Pacific,” the Pentagon spokesperson Lt. Col. Christopher Logan said in response, saying that reports of Chinese militarization “only serves to raise tensions and destabilize the region.”

Trusted Xi ally a rising influence on China’s foreign policy: AP reports, Chinese President Xi Jinping is increasingly turning to friend and trusted confidant Wang Qishan to help guide the country’s foreign relations as he prepares for a potentially bruising trade fight with the US and competition for leadership in Asia. The 69-year-old Wang was appointed vice president in March, but exercises outsized influence in the historically symbolic position despite standing down from the ruling Communist Party’s leading body due to age restrictions.

Bulgaria to host contentious China summit: FT reports, gathering likely to stoke EU fears over Beijing’s influence in central and eastern Europe.

US college degrees lose mystique among Asian students: FT reports, Trump, guns and access to quality education at home affect enrolment.

Venezuela's Nicolas Maduro won a new six-year term on Sunday in an election deemed illegitimate by the opposition and foreign governments. 

Venezuela in 2018:

Inflation: Rose 2,400% last year, and it's projected to reach 13,000% this year. The bolivar lost 99% of its value.

Unemployment: Expected to hit 30%.

Population decline: 600,000 have fled Venezuela over the last
coupleyears, and 5,000 people are getting out daily.

Mexico: Thirty-six candidates for various offices have been killed since September, and dozens of other politicians and campaign officials have been slaughtered.

Italy's two populist leaders have agreed on a prime minister and are set to propose a cabinet as early as today. 

Newspapers in the country reporting that Giuseppe Conte, a 53-year old law professor with no political experience, is the leading candidate.

The populists' ascension in Rome crystallizes a real danger for Europe's liberal establishment. 

Matteo Salvini, a populist on the verge of power: The leader of Italy’s League party has prospered by attacking Brussels rather than Rome. https://on.ft.com/2rWl13l

Scotland: Nicola Sturgeon is set to “restart” her campaign for Scottish independence. The Scottish National Party will revamp its economic blueprint for independence, which may include a plan to phase in a new Scottish currency. 

Modern Tory: Michael Gove and Scottish Conservative Party leader Ruth Davidson launch Onward, a think tank aimed at attracting more voters from the center. The name has echoes of French President Emmanuel Macron’s En Marche! party and its mission is to unite and modernize the party.

Space race: Britain is pressing forward with plans to set up its own rival satellite system to Europe’s Galileo project and hopes to team up with Australia as a partner in the project.

Jeremy Warner: Brexit has become a farce, risking an outcome that will satisfy no one http://bit.ly/2rXsteM

By far the best summary so far ventured of the Brexit negotiations came from the Prime Minister of Luxembourg, Xavier Bettel. “They were in with a load of opt-outs,” he said. “Now they are out, and want a load of opt-ins.”

BRIGADOON EVENTS

Brigadoon Annapolis | Salon Dinner + Lectures = Sep. 20-21, 2018

Brigadoon Detroit | Salon Dinner = Oct. 11, 2018

Brigadoon Cincinnati | Salon Dinner = Nov. 1, 2018

Brigadoon Scotland 2018 = Nov. 11-13, 2018

Brigadoon Sundance 2019 = Feb. 24-26, 2019

More info @ http://thebrigadoon.com

AMERICAN POLITICS

Trump Jr. and other aides met with Gulf emissary offering help to win election: NYT reports, three months before the 2016 election, a small group gathered at Trump Tower to meet with Donald Trump Jr., the president’s eldest son. One was an Israeli specialist in social media manipulation. Another was an emissary for two wealthy Arab princes. The third was a Republican donor with a controversial past in the Middle East as a private security contractor.

WP: Secret FBI source for Russia investigation met with three Trump advisers during campaign

Trump grappling with risks of proceeding with North Korea meeting: NYT reports, Trump, increasingly concerned that his summit meeting in Singapore next month with North Korea’s leader could turn into a political embarrassment, has begun pressing his aides and allies about whether he should take the risk of proceeding with a historic meeting that he had leapt into accepting, according to administration and foreign officials.

