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Gen Z, on the heels of the pandemic, is pushing for changes to how we work. Workers across generations are benefitting from some of the questions Gen Z has been asking. AdvertisementAdvertisementThanks, Gen Z. Gen Zers aren't likely to get everything they're asking for — at least not right away. And even workplace jargon — that code for showing you belong because you know how to toss it around — is getting a Gen Z rewrite .
Persons: Gen Z, , Zers aren't, Pradeep Philip, Philip, That's, Nicole Kyle, Zers, Brynn Anderson, who've, Alex Soojung, Kim Pang, Pang, we've, Read, Zer, Gen Organizations: Workers, Service, Deloitte, Economics, CMP Research, United Auto Workers, Detroit, UPS, Associated Press, UAW, didn't Locations: America
A Swedish union is leading strikes against Tesla to secure a collective labor agreement. AdvertisementAdvertisementTesla is facing growing strike action in Sweden over its refusal to accept a collective labor agreement. Not all Tesla employees are participating in the strikes, however. Musk has consistently rejected calls for his staff to unionise, tweeting in 2018 that Tesla employees could lose their stock options if they did so. The factory has reportedly seen an unusually high number of work-related accidents and IG Metall says union signups among Tesla workers have surged.
Persons: Tesla, , Elon Musk's, Musk, Elon, Christiane Benner, Metall, Benner Organizations: Service, IF Metall, Tesla, The New York Times, Metall, UAW, Bloomberg, United Auto Workers Locations: Sweden, Swedish, tweeting, Europe, Berlin
Most Gulf markets end higher after US job market softens
  + stars: | 2023-11-05 | by ( ) www.reuters.com   time to read: +2 min
A trader looks on near electronic boards showing stock market data at Bahrain Bourse after Joe Biden won the U.S. presidency, in Manama, Bahrain, November 8, 2020. Most Gulf Cooperation Council countries, including the UAE, peg their currencies to the U.S. dollar and follow the Fed's policy moves closely. Saudi Arabia's benchmark index (.TASI) gained 0.8%, with oil giant Saudi Aramco (2222.SE) rising 0.5% and Lumi Rental Co (4262.SE) finishing 1.7% higher. Outside the Gulf, Egypt's blue-chip index (.EGX30) closed 2% higher, led by a 2.1% rise in Commercial International Bank (COMI.CA). On Friday, the lender reported third-quarter net income of 8.35 billion Egyptian pounds ($270.66 million), up 89% year-on-year.
Persons: Joe Biden, Hamad I Mohammed, Detroit's, Jerome Powell, Ateeq, David Goodman, Sharon Singleton Organizations: Bahrain Bourse, U.S, REUTERS, Federal, United Auto Workers, UAW, Gulf Cooperation, U.S ., Saudi Aramco, Lumi, Reuters, Industries Qatar, Commercial International Bank, Thomson Locations: Bahrain, Manama, U.S, Gulf, UAE, Saudi, Ateeq Shariff, Bengaluru
[1/2] United Auto Workers President Shawn Fain greets workers at the Stellantis Sterling Heights Assembly Plant, to mark the beginning of contract negotiations in Sterling Heights, Michigan, U.S. July 12, 2023. The UAW released more details of its tentative 4-1/2 year deal with GM <on Saturday. Temporary workers will have a faster path to full-time status and could see wages rise by about 50% immediately. The GM agreement will move more than 7,000 UAW workers in GM component plants, service parts warehouses and what GM calls "subsystems" operations up to the higher wage levels paid to assembly plant workers. "This contract has wage increases and economic gains like nothing we've ever seen before," UAW Vice President Mike Booth said.
