CEOs are letting go of their recession fears

Just 38% of CEOs surveyed by Fortune are pessimistic about the global economy, compared to 76% last October.
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Good Monday morning.

After a year of waiting for the Godot recession, CEOs seem to be giving up. In our latest poll of 143 CEOs conducted in collaboration with Deloitte (which sponsors this newsletter), only 38% said they had a “pessimistic” or “very pessimistic” outlook for the global economy for the next 12 months, down substantially from the 76% answering the same question last October.

But inflation fears remain strong. Indeed, 57% of the CEOs said they expect inflation to disrupt their business over the next 12 months. A similar percentage said they expected geopolitical developments to disrupt their business over the next year. 

The poll also shows CEOs are very bullish about new developments in A.I., with 79% saying A.I. is likely to significantly enhance business efficiencies in their organization. You can read more from the new poll here.

A separate poll from JPMorgan also out this morning shows only 45% of midsize business leaders expect a recession before year-end, down from 65% six months ago.

How do you invest in this kind of economy? Our Fortune team taps the experts for their best advice in Fortune’s new Quarterly Investment Guide here.

Other news below.


Alan Murray
@alansmurray

alan.murray@fortune.com

TOP NEWS

Grandparent leave

Companies like Fannie Mae, Cisco, and Booking.com are introducing a new benefit to keep their older workers: “grandparent leave,” or extra paid time off to look after grandchildren. Older workers say they appreciate the flexibility to jump in and care for a grandchild in the event of an emergency. More companies are offering benefits targeting older employees, like elder care consultants and menopause benefits, as the American workforce ages. Fortune

China’s slump 

China’s youth unemployment crisis continues to worsen with a record 21.3% of those aged 16 to 24 out of work in June. China’s statistics bureau reported 6.3% year-on-year GDP growth on Monday, coming in below consensus expectations of 7.3%. Chinese officials are reluctant to launch larger stimulus programs to revive the economy, even as the country flirts with deflationCNBC

Call of Duty

Microsoft has promised to offer the popular “Call of Duty” video games to competitor Sony for the next decade, placating some antitrust concerns about its acquisition of Activision Blizzard. The fate of the Activision-developed shooter series on Sony’s PlayStation was a major point of contention between the two gaming giants. According to a (poorly redacted) Sony document, the game series may have generated $800 million in revenue for Sony in 2021 in the U.S. alone. The Verge

AROUND THE WATERCOOLER

Court ruling means JPMorgan may soon start ‘discovery’ in Frank founder’s case, and more juicy texts are released: ‘You’ll have 4.5 million users today…2.3 cents per user’ by Luisa Beltran

Commentary: Climate change is the next frontier of America’s culture wars. Corporations are still doing the right thing–and hoping no one notices by Bill Novelli

A fight erupts in U.S. housing market as deteriorated affordability clashes with the ‘lock-in effect’ by Lance Lambert

Barry Diller calls A.I. ‘overhyped to death’ after striking Hollywood actors label it an ‘existential threat’ by Steve Mollman

Jeremy Siegel says we are in a ‘Goldilocks economy’ and the Fed doesn’t need to raise interest rates anymore by Will Daniel 

Inside the structure of Disney and Comcast’s complicated Hulu deal—and why it’s pivotal to Bob Iger’s turnaround plan by Shawn Tully

This edition of CEO Daily was curated by Nicholas Gordon. 

This is the web version of CEO Daily, a newsletter of must-read insights from Fortune CEO Alan Murray. Sign up to get it delivered free to your inbox.