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Analysts said tariffs on cars imported from Mexico would have dire consequences for US automakers. Tesla announced in March 2023 that it was planning to build its seventh gigafactory near the industrial hub of Monterrey, Mexico. Trump vowed to clamp down on automakers building cars in Mexico on the campaign trail, and the prospect of new tariffs could force US automakers such as Tesla to make some hard choices about operational or planned factories in Mexico. Analysts told BI that the tariffs floated by Trump would deter automakers such as Tesla from investing in Mexico. Other automakers have expanded their presence in Mexico, despite the uncertainty of the election and the prospect of tariffs under a second Trump term.
Persons: Donald Trump, Elon Musk, , Tesla, Trump, It's, Donald Trump's, Alex Brandon, Musk, Sam Fiorani, Fiorani, Ford, David Whiston, Scott Olson, BYD, Stephanie Brinley, Alanis King, Brinley, Stellantis Organizations: Service, Mexico —, AP, UBS, Trump, AutoForecast Solutions, General Motors, Ford, Getty, Toyota, Tacoma, Nissan, Volkswagen, BYD, Chrysler, Street Journal, BMW, P Global, Toyota Tacoma, GM Locations: Mexico, Monterrey, Detroit, United States, Cuautitlan, Toluca, San Luis Potosí
Electric vehicles, trade, tariffs, China, emissions regulations and labor are among the top issues automakers are monitoring, according to industry executives and policy experts. Harris vs. TrumpOfficials expect a Harris victory to be a continuation, but not a copy, of the past four years under Biden. Republican presidential nominee and former U.S. President Donald Trump speaks as he visits a campaign office in Hamtramck, Michigan, U.S. October 18, 2024. Republicans, led by Trump, have largely condemned EVs, saying that they are being forced upon consumers and that they will ruin the U.S. automotive industry. LaborOf the many issues regarding the automotive industry, officials who spoke to CNBC were nearly unanimous regarding labor: They're concerned a Harris win would continue to mean increased power for organized labor.
Persons: Bill Pugliano, Kamala Harris, Donald Trump, Joe Biden, Harris, Jefferies, Philippe Houchois, Biden, Shawn Fain, Drew Angerer, Brian Snyder, , Elon Musk's, Trump, Pablo Di Si, EVs, Harris hasn't, Peter Rawlinson, Rawlinson, That's, Trump's, USMCA, Mary Barra, hasn't, Fain Organizations: Ford, Ford Dearborn Plant, Getty, DETROIT, Motor, Great, Trump, CNBC, Trump Officials, United Auto Workers, Democratic, International Union of Painters, AFP, Republican, Reuters, Motors, Ford Motor, Chrysler, EV, Lucid, Tesla, California Air Resources, D.C, District of Columbia, Alliance for Automotive Innovation, U.S . Officials, IRA Electric, Volkswagen Group of America, Automotive, Republicans, Environmental Protection Agency, . North, North American Free Trade, Jefferies, Labor, Democratic National Convention, UAW Locations: Dearborn , Michigan, Michigan, Motor City, Great Lakes State, China, Macomb , Michigan, California, Hamtramck , Michigan, U.S, Detroit, Washington , Oregon, New York, Washington, . North American, United States, Mexico, Canada, American
Insider Today: America's billionaire hub
  + stars: | 2024-10-19 | by ( Joi-Marie Mckenzie | ) www.businessinsider.com   time to read: +6 min
This post originally appeared in the Insider Today newsletter. download the app Email address Sign up By clicking “Sign Up”, you accept our Terms of Service and Privacy Policy . You can opt-out at any time by visiting our Preferences page or by clicking "unsubscribe" at the bottom of the email. European manufacturers are trying to claw back some of the market share of electric vehicles from their Chinese competitors. AdvertisementMore of this week's top reads:The Insider Today team: Dan DeFrancesco, deputy editor and anchor, in New York City.
