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Jobs in the state’s auto plants, parts factories and corporate offices shrank by 35% since 1990, according to figures from the Bureau of Labor Statistics. And those jobs make up only 3.7% of the jobs in the state, roughly half what it was in 1990. Some of the auto jobs disappeared because of automation. “But it is still the cornerstone of the Southeast Michigan economy. The categories understate the importance.”But other segments of the Michigan economy now rival autos.
Persons: , Stellantis, Jeff Kowalsky, Patrick Anderson, “ I’m, ” Anderson, Brian Peters, Peters, ” Peters, Anderson, Bill Pugliano, Gretchen Whitmer, Whitmer, there’s, , Monique Stanton, Stanton, ” Stanton, Matthew Hatcher, Donald Trump, Joe Biden Organizations: New, New York CNN, Republican, Democratic, Bureau of Labor Statistics, Motors, Ford, Fiat Chrysler —, GM, Fiat Chrysler, Getty, Anderson Economic Group, Michigan Center for Data, Michigan Health & Hospital Association, Health, Big, Chrysler, United Auto Workers, General Motors, North, Gov, Census, ICE, Michigan, Michigan League, Public, Missouri Economic Research, Information, Fox News, Democrats, Shoppers, Bloomberg, Washington Post, Monmouth University Locations: New York, Michigan, Mexico, Southern, Edmunds, Dearborn , Michigan, AFP, Southeast Michigan, Lansing , Michigan, North America, Marshall , Michigan, Florida, Texas, Illinois, California, Living, Somerset, Troy , Michigan
Forget Tesla , the real competition in electric vehicles is low-cost Chinese automakers. Farley wants to be prepared even if the U.S. government were to step in to curtail Chinese automakers' access. Outlook Ford investors shouldn't be concerned in the short term since Chinese EV competitors won't enter the market overnight. To that end, a group of lawmakers has urged the White House to boost tariffs on Chinese vehicles and figure out a way to be "prepared to address the coming wave" of Chinese vehicles by way of U.S. other trading partners. The cost of production will become more efficient, resulting in a more competitive and hopefully profitable Ford EV product.
Persons: Forget Tesla, Jim Farley, BYD, Ford, Farley, , Warren, Berkshire Hathaway, Morgan Stanley, I've, Tom Narayan, Stellantis, Narayan, Tesla, Jim Cramer, Jim, It's, RBC's Narayan, Ford's Farley, Wolfe, Jeff Windau, Edward Jones, shouldn't, Biden, Windau, doesn't bode, Jim Cramer's, Charly Triballeau Organizations: Nikkei, Wolfe Research, Ford, RBC Capital Markets, U.S, EV, Detroit, General Motors, Chrysler, Ford Blue, Ford Pro, Ford Model, CNBC, ICE, Ferrari, North, Outlook, Bloomberg, Ford EV, American EV, AFP, Getty Locations: U.S, Mexico, China, Europe, Indonesia, Hungary, Thailand, Inwood , New York
CNN —BYD is a Chinese carmaker that recently unseated Tesla as the world’s leading seller of electric vehicles. Its new all-electric Yangwang U9 has nearly 1,300 horspower and is designed to compete directly with Lamborghini and Ferrari. As an electric supercar, the Yangwang U9 combines power and performance similar to a 1,800-horsepower, $2 million Rimac Nevera, but in a package costing less than gasoline-powered cars from the famous Italian automakers. Tesla chief executive Elon Musk has said that Chinese EV makers like BYD could “demolish” other automakers as the industry transitions to electric vehicles. ]”A rear view of the BYD Yangwang U9 electric car in Shenzhen, China, earlier this year.
Persons: Tesla, BYD, Elon Musk, ” Carlos Tavares, Stellantis, Qilai Shen, Stephan Winkelmann, CNN’s Shawn Feng Organizations: CNN, Lamborghini, Ferrari, Dolphin, Elon, Jeep, Fiat, Bloomberg, Getty Locations: Chinese, Europe, New York, Shenzhen, China
(BNEF’s figures include plug-in hybrids, but the large majority are fully electric vehicles.) High pricesMost electric vehicles currently on sale in America are on the more expensive side of the automotive market. Power, referring to the Kia EV9 and Cadillac Lyriq electric vehicles. Besides raw numbers, the EV chargers that are currently available tend to rate low with consumers in terms of reliability, according to J.D.. Power surveys. Public chargers are more important to people who can afford neither an expensive vehicle nor a house with private parking.
