The 2024 Paris Olympics may be the most corporate Games ever

By Peter VanhamEditorial Director, Leadership
Peter VanhamEditorial Director, Leadership

Peter Vanham is editorial director, leadership, at Fortune.

Nicholas GordonBy Nicholas GordonAsia Editor
Nicholas GordonAsia Editor

Nicholas Gordon is an Asia editor based in Hong Kong, where he helps to drive Fortune’s coverage of Asian business and economics news.

Aytac Unal—Anadolu via Getty Images

Good morning from Geneva.

The 2024 Olympic Games may or may not turn out to be a good investment for Paris and France, but they certainly have been an investment of choice among the country’s largest companies. 

As rain fell on the Olympics’ opening weekend in Paris, Jean-Pascal Tricoire and Christel Heydemann were among those cheerily posing for photos in ponchos. “Rainy event, happy event!” Tricoire posted on LinkedIn 

But the chairman of Schneider Electric, France’s leading energy management company, and the CEO of Orange, the country’s largest international mobile operator, are far from the only ones you’ll spot at Olympic venues these days. 

Almost half of France’s Fortune Global 500 companies are official partners of the Games: Electricité de France (No. 55), retailer Carrefour (No. 125), parking operator Vinci (No. 202), construction materials firm Saint-Gobain (No. 263), pharma company Sanofi (No. 299), banking group Groupe BPCE (No. 300), Orange (No. 319), rail operator SNCF Group (No. 340), the national postal group La Poste (No. 403), Schneider Electric (No. 421), and industrial gas maker Air Liquide (No. 488). 

To my knowledge, it’s rather exceptional that a G7 economy gets the support of so many of its largest companies in hosting the Games. 

A big reason why? France’s economy is more centralized and state-directed than most, making it easier for leaders like President Emmanuel Macron to rally the chief executives of the nation’s largest companies behind the project. 

But I’d offer two additional forces behind what may be the most corporate Olympic Games ever. 

First, Paris decided to focus on sustainability. That made getting involved more attractive for companies such as EDF, Schneider, Saint-Gobain, and Air Liquide. They are all in the midst of large industrial transformations, aiming to get to net zero emissions and help their customers do the same. The Olympic Games in that sense are a priceless global display of their savoir-faire

Second, as physical and emotional wellness becomes increasingly important for society and business, showing support for the most notable global event celebrating human health is a natural fit. For pharma giant Sanofi, the Games are “a unique opportunity to combine innovation for health with the practice of high-level sport;” the same rationale likely applies to other official partners, such as food producer Danone and sports retailer Decathlon.  

All told, partnering with the Paris Olympics is a no-brainer for the companies involved. Nerio Alessandri, CEO of Technogym, the Olympics’ supplier of fitness equipment for the last eight Games, certainly sees it that way. “I have no KPIs,” the Italian executive told me just before the Games. “But it’s the most important exposure in the world.”    

More news below.

Peter Vanham
peter.vanham@fortune.com
Follow on LinkedIn

TOP NEWS

Harris vs. Trump in Silicon Valley

A string of high-profile members of the tech sector are declaring their allegiance to the Trump campaign, a shift from previous elections where Trump-aligned techies kept their views more quiet. Investors point to the Biden administration’s stance on crypto and the slump in private markets for the shift. “Under Trump, there was a ton of liquidity. Under Biden, there was not,” says Bradley Tusk, a VC that plans to donate to the Harris campaign. Fortune

Glorifying youth

Early-stage VC Katerina Stroponiati wants Silicon Valley to stop prioritizing young founders over older, more experienced leaders. “Silicon Valley investors keep ignoring everyone older than even 40,” the founder of VC firm Brilliant Minds says. Stroponiati notes that she’s investing in a 72-year-old founder who's using AI to build a music application. Fortune

Asian philanthropy

Asia’s wealthy tycoons tend to use their companies as the vehicle for their philanthropic work, unlike the U.S. where foundations are more common, notes Ruth Shapiro, co-founder of the Center for Asian Philanthropy and Society. "Companies want to fund where they’re operating,” she explains. CAPS research estimates that an additional $702 billion of funds could be released if Asians donated at the same rate as Americans. Fortune

AROUND THE WATERCOOLER

Elon Musk forced to step in to resolve Tesla Cybertruck owner’s hellish experience by Christiaan Hetzner

An AI-dominated future with no jobs could be a dream or a nightmare by Geoff Colvin

How Singapore drives almost a third of U.S. chipmaker Micron’s revenue by Lionel Lim

Billionaire CEO Jay Chaudhry made his employees into millionaires after selling his startup—’people were going crazy’ by Chloe Berger

Specialists in relocating Americans to Europe and Canada are seeing the phone ringing off the hook since the Trump vs. Biden debate by Eleanor Pringle

This edition of CEO Daily was curated by Nicholas Gordon.

This is the web version of CEO Daily, a newsletter of must-read global insights from CEOs and industry leaders. Sign up to get it delivered free to your inbox.