Persons: , Siri, James Bond, Tom Carter, Ram, Fiat —, Leapmotor, Carlos Tavares, Joey Hadden, Jackson, It's, BI's Joey Hadden, Taylor, Chelsea Jia Feng, Taylor Swift, Swift, she'll, Konrad Krajewski, Uber, Priyanka Rajput, Troy Aikman, Anna Kendrick, Jason Segel, Harrison Ford, Peacock, Elisabeth Finch, Rebecca Zisser, We've, grout, Dan DeFrancesco, Jordan Parker Erb, Lisa Ryan, Amanda Yen, Grace Lett Organizations: Business, Service, Getty, BYD's, Paris, European Union, Jeep, Fiat, Economic Policy Institute, Target, BI, NFL, Apple, Netflix Locations: London, China, Jackson Hole , Wyoming, York City, Manhattan, LaGuardia, ozina, caked, Patagonia, New York City, New York, Chicago
Wells Fargo — Shares of the San Francisco-based lender rose 3%, helped by better-than-expected earnings. However, the bank's revenue of $20.37 billion came in below the $20.42 billion expected, and Wells experienced an 11% decline in net interest income. Tesla , Uber — Tesla shares tumbled 6.4% after its event for the robotaxi, a self-driving cab concept, left investors feeling underwhelmed. Affirm , Flywire — Affirm shares popped 3.1% after Wells Fargo upgraded the buy-now-pay-later stock to overweight from equal weight. Elsewhere in the digital payments space, Wells Fargo downgraded Flywire to equal weight from overweight, sending shares down 2.7%.
Persons: Wells, JPMorgan Chase, Tesla, underwhelmed, Carlos Tavares, Flywire, Mobileye, Morgan Stanley, Kinder Morgan, Ferrari, Lisa Kailai Han, Jesse Pound, Michelle Fox, Yun Li, Sean Conlon Organizations: LSEG, JPMorgan, Revenue, Bank of America, BlackRock, Mizuho, Bank of Locations: San Francisco, Wells, Flywire, Atlassian, China
EVgo — Shares advanced more than 9% after JPMorgan upgraded the electric vehicle charging company to overweight . Levi Strauss — Shares plunged 12% after the denim maker trimmed its full-year revenue guidance and delivered fiscal third-quarter revenue that missed analysts' expectations. Constellation Brands — The beverage company rose slightly on the back of better-than-expected fiscal second-quarter earnings. Revenue of $2.92 billion, however, marginally missed expectations. Stellantis — The automaker was down more than 3% in the premarket after a Barclays downgrade to equal weight from overweight.
Persons: Mizuho, Jensen Huang, CNBC's, Blackwell, Eli Lilly, Bill Peterson, Levi Strauss —, Stellantis, Henning Cosman, — CNBC's Brian Evans, Lisa Han, Jesse Pound, Sean Conlon Organizations: Mizuho, Nvidia –, U.S . Food, Drug Administration, JPMorgan, Dockers, Constellation Brands, Barclays Locations: U.S
Check out the companies making headlines in midday trading: Nio — The U.S.-listed shares of the Chinese electric vehicle maker climbed 9.5% after Nio announced a 13.3 billion yuan cash injection for its Nio China business. The transactions are expected to be completed by year-end, and will reduce Nio Inc.'s stake in Nio China to 88.3% from its current 92.1%. CVS Health — Shares jumped 3.3% on news that hedge fund Glenview Capital intends to meet with CVS Health's executives to boost the struggling business. Crypto stocks — Stocks tied to the price of bitcoin retreated with the cryptocurrency following a sizeable rally last week. Cumberland Hospital for Children and Adolescents is an "indirect subsidiary" of Universal Health Services, according to an 8-K filing.