Persons: CNN — Tesla, , Tyson Jominy, Kia, Corey Cantor, Jim Farley, Farley, Jominy, Tesla, Carlos Tavares, Valdez Streaty, , “ We’re Organizations: CNN, Ford, Cox Automotive, Bloomberg New Energy Finance, Kia, J.D, ” Ford, National Renewable Energy Laboratory, US Department of Energy, DOE, EV, BMW, GM, Honda, Hyundai, Benz, Stellantis, Dodge, Leasing Locations: United States, America, California, Canada, New York
Ford Super Duty trucks are seen at the Kentucky Truck assembly plant in Louisville, Kentucky, U.S., April 27, 2023. Ford and a United Auto Workers local union reached a tentative deal on Wednesday to avert a strike at the automaker's most profitable plant. The UAW had threatened that nearly 9,000 workers at Ford's Kentucky truck plant would strike on Friday if local union demands were not resolved. The UAW said Tuesday the deal addresses local issues related to skilled trades, ergonomics and health and safety. Workers at the plant produce Ford Super Duty pickups as well as Ford Expeditions and Lincoln Navigator SUVs.
Persons: Ford, , — CNBC's Michael Wayland Organizations: Ford Super Duty, United Auto Workers, UAW, Workers, Ford, Ford Expeditions, Lincoln, Big Three, — Ford, General Motors, Local Locations: Kentucky, Louisville , Kentucky, U.S, Ford's Kentucky, Louisville
The 33 strikes last year is roughly double the average of 16.7 major strikes a year over the course of the last 20 years. A separate database of all work stoppages by Cornell University’s School of Industrial and Labor Relations shows that there were 451 work stoppages in 2023, up 9% from the 2022 total. So the major strikes of 1,000 or more account for less than 10% of the overall number of strikes. So many of the major strikes and contract negotiations that occurred in 2023 will not occur again in 2024. But that doesn’t mean there isn’t a chance of some major work stoppages this year.
Persons: Joe Biden Organizations: New, New York CNN, Labor Department, Bureau of Labor Statistics, SAG, Cornell University’s School of Industrial and Labor Relations, General Motors, Ford, Anheuser, Busch, Teamsters, CNN, Molson Coors, Hollywood, Writers Guild of America, Boeing Boeing, Boeing, Max, Alaska Airlines, Professional, American Airlines, Labor, Railway Labor Locations: New York, America, Fort Worth , Texas, Canada, Hollywood, Washington
But as data emerges on degreeless hiring, there are signs that some of these efforts may be falling short. It's based on limited data and doesn't consider alternative pathways that people without degrees use to join organizations, such as through apprenticeships and internships. But it's still a snapshot look at how some of the top employers in the U.S. are doing in their efforts to hire more workers based on skills versus degree attainment. Rather, it implies managers may be reticent to hire people without degrees, absent specific policies to assess these workers' skills. Companies that have been successful with skill-based hiring also articulate clearly the skills they require for a job, even before posting it.
Persons: it's, Matt Sigelman, What's, Sigelman, Schultz, Joseph Fuller, Fuller, Tyson, Lockheed Martin, Kroger, Stellantis, Backsliders, Meijer, Delta Organizations: Burning Glass Institute, Harvard Business School, Glass Institute, Workers, American, Foundation, Walmart, Apple, GM, Koch Industries, General Motors, Target, Tyson Foods, ExxonMobil, Yelp, Bank of America, Oracle, Companies, Lockheed, Stellantis, CNBC, Amazon, Nike, Delta, Uber, HSBC, Novartis, Delta Air Lines, US Foods Locations: U.S, Meijer
U.S. President Joe Biden answers questions from reporters after driving a Jeep Wrangler Rubicon Xe around the White House driveway following remarks during an event on the South Lawn of the White House August 5, 2021 in Washington, DC. The shift would mean that EV sales would not need to rise sharply until after 2030. Reuters previously reported that the White House could enact proposed Environmental Protection Agency regulations as soon as March that would mandate dramatic reductions in tailpipe emissions. The administration proposal would require boosting U.S. EV market share to 67% by 2032 from less than 8% in 2023. Automakers and the AAI have urged the Biden administration to slow the proposed ramp-up in EV sales.