Persons: Shawn Fain, Rebecca Cook, Mike Booth, Fain, Joe White, Ben Klayman, Matthew Lewis Organizations: United Auto Workers, Sterling Heights Assembly, REUTERS, Rights DETROIT, General Motors, UAW, GM, Detroit, Ford, Chrysler, Auto, Toyota, Honda, Volkswagen, Hyundai, Tesla, Thomson Locations: Sterling Heights, Sterling Heights , Michigan, U.S, Lordstown , Ohio, Orion, Michigan, Spring Hill , Tennessee, Detroit, Bengaluru
DETROIT – General Motors plans to invest roughly $13 billion in U.S. facilities by April 2028, the United Auto Workers union said as part of its recent tentative agreement with the automaker. GM has already announced some of the planned investments such as $4 billion at Orion Assembly in suburban Detroit and $2 billion in Spring Hill, Tennessee, for new electric vehicles. GM was the last Detroit automaker to reach a tentative agreement following Ford Motor and Chrysler-parent Stellantis . GM's U.S. investments through the terms of the 4 ½-tear tentative compared to $8.1 billion announced by the union at Ford and $18.9 billion at Stellantis, including $6.2 billion in previously announced parts plants in Kokomo, Indiana. The details disclosed by the union for GM did not include billions in previously announced investments in four joint-venture battery cell plants in the U.S., including three upcoming facilities.
Persons: Mary Barra Organizations: United Auto Workers, UAW, General Motors, DETROIT –, Motors, GM, Orion Assembly, Detroit, Ford Motor, Chrysler, Ford Locations: Arlington , Texas, DETROIT, Detroit, Spring Hill , Tennessee, Lansing Grand, U.S, Kokomo , Indiana
New York CNN —Members of the United Auto Workers union are back on the job at General Motors, Ford and Stellantis. They can’t go on strike in sympathy with another union’s strike, and they can’t wage a strike over political issues, such as a change in government policy. The Teamsters and the UAW also both have members now on strike against a group of casinos in Detroit. The significance of May 1The date Fain sees for this collective, coordinated strike is May 1, 2028, or May Day, which is also International Workers Day. That is celebrated as a Labor Day in many other countries, but rarely in the United States, which is where its historical roots are.
Persons: Shawn Fain, , Todd Vachon, Taft, Harry Truman, Vachon, Fain, expirations, Kate Bronfenbrenner, , , “ He’s, Bronfenbrenner, McCarthy, ” Fain Organizations: New, New York CNN, United Auto Workers, General Motors, Ford, UAW, Rutgers University, US Department of Labor, Teamsters ’, UPS, Labor Education Research, Cornell University, Kaiser Permanente, Teamsters, Workers, Labor, Unions Locations: New York, Europe, United States, France, Detroit,
Ford envisions at least three new electric vehicles that will preserve jobs at several factories. Those and other closely held production plans by Detroit's automakers have emerged in details of the tentative contract agreements that ended the six-week strikes by the United Auto Workers union. The UAW's success in gaining commitments from the companies to build new electric vehicles at several factories represented a particular achievement. The automakers have all embraced the transition to electric vehicles as a large-scale and long-term commitment. And not all the companies’ production plans under the contract, of course, involve electric vehicles.
Persons: , Biden, What's, Ford, Stellantis, ___ Veiga Organizations: DETROIT, Ford, General Motors, Detroit's automakers, United Auto Workers, Workers, EVs, EV, Dodge, Jeep, Cherokee, UAW, Kentucky, Plant, Expedition, Lincoln Navigator, Lincoln, Ohio Assembly Plant, Hill Assembly, Honda, Chevrolet Silverado, GMC Sierra, Fairfax Assembly Plant, GM, Detroit automakers, Toyota Tacoma Locations: Belvidere , Illinois, Toledo, Warren , Michigan, Sterling Heights , Michigan, Detroit, Dodge Durango, Rouge, Dearborn , Michigan, Louisville, Cleveland, Rock , Michigan, Hill, Hill Assembly Plant, Tennessee, Orion Township , Michigan, Fairfax, Kansas City , Kansas, Lansing , Michigan, Los Angeles
Gene Sperling, the White House liaison for the strike talks, was in daily contact with executives at the UAW and the three automakers. By that point, there was enough trust that the misunderstanding did little from the White House perspective to hurt the relationship. The UAW president declined to endorse the president who had engaged in the historic outreach. So as I said we’ll do that when it’s time.”Still, the White House saw itself as building trust with the UAW as the talks progressed. As soon as a tentative agreement was in place, Barra told the gathered negotiators that she needed to text the White House.
