Good morning. New York City-based Tapestry, Inc., parent of luxury brands Coach and Kate Spade New York, is executing a three-year strategy focused on profitable growth and strong shareholder returns.
The “Amplify” strategy is anchored on four pillars: building emotional connections with consumers (especially Gen Z), advancing fashion innovation, delivering compelling global experiences, and fostering an agile, consumer-focused culture.
These priorities build on proven strategies, especially at Coach, according to CFO and COO Scott Roe, who spoke with me on Tuesday ahead of the company’s investor day.
Millennials and Gen Z are increasingly choosing Coach, driving a beat for the quarter that ended June 28, fueled by these demographics. “By 2030, Gen Z and millennials will make up over 70% of the market,” Roe said. Tapestry aims to capture their first luxury purchase.
“The long-term value of acquiring customers at this initial entry point is substantial,” he said. “While others talk to millions, we’re talking to billions of potential consumers.”
In the same quarter, Tapestry reported a non-cash impairment charge of $855 million related to Kate Spade and a 13% revenue decline for the brand, Fortune reported. Despite this, having achieved previous goals, the company is confident its strategy can drive future growth for both Coach and Kate Spade, Roe said.
Tapestry plans for Coach to deliver mid-single-digit annual revenue growth (CAGR) and expand its operating margin to the mid-30% range over the next three years, with a longer-term goal of reaching $10 billion in annual revenue.
And the company expects Kate Spade to return to profitable top-line growth in Fiscal 2027 and target mid-single-digit revenue growth and high single-digit operating margin by Fiscal 2028.
“Scale and investment in marketing have never been more important,” Roe emphasized. “There are no barriers to entry in our category, but significant barriers to scale.” Over the past three years, Tapestry’s marketing investment has grown from 3.5% to more than 11% of revenue, with plans to increase it by another 200 basis points.
Tapestry plans to return $4 billion to shareholders by fiscal 2028, representing 100% of adjusted free cash flow from FY26 to FY28, even after capital expenditures, Roe said. The business now operates at a sustainable mid-single-digit growth rate, driven by a self-reinforcing model focused on quality growth and margin expansion, he said.
This performance enables significant reinvestment in the business, resulting in robust earnings and cash flow, Roe said. Capital allocation priorities include growing the dividend (targeting a 30% payout ratio) and a recently authorized $3 billion share repurchase, returning all free cash flow to shareholders.
“This is a powerful message that truly reflects our conviction in the future,” Roe said.
Ranjith Roy has been promoted to CFO of Yum! Brands (No. 491), the parent company of household-name brands including KFC, Taco Bell, and Pizza Hut. Roy is taking over from Chris Turner, promoted to CEO, effective Oct. 1. Roy joined Yum! in 2024 as chief strategy officer and treasurer, overseeing strategy, mergers and acquisitions and treasury operations. Before joining Yum!, he served as CFO of the e-commerce marketplace Goldbelly, where he helped scale operations. He also spent more than 15 years with Goldman Sachs, where he led investment banking relationships for restaurant, food and food tech businesses, building industry expertise.
Roy brings to the CFO role a “blend of commercial acumen, strategic insight on Yum!, and the restaurant industry,” Turner said in a statement. “He has a proven ability to navigate fast-paced and complex environments with a sharp focus on long-term value creation.”
Every Friday morning, the weekly Fortune 500 Power Moves column tracks Fortune 500 company C-suite shifts—see the most recent edition.
Big Deal
CFOs are grappling with the volume and pace of AI developments in corporate finance, according to Gartner Inc., a business and technology insights company.
Gartner’s research finds three areas stand out as having the potential for transformational impact while reaching mainstream adoption within two years: Generative AI in finance, composite AI and responsible AI.
“The pace and potential of AI developments in finance can be overwhelming,” Alex Levine, director analyst in the Gartner Finance practice, said in a statement. “The AI in Finance Hype Cycle aims to help finance leaders cut through the noise and focus on technologies likely to have the most impact in the near-term.”
Below is Gartner’s Hype Cycle for AI in Finance, 2025
Courtesy of Gartner, Inc.
Going deeper
“Workday’s CEO says his career took off after he changed his attitude—and Amazon boss Andy Jassy swears by the same mindset hack” is a Fortune report by Preston Fore.
