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Business Insider looked at how components of the labor market have settled down, like wage growth. And that more boring but steady labor market could be great news for workers and job seekers. The US could be in a Goldilocks job market. Job switchers are seeing higher wage growth than people staying, according to the 12-month moving average of median wage growth from the Atlanta Fed's Wage Growth Tracker. So what will happen to the Goldilocks job market?
Persons: Nick Bunker, Bunker, , That's, Julia Pollak, ZipRecruiter's, " Pollak, Pollak, Job, Julie Su, switchers, Eugenio Alemán, Raymond James, Juliana Kaplan Organizations: Service, North America, BLS Locations: Atlanta
A majority of Americans, 95%, said they plan to look for a new job this year, according to a January 2024 survey by job site Monster. Money is a big reason, with 45% of workers saying they need a higher income. Data from the Federal Reserve shows that job switchers increase their salaries more quickly, on average, than those who stay put. The first time she switched jobs, she took a $20,000 pay cut in order to gain experience. Abdul told CNBC she continued to grow her salary through promotions and other job hops.
Persons: Kyyah Abdul, I've, Abdul, She's Organizations: Federal Reserve, Finance, CNBC Locations: Los Angeles
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailHere's how you know it's time to leave your jobA majority of Americans, 95%, said they plan to look for a new job in 2024, according to a survey by job site Monster. Money's a big part of this: 45% of American workers say they need a higher income. Data from the Federal Reserve shows that job switchers increase their salary more quickly on average than those who stay put, but hiring professionals say it's still important for candidates to be strategic when making career moves.
Organizations: Federal Reserve
Salaries for fully in-office roles are climbing in the United States. As of March 2024, hybrid roles pay $59,992 on average, in 2023, that number was $54,034, ZipRecruiter reports. Remote jobs now pay $75,327, but in 2023, they paid an average $69,107. Given how competitive the job market has been in recent months — especially for remote roles — Bui says it's a "fair trade-off." It's too soon to tell if higher salaries will be enough to convince people to choose an in-office job over a remote offer.
Persons: switchers, Johnny Bui, Bui, — Bui, it's, Julia Pollak, ZipRecruiter's, Pollak, It's Organizations: United States . Companies, CNBC, Visa, LinkedIn, Employees, Owl Labs, Employers Locations: United States, U.S, Austin , Texas
Some side hustles come with a significant time investment and unpredictable pay. Related storiesNot all side hustles come with the time investment that ride-hailing does. But everyone with a side gig is faced with the same question: Are the extra working hours worth the financial reward? Only eight months after he started, he resigned from his two extra roles and decided to stop job-juggling for the time being. But all prospective job-switchers are faced with the same question: Are the uncertainties that come with a new job worth the financial reward?
Persons: , switchers, Lyft, There's, overemployment Organizations: Service, Business, Harris Poll, Uber, Twin Cities, Bureau of Labor Statistics —, Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta, Harris, Atlanta Fed Locations: Atlanta, Minnesota, Texas
Winning candidate Gen Kitchen said the result was a "stunning victory for the Labour Party and must send a message from Northamptonshire to Downing Street." LONDON — U.K. Prime Minister Rishi Sunak's ruling Conservative Party suffered another double by-election defeat on Thursday, as the opposition Labour Party's momentum shows no sign of slowing. The double defeat of Thursday was the latest in a string of unfavorable by-election results for the ruling party in what were previously considered safe seats. "I was very pleased last night to see that we were clearly getting Tory switchers, in other words people who hadn't voted for the Labour Party before, coming out last night and voting for the Labour Party in a by-election." The Labour Party maintains a lead of more than 20 points over the Conservatives in all national polling, with a general election due no later than January 2025.
Persons: Kitchen, Peter Bone, , Rishi Sunak's, Helen Harrison, Gen Kitchen, Chris Skidmore, Damien Egan, Keir Starmer, Tory switchers, hadn't, Boris Johnson, Robert Ford Organizations: Labour, Labour Party, Downing, Conservative, Conservatives, LONDON, Conservative Party, Kettering Leisure Village, Tamworth, Liberal Democrats, BBC, University of Manchester, CNBC Locations: Northamptonshire, Wellingborough , Northamptonshire, KETTERING, England, Wellingborough, Kettering, Kettering , England, Kingswood , South Gloucestershire, North, Kingswood, Mid Bedfordshire, West Midlands, Selby, Ainsty, Somerton, Frome
Policy changes look to reduce 401(k) plan 'leakage'
  + stars: | 2024-02-10 | by ( Greg Iacurci | ) www.cnbc.com   time to read: +5 min
About 40% of workers who leave a job cash out their 401(k) plans each year, according to the Employee Benefit Research Institute. The 401(k) ecosystem would have almost $2 trillion more over a 40-year period if workers didn't cash out their accounts, EBRI estimated. 85% of workers who cash out drain their 401(k)It's not all workers' faultIt's not all workers' fault, though. By law, employers can cash out the small account balances of former employees who leave their 401(k) accounts behind. It's not just workers who benefit: Administrators keep more money in the 401(k) ecosystem, likely padding their profits.