Persons: Nio, Alibaba, Stocks, bitcoin, Coinbase, MicroStrategy, Bitcoin, EchoStar, Piper Sandler, Stephen Scouten, — CNBC's Sean Conlon, Tanaya Macheel, Sarah Min, Jesse Pound, Pia Singh Organizations: Nio Inc, GM, Ford, CVS, , Glenview Capital, CNBC, DirecTV, Amerant, Moderna, Universal Health Services, Cumberland Hospital for Children Locations: U.S, China, Glenview, Florida
McDonald's — Shares were down slightly in the premarket after the fast food giant reported second-quarter results that missed analyst expectations . Bristol-Myers Squibb — The pharma stock shed 1.5% following a downgrade to underweight from equal weight at Barclays. This call comes after Bristol-Myers Squibb issued better-than-expected earnings and raised its full-year guidance on Friday. Tesla — The electric vehicle maker advanced 1.5% after bring crowned the top pick U.S. auto stock by Morgan Stanley analyst Adam Jonas. The Marvel movie raked in more than $200 million during its opening weekend, making it the strongest debut on record for an R-rated film.
Persons: McDonald's, Olin, Myers Squibb, Myers, Tesla, Morgan Stanley, Adam Jonas, Stellantis, Microstrategy, , Samantha Subin, Sarah Min, Michelle Fox, Fred Imbert Organizations: JPMorgan, Technologies, Guggenheim, Myers, pharma, Barclays, Myers Squibb, Bristol, Ford, Deutsche Bank, Chrysler, Dodge, Disney, Marvel Locations: Bristol, Monday's premarket
Revvity — The life sciences company advanced 6% after posting a second-quarter earnings beat. Revvity's adjusted earnings of $1.22 per share topped the FactSet estimate of $1.12 per share. The new Marvel movie topped $200 million at the domestic box office, a record opening weekend for an R-rated film. Second-quarter adjusted earnings per share came in at 96 cents, versus the expected consensus estimate of 92 cents, per FactSet. The stock plunged more than 40% in the previous session after Dexcom reported disappointing second-quarter results and offered weak guidance.
Persons: Tesla, Morgan Stanley, Adam Jonas, Walt Disney, Dexcom, — CNBC's Sean Conlon, Michelle Fox, Alex Harring, Jesse Pound, Samantha Subin Organizations: Management, Guggenheim, Ford, Deutsche Bank, Walt Disney —, Marvel, Semiconductor —, Revenue, Dexcom, Health Canada
DETROIT – Ford Motor is leading a decline in major U.S. automotive stocks this week amid disappointing results and investor skepticism around future performance. Shares of Ford were off by more than 17% in early trading Thursday – on pace for their worst decline since 2009 – after missing Wall Street's bottom-line earnings expectations due to warranty problems, a reoccurring issue with the company. Shares of General Motors and Stellantis were notably off as well after reporting their results this week. Shares of Tesla , which reported results Tuesday afternoon, were up slightly Thursday after their largest daily decline since 2020 on Wednesday. GM, down roughly 7% this week, outperformed Wall Street's expectations for the second quarter and increased its guidance for the year.
Persons: , Stellantis —, Stellantis, Carlos Tavares Organizations: New York, DETROIT, Ford, General Motors, Tesla, — Ford, GM, NYSE Locations: Detroit
Check out the companies making headlines in midday trading: Adobe — The software stock surged 14% on stronger-than-expected quarterly results. Adobe posted adjusted earnings of $4.48 per share on $5.31 billion in revenue and boosted its full-year guidance. JPMorgan also upgraded shares to overweight from neutral. Hasbro — The toymaker's shares jumped 4.8% on the back of an upgrade from Bank of America to buy from neutral. Dell Technologies — The PC maker fell more than 1% after CEO Michael Dell disclosed the sale of 5.7 million shares.
Persons: RH, LSEG, Zscaler, Keith Gill, Stellantis, Michael Dell, , Alex Harring, Michelle Fox, Pia Singh Organizations: Adobe, JPMorgan, Wall, Hasbro, Bank of America, Zero Trust Network Security, Boeing — Boeing, Federal Aviation Administration, Airbus, New York Times, GameStop, Dell Technologies Locations: Bank, U.S
Win Mcnamee | Getty ImagesDETROIT – President Joe Biden's plan to quadruple tariffs on China-made electric vehicles is unlikely to stave off the threat of more Chinese cars and trucks on U.S. roadways. Automotive and trade experts say the increased tariffs are a near-term protectionism act that may delay, but won't stop, Chinese automakers from coming to the U.S. with EVs. The EV tariffs, including other increases regarding battery materials, were among new tariff rates on $18 billion worth of Chinese imports. The quality and build of vehicles by Chinese automakers have gotten significantly better in recent years, as the Chinese government has subsidized their operations to grow domestic production. GM and others have found it hard to compete against budget and mainstream Chinese vehicles, including EVs.