From the report: “$62 billion Workday CEO Carl Eschenbach reveals Gen Z’s career success won’t come from chasing titles or padding resumes—but by shifting their mindset. Instead, he says Gen Z should double down on attitude, authenticity, and relationships to thrive in an AI-disrupted workplace.” You can read the complete report here.
Overheard
“It really helped me through some difficult times, being diagnosed with ADHD, and helping me kind of slow down my thoughts and be more strategic.”
—Veteran NFL wide receiver Larry Fitzgerald Jr., an investor in Chess.com, said on Tuesday during Fortune’s Brainstorm Tech conference in Park City, Utah, that chess had a formative influence on his youth and helped him manage the challenges of attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder. He learned the game from his father, who played on both the Indiana State University chess and football teams, Fortune reported.
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For years, Binance has dodged questions about where it plans to establish a corporate headquarters. On Monday, the world’s largest crypto exchange made an announcement that indicates it has chosen a location: Abu Dhabi, the capital of the United Arab Emirates.
In its announcement, Binance reported that it has secured three global financial licenses within Abu Dhabi Global Market, a special economic zone inside the Emirati city. The licenses regulate three different prongs of the exchange’s business: its exchange, clearinghouse, and broker dealer services. The three regulated entities are named Nest Exchange Limited, Nest Clearing and Custody Limited, and Nest Trading Limited, respectively.
Richard Teng, the co-CEO of Binance, declined to say whether Abu Dhabi is now Binance’s global headquarters. “But for all intents and purposes, if you look at the regulatory sphere, I think the global regulators are more concerned of where we are regulated on a global basis,” he said, adding that Abu Dhabi Global Market is where his crypto exchange’s “global platform” will be governed.
A company spokesperson declined to add more to Teng’s comments, but did not deny Fortune’s assertion that Binance appears to have chosen Abu Dhabai as its headquarters.
Corporate governance
The Abu Dhabi announcement suggests that Binance, which has for years taken pride in branding itself as a company with no fixed location, is bowing to the practical considerations that go with being a major financial firm—and the corporate governance obligations that entails.
When Changpeng Zhao, the cofounder and former CEO of Binance, launched the company in 2017, he initially established the exchange in Hong Kong. But, weeks after he registered Binance in the city, China banned cryptocurrency trading, and Zhao moved his nascent trading platform. Binance has since been itinerant. “Wherever I sit is going to be the Binance office,” Zhao said in 2020.
The location of a company’s headquarters impacts its tax obligations and what regulations it needs to follow. In 2023, after Binance reached a landmark $4.3 billion settlement with the U.S. Department of Justice, Zhao stepped down as CEO and pleaded guilty to failing to implement an effective anti-money laundering program.
Teng took over and promised to implement the corporate structures—like a board of directors—that are the norm for companies of Binance’s size. Teng, who now shares the CEO role with the newly appointed Yi He, oversaw the appointment of Binance’s first board in April 2024. And he’s repeatedly telegraphed that his crypto exchange is focused on regulatory compliance.
Binance already has a strong footprint in the Emirates. It has a crypto license in Dubai, received a $2 billion investment from an Emirati venture fund in March, and, that same month, said it employed 1,000 employees in the country.
Stocks held by members of Congress have been beating the S&P 500 lately, but there’s a subset of lawmakers who crush their peers: leadership.
According to a recent working paper for the National Bureau of Economic Research, congressional leaders outperform back benchers by up to 47% a year.
Shang-Jin Wei from Columbia University and Columbia Business School along with Yifan Zhou from Xi’an Jiaotong-Liverpool University looked at lawmakers who ascended to leadership posts, such as Speaker of the House as well as House and Senate floor leaders, whips, and conference/caucus chairs.
Between 1995 and 2021, there were 20 such leaders who made stock trades before and after rising to their posts. Wei and Zhou observed that lawmakers underperformed benchmarks before becoming leaders, then everything suddenly changed.
“Importantly, whilst we observe a huge improvement in leaders’ trading performance as they ascend to leadership roles, the matched ‘regular’ members’ stock trading performance does not improve much,” they wrote.