Persons: Joe Biden, Biden, Joe Biden's, John Bozzella, Bozzella, Stellantis Organizations: New York Times, Alliance for Automotive Innovation, Reuters, Agency, EV, General Motors, Ford, AAI Locations: Washington , DC, U.S
DETROIT (AP) — The United Auto Workers union is threatening to go on strike next week at Ford Motor Co.'s largest and most profitable factory in a dispute over local contract language. The union said Friday that nearly 9,000 workers at the Kentucky Truck Plant in Louisville will strike on Feb. 23 if the local contract dispute is not resolved. If there's a strike, it would be the second time the union has walked out at the sprawling factory in the past year. In October, UAW workers shut down the plant during national contract negotiations that ended with large raises for employees. The union says that workers have been without a local contract for five months.
Persons: Jim Farley, Farley, Ford Organizations: DETROIT, United Auto Workers, Ford Motor Co, Kentucky, Plant, UAW, Ford, Lincoln, General Motors, U.S, Rivals General Motors Locations: Louisville, New York, U.S, Mexico
DETROIT – The United Auto Workers is threatening a labor strike at Ford Motor's largest U.S. plant if local union demands aren't resolved by next week. The Detroit union on Friday said nearly 9,000 UAW autoworkers at Ford's Kentucky Truck Plant could strike at 12:01 a.m. on Feb. 23 if local contract issues remain. The plant — Ford's largest in terms of employment and revenue — produces Ford Super Duty pickups as well as the Ford Expedition and the Lincoln Navigator SUVs. Local contracts differ from the national agreements that the union ratified late last year with Ford, General Motors and Chrysler parent Stellantis . The union said "core issues in Kentucky Truck Plant's local negotiations are health and safety in the plant, including minimum in-plant nurse staffing levels and ergonomic issues, as well as Ford's continued attempts to erode the skilled trades at Kentucky Truck Plant."
Persons: Shawn Fain, aren't, Ford's Organizations: United Auto Workers, Detroit, DETROIT –, Ford Motor's, UAW, Ford, Ford Expedition, Lincoln, General Motors, Chrysler, Kentucky Locations: Kentucky
A traditional automaker just turned a profit on EVs
  + stars: | 2024-02-15 | by ( Chris Isidore | ) edition.cnn.com   time to read: +3 min
New York CNN —Electric vehicles are finally turning a profit for Stellantis, CEO Carlos Tavares said Thursday, and, in contrast to some rivals, it will not cut back on producing EVs. The announcement marks an important milestone for electric vehicles and for traditional automakers, which have struggled to make money on EVs even as demand has grown. Ford, the only company to break out results separately for electric and traditional vehicles, reported that it lost $4.7 billion in EVs last year, or more than $40,000 per vehicle. But he said that EVs, while profitable, are still not as profitable as traditional gas-powered vehicles. That includes profit sharing for about 38,000 United Auto Workers union members at an average of $13,860, down from $14,760 a year earlier.
Persons: Carlos Tavares, , Tesla, Traveras, Stellantis Organizations: New, New York CNN —, Fiat Chrysler, PSA Group, Ford, GM, General Motors, Jeep, Chrysler, Dodge, United Auto Workers, UAW Locations: New York, Detroit, EVs, Europe, Paris
Full-year profit rose 11% to 18.6 billion euros . Stellantis' North American revenues, accounting for nearly half of the carmaker’s total, dropped 5.6% in the second half of the year to 40.5 billion euros from 43 billion euros on lower shipments that eroded its market share. Stellantis’ European revenues were flat in the second half of the year at 31.7 billion euros. Stellantis paid shareholders 6.6 billion euros last year through dividends and buybacks, up 53% from 2022. The carmaker said it plans to increase dividend payments by 16% this year, to 1.55 euros per share, and buy back another 3 billion euros in shares.
Persons: Stellantis, Natalie Knight Organizations: MILAN, Peugeot PSA, FCA, Detroit, South, Pacific Locations: North America, South America, China, India
Super Micro Computer — The technology name added 8.5% after Bank of America said shares could rise to $1,040, a Wall Street high. For the recent quarter, Applovin reported earnings of 49 cents per share and $953 million in revenue. However, the company beat first-quarter earnings and revenue estimates. JFrog — The software development stock skyrocketed 25% after topping Wall Street's fourth-quarter estimates. That topped FactSet estimates 12 cents per share in earnings on $93 million in revenue.
