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CNBC Daily Open: Stocks can’t defy October’s gravity
  + stars: | 2024-10-04 | by ( Yeo Boon Ping | ) www.cnbc.com   time to read: +3 min
This report is from today's CNBC Daily Open, our international markets newsletter. CNBC Daily Open brings investors up to speed on everything they need to know, no matter where they are. [PRO] How to play the jobs report The U.S. jobs report for September, coming out later today, will indicate if the economy will be able to achieve a soft landing or is headed toward a recession. Analysts at JPMorgan break down how the S&P 500 could react , depending on the number of jobs added for September. With the jobs report out in about 12 hours, it's too late for second guessing, in any case.
Persons: AI's, Nvidia's, Blackwell, Jensen Huang, Dow Jones, David Kelly, Kelly, it's, , Jeff Cox, Alex Harring, Pia Singh Organizations: New York Stock Exchange, CNBC, JPMorgan, Nvidia, Port, U.S, International Longshoremen's Association, United States Maritime Alliance, Dow Jones Industrial, Nasdaq, Dow, U.S . Federal Reserve, Asset Management Locations: New York City, U.S, East, Gulf Coast
Then union members will get additional $4-per-hour raises every year during the life of the six-year tentative deal. The union had been willing to consider the $4-an-hour deal before the strike, union boss Harold Daggett said on the picket line outside the Port of New York and New Jersey early Tuesday, soon after the start of the strike. Thursday’s deal likely is the end of the strike, but it doesn’t close the door on a new strike in the future. Should the members vote against the deal, the strike might start once again. But union members voted nearly unanimously to reject it and have remained on strike since September 13.
Persons: Harold Daggett, Bryan R, Smith, Helene, Bethann Rooney, , Rooney Organizations: New, New York CNN, United, International Longshoremen’s Association, United States Maritime Alliance, Getty, Port Authority of New, Hurricane Sandy, International Association of Machinists, Boeing Locations: New York, United States, East, Gulf Coast, Port of New York, New Jersey, Maine, Texas, Virginia, Port Newark, AFP, Port Authority of New York, Port, NY, NJ, Hurricane
Dockworkers strike in a picket line outside of the Port of Houston Authority on October 01, 2024 in Houston, Texas. The strike, affecting 36 ports, marked a historic event and was the first by the union since 1977. (Photo by Brandon Bell/Getty Images)The tentative agreement to suspend the International Longshoremen's Association strike may have consumers and businesses breathing a sigh of relief. In a statement Friday, the ILA said it wants to tighten the language related to the use of automation at ports. It is only a tentative agreement and automation at ports will remain a major stumbling block," said Peter Sand, chief shipping analyst at supply chain intelligence firm Xeneta.
Persons: Brandon Bell, Peter Sand, Harold Daggett, Daggett, Dennis Daggett, Harold Daggett's, that's, Sand, Dr, Michael Nacht, Larry Henry Organizations: Port, Houston Authority, International Longshoreman's Association, United States Maritime Alliance, International Longshoremen's Association, ILA, CNBC, Office, GAO, Public, University of California, Defense, ContainerTrac, International, Warehouse Union, Pacific Maritime Association Locations: Houston , Texas, U.S, Berkeley, Long Beach, Los Angeles , California, West Coast
An aerial view of the Dundalk Marine Terminal October 03, 2024 in Baltimore, Maryland. Shares of Moller-Maersk slumped more than 8% on the Friday market open as European shipping companies fell on the conclusion of a U.S. port strike. A prolonged strike would have provided a boost for European shippers to take a larger share of global supply chain demands. Maersk shares pared losses slightly to trade down 7.05% by 9:05 a.m. London time. Thursday's deal ended a strike that had choked U.S. East Coast and Gulf Coast ports since the start of the week and threatened U.S. supply of fruits, pharmaceuticals and automobiles, among other goods.