Persons: Joe Biden, Shawn Fain, Biden, Fain, Gene Sperling, Sperling, We’re, Donald Trump, “ I’m, ” Biden, , Julie Su, Su, umbrage, , ” Fain, “ We’ll, Ford, Stellantis, Mary Barra, Barra, Tom Krisher Organizations: WASHINGTON, United Auto Workers, General Motors, UAW, GM, Ford, Chrysler, Democratic, White, Democratic White Houses, Associated Press, Democrats, AP VoteCast, Republican, Labor, Biden, AP Locations: Delaware, Michigan, Pennsylvania, Wisconsin, Detroit
[1/2] Traders work on the floor at the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) in New York City, U.S., October 27, 2023. The job growth slowdown underscored views that the Federal Reserve may be done hiking interest rates. Benchmark 10-year yields fell as low as 4.484%, the lowest since Sept. 26. The U.S. dollar index dropped to a six-week low after the jobs data. In afternoon trading, the dollar index fell 1.111%, with the euro up 1.07% to $1.0734.
Persons: Brendan McDermid, Detroit's, Brad McMillan, Jerome Powell, Caroline Valetkevitch, Harry Robertson, Chibuike, Jacqueline Wong, Miral Fahmy, Alison Williams, Mark Heinrich, Rod Nickel, Diane Craft Organizations: New York Stock Exchange, REUTERS, U.S, Treasury, Federal, United Auto Workers, Commonwealth Financial Network, Bank of England, Traders, U.S . Treasury, Dow Jones, Nasdaq, Apple, Brent, Thomson Locations: New York City, U.S, Waltham , Massachusetts, Central, New York, London
The United Auto Workers union said it reached a tentative deal with General Motors on Monday, more than six weeks after workers went on strike. The company was the last of the three Detroit automakers to reach a new tentative labor deal. Photo: Rebecca Cook/ReutersUnited Auto Workers leaders bargained for months and called a historic strike before clinching tentative agreements with Detroit’s automakers. UAW members at local chapters across the country begin voting as soon as this week on the labor pacts with Ford Motor , General Motors and Chrysler parent Stellantis . The proposed contracts, which include a 25% wage hike and a return of cost-of-living adjustments, increase pay more than several contracts over the past two decades combined.
Persons: Rebecca Cook Organizations: United Auto Workers, General Motors, Detroit, Reuters United Auto Workers, Detroit’s, UAW, Ford Motor, Chrysler
MARKET REACTION:STOCKS: U.S. stock futures (.SPX) rose after the jobs data.BONDS: U.S. Treasury 10-year yield dropped to three-week low after the jobs report, last yield down at 4.562%. FOREX: The dollar index fell after the weaker-than-expected jobs report. There's not a lot of breadth in the markets and there's not a lot of breadth in the job gains anymore." Back month revisions were substantial as the BLS has consistently overestimated job gains this year, unlike last year where they consistently underestimated the gains. "This is a good sign that the labor market is weakening and is playing into the hands of the Fed.
Persons: Elizabeth Frantz, Detroit's, BRIAN JACOBSEN, MENOMONEE, That's, PETER CARDILLO Organizations: REUTERS, United Auto Workers, UAW, Labor Department's Bureau of Labor Statistics, Treasury, BLS, Fed, Global Finance, Markets, Thomson Locations: Arlington , Virginia, U.S, WISCONSIN, September's
[1/2] Dollar, Euro and Pound banknotes are seen in this picture illustration taken April 28, 2017. The euro was last up 0.27% at $1.06515, and thanks to gains earlier in the week was heading for a weekly gain of 0.8%, which would be its most since July. Sterling likewise was up 0.2% on the day at $1.2228, and set for a 0.86% weekly gain, also its most since July. Both the Aussie and the New Zealand dollars are up 1.7% for the week, their best weekly performance since again mid-July. The dollar is heading for a weekly gain of 0.25% on the franc and was last at 0.9041 francs.
