PARIS (Reuters) - French President Emmanuel Macron will host dozens of the world’s most powerful business executives at the gilded Palace of Versailles to pitch France Inc before the global elite’s annual gathering at Davos.

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Goldman Sachs’s Lloyd Blankfein, JP Morgan’s Jamie Dimon and Facebook’s Sheryl Sandberg will be among the chief executives at the summit that the presidency is dubbing “Choose France”.

Elysee sources said “concrete” investment decisions would be announced.

“Monday, in the global business world, France will be the place to be,” one presidential adviser quipped.

“Many investors will be in Europe for the Davos summit, so we’ve suggested a stopover in Paris,” another Macron aide said.

Macron, a former investment banker, and his government are pushing through social and economic reforms to re-shape the French economy and restore France’s image among investors.

Investors frequently complain of the country’s high labor costs and rigid labor regulations, and remember his socialist predecessor’s now-defunct 75 percent tax on millionaires.

French officials have also seized on Britain’s decision to exit the European Union, Germany’s complex coalition talks and Spain’s Catalonia crisis to promote France as a haven of stability at the heart of the European single market.

Half of the companies represented at the grand palace of Versailles will be European, a quarter American, and another quarter from Asia and the Middle East, Elysee officials said.

The list of attendees reads like a Who’s Who of international business and is a sign of the 40-year-old French leader’s continued pulling power eight months into his presidency.

The include top executives from HSBC, Bank of America, Google, Rolls Royce, SAP, UPS, Bosch, Alibaba, JD.com, GlaxoSmithKline, Novartis and Cisco.

One of the aides said executives would “speed date” with French ministers in the afternoon before Macron joins them.

Dozens of investment projects will be discussed, and Elysee insiders expect four to five “significant and emblematic” announcements to be made, including one for a job-creating bricks-and-mortar factory in the industrial sector.

Two announcements in the digital sector and artificial intelligence will also be made, they said.

Macron, 40, then travels to Davos where in a speech on Wednesday he will set out his vision for the future of globalization, the Elysee officials said. Widening inequalities, global warming and the rise of nationalism will feature in the 45-minute speech.