What to watch for today
Davos and the wealth gap. The World Economic Forum kicks off in Switzerland, with this year’s meeting centered on the threat of income inequality to global economic stability. (The world’s 85 richest people now have as much wealth as the world’s 3.5 billion poorest.) Check out our interactive database of all the attendees in Davos, including Quartz editor-in-chief Kevin Delaney, who will be reporting from the scene.
The IMF gets more optimistic. The group’s world economic outlook is expected to forecast even faster growth than the 3.6% expansion it previously predicted for 2014.
Big week for quarterly earnings. America’s largest airline (Delta) and mobile carrier (Verizon) will give updates on their performances in the last three months of 2013. Also reporting are Unilever, IBM, SAB Miller, Johnson & Johnson and Haliburton.
While you were sleeping
Iran disinvited from Syrian talks. This week’s peace conference in Switzerland was salvaged after UN secretary general Ban Ki-moon rescinded his surprise invitation to Iran due to objections from Syrian rebels and the United States.
SABMiller sales fizzle. The world’s second-largest brewer was hurt by lower-than-expected volume. Lager sales Beer lager were up in Africa, Latin America, and China, but dropped in Europe, Australia, and North America.
Pollution does a roundtrip to China and back. The latest report from the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change suggests that industrialized countries have outsourced their greenhouse gas emissions to China and other developing countries; airborne pollution is then blown back across the Pacific Ocean to the United States.
Lenovo and IBM renew server talks. The companies tried and failed to reach a deal over IBM’s low-end server business last year, but are trying again to bridge the gap between the $4-6 billion IBM is reportedly offering and the $2.5 billion Lenovo is willing to pay.
China’s money injection. The People’s Bank of China offered funds to big lenders (paywall) to ease a cash crunch ahead of the Lunar New Year, pushing down interbank interest rates.
US-Japan dolphin feud. New US ambassador Caroline Kennedy irked Japan with a tweet decrying an annual dolphin hunt that was depicted in the Academy Award-winning 2009 film “The Cove.”
A spaceship woke up to go comet hunting. The European Space Agency’s Rosetta spacecraft emerged from a years-long slumber to get ready to harpoon the Churyumov-Gerasimenko comet and land on its surface.
Quartz obsession interlude
Gwynn Guilford on Western media’s gullibility for dystopian stories about China. ”When it comes to China stories, people will believe almost anything. Take, for instance, the reports about pollution being so severe in Beijing that residents now watch radiant sunrises broadcast on a huge screen in Tiananmen Square. So, that never happened. […] But that didn’t prevent a slew of prominent media outlets—including Time, CBS News and the Huffington Post—from running the story.” Read more here.
Matters of debate
How Davos could really save the world. Hire the long-term unemployed, give up your patents, don’t spoil your kids, and other advice for the World Economic Forum’s elite.
SodaStream has blood on its hands. The homemade seltzer machine draws ire for being manufactured in the Israeli-occupied West Bank.
Hunting black rhinos is good for conservation. Namibia’s controversial auction of hunting rights of the endangered species has resulted in fewer illegal poaching deaths.
Surprising discoveries
Acid snow is a thing. Weather forecasters in South Korea warn people to carry an umbrella to avoid coming in contact with the stuff.
Americans have tripled their cheese intake since 1970. That’s 11.5 pounds (5.2kg) of mozzarella per person, per year, because pizza. The obesity rate is up 20 percentage points over the same period.
Butter won. After 20 years of trying to convince people that margarine is better, Unilever has announced a historic reversal.
Watch the road in Buckinghamshire. Britain’s first pub at a highway service station will start serving alcohol at 9am, raising understandable concerns.
“Password” is no longer the most common password. That would be 123456.
Our best wishes for a productive day. Please send any news, comments, spreadable butter alternatives, and better passwords to hi@qz.com. You can follow us on Twitter here for updates throughout the day.
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Quartz Daily Brief—Americas edition—Davos inequality, Iran disinvited, SABMiller fizzles, defending rhino hunting
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