Persons: Twilio, Applovin, Deere, Tripadvisor, Albemarle —, — Coinbase, , JFrog, Penn, Jesse Pound, Hakyung Kim, Alex Harring, Michelle Fox, Brian Evans, Christina Cheddar Berk Organizations: Cisco Systems, Cisco, LSEG, Bank of America, Wells, Currency, Deere, Albemarle, JPMorgan, Chrysler, Fiat, Penn Entertainment, ESPN Bet Locations: North Carolina
(L-R) United Auto Workers (U.A.W.) members Kaleb Delfine, Bryan Broecker, Michael Gatto and James Triplett picket outside the Jeep Plant on September 18, 2023 in Toledo, Ohio. Global auto giant Stellantis on Thursday reported a 10% year-on-year fall in profit in the second half of 2023, as six-week strikes at the so-called "Detroit Three" automakers hampered production in the group's North American profit epicenter. Adjusted operating income (AOI) came in at 10.2 billion euros ($10.96 billion) for the July to December period, down from 11.3 billion euros for the same period in 2022. Stellantis reported in late October that labor strikes by the United Auto Workers union, which ran for six weeks from Sept. 15 and also targeted General Motors and Ford Motor , cost the company $3.2 billion in revenue through October.
Persons: Kaleb Delfine, Bryan Broecker, Michael Gatto, James Triplett, Stellantis Organizations: United Auto Workers, Jeep, Global, Reuters, Stellantis, United Auto Workers union, Motors, Ford Motor Locations: Toledo , Ohio, American, Europe, North America
California's Office of Administrative Law declined to accept the automaker's petition filed in December to overturn the California Air Resources Board (CARB) agreement and said the automaker could file suit or pursue the issue with the air resources board. The automaker said in December it was seeking to address "the competitive disadvantages arising from our continuing exclusion and to preserve our ability to best serve our customers by fairly allocating our products to all states."
Organizations: Administrative, California Air Resources Board
New York CNN —Steve Maller, a flight attendant for nearly 20 years, was one of the flight attendants on the Alaska Airlines flight 1282 when a door plug blew out. But he did say he’s also proud of how the flight attendants on board responded. “We have flight attendants who live in cars because they can’t afford to live where they’re based,” she said. A flight attendant wears a pin reading,' Flight Attendants Save Live!' He said many are already walking out — and the steady flow of flight attendants leaving Alaska every month worries him.
Persons: Steve Maller, Maller, Ben Minicucci, , ” Maller, , he’s, He’s, haven’t, don’t, Joe Raedle, Julie Hedrick, we’re, We’re, Ondrea Wallace, she’s, Wallace, we’ve, Joe Biden, Nam, Sara Nelson, Biden Organizations: New, New York CNN, Alaska Airlines, of Flight, National Transportation Safety, General Motors, Ford, Railway Labor, United Airlines, Miami International Airport, , Association of Professional, Association of Flight, CWA, Transport Workers Union, American Airlines, Railway Labor Act, O'Hare International, AFA, United, Alaska Air Locations: New York, Alaska, Portland , Oregon, Portland, Alaksa, United, Southwest, Chicago,
The Chrysler Halcyon concept car. The Chrysler Halcyon concept car. The Chrysler Halcyon concept car. StellantisAutomakers routinely use concept vehicles to gauge customer interest or show the future direction of a vehicle or brand. The Halcyon concept car boasts "harmony in motion" and sustainability principles, according to several officials.
Persons: Christine Feuell, we've, Feuell, Stellantis Organizations: Chrysler, DETROIT, Chrysler Pacifica, Stellantis, Fiat Chrysler, French, PSA, , CES Locations: U.S, Canada
Investors now expect that the Fed will begin easing back rates in May or June, according to the CME FedWatch Tool. Before the Bell: What does the Fed’s signal that it won’t cut rates in March mean for markets? I think what’s important for the markets themselves is the fact that the Fed has signaled they’re going to cut rates. So, they’re going to cut rates at some point this year, probably May or June is going to be the first cut that we get. There’s a lot of areas where your earnings … start to reaccelerate higher, and that’s a good thing.