Today: Trump will attend the swearing in of Gina Haspel to be director of the CIA.

South Korea: Moon is due to meet Trump in Washington on Wednesday and the two leaders will discuss security assurances and economic incentives for denuclearizing North Korea, with Moon hoping to advise Trump on the proposed June 12 summit.

AP: Mnuchin says NAFTA negotiations could spill into 2019

Ryan's power begins to ebb: House Republicans grow restive head of midterm elections. http://bit.ly/2wtHAjd

AP: 2018 midterms: An early heat for 2020 Democrats?http://bit.ly/2GATxEQ

"The leading players — from established national figures such as former Vice President Joe Biden, Bernie Sanders, and Elizabeth Warren to up-and-comers including California Sen. Kamala Harris — don’t necessarily put it that way. But the potential 2020 candidates are making the rounds, raising and distributing campaign cash among fellow Democrats, endorsing candidates and meeting political activists." 

ENTERPRISE

General Electric is nearing a deal to sell its transportation business to railroad equipment maker Wabtec possibly for more than $20B.

Facebook, Uber execs top guest list for Macron's tech huddle: Bloomberg reports, Tech should do good. And Emmanuel Macron, though busy with climate change, Europe, Iran, reforming the French economy and trade tensions with the U.S., will see to it. France’s president wants to become the go-to head of state for global tech and will host the bosses of Alphabet Inc.’s Google to Uber in Paris next week to talk about social responsibility, eyeing an opening as the industry’s relationship with U.S. President Donald Trump proves complicated.

Facebook is launching a tool that connects marketers to relevant influencers.

Zuck and the EU: The Facebook founder and CEO Mark Zuckerberg will meet with the European Parliament today to discuss privacy and the misuse of user data.

Ford’s Hackett faces tough test in trying to drive change: FT reports, carmaker’s share price has barely budged in the chief executive’s first year at the helm.

The age of every company in the Fortune 500https://for.tn/2KDTb2T

The oldest one was founded in 1784 by Alexander Hamilton = The Bank of New York Mellon

The oldest member of the household products industry, Colgate-Palmolive, dates to 1806.

A majority of the 500—360 companies to be exact—were started in the 20th century, 136 launched since Jan. 1, 1980, and 26 in this century.


TRENDS

Satellite data strongly suggests that China, Russia, and other authoritarian countries are fudging their GDP reportshttps://wapo.st/2IIk1cP

@BoF: Women's sneakers sales have increased by 37 percent last year, while high heels fell 11 percent. http://bof.bz/gixL30k65vK 

CULTURE

Michael Curry’s royal wedding sermon will go down in history: Guardian reports, the American bishop did it black. And he shocked the congregation by refusing to tone down his passionate message on power and love.

Lucy Kellaway grills the world’s ‘best teacher’ https://on.ft.com/2ISitx7

AP: 'Shoplifters' wins Palme d'Or, grand prize to Spike Lee

SPORT

U17 Euro Championship: Italy lost the European Under-17 championship to the Netherlands on Sunday in a penalty shootout.

A new Atlanta, united by soccer: Smart signings, massive crowds and a stealthy bus ride before home games have helped an MLS team foster an immediate connection with its fans. https://nyti.ms/2k5wBor

North Korea, China, Tariffs, ZTE, Ireland, Starbucks, Pot

Marc Ross Daily.png

North Korea, China, Tariffs, ZTE, Ireland, Starbucks, Pot

Marc Ross Daily
May 16, 2018
Curation and commentary from Marc A. Ross

Reporting from Alexandria, Virginia

Marc Ross Daily  = Global Business News at the Intersection of Politics + Policy + Profits