Persons: Craig Copeland, , whittle, Spencer Williams, Vanguard Group —, wouldn't, Williams, who's, It's Organizations: Getty, Research, Fidelity Investments, Vanguard Group
Barthélémy Kiss, 36, is a politics graduate running his second AI company Powder. Kiss has hired career switchers and liberal arts grads to work on his most recent AI project. Working on this startup, I've learned that people with a liberal arts background have a major edge in our industry. The liberal arts grads we've hired have a creative, human-centric approach to understanding the best applications of AI in their respective fields. We need creative thinkers to get the best out of AI technologyHuman creativity is crucial in the AI space.
Persons: Barthélémy, Kiss, switchers, grads, , Eric Risser, We've, I've, grads we've, Stan, Maryan, Pierre Boulez Organizations: Service, Unity, Creative, Ircam Locations: Paris
New York CNN —The first jobs report for 2024, set to be released at 8:30 am ET Friday, is expected to underscore the strength of the US economy despite 11 rate hikes from the Federal Reserve. That can make the January jobs report among the trickiest to forecast, said Sarah House, a senior economist with Wells Fargo. Friday’s jobs report also will include the final annual benchmark review of payroll data for the 12 months that ended in March 2023. However, excluding January 2023, last month’s job cuts were the highest seen in January since 2009, according to Challenger. US worker productivity grew 3.2% in the fourth quarter, according to a BLS report released Thursday.
Persons: Jerome Powell, he’s, Sarah House, Wells, “ We’re, , there’s, Boussour, EY, ” Boussour, Daniel Zhao, Zhao, haven’t, ” Andrew Challenger, people’s paychecks, ” Diane Swonk, , , Swonk Organizations: New, New York CNN, Federal Reserve, Labor, Workers, Challenger, , BLS, KPMG, CNN Locations: New York, Wells Fargo, United States
That can make the January jobs report among the trickiest to forecast, said Sarah House, a senior economist with Wells Fargo. Friday’s jobs report also will include the final annual benchmark review of payroll data for the 12 months that ended in March 2023. Fresh data on job cuts and productivityOn Thursday, the layoff picture became clearer. However, excluding January 2023, last month’s job cuts were the highest seen in January since 2009, according to Challenger. US worker productivity grew 3.2% in the fourth quarter, according to a BLS report released Thursday.
Persons: Jerome Powell, he’s, Sarah House, Wells, “ We’re, , there’s, Boussour, EY, ” Boussour, Daniel Zhao, Zhao, haven’t, ” Andrew Challenger, people’s paychecks, ” Diane Swonk, , , Swonk Organizations: New, New York CNN, of Labor Statistics, Federal Reserve, Labor, Workers, Challenger, , BLS, KPMG, CNN Locations: New York, Wells Fargo, United States
CNN —Former President Donald Trump made several false claims in a speech Tuesday night after CNN and other media outlets projected that he would win the Republican presidential primary in New Hampshire. CNN also watched rival candidate Nikki Haley’s Tuesday night speech in New Hampshire; Haley’s claims were either accurate or too general to fact check. He lost the 2020 election fair and square to Joe Biden, by a 306 to 232 margin in the Electoral College, and also lost New Hampshire in that election. Chris Sununu, a supporter of Haley, Trump said that because of Sununu’s incompetence, “in the Republican primary, they accepted Democrats to vote. In fact, I think they had 4,000 Democrats – Democrats before October 6 – they already voted.
