Beijing’s intensifying crackdown on its own technology sector is being felt across global markets, erasing $769 billion in value from U.S.-listed Chinese stocks in just five months. On Monday, the massacre accelerated, with the Nasdaq Golden Dragon China Index—which follows 98 of China’s biggest U.S.-listed firms—plunged 7% after Beijing regulators unveiled an overhaul of China’s education sector. The revamp seeks to ban firms in that patch from making profits, raising capital or going public. With Friday’s 8.5% drop, today’s decline brings the gauge’s two-day toll to 15%—its biggest since 2008. The broader U.S. markets however had a lovely day. Here’s your markets wrapDavid E. Rovella

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Larry Chen is an ex-school teacher who became one of the world’s richest people. But now that he’s been caught in the market vise created by Beijing’s crackdown, he can no longer claim such elite status. The founder of online tutoring firm Gaotu Techedu and former multibillionaire is worth only $235 million after China’s regulatory overhaul sent his company’s shares plunging 70% this weekend.

Gaotu Techedu Chairman and CEO Larry Xiangdong Chen, right, along with members of the company's leadership team celebrate their initial public offering at the New York Stock Exchange in 2019. Photographer: Richard Drew/AP

With Southeast Asia reeling from the latest wave of coronavirus infections, even one-time success story Singapore hasn’t been able to escape. The city-state witnessed record jumps in cases thanks to outbreaks at karaoke lounges and a port that supplies produce all over the island. So it might seem strange that the government has announced it aims to relax precautions against the spread of the deadly pathogen. This includes allowing quarantine-free travel in September. In the U.S., the Biden administration is keeping foreign travel restrictions in place as the delta variant spreads. With a fifth wave spreading across the nation, mostly among Americans who chose not to be vaccinated, more mandatory vaccination orders are starting to appear. Here’s the latest on the pandemic.

Tesla reported better-than-expected second-quarter earnings, thanks in part to strong demand for its electric vehicles. Indeed, Elon Musk’s company suggested deliveries this year may exceed its longer-term projections for 50% growth.

Republicans threw a wrench into U.S. Senate infrastructure talks that had appeared to be back on track. The GOP rejected a Democratic offer supposedly intended to address all outstanding issues. The roadblock calls into question passage of the $579 billion package—a major political goal for President Joe Biden—before the August recess.

The popular stablecoin known as Tether is under criminal investigation by the Justice Department. Prosecutors are looking into whether its executives committed bank fraud, a development with potentially seismic consequences for the broader crypto market.

Boeing, that famous name of American industry better known of late for making a commercial airliner that crashed twice, killing 346 people, is losing highly experienced engineers at an alarming clip

Candles burn at a memorial arch erected at the site of the Ethiopian Airlines Flight 302 disaster on March 14, 2019, in Ejere, Ethiopia. It was one of two defective Boeing 737 Max airliners that crashed over the span of five months. Photographer: Jemal Countess/Getty Images

Nearly 1,000 current and former Activision Blizzard employees have signed a letter calling the video game publisher’s responses to a recent discrimination lawsuit “abhorrent and insulting.” 

What you’ll need to know tomorrow 

Wall Street Interns Back at Work, and the Bars

After a year of Zoom meetings, New York’s youngest aspiring financiers have returned to the offices of the city’s investment banks, where they’re making the most of the in-person mentoring and networking they’ve lacked throughout during the pandemic. And after those 14-hour workdays, they’re hitting the bars.  

Photographer: Mark Kauzlarich/Bloomberg Photographer: Mark Kauzlarich/Bloomberg

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