Subscribe here
https://goo.gl/bSQKwA

TOP FIVE

✔️ North Korea abruptly postponed talks with South Korea

✔️ US business groups bash Trump's China tariffs plan

✔️ Jacob Rees-Mogg refuses European Economic Area

✔️ Women sweep to victory in House primaries

✔️ China is Facebook's second largest market after the US

MR IN THE NEWS

US-China trade relations: Yesterday, I had the opportunity to speak with Asieh Namdar with CGTN-America. We discussed the state of US-China trade policy and the future of trade between the two countries. You can see the clip here: http://bit.ly/2InHcda

GEOECONOMICS

North Korea abruptly postponed talks with South Korea to protest US-South Korean military exercises and threatened to scrap a summit next month between Trump and North Korean leader Kim Jong Un if there is “a one-sided demand for us to give up our nukes.”

Welcome to The Bigs, Mr. Trump.

FT: Asia markets soften as Korea talks collapse

US firms seek tariff relief as US and China try to mend rift
: AP reports, corporate America is seeking relief from President Donald Trump's threatened tariffs on at least $50 billion in Chinese goods as negotiators seek to prevent a trade war between the world's two biggest economies. As the US government began three days of hearings on the tariffs Tuesday, Chinese Vice Premier Liu He traveled to Washington to seek a resolution to the trade dispute. A similar high-level US delegation made a trip to Beijing earlier this month and returned empty-handed.

NYT: Businesses race to Washington to sway Trump on China tariffs

Bloomberg: US business groups bash Trump's China tariffs plan


Just about everything is odd about Trump’s support of Chinese firm ZTE: WP reports, just about everything is odd about President Trump's recent tweet that he wants to help Chinese technology company ZTE “get back into business, fast” because its failure costs “too many jobs in China.” It's odd that Trump, who campaigned on saving millions of U.S. jobs, suddenly says he cares about a few thousand Chinese jobs. It's odd that Trump, who championed “America First,” is worried about a single Chinese firm.

FT: US and China ‘still very far apart’ on trade, says US ambassador

Is China straight-up bribing Donald Trump? Vanity Fair reports, the president suddenly softens on a Chinese business after Beijing bankrolls a Trump Organization project.

"So it was a bit odd to see Trump pull a complete 180, suddenly insisting that the company and its 75,000 Chinese jobs must be saved, though to be fair, tweeting “Look, China just pumped $500 million into a Trump Organization project so I had to do them a solid” might not have gone over so well."

NAFTA: Negotiators from Canada, Mexico, and the United States are unlikely to strike a deal for a revised North American Free Trade Agreement deal by Thursday.

Pot in Canada: On Monday, the world’s largest marijuana producer was formed when Aurora Cannabis, which is headquartered in Vancouver, bought medical-marijuana firm MedReleaf for about CA$3bn (€2bn) in stock. The acquisition is the latest in a string of maneuvers in Canada’s cannabis economy ahead of new legislation that could legalize the drug on 1 July – Canada’s national holiday. 

WSJ: Trump's goal for NAFTA rewrite looks unattainable in 2018

Spain’s top economists vow to boycott all-male panel discussions. 

Tory MP Jacob Rees-Mogg refuses European Economic Area: Rees-Mogg met PM Theresa May yesterday and assured her that the 60 or so Tory Brexiteers that he leads in the European Research Group will not back down over the customs partnership. He argued that abiding by EU rules without having a say in how they were made would completely undo the purpose of the Brexit vote.

Why the future of Northern Ireland is crucial to Brexit negotiations: The Times reports, as a recent poll causes grave concern among senior Tories on all sides of the argument, Sam Coates, the Times deputy political editor, breaks down ten key reasons the province has become critical to the debate.

