‘Whoa! Look at this!’ What CEOs are saying about the government shutdown
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‘Whoa! Look at this!’ What CEOs are saying about the government shutdown

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Also: All the news and watercooler chat from Fortune.

October 2, 2025
09:03 AM
7 min read
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s·CEO Daily‘Whoa!

Look at this!’ What CEOs are saying the government shutdownBy Diane BradyBy Diane BradyExecutive Editorial Director, Fortune Media and author of CEO DailyDiane BradyExecutive Editorial Director, Fortune Media and author of CEO DailyDiane Brady is an award-winning journalist and author who has interviewed newsmakers worldwide and often speaks the global landscape.

As executive editorial director of the Fortune CEO Initiative, she brings together a growing community of global leaders through conversations, content, and connections.

She is also executive editorial director of Fortune Media and interviews newsmakers for the magazine and the CEO Daily .SEE FULL BIO President Trump in the Oval Office on Tuesday, Sept.

30, 2025.Francis Chung—Politico/Bloomberg/Getty ImagesIn today’s CEO Daily: Diane Brady on what CEOs are saying the government shutdown.

The big story: Trump using shutdown to cut spending, fire workers. The : Up, up, up! Plus: All the news and watercooler chat from Fortune. Good morning.

I was talking to a CEO over the phone yesterday the potential impact of a government shutdown when the news broke that the White House is withholding $18 billion in federal infrastructure funds for New York City.

“Whoa! Look at this,” he said, reading out allegations that the city has “discriminatory, unconstitutional” contracting cesses. “If you work with the government, that could be more significant.” Maybe.

The impact of a shutdown will, of course, depend on its length and the reaction of those impacted. Investors aren’t happy, but that could pass.

While roughly three-quarters of federal employees are classified as “essential” workers who must stay on the job, some may stop showing up if they’re not paid.

As another CEO pointed out yesterday, a raft of no-show TSA workers can make for annoying security lines, but a dozen “sick” air traffic controllers can seriously disrupt air travel. The U.S.

has weathered 10 shutdowns since the current budget policy was established in 1976.

One difference this time around is that DOGE cuts and policy shifts have already disrupted various aspects of government operations, from education grants to public health grams, making yesterday’s “orderly shutdown” yet another challenge to navigate.

The main message from the CEOs I reached yesterday: Check back in a week or two.

While CEOs are keeping an eye on the economic impact of a shutdown, they have to stay focused on growing their , recruiting top talent and leveraging or breakthrough nologies in areas from clean energy to AI.

That’s why gatherings the Fortune Global Forum in Riyadh on the 26th and 27th of this month are so important. It’s an opportunity for leaders to learn and connect around d challenges and opportunities.

Among the CEOs joining us are Qualcomm’s Cristiano Amon, Masdar’s Mohamed Jameel Al Ramahi, Delta’s Ed Bastian, Abhijit Dubey of NTT Data, Mary Callahan Erdoes of JPMorgan Chase, JLL’s Christian Ulbrich, Bill Winters of Standard Chartered, Cohere’s Aidan Gomez, Nokia’s Justin Hotard, Tony Han of WeRide, Jenny Johnson of Franklin Templeton, Zimmer Biomet’s Ivan Tornos, Tan Su Shan of DBS Group, Gilberto Tomazoni of JBS, Jonathan Ross of Groq and many more.

You can check out more the upcoming forum here and click here to apply to attend.

CEO Daily via Diane Brady at diane.brady@fortune.comTop newsTrump uses shutdown to cut spending, fire workers “Republicans must use this opportunity of Democrat forced closure to out dead wood, waste, and fraud.

Billions of Dollars can be d,” the president said on Truth Social.

White House budget director Russell Vought said $26 billion in funding for previously apved grams was on hold, much of which had been earmarked for Democrat-led states or cities.

Permanent layoffs are expected to begin in the next day or so. The White House is using government agency websites to refer to the shutdown as “Democrat-led.”U.S.

to vide intelligence for long-range strikes on RussiaMore evidence that Trump’s break with Putin is serious: The WSJ reports that the White House has apved sharing intelligence with Ukraine that will help Kyiv conduct long-range strikes deep into Russia, potentially targeting the oil and power infrastructure that fuels the invasion of Ukraine.

Washington is also considering sending Ukraine long-range missiles, but has not made a final decision.Supreme Court delays decision on Fed’s CookThe high court ruled that it will not take up Fed Governor Lisa Cook’s lawsuit against President Trump until January, after lower courts have dealt with the case.

The move is a potential signal that the court is skeptical of the White House's legal right to fire her.PIMCO: There are “cracks” in the corporate credit market PIMCO President Christian Stracke told CNBC that the private credit market for companies seeking debt funding was going through a difficult patch.

“We’re seeing some real blems in the credit .

There have been some high-file defaults in the credit — in the public — where it’s very difficult for the company to negotiate with the lenders to preserve value in the company,” he said.The turnaround at Ralph LaurenRalph Lauren was staring irrelevance in the face when cter & Gamble veteran Patrice Louvet took over as CEO and brought the fashion brand back to its luxury roots.

Now, with fits at a 13-year high, Louvet says, “It’s got to stay fresh.”Two weeks of bro-co-CEOs In the past two weeks, three large companies—Spotify, Oracle, and Comcast—either added a co-CEO to their corner office or replaced their CEO with a leadership duo.

Fortune’s Lila MacLellan describes the phenomenon as the “rise of the bro-co-CEO.”Citi mandates AI training for most employeesCiti is mandating AI training for the majority of its 229,00 employees, according to an internal memo d with American Banker.

A Citi representative told Fortune that “This training is teaching our colleagues the possibilities of great mpting versus basic mpting to generate impactful results.”OpenAI is officially worth $500 billionSam Altman’s AI company has a funding round that values his company at a higher level than SpaceX, making it the world’s most valuable startup.Bitcoin treasury craze coolsCompanies that diluted their stock by selling s specifically to fund Bitcoin purchases have seen their values tumble by 20% to 50%, according to the WSJ.

While their valuations remain above the price of Bitcoin on their balance sheets, it seems the market is not willing to buy an endless number of self-diluting Bitcoin treasury companies.

Michael Saylor’s Strategy fell 20% in Q3.The S&P 500 futures were up 0.16% this morning. The index closed up 0.34% in its last session. STOXX Europe 600 was up 0.7% in early trading.

The U.K.’s FTSE 100 flat in early trading. Japan’s Nikkei 225 was up 0.87%. China’s CSI 300 was up 0.45%. The South Korea KOSPI was up 2.7%. India’s Nifty 50 was up 0.92% before the end of the session.

Bitcoin rose to $118.6K.Around the watercoolerWalmart now plans to bring drone deries to ‘most areas that we operate in’, exec says by Jessica MathewsThe economy is just getting stronger, not weaker, and ‘we in the economics fession need to look ourselves in the mirror,’ top analyst says by Nick LichtenbergPeople destroyed the ‘friend.com’ AI necklace ads with graffiti.

The 22-year-old founder loves it: ‘Capitalism is the greatest artistic medium.’ by Eva RoytburgFormer Wall Street darling Charlie Javice says ‘I have remorse deeper than I knew possible’ in tearful apology to JPMorgan holders by Dave SmithCEO Daily is compiled and edited by Joey Abrams and Jim Edwards.This is the web version of CEO Daily, a of must-read global insights from CEOs and industry leaders.

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