Persons: Dado Ruvic, Sterling, Jerome Powell, We've, BOE, Yusuke Miyairi, Detroit's, Kazuo Ueda, Ankur Banerjee, Rae Wee, Gerry Doyle, Kim Coghill, David Evans Organizations: REUTERS, Rights, U.S . Treasury Department, Federal, Fed, Treasury, Nomura, Analysts, United Auto Workers, UAW, Bank of England, Bank of Japan, Reuters, New, Swiss, Thomson Locations: Rights SINGAPORE, LONDON, U.S, New Zealand, Singapore
Sharp U.S. Hiring Slowdown Signals Cooling Economy Ahead
  + stars: | 2023-11-03 | by ( David Harrison | ) www.wsj.com   time to read: 1 min
The share of working-age people either working or looking for a job has climbed. Photo: Allison Joyce/Bloomberg NewsHiring slowed sharply in October, a sign the economy is cooling this fall following a hot stretch over the summer. U.S. employers added 150,000 jobs in October, down from the previous month’s revised gain of 297,000, the Labor Department said Friday. That was the smallest gain since June, with automakers having around 33,000 fewer workers on payroll because of the United Auto Workers strike. The unemployment rate rose to 3.9% from 3.8% the prior month.
Persons: Allison Joyce Organizations: Bloomberg, Labor Department, United Auto Workers
The monthly data does comes with a footnote: The headline job gains of 150,000 were depressed by a United Auto Workers strike. But even accounting for that the number was close to the 183,000 monthly pace of job growth sustained for the 10 years before the pandemic, from 2010 to 2019, and to that extent looked "normal" after years of outsized job gains. The pace of annual wage growth eased down to 4.1% in October in a continuing decline, while the month-to- month increase of 0.2% annualizes to around 2.4%, within the Fed's comfort zone. If labor force growth is coupled with an easing of open jobs, it could show a job market moving closer to balance. But if consumption remains strong and drives still-high numbers of openings, then a stall in labor force growth could reignite wage pressures.
Persons: Jerome Powell, Howard Schneider, Andrea Ricci Organizations: Federal Reserve, United Auto Workers, Reuters Graphics Reuters, Reuters, Thomson Locations: U.S
Our trades and decisions on stock ratings were driven more by earnings, company-specific developments and portfolio management rather than any broad commentary on the market. The stock soared more than 5% on the news, adding to those gains throughout the rest of the week. Estee Lauder's new "Profit Recovery Plan" provided little comfort because it's not expected to kick in until the company's fiscal years 2025 and 2026. As a subscriber to the CNBC Investing Club with Jim Cramer, you will receive a trade alert before Jim makes a trade. Jim waits 45 minutes after sending a trade alert before buying or selling a stock in his charitable trust's portfolio.
Persons: week's, Ford, Estee Lauder, Estee, it's, Veralto, Locker, Jim Cramer's, Jim Cramer, Jim, Spencer Platt Organizations: Dow Jones, Nasdaq, Federal Reserve, U.S . Labor Department, Ford, United Auto Workers, GE HealthCare Technologies, Oracle, DuPont de Nemours, DuPont, CNBC, Traders, New York Stock Exchange, Getty Locations: oversold, China, FL, New York City
John J. Kim | Tribune News Service | Getty ImagesDETROIT – United Auto Workers President Shawn Fain wants to expand the union's battle from the Detroit automakers to Tesla , Toyota Motor and other non-unionized automakers operating in the U.S. The UAW has previously failed to organize foreign-based automakers in the U.S. The UAW has previously discussed organizing Tesla's Fremont plant in California with little to no traction in those efforts. "Workers at Tesla, Toyota, Honda, and others are not the enemy — they're the UAW members of the future," Fain said. UAW President Shawn Fain marches with UAW members through downtown Detroit after a rally in support of United Auto Workers members as they strike the Big Three auto makers on September 15, 2023 in Detroit, Michigan.
Persons: Shawn Fain, John J, Kim, We've, Fain, Stellantis, we've, Ford, Bill Ford, Toyota Fain, Bill Pugliano, Tesla, Elon Musk, Musk, Tom Williams Organizations: United Auto Workers, UAW, Tribune, Service, Getty, DETROIT, Detroit, Tesla, Toyota Motor, U.S, General Motors, Ford Motor, Chrysler, Volkswagen, Nissan, GM, Ford, American, . ", Toyota, Honda, Bloomberg News, Bloomberg, CNBC, Cq, Inc Locations: Chicago, U.S, Fremont, California, Kentucky, Detroit, Detroit , Michigan, Fremont , California
The government’s October jobs report is expected to show Friday that companies and government agencies added 184,000 jobs, a solid showing, though down sharply from a blockbuster 336,000 gain in September. The Fed scrutinizes the monthly job data to assess whether employers are still hiring and raising pay aggressively as a result of labor shortages. The Fed's policymakers are trying to calibrate their key interest rate to simultaneously cool inflation, support job growth and ward off a recession. At the same time, inflationary pressures have been easing as the Fed has sharply raised borrowing costs. In the meantime, despite long-standing predictions by economists that the Fed's ever-higher interest rates would trigger a recession, the U.S. economy, the world’s largest, remains sturdy.