Persons: Germany's Hapag Lloyd, Nagel Organizations: Dundalk Marine, Moller, Maersk, U.S, dockworkers, United States Maritime Alliance, International Longshoremen's Association Locations: Dundalk, Baltimore , Maryland, U.S, London, Swiss, East Coast, Gulf Coast
Days after thousands of dockworkers went on the biggest strike in decades, the union announced a tentative agreement on wages Thursday and extended a deadline for bargaining. "The International Longshoremen’s Association and the United States Maritime Alliance, Ltd. have reached a tentative agreement on wages," the union and the alliance said in a joint statement. "Effective immediately, all current job actions will cease and all work covered by the Master Contract will resume," the union said. The International Longshoremen’s Association, known as the ILA, argued that big global cargo carriers have raked in huge profits since pandemic-era supply-chain snags drove up freight rates, and that workers haven’t sufficiently shared in those gains. United States Maritime Alliance, or USMX, represents major ocean freight and port operators.
Persons: dockworkers, snags, haven’t Organizations: Longshoremen’s Association, United States Maritime Alliance, Ltd, ILA
One alternative would be to sail to West Coast ports on the other side of the country, likely using the Panama Canal, a journey of thousands of miles that would hike costs and add weeks to delivery times. Bryan R. Smith / AFP - Getty Images fileThe ILA is seeking a big pay raise along with commitments to halt port automation projects it fears will kill jobs. The USMX had offered a 50% pay bump, but the ILA said it was insufficient to address its concerns. The strike affects 36 ports — including New York, Baltimore and Houston — that handle a range of containerized goods. Biden’s administration has repeatedly said it will not use federal powers to halt the strike.
Persons: , Everstream’s Jena Santoro, Bryan R, Smith, USMX, ” USMX, , Joe Biden’s, Morgan Stanley Organizations: International Longshoremen’s Association, Reuters, ILA, United States Maritime Alliance, Getty, Houston, National Retail Federation Locations: U.S, East Coast, Gulf Coast, West Coast, Panama, Maine, Texas, Bayonne , New Jersey, AFP, New York, Baltimore
The International Longshoremen's Association and the United States Maritime Alliance reached a deal. Port employers and striking dockworkers reached a tentative agreement on wages, according to a joint statement. The strike will be suspended until January to allow time to work out the specifics of a new contract. The 62% increase would up the hourly rate for port workers from $39 to $63 in the coming years, according to the outlet. AdvertisementThe three-day strike shuttered ports across the East and Gulf Coast, disrupting the supply chain and impacting consumer items like fruits and car parts.
Persons: dockworkers, Organizations: Longshoremen's Association, United States Maritime Alliance, Service, CNN, Associated Press, Street Journal, White, The, CBS News, International Longshoremen's Association Locations: Maine, Texas, West, East, Gulf
A major union for U.S. dockworkers and the United States Maritime Alliance have agreed to a tentative deal on wages and have extended their existing contract through Jan. 15 to provide time to negotiate a new contract. The move ends a strike that had snarled East Coast and Gulf Coast ports since the beginning of the week and threatened U.S. supply of fruits, automobiles, and other goods. During the week, the strike had already started to stress the U.S. supply chain. The strike was the first by the ILA since 1977, and it impacted operations at 14 different ports. About 50,000 of the union's 85,000 members were on strike this week.
Persons: Harold Daggett Organizations: U.S, dockworkers, United States Maritime Alliance, Longshoremen's Association, Ltd, CNBC, Shipping, ILA Locations: East Coast, Gulf Coast, U.S
Brashier said some clients had containers that were once destined for the Port of Savannah diverted to the Port of Norfolk in the last hours before the strike began. More than a dozen container vessels are currently waiting in the port anchorage area of Freeport, Everstream Analytics data shows. MSC, the largest containership company in the world, has diverted two vessels, according to Vizion. A container ship departs the Port of Newark for the Atlantic Ocean on September 30, 2024 seen from New York City. Christian Roeloffs, cofounder and CEO of Container xChange, said the timing of this strike is especially challenging for shippers.