Persons: Donald Trump, Nikki Haley’s, Haley’s, dismissively, Joe Biden, , Biden, ” Howard Gleckman, , ” Gleckman, ” Trump, Hillary Clinton, Chris Sununu, Haley, Trump, , it’s, Sununu, can’t Organizations: CNN, Republican, Trump, Electoral College, New Hampshire, Brookings Tax, Urban Institute, New Hampshire Trump, Democratic, Republican New Hampshire Gov, – Democrats, GOP, New Hampshire Bulletin Locations: New Hampshire, , New, Trump’s, Florida, Hampshire
If you've ever thought about quitting your job and exploring a new path, now is a great time to switch careers. Businesses typically refresh their hiring budgets at the start of the year, meaning there are more job opportunities to explore, and with travel slowing down after the holidays, more people are unencumbered and willing to network, making it easier to strike up meaningful connections. Conversations with close friends won't yield the most valuable insights, says Lipman, who is also the bestselling author of "NEXT! "You can post a networking request on LinkedIn or Instagram, or if you have a list of industries you're interested in, you can text people and just say, 'Hey! I'm looking to transition careers, and am interested in learning more about working in tech (or whatever the industry is), do you know anyone I can chat with?'"
Persons: Joanne Lipman, Lipman, Erin McGoff Organizations: Yale University Locations: New York
These workers in accounting, product management, defense, and music quit their jobs to work in AI. Moritz Kremb quit his product manager job to focus on his AI business. Ted Lebantino says there's a high learning curve in developing AI skills. To make the jump into AI, Kremb suggests making a name for yourself on social media by creating content about AI. As for Fineberg, the AI startup CEO says you don't even need to quit your job to break into it.
Persons: , Moritz Kremb, OpenAI's ChatGPT, Kremb, Weeks, Moritz Kremb There's, who've, Justin Fineberg, there's, Justin Fineberg Justin Fineberg, Uber, Fineberg, Jacqueline DeStefano, Tangorra, Lockheed Martin, Ted Lebantino, — Lebantino, Javier Orman, Javier Orman DeStefano, DeStefano, Orman, switchers Organizations: Service, Business, Meta, Netflix, New Yorker, Omni Business Intelligence Solutions, Lockheed, San Francisco Bay Area, LinkedIn Locations: New, New York, Long, San Francisco Bay, Chicago
sturti | Getty ImagesThe Great Resignation may be over for most workers — but for some top honchos, it's only just begun. CEOs are looking around and thinking: 'I prefer a position in another company,' or 'I prefer retirement. "CEOs are looking around and thinking: 'I prefer a position in another company,' or 'I prefer retirement. While businesses rally to ensure the mental well-being of their workforce, CEOs might find themselves isolated in their struggles. While businesses rally to ensure the mental well-being of their workforce, CEOs might find themselves isolated in their struggles."
Persons: Gray, Alexander Kirss, Covid, switchers, Kirss, Carlina, , LaShawn Davis, Challenger, Andrew Challenger, Davis, there's Organizations: Challenger, Christmas, Gartner, CNBC, Employees, Hospitals Locations: Ukraine
Many workers reported cost of living as the most significant reason for moving states for a new job. Cities including San Francisco and Miami saw net population losses in the third quarter of 2023. New data from the Bank of America Institute looks at where job switchers are moving for those new roles , and which cities are increasingly luring in more new workers. San Francisco had one of the lowest shares of job changers moving in at under 11%. For many of these cities, Bank of America found population change and job growth went hand-in-hand.
Persons: , San Francisco, they're, Gen Zers, Bostonians Organizations: Miami, Service, Boston, Bank of America Institute, Los Angeles . Bank of America, of America, Bank of America, Workers, Sun, San Franciscans Locations: Boston, Portland, San Francisco, Boston —, Oregon, Chicago, New York City, Miami, Los Angeles, Columbus, Austin, San Antonio, Las Vegas, Tampa, Seattle
The boomer market boon
  + stars: | 2023-10-30 | by ( Dan Defrancesco | ) www.businessinsider.com   time to read: +7 min
With that in mind, Bank of America has a way the rest of us can cash in on the boomer boon, writes Insider's Aruni Soni. Millennials vs. boomer spending Bank of AmericaIf you don't want to invest in boomers, you could always just invest like them. Regardless of what you decide to do with your money, just don't bank on getting more of it from your relatives. The billionaire hedge fund boss and owner of the New York Mets isn't expecting a deep recession or prolonged market downturn. The Insider Today team: Dan DeFrancesco, senior editor and anchor, in New York City.