Persons: ’ ’, Nancy Vanden Houten, ’ Vanden Houten, Vanden Houten, Jerome Powell Organizations: WASHINGTON, , Federal Reserve, Oxford Economics, Federal, United Auto Workers, Detroit, Wage, Labor Department Locations: U.S, COVID
The October jobs report showed a cooling labor market in the U.S., with many sectors showing minimal or negative growth as the economy added a relatively meager 150,000 jobs overall. If private education was included in that category, as some economists choose to do, there would have 89,000 jobs added in that group. "It's usually a bad thing when job growth is led by the public service, but in this case it is long overdue. The private sector jobs recovery was much stronger and much faster than that of the public sector," said Julia Pollak, chief economist at ZipRecruiter. Information shed 9,000 jobs, while transportation and warehousing lost more than 12,000 jobs.
Persons: Julia Pollak, Pollak Organizations: of Labor Statistics, ZipRecruiter, Manufacturing, BLS, United Auto Workers, Detroit Locations: U.S
[1/2] Traders work on the floor at the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) in New York City, U.S., October 27, 2023. The job growth slowdown underscored views that the Federal Reserve may be done hiking interest rates. The data also showed the increase in annual wages was the smallest in nearly 2-1/2 years, pointing to an easing in labor market conditions. The pan-European STOXX 600 index (.STOXX) rose 0.17% and MSCI's gauge of stocks across the globe (.MIWD00000PUS) gained 1.44%. The U.S. dollar index dropped to a six-week low after the jobs data.
Persons: Brendan McDermid, Detroit's, Brad McMillan, Jerome Powell, Caroline Valetkevitch, Harry Robertson, Chibuike Oguh, Jacqueline Wong, Miral Fahmy, Alison Williams, Mark Heinrich, Rod Nickel Organizations: New York Stock Exchange, REUTERS, U.S, Treasury, Federal, United Auto Workers, Commonwealth Financial Network, Bank of England, U.S . Treasury, Dow Jones, Nasdaq, Apple, Brent, Thomson Locations: New York City, U.S, Waltham , Massachusetts, Central, New York, London
Minneapolis CNN —For several months now, the US labor market has been on a cooling trajectory, and Friday’s jobs report made that even more apparent. The US economy added 150,000 jobs last month, falling below expectations but still notching a solid month of employment growth, according to Bureau of Labor Statistics data released Friday. October’s job growth came in below September’s stronger-than expected but downwardly revised total of 297,000 jobs. Including the estimated 150,000 jobs added last month and the downward revisions to August and September that totaled 101,000 jobs, the United States is averaging 239,000 jobs gained per month so far this year. Where the jobs were — and weren’tBecause of the timing of the striking actions and how the BLS tracks such activity, October is the first jobs report that reflects the massive strike.
Persons: , Sung Won Sohn, Nancy Vanden Houten, Jerome Powell, Gus Faucher, Dante DeAntonio, ” DeAntonio, “ It’s, ” Ger Doyle, ManpowerGroup, Amy Glaser, we’ve, “ We’re Organizations: Minneapolis CNN —, of Labor Statistics, SS Economics, Loyola Marymount University, United Auto Workers, Ford, General Motors, UAW, Big, Federal Reserve, Fed, Oxford Economics, BLS, PNC Financial Services, Government, Moody’s, , CNN, Locations: Minneapolis, United States, Southern California
Nonfarm payrolls increased by 150,000 jobs last month, the Labor Department's Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) said in its closely watched employment report on Friday. The economy needs to create roughly 100,000 jobs per month to keep up with growth in the working-age population. The report could strengthen financial market expectations that the Federal Reserve is done raising interest rates for the current cycle. The labor market is the major force behind the economy's staying power, with gross domestic product recording an annualized growth pace of nearly 5% in the third quarter. But others disagreed, saying that the record-setting contracts would only become an issue for wage inflation if the Fed raised rates too high and choked off demand.