Persons: Eric Adams, Spencer Platt, Biden, Paul Brashier, Brashier, Jose Luis Gonzalez, Mirko Woitzik, Lloyd, Hermann Schulte, Port, Harold Daggett, Daggett, Stew Leonard, Jr, Stew Leonard's, Leonard, Brandon Daniels, Daniels, Christian Roeloffs Organizations: International Longshoremen’s Association, ILA, Getty, International Longshoremen's Association, United States Maritime Alliance, ITS Logistics, CNBC, Trucking, Port, Portsmouth, Reuters, Dresden, Turkey East Coast Express Service, America, Schulte Group, MSC, USMX, Local, Virginia International, Walmart, Depot, Folgers Company, Nike, Container, Analytics Locations: Brooklyn, Brooklyn , New York, Gulf Coast, Savannah, Port of Norfolk, Virginia, Portsmouth , Virginia, U.S, Vizion, East Coast, Port of Norfolk , Virginia, Savannah , Georgia, Egypt, America, Charleston, Port, Freeport, Bahamas, Cristobal, Port of New York, New Jersey, Halifax, Canada, Newark, New York City, New York, Savannah , Norfolk, West Coast, demurrage, China, Israel
Daggett is the president of the International Longshoremen’s Association, which has nearly 50,000 union members on strike at three dozen different port facilities. This is the union’s first strike in 47 years, but Daggett participated in the previous strike as a rank-and-file dock worker. A sea of hundreds of union members parted amid cheers as made his way to the top of a small grassy knoll, with idle shipping containers as a backdrop. Unwanted attentionBut increasing attention on Daggett and the strike has brought harassment and death threats, according to a statement from the union. Members of the International Longshoremen's Association union, which represents roughly 45,000 workers, on strike outside the Port of New York and New Jersey on the first day of the strike.
Persons: Harold Daggett, Daggett, , Bryan R, Smith, “ We’re, Dennis Daggett, ” Daggett, Shawn Fain, don’t, Donald Trump, Trump, Kamala Harris, Joe Biden, Biden, Julie Su, John McCown, Shannon Stapleton Organizations: New, New York CNN, International Longshoremen’s Association, Navy, Sporting, International Longshoremen's Association, Port, Gulf Coasts, Getty, ILA, United Auto Workers, UAW, Queens, Trump, Mar, Lago, Democratic, Labor Locations: New York, East, Gulf Coasts, That’s, United States, Vietnam, Europe, Port of New York, New Jersey, Gulf, AFP, Elizabeth , New Jersey, New York City, , OpenSecrets
A trio of emergencies has all struck just five weeks ahead of the 2024 presidential election. Both Donald Trump and Kamala Harris will be forced to reckon with the crises in the final days of their campaigns. AdvertisementViolence in the Middle East, a massive labor strike among East Coast and Gulf Coast dockworkers, and the devastation of Hurricane Helene all struck with only five weeks before the 2024 presidential election. "What we've seen out of Vice President Harris is we've seen steady leadership," he said when talking about the Middle East. What matters most now is how the candidates' messaging lands with specific communities impacted by these crises, Loge said.
Persons: Hurricane Helene, Donald Trump, Kamala Harris, , Israel, Peter Loge, David Jones, Trump, Joe Biden, Randall Adkins, Adkins, Loge, it's, Sen, JD Vance, Tim Walz, Vance, Harris, Walz, Biden, she's, BRYAN R, SMITH, Jones, Grace Cary, Helene Organizations: Service, East, School of Media, Public Affairs, George Washington University, Baruch College, City University of New, Trump, University of Nebraska, Gov, Logistics, JPMorgan, Getty, Biden Locations: Hurricane, East Coast, Gulf Coast, East, Middle, Iran, Israel, Lebanon, Tehran, City University of New York, University of Nebraska Omaha, American, Arizona, Georgia, Wisconsin, North Carolina, Michigan
Massive East Coast port strike: five things to know
  + stars: | 2024-10-03 | by ( Ramishah Maruf | ) edition.cnn.com   time to read: +6 min
New York CNN —A massive port strike along the East and Gulf Coasts that kicked off on Tuesday has the potential to become one of America’s most disruptive work stoppages in recent times. Here’s the latest information you need to know about the port strike. People are panic-buying toilet paper, reports on social media show, displaying empty store shelves where toilet paper and sometimes paper towels used to be. Unlike toilet paper, bananas go bad, so shippers weren’t able to ship large volumes in advance of strikes. On Wednesday, Biden starkly warned against the “man-made disaster” caused by the ongoing port strike and urged the two sides to come to an agreement to avoid significant economic impacts.