Leadership’s stock market edge stems in part from their ability to set the regulatory or legislation agenda, such as deciding if and when a particular bill will be put to a vote. Setting the agenda also gives leaders advanced knowledge of when certain actions will take place.
In fact, Wei and Zhou found that leaders demonstrate much better returns on stock trades that are made when their party controls their chamber.
In addition, being a leader also increases access to non-public information. The researchers said that while companies are reluctant to share such insider knowledge, they may prioritize revealing it to leaders over rank-and-file lawmakers.
Leaders earn higher returns on companies that contribute to their campaigns or are headquartered in their states, which Wei and Zhou said could be attributable to “privileged access to firm-specific information.”
The upper echelon also influences how other members of Congress vote, and the paper found that a leader’s party is much more likely to vote for bills that help firms whose stocks the leader held, or vote against bills that harmed them. And stocks owned by leadership tend to see increases in federal contract awards, especially sole-source contracts, over the following one to two years.
“These results suggest that congressional leaders may not only trade on privileged knowledge, but also shape policy outcomes to enrich themselves,” Wei and Zhou wrote.
Stock trades by congressional leaders are even predictive, forecasting higher occurrences of positive or negative corporate news over the following year, they added. In particular, stock sales predict the number of hearings and regulatory actions over the coming year, though purchases don’t.
Investors have long suspected that Washington has a special advantage on Wall Street. That’s given rise to more ETFs with political themes, including funds that track portfolios belonging to Democrats and Republicans in Congress.
And Paul Pelosi, former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s husband, even has a cult following among some investors who mimic his stock moves.
Congress has tried to crack down on members’ stock holdings. The STOCK Act of 2012 requires more timely disclosures, but some lawmakers want to ban trading completely.
A bipartisan group of House members is pushing legislation that would prohibit members of Congress, their spouses, dependent children, and trustees from trading individual stocks, commodities, or futures.
And this past week, a discharge petition was put forth that would force a vote in the House if it gets enough signatures.
“If leadership wants to put forward a bill that would actually do that and end the corruption, we’re all for it,” said Rep. Anna Paulina Luna, R-Fla., on social media on Tuesday. “But we’re tired of the partisan games. This is the most bipartisan bipartisan thing in U.S. history, and it’s time that the House of Representatives listens to the American people.”
French President Emmanuel Macron warned that the European Union may be forced to take “strong measures” against China, including potential tariffs, if Beijing fails to address its widening trade imbalance with the bloc.
“I’m trying to explain to the Chinese that their trade surplus isn’t sustainable because they’re killing their own clients, notably by importing hardly anything from us any more,” Macron told Les Echos newspaper in an interview published on Sunday.
“If they don’t react, in the coming months we Europeans will be obliged to take strong measures and decouple, like the US, like for example tariffs on Chinese products,” he said, adding that he had discussed the matter with European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen.
Macron has just returned from a three-day state visit in China, where he pressed for more investment as Paris seeks to recalibrate its relationship with the world’s second-largest economy. France’s goods trade deficit with China reached around €47 billion ($54.7 billion) last year, according to the French Treasury. Meanwhile, China’s goods trade surplus with the EU swelled to almost $143 billion in the first half of 2025, a record for any six-month period, according to data released by China earlier this year.
Tensions between France and China escalated last year after Paris backed the EU’s decision to impose tariffs on Chinese electric vehicles. Beijing retaliated by imposing minimum price requirements on French cognac, sparking fears among pork and dairy producers that they could be targeted next.
‘Life or Death’
Macron said the US approach to China was “inappropriate” and had worsened Europe’s position by diverting Chinese goods toward the EU market.
“Today, we’re stuck between the two, and it’s a question of life or death for European industry,” Macron said, while noting that Germany — Europe’s biggest economy — doesn’t entirely share France’s stance.
In addition to Europe needing to become more competitive, the European Central Bank too has a role to play in strengthening the EU’s single market, Macron said, arguing that monetary policy should take growth and jobs into account, not just inflation, he said.
He also said the ECB’s decision to continue selling the government bonds it holds risks pushing up long-term interest rates and weighing on economic activity.
“Europe must — and wants to — remain a zone of monetary stability and credible investment,” Macron said.