Persons: , John Knox, Joe Raedle, boomers, They're, Insider's Aruni Soni, Treasurys, Insider's Filip De Mott, Cuban, Neil Cavuto, Steven Ferdman, Charlie Munger, Bill Ackman, Michael Baron, Steve Cohen, Linda Yaccarino, Elon Musk, Jerod Harris, Jenny Chang, Rodriguez, it's, Arantza Pena, Taylor Swift, Devin Booker, John Adams, Diego Maradona, Ivanka Trump, Keyatta Mincey, Parker, Dan DeFrancesco, Naga Siu, Hallam Bullock, Lisa Ryan Organizations: Service, Bank of America, of America, Big Tech, Fox Business Network Studios, Dallas Mavericks, New York Mets, Elon, Elon Musk's, Microsoft, Google, Amazon Web Services, Kansas, HSBC Locations: Pompano Beach , Florida, New York City, Phoenix , Arizona, Local Kansas City, Kansas City, McDonald's, San Diego, London, New York
Office communication is becoming far more casual, and Gen Z is leading the shift, new research has found. Job hoppers earned increasingly more than job stayers during the Covid-19 pandemic, but gains have languished. Wages for "job switchers" were 5.6%, as wages for "job stayers" slid 5.2%, according to Atlanta Fed data. However, job hopping won't necessarily make work difficulties disappear. As your funds keep growing for your retirement, keeping tabs on your old workplace accounts after you switch jobs can help ensure you aren't losing track of those accounts over time.
Persons: Sophia Bera Daigle, Bera Daigle, Daigle, haven't Organizations: Workers, Atlanta Fed, CNBC FA Locations: Austin , Texas
That's about 25% of money in all 401(k) plans. Typically, as long as you have $5,000 invested in your employer's plan, you can leave it there when you leave. A 401(k) plan comes with limited investment options, and the ones in your old plan may not be very attractive. This makes a lot of sense for people who gravitate toward simple, passive investing strategies, which tend to be available in just about every 401(k) plan, says Betz. A 401(k) is just about always going to come with a limited menu of investment options, and maybe this one is full of high-fee, low-performing mutual funds.
Persons: switchers, that's, Jason Betz, it's, Yoav Zurel, Betz Organizations: Ameriprise, Employers
The boss is back in charge
  + stars: | 2023-09-17 | by ( Beatrice Nolan | Sarah Jackson | ) www.businessinsider.com   time to read: +7 min
After a brief transition of power to workers, it feels like bosses are back in charge. Between the rise of AI, return-to-office mandates, and layoffs — employee anxiety is high. Between the rise of job-threatening AI, strict return-to-office mandates, and sweeping layoffs, it feels like bosses are clawing back what little remains of employees' power . The economic trend began in early 2021 in the wake of the pandemic and saw millions of workers quit their jobs . AdvertisementAdvertisementThe charge is largely being led by Big Tech and banks, with varying degrees of severity and pushback.
Persons: didn't, Peter Cappelli, Cappelli, Erin Kelly, Stanford, Nick Bloom, they're, Raj Choudhury, OpenAI's ChatGPT Organizations: Service, Companies, Wharton Business School, MIT Sloan, Big Tech, Amazon, Web Services, Harvard Business School, Octopus Energy Locations: Wall, Silicon
CNN —Much remains unknown of course about the presidential general election whose traditional kick-off will come one year from today on Labor Day, 2024. Twenty states have likewise voted for the GOP presidential nominee in all four of those contests. That means 40 of the 50 states, or 80%, have voted the same way in four consecutive presidential elections. In the presidential elections of 2012, 2016 and 2020, though, the states where the margin of victory landed within four points of the national vote total dwindled. Eventually a Democratic choice to write off Florida and Ohio could provide a tactical benefit for the GOP presidential nominee.
Persons: , Doug Sosnik, Bill Clinton, Barack Obama’s, Joe Biden’s, Franklin D, Roosevelt, Trump, hasn’t, Obama, Kyle Kondik, Ball, Kondik, Amy Walter, Biden, Crystal Ball, Cook, Trump’s, headwinds, Republican Sen, Ron Johnson, Roy Cooper, Erika Franklin Fowler, , George W, Bush’s, Hillary Rodham Clinton, Michael Bloomberg, I’ve, Steve Schale, Schale, don’t, it’s, “ Biden, Ben Tulchin, Fowler Organizations: CNN, Labor, White, Democratic, GOP, University of Virginia’s Center for Politics, Electoral College, Trump, Democrats, Crystal Ball, New Hampshire, Republican, White House, Biden, Pennsylvania Senate, Democratic Gov, Wesleyan Media Project, Wesleyan University, Electoral, Republicans, , Wisconsin, District, New, New York City, Sunshine Locations: Indiana , Iowa , Ohio, Florida, North Carolina, Arizona, Georgia, Wisconsin, Michigan, Nevada, Pennsylvania, New Hampshire, Arizona , Georgia, New, dislodging Michigan, Nebraska, Ohio, New York, Minnesota, New Hampshire , Virginia, Oregon, Texas
The amount of money most workers want now to accept a job reached a record high this year, a sign that inflation is alive and well at least in the labor market. Over the past three years, which entails the Covid-19 pandemic era, the level has risen more than 22%. Though there was a gap between the wage workers wanted and what was offered, satisfaction with compensation and upward mobility increased across the board. Job seekers, or those who have looked for work in the previous four weeks, declined to 19.4% from 24.7% a year ago. That came as job openings fell 738,000 to 9.58 million, according to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics.