Persons: , Harold Daggett, Dockworkers, USMX, Biden, Joe Biden, Taft, Hartley, , ” Biden, Kamala Harris, didn’t, Donald Trump’s, Trump, Kamala Harris ’, Joint Base Andrews, “ We’re, Betsy Klein, Allison Morrow, Chris Isidore, Vanessa Yurkevich, Kayla Tausche, Arlette Saenz Organizations: New, New York CNN, Gulf Coasts, International Longshoremen’s Association, United States Maritime Alliance, CNN, ILA, Anderson Economic, American Farm Bureau Federation, Democratic, , NLRB, American, Wednesday, Joint Base Locations: New York, East, USMX, Maine, Texas, Canada, Mexico, Taft, America
Terms of the tentative deal on wages were not immediately available Thursday evening. A tentative deal would still need to be ratified by the rank-and-file ILA members before it would take effect. But with ships stuck at sea unable to come into US ports to unload and load goods, the union has agreed to have workers return to work on Friday. Still, should the members vote against the deal, the strike might start once again. But union members voted nearly unanimously to reject it and have remained on strike since September 13.
Persons: Biden, Joe Biden, Taft, Hartley, Kamala Harris, Transportation Pete Buttigieg, John McCown, containerization, USMX, Harold Daggett, Daggett Organizations: New, New York CNN —, International Longshoremen’s Association, United States Maritime Alliance, International Association of Machinists, Boeing, Business, Transportation, ILA, Shipping Locations: New York, Maine, Texas, United States
The trio of tests facing Harris comes with potential economic, political and humanitarian consequences if the administration errs. And the new scrutiny of Trump’s behavior after the 2020 election could cause some voters to again question his fitness for the Oval Office. Former President Donald Trump speaks during a campaign event at Dane Manufacturing in Waunakee, Wisconsin, October 1, 2024. NONE OF THIS HAPPENED WHILE I WAS PRESIDENT!” Trump wrote on Truth Social on Tuesday. But Trump has already tried to manipulate the tragedy for political gain, accusing Biden of “sleeping” following the storm.
Persons: Donald Trump, Kamala Harris, Biden, Hurricane Helene, Trump, Jack Smith, , Harris, Kamil Krzaczynski, Trump’s, ” Smith, Smith, ” Trump, Steven Cheung, JD Vance couldn’t, Augusta Mayor Garnett Johnson, Brendan Smialowski, Joe Biden, Helene, Amir Cohen, Hassan Nasrallah, Benjamin Netanyahu’s, Netanyahu’s, Netanyahu, , , There’s, egging Netanyahu, Spencer Platt, “ Donald Trump …, Still, Mandel Ngan, they’ve, Brian Kemp, ” Biden, we’re Organizations: CNN, Oval, Dane Manufacturing, Getty, Trump, , Radical Democrats, Republican, Augusta, Democratic, White, Reuters, Wednesday, Democratic Party, Port, International Longshoremen’s Association, Biden, Republican Party, GOP, Raleigh Emergency Operations Center, Pentagon, National Guard, Georgia Republican Gov Locations: Hurricane, Waunakee , Wisconsin, AFP, Meadowbrook, Augusta , Georgia, Iran, Israel, United States, Tehran, Russia, Ukraine, Ashkelon, Lebanon, Gaza, Islamic Republic, Washington, Michigan, New York, Newark, Staten Island , New York, Gulf Coast, Raleigh , North Carolina, Georgia, North Carolina
The dockworkers' strike threatens supply chains, while Hurricane Helene caused costly damage. Devastation from Hurricane Helene, a dockworkers' strike, and escalating conflict in the Middle East all threaten to scramble supply chains and inflate prices. How much the strike impacts prices depends on how much of a cushion companies have built to deal with any bottlenecks. Bottlenecks also encourage carriers to raise their prices, increasing retail and consumer goods prices, Kent said. The hurricane has also disrupted some supply chains, including healthcare supplies and high-purity quartz needed for semiconductor manufacturing.
