Tuesday Morning Briefing: French President Macron vows to reform at pre-Davos dinner
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January 22, 2019
Reuters News Now
Day 1: 2019 World Economic Forum
Exactly 226 years after the decapitation of King Louis XVI,who failed to quell popular discontent over a France’s feudal society, President Emmanuel Macron started his speech at a pre-Davos dinner at Versailles by invoking the king and his wife Marie-Antoinette. Macron, speaking to an audience that included J.P. Morgan CEO Jamie Dimon, Snapchat chief Evan Spiegel and Microsoft boss Satya Nadella, said he would not follow the path of guillotined French royals and would continue to reform the French economy despite occasional violent revolt.
Eighteen years ago, at the height of the Taliban’s power in Afghanistan,Roshan Mashal secretly taught her daughters and a dozen local girls to read and write. But while Mashal’s daughters have since gained university degrees in economics and medicine, she now fears the hardline Islamist group could once again become part of the government. As talks to end Afghanistan’s war pick up momentum, women such as Mashal fear the freedoms etched out since U.S.-backed Afghan forces overthrew the Taliban in 2001 are about to slide backwards.
Tesla has signed a preliminary agreement with China’s Tianjin Lishen to supply batteries for its new Shanghai car factory, according to sources with knowledge of the matter. While Panasonic is currently Tesla’s exclusive battery cell supplier, Tesla CEO Elon Musk said in November the company would manufacture all its battery modules and packs at the Shanghai factory and planned to diversify its sources.
Ever wanted to run your electric car for free? With millions of electric cars expected on European roads over the next decade, utilities see an opportunity to sell drivers more electricity, and at the same time, offset the risk of unstable power grids stressed by the new demand. That’s why E.ON and EDF are already working with Nissan to develop services that allow power stored in electric vehicle batteries to be sold back to the grid - and now they’re trying to persuade European carmakers to follow suit.
China’s broadcasting regulator approved the release of a third batch of video games after a freeze for most of last year, with industry-leader Tencent still absent from the list of new titles. Home to the world’s largest video game market, China’s 620 million players spent $37.9 billion last year mostly on mobile and PC games, according to data from gaming market researcher Newzoo.
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