Organizations: New, Federal, New York Fed, Atlanta Fed, Employers, U.S . Bureau of Labor Statistics
Executives said iPhone sales would improve in the fourth quarter, but did not say how much. Weaker iPhone sales were balanced by strong sales in the services segment that contains Apple TV+ and by sales in China that grew 8% year over year. That sales forecast is below analyst expectations of roughly flat fiscal fourth-quarter sales of $90.19 billion, according to Refinitiv data. Apple said iPhone sales were $39.67 billion, below analyst expectations of $39.91 billion, according to Refinitiv data. Mac and iPad sales were $6.84 billion and $5.79 billion, respectively, compared with analyst estimates of $6.62 billion and $6.41 billion, according to Refinitiv data.
Persons: Joshua Roberts, Luca Maestri, Daniel Newman, Maestri, Tim Cook, We've, We're, Cook, Apple, Jeremy Goldman, Stephen Nellis, Yuvraj Malik, Peter Henderson, Matthew Lewis Organizations: Apple Inc, REUTERS, Wall, Apple, Android, Futurum, Reuters, Research, Major League Soccer, Apple Watch, Thomson Locations: Washington , U.S, China, CHINA, San Francisco, Bengaluru
Logo of an Apple store is seen as Apple Inc. reports fourth quarter earnings in Washington, U.S., January 27, 2022. IPhone sales slightly missed analyst estimates, but were made up for by strong sales in the services segment that contains Apple TV+ and by sales in China that grew 8% year over year. That helped Apple push sales in its greater China region to$15.76 billion, from $14.60 billion in last year's same quarter. Apple said iPhone sales were $39.67 billion, below analyst expectations of $39.91 billion, according to Refinitiv data. Mac and iPad sales were $6.84 billion and $5.79 billion, respectively, compared with analyst estimates of $6.62 billion and $6.41 billion, according to Refinitiv data.
Persons: Joshua Roberts, Tim Cook, We've, We're, Cook, Apple, Stephen Nellis, Yuvraj Malik, Peter Henderson, Matthew Lewis Organizations: Apple Inc, REUTERS, Apple, Reuters, Android, Big Tech, Microsoft, Google, Research, Major League Soccer, Apple Watch, Thomson Locations: Washington , U.S, China, San Francisco, Bengaluru
Revenue in Apple's fiscal third quarter of $81.8 billion edged down 1% but edged out expectations of $81.69 billion. Gross margin was 44.5%, expanding 126 basis points from a year ago and coming in slightly above the 44.3% estimate. However, as we've noted before, the installed base represents the outlet for Apple's higher margin, recurring revenue Services business. Cash flow & capital allocation In its June quarter, Apple generated operating cash flow and free cash flow results that were well above what the Street was looking for. Guidance For the current September quarter, Apple expects year-over-year revenue performance to be similar to the June quarter, assuming no worsening macro outlook.
Persons: we've, Apple, we're, it's, Jim Cramer's, Jim Cramer, Jim, Jakub Porzycki Organizations: Apple, Services, Management, Greater, Apple Watch, CNBC, Nurphoto, Getty Locations: Greater China, Europe, Americas
But lately, he's been having trouble squaring that passion with a growing problem: a glut of underqualified real-estate agents. "The general public deserves so much better than what the majority of real-estate agents provide." A threat to the industryThe vast majority of real-estate agents are independent contractors who rely on commissions. But despite the ease with which home shoppers can now browse homes online, buyers and sellers still see themselves as dependent on real-estate agents. And if those people don't have the ability to become a real-estate agent or a Realtor, then they lose their access to representation."
Persons: Bret Weinstein, he's, Weinstein, they're incentivized, It's, appraisers, they're, they'd, Lawrence Yun, Stephen Brobeck, Brobeck, Inman, that's, There's, Jessica Reinhardt, Reinhardt, bristled, who's, Reinhard, James Rodriguez Organizations: Realtors, Consumer Federation of America, National Association of Realtors, NAR, Consumers, CFA, Denver Metro Association of Realtors Locations: Denver, Texas, Massachusetts, Michigan, Pennsylvania
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