Persons: Helene, , Israel ramped, Douglas Kent, Dockworkers, dockworkers, Morgan Stanley, Kent, Fazili, Lauren Saidel, Baker, she's, Biden, Hurricane Helene, Adam Kamins Organizations: Service, Association for Supply Chain Management, JPMorgan, National Economic, Biden, ITR, International Longshoremen's Association —, United States Maritime Alliance, Homeowners Locations: Israel, Iran, Hurricane, Lebanon, Maine, Texas, East Coast, Gulf, Kent, West Coast, North Carolina, Florida
The port workers' strike could disrupt business for big retailers, according to ImportGenius data. Walmart, Ikea and Samsung are some of the biggest importers at ports affected, the data show. JPMorgan predicted the strike could cost the US up to $5 billion daily. AdvertisementMajor retailers are pivoting their shipping plans and preparing for the financial impact of the ongoing port strike. The chart doesn't include data from shipping companies that handle cargo from multiple businesses or anonymous shipments.
Persons: , Alan Murphy, William George, General Motors, Jess Dankert, Dankert Organizations: Walmart, Ikea, Samsung, JPMorgan, Service, Intelligence, CNBC, Research, Arbor Research, Lading, Customs, Business, General, Home, Retail Industry, Association, International Longshoremen's Locations: Gulf Coast, ImportGenius, West, Maine, Texas
U.S. stock futures were flat on Thursday night as traders looked ahead to the widely anticipated release of September's jobs report on Friday morning. S&P 500 futures and Nasdaq 100 futures were also unchanged. These moves came after the major averages ended Thursday's trading session with losses. U.S. oil futures climbed about 5% Thursday, weighing on the major averages. Indeed, all three major averages are already on pace for weekly losses.
Persons: Dow Jones, Barbara Doran, I'd, it's, Doran Organizations: New York Stock Exchange, Dow Jones, Nasdaq, International Longshoremen's Association, United States Maritime Alliance, Dow, BD8 Capital Partners Locations: New York City . U.S, U.S, East, Iran, Israel
Automation is a core issue at play in the ongoing dockworker strike at Eastern US ports. AdvertisementStriking dockworkers at US ports say they're worried that jobs could plummet as shipping companies increasingly turn to automation. Picketing workers gathered at ports in New York and Miami carrying signs reading "Machines don't feed families" and "Fight automation, Save jobs." AdvertisementThe union's objection to the way shipping companies are using automation now is a key sticking point in the negotiations for a new labor contract. The move eventually contributed to the ILA earning the unusual distinction of being a labor union being named in an unfair labor practices complaint filed by management.
Persons: , USMX, Harold Daggett, Jesus Olarte, Daggett, it's, Stephen Edwards, Dominick Organizations: Service, International Longshoremen's Association, US Maritime Alliance, Business, Port, Getty, Maersk, APM, New York Times, ILA Locations: Eastern, New York, Miami, East Coast, Anadolu, Mobile , Alabama, Port of Virginia, Norfolk, Baltimore
CNBC Daily Open: Minor turbulence for the soft landing
  + stars: | 2024-10-02 | by ( Yeo Boon Ping | ) www.cnbc.com   time to read: +2 min
Kirk Side | Houston Chronicle | Getty ImagesThis report is from today's CNBC Daily Open, our international markets newsletter. CNBC Daily Open brings investors up to speed on everything they need to know, no matter where they are. Port workers along the U.S. East Coast and Gulf Coast started striking Tuesday. Higher oil prices pose a risk to inflation resurging, or at least slowing less than everyone is hoping for. The best-case scenario would be that recent events are just minor turbulence on the way to a soft landing.