Persons: Brian Snyder, Detroit's, Lucia Mutikani, Nick Zieminski Organizations: Taylor Party, Equipment Rentals, REUTERS, Rights, United Auto Workers, UAW, Labor Department's Bureau of Labor Statistics, Reuters, BLS, Federal, UPS, Thomson Locations: Somerville , Massachusetts, U.S
The anticipated moderation in employment growth last month would also be pay back after September's enormous gains, the largest in eight months. The Labor Department's closely watched employment report on Friday is expected to show labor market conditions steadily easing, with annual wage growth the smallest in nearly 2-1/2 years and significant growth in the supply of workers. Manufacturing payrolls are forecast falling 10,000 after advancing 17,000 in September. Last week, the BLS reported at least 30,000 UAW members were on strike during the period it surveyed businesses for October's employment report. Wages gains would still be above the 3.5% that economists say is consistent with the Fed's 2% target.
Persons: Brian Snyder, Detroit's, Sam Bullard, payrolls, Veronica Clark, we've, Sung Won Sohn, we're, Brian Bethune, that's, Lucia Mutikani, David Gregorio Our Organizations: Taylor Party, Equipment Rentals, REUTERS, UAW, United Auto Workers, Labor, Federal Reserve, Labor Department's Bureau of Labor Statistics, Manufacturing, BLS, Citigroup, UPS, Finance, Loyola Marymount University, Boston College, Thomson Locations: Somerville , Massachusetts, U.S, WASHINGTON, Wells, Charlotte , North Carolina, New York, Los Angeles
How the UAW's drive to 'end tiers' will change GM
  + stars: | 2023-11-03 | by ( ) www.reuters.com   time to read: +3 min
The tentative 4-1/2 year deal will pull more than 7,000 UAW workers in GM component plants, service parts warehouses and what GM calls "subsystems" operations up to the higher wage levels paid to assembly plant workers. As at Ford and Stellantis, GM will raise pay for temporary workers and give them a faster path to full-time status and wages. Eliminating tiers of lower-paid UAW workers at the Detroit Three was a top priority for Fain and UAW bargainers. Fain and UAW members would often wear red t-shirts printed with the slogan "End Tiers" at rallies and on picket lines. GM "has been the worst actor" in creating tiers of lower-wage UAW employees within its operations, Booth said in an Oct. 20 video address.
Persons: Shawn Fain, Rebecca Cook, Shawn Fain's, Fain, Mike Booth, Booth, Joe White, Peter Henderson, Josie Kao Organizations: United Auto Workers, REUTERS, Rights DETROIT, General Motors, UAW, GM, Workers, Holdings, Ford, Tesla, Detroit, automaker . Workers, Thomson Locations: Detroit , Michigan, U.S, , Ohio, Stellantis .
The United Auto Workers union said it reached a tentative deal with General Motors on Monday, more than six weeks after workers went on strike. The company is the last of the three Detroit automakers to reach a new tentative labor deal. Photo: Rebecca Cook/ReutersThe city that has been home to Jeep since World War II largely shrugged off a six-week strike that mothballed a hulking factory with thousands of workers. Jeep-maker Stellantis ’s Toledo, Ohio, assembly plant was one of the first to face walkouts when the United Auto Workers strike against that company, Ford Motor and General Motors started on Sept. 15.
Persons: Rebecca Cook, Stellantis ’, General Motors Organizations: United Auto Workers, General Motors, Detroit, Ford Motor, General Locations: Toledo , Ohio
The United Auto Workers union said it reached a tentative deal with General Motors on Monday, more than six weeks after workers went on strike. The company is the last of the three Detroit automakers to reach a new tentative labor deal. Photo: Rebecca Cook/ReutersFord Motor , General Motors and Chrysler-parent Stellantis agreed to pay striking workers for their time on the picket lines, as part of new labor deals reached late last month with the United Auto Workers to end the union’s walkout. The move is an unusual one in the union’s history of negotiating with the car companies, according to people familiar with the talks.
Persons: Rebecca Cook Organizations: United Auto Workers, General Motors, Detroit, Reuters Ford Motor, Chrysler
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