Persons: Stocks, Jerome Powell, Bell, Matt Orton, I’ve, We’re, it’s, Matt Egan, Read, Price Organizations: CNN Business, Bell, New York CNN, Investors, Fed, Raymond James Investment Management, The Conference, Conference, Avis Budget Group, Hasbro, Cola, Molson Coors, The, Labor Statistics, Kraft, Heinz, The Commerce Department, National Association of Home Builders, University of Michigan Locations: New York, Wells Fargo
Wall Street wrapped up another positive week, with the S & P 500 closing Friday above 5,000 for the first time ever. It was a pretty light week in terms of economic data releases, though we did get a favorable ISM Services number on Monday. Things will pick up next week with several closely watched macroeconomic updates, including two key government inflation reports. While no Club earnings are scheduled to report earnings in the week ahead, 61 companies in the S & P 500 will deliver their latest quarterly results. Consumer inflation: The main event of the week will come on Tuesday when the January consumer price index (CPI) is released.
Persons: Estee Lauder, Eli Lilly, Price, Bausch, Trimble, Krispy Kreme, Topgolf, Kraft Heinz, Martin Marietta, Owens Corning, WEN, Jim Cramer's, Jim Cramer, Jim, Spencer Platt Organizations: Nasdaq, Club, GE Healthcare, DuPont, Linde, Ford, Disney, Wynn Resorts, CPI, PPI, Palo Alto Networks, Nvidia, Bausch Health, Arista Networks, WM, Cadence Design Systems, ZoomInfo Technologies, Avis Budget, Brighthouse, Goodyear Tire &, Vornado Realty, Marriott International, Hasbro, Restaurant Brands, Molson Coors Beverage, Holdings, MGM Resorts, MGM, Akamai Technologies, American International Group, AIG, Topgolf Callaway Brands, CME Group, Sony, SONY, Blackstone Mortgage Trust, Martin Marietta Materials, Ryder, Occidental Petroleum, Cisco Systems, Deere, Penn Entertainment, Southern Company, Coinbase, Trade, Materials, Rand, Texas, Housing, Jim Cramer's Charitable, CNBC, New York Stock Exchange, Getty Locations: Albemarle, ALB, Ingersoll, New York City
Even with a raise, Tesla workers don't make as much as union-represented workers. AdvertisementTesla recently gave some of its factory workers raises, but union-represented workers at Detroit’s Big Three will still make a lot more per hour. According to internal documents reviewed by Business Insider, new pay guidelines for Tesla workers were implemented on January 8. Why some Tesla workers aren’t focused on UAW payDespite the pay discrepancy, some Tesla workers previously told BI they’d be hesitant to join a union. But the German union IG Metall said last year that some Tesla workers at the company's Brandenburg plant had joined its union.
Persons: , Tesla, Stellantis, aren’t, Elon, “ It’s, Musk, Metall Organizations: unionizing, UAW, NEW, Service, Business, United Auto Workers, Ford, GM, EV, National Labor Relations Board, NLRB Locations: Buffalo , New York, rehire, company's Brandenburg
The Dearborn, Michigan, automaker posted a $523 million net loss from October through December versus a $1.26 billion profit for the same period a year ago. Ford reported a $1.7 billion noncash accounting loss during the quarter on remeasurement of pension and other post-retirement employee benefits. UAW workers shut down the company’s largest and most profitable factory in Louisville, Kentucky, which makes big SUVs and heavy-duty pickup trucks. The UAW strike began Sept. 15, targeting assembly plants and other facilities at Ford, General Motors and Jeep maker Stellantis. At the end of the contract, top-scale assembly workers will make about $42 per hour, plus they’ll get annual profit-sharing checks.