Persons: Seabrook . Kirk, Kathy Hochul, Adam Kamins, Christopher Ball, Piper Sandler, Campbell, It's, Steve Liesman, Jeff Cox, Fred Imbert, Lori Ann LaRocco, Sean Conlon, Alex Harring, Brian Evans Organizations: Houston Chronicle, CNBC, U.S ., Gulf Coast, New, Moody's, Quinnipiac University, Nasdaq, Nvidia, Apple Locations: Seabrook ., Port, U.S, U.S . East Coast, New York, New Jersey, Iran, Major U.S, East
(This is a wrap-up of the key money moving discussions on CNBC's "Worldwide Exchange" exclusive for Pro subscribers. Worldwide Exchange airs at 5 a.m. "The fixed income market has enough yield to bail you out if the geopolitical tensions get worse," said Hyman said on Worldwide Exchange. "Investors are not focusing on the likely U.S. response post election to replenishing defense stocks and ramping up capabilities." Worldwide Exchange Pick: Biotech Stocks Scott Ladner of Horizon Investments is seeing opportunities in the biotech sector, specifically the iShares Biotechnology ETF (IBB) and SPDR S & P Biotech (XBI) ETFs.
Persons: Simeon Hyman, Hyman, Terry Haines, Haines, Lockheed Martin, Scott Ladner, Ladner Organizations: Pro, Worldwide, Proshares Advisors, Defense, Lockheed, Raytheon, Biotech, Horizon Investments, iShares Biotechnology, P Biotech, Shipping Stocks Shipping, U.S Locations: Israel, Iran, Ukraine, South China, U.S, East, Gulf Coast
The US port strike on the East and Gulf Coasts could threaten farm exports amid harvest season. AdvertisementThe US port strike at East and Gulf Coast ports isn't just impacting bananas and consumer imports into the country — it could hurt America's farm exports too. Seyfert told Politico on Friday that while some farm exports can be moved to the West Coast for shipping, there's probably not enough capacity there. "A prolonged strike would force importers to seek alternative supplies, either from West Coast ports or other countries," wrote Glauber. AdvertisementLogistics experts told Business Insider's Tim Paradis that the port strike could damage the US economy badly.
Persons: Joe Biden, , Mike Seyfert, Seyfert, Joseph Glauber, Tim Paradis, Biden Organizations: Association, Service, White, Politico, Food Policy Research Institute, Logistics, United States Maritime Alliance, International Longshoremen's Association Locations: Gulf, East, Gulf Coast, West Coast, Mexico
Here’s the deal: The East Coast port strike is getting a lot of attention for its potential disruption to the economy — which is precisely the point. No dockworkers means no bananas (or whatever), which means no profits for the companies that produce and ship them. While research shows automation has obvious benefits, like lower operating costs and fewer human-related errors, port automation does not, on its own, significantly improve performance, according to a 2018 McKinsey report. But automation anxiety is rapidly spilling over into office work, where managers are adopting AI in the hopes of replacing human work or amplifying production. As Washington Post columnist Heather Long wrote Tuesday, the strike is “an early battle of well-paid workers against advanced automation.
Persons: CNN Business ’, It’s, , Dennis Daggett, Mark Felix, Sameera Fazili, Biden, it’s, , ” Fazili, Heather Long Organizations: CNN Business, New York CNN, Hollywood, McKinsey, International Longshoremen’s Association, Economic, Getty, National Economic Council, Washington Locations: New York, East Coast, China, Singapore, Europe, Port of New York, New Jersey, Long Beach, Los Angeles, AFP
President Biden said on Tuesday that his administration will be "monitoring for any price gouging activity" that benefits foreign ocean carriers, including those on the USMX board. He also said "foreign ocean carriers have made record profits since the pandemic, when Longshoremen put themselves at risk to keep ports open." UBS forecast that 20% of Maersk's total volume would touch a U.S. port that would be impacted by the strike. Acting Secretary Julie Su lashed out at the idea that labor wage increases would be passed onto U.S. exporters and importers. I know they understand, just as consumers and American workers understand, that foreign companies who profit from our economy and who employ American workers and have an impact on American consumers should do the right thing, and in that battle, we are always going to stand with American workers, American businesses and American consumers."