BRIGADOON EVENTS

Brigadoon Annapolis | Salon Dinner + Lectures = Sep. 20-21, 2018

Brigadoon Detroit | Salon Dinner = Oct. 11, 2018

Brigadoon Cincinnati | Salon Dinner = Nov. 1, 2018

Brigadoon Scotland 2018 = Nov. 11-13, 2018

More info @ http://thebrigadoon.com

AMERICAN POLITICS

CIA: Gina Haspel is on track to be confirmed by the US Senate.

Today: Trump will meet and hold a working lunch with Uzbekistan President Shavkat Mirziyoyev. 

Novartis has announced the departure of general counsel Felix Ehrat over his role in a $1.2M contract it struck with Michael Cohen.

Related: Marc Ross: CEOs need to learn lessons from the AT&T and Michael Cohen scandal http://bit.ly/2rMzX39

Election 2018: Democratic women had a good night, winning seven primaries for House seats in Pennsylvania and threatening the state's all-male congressional delegation.

Women sweep to victory in House primaries: Politico reports, voters decide key battleground contests in 4 states.

Top Dem presidential hopefuls audition for 2020: Politico reports, the first cattle call of 2020 drew a host of big names, The Center for American Progress’ Ideas Conference allowed possible 2020 candidates to test out messages on progressivism in the Trump era.

A reckoning for Obama's foreign-policy legacy: Veterans of the last administration are learning a hard lesson: Policies constructed by executive order and executive agreement are just as easily blown up by them. https://theatln.tc/2IMEkFY

Hurricane Genesis and Outlook Project report predicts that there will be 11 to 18 named tropical storms this year.

ENTERPRISE

Starbucks is looking to double down on the Chinese market as traffic growth comes under pressure in the U.S. The coffee chain hopes to more than triple its revenue and almost double its store count in China over the next five years. It currently has around 3,300 stores in 141 cities across the country.

China is Facebook's second largest market after the US: AdAge reports, nearly 10 percent of Facebook's global revenue, or about $5 billion, comes from China, despite being banned from operating in the country, according to a new report by Pivotal research analyst Brian Wieser. This means China is the second-largest ad spender on Facebook, only behind the US.

No Facebook for you: As part of its purge of bad content from its platform, Facebook deleted 583 million fake accounts and 865.8 million posts during Q1 2018.

Facebook’s blockchain move raises eyebrows: FT reports, Zuckerberg flirts with decentralization of his very centralized social network.

Amazon is debuting a Prime loyalty program that includes an extra 10% off on sales items and weekly discounts at Whole Foods.

Kellogg has discontinued its operations in Venezuela due to the ongoing social and economic distress in the nation.

Lime, the e-scooter company, is raising $500 million.

How China's tech revolution threatens Silicon Valley: A look inside Beijing's booming start-up scene shows how ubiquitous the country's tech culture is. https://theatln.tc/2wKkiHn

TRENDS

Great things take time: Why focusing on the long-term is more important than ever http://bit.ly/2IlN0E4

CULTURE

RIP: Tom Wolfe employed literary techniques in his magazine articles, pioneering the New Journalism of the 1960s and ’70s. He wrote books such as “The Electric Kool-Aid Acid Test” and “The Right Stuff”; his first novel, “The Bonfire of the Vanities,” was a bestseller.

Tom Wolfe, writer, 1930-2018: FT reports, American literary and journalistic iconoclast who Norman Mailer said was the hardest working writer of his time.

The Tom Wolfe syllabus: The pioneer of New Journalism died at the age of 88 on Monday. From ‘The Electric Kool-Aid Acid Test’ to ‘Bonfire of the Vanities,’ the Ringer staff looks back on his most striking work. http://bit.ly/2IJRgMV

Royal Wedding: UK Home Office Minister Victoria Atkins has today signed the order relaxing pub licensing laws for the royal wedding this weekend. UK subjects will be permitted to toast the happy couple in pubs across the land until 1:00 am on both Friday and Saturday night.

SPORT

Today @ 2:45 pm ET: UEFA Europa League Final = Marseille vs. Atletico Madrid