“…The current efficient protocols involve installation of fluorinated groups [4] or, alternatively, selective activation and functionalization of a C−F bond in a multi‐fluorinated compound [5] . The latter strategy has recently proven to be more efficient and prevalent, and defluorinative arylation, [6] alkylation, [7] borylation, [8] silylation, [9] carbonylation, [10] hydrogenation [11] and alkynylation [12] of gem ‐difluoroalkenes have been developed successively to build a range of substituted monofluoroalkenes. Despite these successes, the highly desirable asymmetric variant involving catalytic C−F bond activation of gem ‐difluoroalkenes with readily available reagents to construct enantioenriched monofluoroalkenes remains elusive.…”