Persons: Biden, Longshoremen, majeure, Daggett, Harold Daggett, Lars Jenson, Pete Buttigieg, Julie Su, Taft, Hartley, Buttigieg, Larry Lindsey, Su, Peter Friedmann, I've, nonfarm, Helene, switchers, they're, Jim Bianco, CNBC's, Peter Boockvar, Alan Baer, Steve Lamar, Taft Hartley, Lamar, CNBC's Jeff Cox Organizations: CMA, U.S, United States Maritime Alliance, Vespucci, Federal Reserve, Transportation, Labor, International Longshoremen's Association, UBS, Maersk, Federal Maritime Commission, ILA, Boeing, The Lindsey Group, Agriculture Transportation Coalition, Bianco Research, Bleakley Financial, USA, American Apparel and Footwear Association, Biden Administration, Locations: East, Gulf Coast, U.S, autoworkers
WASHINGTON — A dockworkers strike threatens to harm shipping, manufacturing, pre-holiday retail inventories — and Vice President Kamala Harris' bid for the presidency. They have been at an impasse with the United States Maritime Alliance, or USMX, which represents shipping and port operations companies. As polls show Harris trailing Trump on the question of who is best suited to handle the economy, the work stoppage puts Democrats in a bind. Harold Daggett, center, with picketing workers outside of the APM container terminal at the Port of Newark in New Jersey, on Tuesday. "President Trump promised to support the ILA in its opposition to automated terminals in the U.S.," Daggett said in the statement.
Persons: WASHINGTON, Kamala Harris, Harris, Tim Walz, Donald Trump's, Sen, JD Vance, Ohio, , Joe Biden, Pete Buttigieg, Julie Su, Lael Brainard, Trump, Harold Daggett, ” Daggett, Biden, Taft, Hartley, They've, Daggett, Joe Biden’s, , Michael Nagle, ” Trump, Tim Ryan, Vance, didn't, Organizations: Longshoreman's Association, Minnesota Gov, United States Maritime Alliance, Trump, ILA, AFL, Teamsters, Fox News, Democratic, USMX, APM, Port, Bloomberg, Getty, Democratic Party, Federal, Senate Locations: Gulf of Mexico, New York, Washington, Taft, U.S, Delaware, Palm Beach , Florida, Queens, Newark, New Jersey, Trump's
Workers at ports stretching from Maine to Texas went on strike early Tuesday in a dispute over wages and automation. So, the unpredictability of this issue here is really in play and it has the magnitude to really throw a giant wrench in global supply chains,” she added. Ocean supply chains have already been hit hard this year by conflict in the Red Sea, a lengthy drought affecting the Panama Canal and the Baltimore bridge collapse. You might say it is a perfect storm, but it is also a really good negotiating position for those people wanting a strike,” Sand said. “Frequent shocks to supply chains in recent years have left producers more attuned to the risks of running low inventories,” Saunders said on Sept. 25.
Persons: ” Lisa DeNight, Newmark, CNBC’s, DeNight, Peter Sand, Sand, ” Sand, — “, , Maersk, Bradley Saunders, Joe Biden, Biden, Taft, Hartley, ” Saunders Organizations: U.S, Workers, International Longshoremen’s Association, ILA, United States Maritime Alliance, Maersk, North America Economist, Capital Economics Locations: East, Gulf, Maine, Texas, U.S, Red, Panama, Baltimore, Gulf Coast, Europe, Asia, Danish, East Coast
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