Persons: , Ford Organizations: DETROIT, — Ford Motor Co, United Auto Workers, Wall, FactSet, Revenue, UAW, Ford, General Motors Locations: Dearborn , Michigan, Louisville , Kentucky
Check out the companies making headlines before the bell: Estee Lauder — The cosmetics stock jumped 15% after Estee Lauder beat expectations with its latest results. In its second quarter, Estee Lauder reported adjusted earnings of 88 cents per share, topping the FactSet consensus estimate of 54 cents per share. Caterpillar — Shares of the heavy machinery maker popped more than 4% after the company reported adjusted earnings per share of $5.23 for the fourth quarter. In its first quarter, the industrial gas supplier reported adjusted earnings of $2.82 per share, weaker than earnings of $3.00 per share expected by analysts polled by StreetAccount. Stellantis — Stellantis shares slid 1.7% after Italian daily Il Messaggero , citing financial sources, reported the French government is reviewing a merger between Stellantis and Renault to compete with German and Chinese automakers, according to FactSet.
Persons: Estee Lauder, Catalent, Goldman Sachs, Il, McDonald's, — CNBC's Brian Evans, Michelle Fox, Fred Imbert, Hakyung Kim, Pia Singh Organizations: Novo Holdings, Caterpillar —, Revenue, North America . Air Products, Chemicals, Air Products, StreetAccount, JPMorgan, Nvidia —, Stellantis, Renault, McDonald's, Merck Animal Health, Mattel —, Warner Bros Locations: North America, StreetAccount .
The Tesla rival pioneering battery-swappingFounded by entrepreneur William Li — sometimes referred to as "China's Elon Musk" — in 2014, Nio has built a network of more than 2,000 battery swap stations in China. Experts told BI that battery swapping offers a solution to many of those concerns — in theory. Ample battery swapping technology promises to swap out an EV battery in under five minutes. It's a heavy innovation because battery swap is closely connected with the vehicle design and the sales model," said Dr Shen. Ample, which in the future plans to charge users a battery subscription fee to use its swap stations, has battery swap stations operating in Spain, Japan, and California, where it has worked mainly with fleet providers such as Uber.
Persons: , William Li —, China's Elon, Nio, Fei Shen, William Li, HECTOR RETAMAL, JAC, Shen, Dylan Khoo, John Helveston, Helveston, Khoo, John De Souza, De Souza Organizations: Service, Business, EV, Chery, ABI Research, George Washington University, Fiat Locations: China, Europe, West, San Francisco, Spain, Japan, California
The job is clean, high-tech and skilled – all key recruitment points as the company looks to add to its ranks in the year to come. It hopes to double its 100-person manufacturing workforce by the end of the year. Finding people who have the training to do those jobs may prove challenging. Ample is running apprenticeship partnerships with the City College of San Francisco, Laney College and the College of San Mateo, launched as a result of the Inflation Reduction Act. But there are classes you will take that will fundamentally increase your ability to the job really, really well, or do it safely even, or be able to be more effective," Hassounah said.
Persons: Stellantis, Uber, Khaled Hassounah, Hassounah Organizations: EV, Daimler, CNBC, City College of San, Laney College, College of San Locations: Bay, U.S, City College of San Francisco, College of San Mateo
Here are Thursday's biggest calls on Wall Street: Morgan Stanley downgrades ZoomInfo to equal weight from overweight Morgan Stanley said it sees a slowing recovery for the software company. Morgan Stanley reiterates General Motors as overweight Morgan Stanley said it's standing by the auto giant and that GM shares are "cheap." Mizuho reiterates Nvidia as buy Mizuho said it's standing by the stock heading into its GTC Conference in March. Morgan Stanley names Docebo a top pick Morgan Stanley named the ed-tech company a top pick. " Morgan Stanley reiterates Bloom Energy as overweight Morgan Stanley said the energy company is an "underappreciated AI winner."
Persons: Morgan Stanley downgrades ZoomInfo, Morgan Stanley, Oppenheimer, AAPL, it's, Mizuho, Goldman Sachs, Goldman, Redburn, Tesla, Daiwa, Jefferies, StoneCo, Wells, JPMorgan downgrades Lennox, LII, Docebo, Kraft Heinz, Mondelez, Kate McShane, Wolfe, Cash Organizations: OW, Apple, Motors, Nvidia, Conference, Citi, Qualcomm, Samsung, Deutsche Bank, Deutsche, Humana, Microsoft, Rockwell Automation, Rockwell, JPMorgan, UBS, SilverBow Resources, Regency, Kraft, Target, RBC downgrades New York Community Bancorp, RBC, New, Community Bancorp, Bloom Energy, Boston Scientific, Mizuho Locations: Boston
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