Good morning, Quartz readers!
Here’s what you need to know
Pfizer gears up to deliver 800,000 vaccine doses to the UK. After Britain authorized its mass use yesterday, the initial run of deliveries is making their way from a manufacturing facility in Puurs, Belgium to mass vaccination centers and hospitals across the UK. The first jabs could be given as soon as Monday.
Valéry Giscard d’Estaing passed away at 94. The former French leader, who died from complications due to Covid-19, was a key architect of European integration during his presidency from 1974 to 1981. Together with his German counterpart, he launched a monetary system that preceded today’s single currency, the euro.
The US banned cotton imports from Xinjiang… Products linked to the Xinjiang Production and Construction Corps, a state-owned quasi-military organization and a major cotton producer, will be blocked due to the firm’s alleged use of forced labor as part of Beijing’s repression of Uyghur Muslims in the region.
…and Donald Trump reviews a bill that could delist Chinese firms from US markets. After passing the House yesterday and the Senate in May, the president is now expected to sign the measure into law, which would kick Chinese companies off US exchanges if they fail to comply with the country’s auditing rules. Meanwhile, Australia passed a law giving the government veto power over deals with foreign states.
Jimmy Lai was denied bail. The founder of Hong Kong’s fiercely independent Apple Daily newspaper was arrested in August under the city’s national security law. Yesterday, he was charged with fraud instead and will be detained until his next hearing in April. The ruling comes a day after the imprisonment of key democracy activists.
Hong Kong’s stock exchange shakeup
There’s a change coming for the Hang Seng, Hong Kong’s counterpart to the S&P 500 or Dow Jones Industrial Average. For decades, the equity benchmark index has been the primary tracker of Hong Kong’s economic fortunes. But in recent years, it has shifted to reflect China’s economic rise, as more and more Chinese companies listed on the Hong Kong stock exchange.
On Monday (Dec. 7), Swire—one of Hong Kong’s colonial-era conglomerates and one of the founding members of the index—will be booted off the Hang Seng. Meituan, the upstart Chinese food delivery app, will replace it.
Meituan will be just one of China’s biggest tech firms to be added to Hang Seng—others include Alibaba, Tencent, and Xiaomi. Not all of China’s tech giants are represented in Hong Kong yet, but more are likely to eye the city for their IPOs as the financial hub becomes increasingly Chinese.
Charting Americans’ changing wealth
Millennials suffered the biggest financial blow from the Great Recession in 2009, and some have worried this group could be a lost generation when it comes to building household wealth. But there are signs that their wealth has caught up over the past five years, and was fairly similar to that of Gen X as of the second quarter of 2020, Fed data show. Both generations still lag behind baby boomers. John Detrixhe looks into what this could mean for millennials’ long-term economic prospects.
Management classics
Yes, the past year has been characterized by upheaval. But the coronavirus crisis also has been an opportunity to test the usefulness and effectiveness of classic management strategies. In the midst of turmoil and heightened stress, which practices hold up? And which approaches are likely to endure even as the workplace continues to evolve?
Our latest field guide on leading through change has the most up-to-date advice on what managers should hold on to, even in the face of immense change. It includes tips on how to:
📢 Articulate priorities clearly and confidently
📝 Fight bureaucracy
💭 Make decisions strategically
🏅 Understand what you’re incentivizing
🤝 Lead with empathy
Read our updated guide to modern leadership here.
✦ Here’s our priority: We hope you’ll support our journalism with a Quartz membership. Sign up for a seven-day free trial.
Surprising discoveries
The winning numbers in a lottery were 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, and 10. South Africa’s lottery commission is now looking into the improbable seequence.
Archaeologists discovered 12,500-year-old rock paintings in the Colombian Amazon. Tens of thousands of paintings depict humans and Ice Age animals including mastodon, horses, and fish.
People are supporting Australia by drinking its wine. After China implemented a 212% increase in tariffs, Australian politicians are asking people around the world to raise a glass in solidarity.
The UN no longer considers marijuana among the most dangerous drugs. The decision opens new gateways for cannabis to be used for medicine and research.
Giphy released its most viewed gifs of 2020. For a year like the one we’ve had, they seem surprisingly sincere.
Our best wishes for a productive day. Please send any news, comments, lucky numbers, and heartfelt gifs to hi@qz.com. Get the most out of Quartz by downloading our iOS app and becoming a member. Today’s Daily Brief was brought to you by Mary Hui, Tripti Lahiri, Jackie Bischof, Liz Webber.