Persons: Joe Biden, Win Mcnamee, Joe Biden's, It's, Dan Hearsch, Stellantis —, Warren Buffett, BYD, Morgan Stanley, Tim Hsiao, Lincoln Organizations: White, Getty, DETROIT, Communist, U.S . Automotive, Motors, U.S, — GM, Ford Motor, Chrysler, Warren, EV, Wall Street, China Association of Automobile Manufacturers, U.S . Vehicles, Lincoln Nautilus, Volvo, Biden Administration Locations: Rose, Washington , DC, China, Mexico, Americas, U.S
Check out the companies making headlines in midday trading: Meme stocks — Meme stocks roared for a second day with GameStop surging more than 65% and AMC popping over 70%. AMC's Tuesday rally came even after the movie theater said it completed a $250 million stock sale during Monday's wild trading. Sony — U.S.-listed shares jumped 5.3% after quarterly revenue came in at 3.5 trillion yen, topping the consensus expectation of 2.89 trillion yen from analysts polled by LSEG. On Holding — The shoe maker jumped 16% after first-quarter earnings came in well ahead of analysts' expectations. Boston Beer Company — Shares added 1% after the beer brewer was upgraded by Jefferies to buy from hold.
Persons: United, Newell Brands, Roth, , Yun Li, Michelle Fox, Samantha Subin, Hakyung Kim, Brian Evans Organizations: GameStop, AMC, Sony —, LSEG, Vodafone — U.S, United Airlines —, Barclays, Boston Beer, Jefferies, JPMorgan Locations: Europe
Eli Lilly also hiked its full-year guidance for adjusted earnings and revenue, topping analysts' expectations. 3M – Shares advanced 7.7% after the maker of industrial products posted earnings of $2.39 per share on revenues of $7.72 billion. First-quarter revenue at the Netherlands-based automaker slid 12% due to lower sales plus foreign exchange effects, even as net pricing remained strong. HSBC — HSBC, Europe's largest bank by assets, added 4.2% after the firm beat first-quarter earnings expectations and announced the departure of its Group Chief Executive Officer, Noel Quinn. PayPal saw first-quarter revenue of $7.7 billion, topping analysts' $7.51 billion consensus estimate, according to LSEG.
Persons: Eli Lilly —, Eli Lilly, Meanwehile, Goldman Sachs, Coke, Tesla, Noel Quinn, Yun Li, Jesse Pound, Michelle Fox Theobald Organizations: Chrysler, HSBC — HSBC, GE Healthcare Technologies, GE, PayPal Locations: Chicago, Netherlands, Atlanta, China
The rise of BYD and other Chinese automakers led Tesla CEO Elon Musk in January to warn that Chinese automakers will "demolish" global rivals without trade barriers. Caresoft, an engineering benchmarking and consulting firm, has already torn down one China-built BYD Seagull and is preparing to do another. Michael Wayland / CNBCThe consulting firm tore apart the BYD Seagull piece by piece to benchmark the small EV against vehicles from other startups and traditional automakers. Its initial study of the BYD Seagull found it to be efficiently and simplistically designed, engineered and executed, but with unexpected quality and anticipated reliability. Growing concernsBYD's rise comes at a precarious time for global auto industry dynamics.
Persons: It's, Terry Woychowski, Warren Buffett, , BYD, Tesla, Elon Musk, Caresoft Bernstein, Nissan, Michael Wayland, Caresoft, simplistically, Woychowski, Mathew Vachaparampil, CNBC BYD, Stellantis —, Donald Trump, Zach Gibson, Jennifer Granholm, Republican Sen, Marco Rubio, Trump, , GM Dong, Tang, Marin Gjaja, Gjaja, Ford, you've, Evelyn Cheng, Dylan Butts Organizations: Shanghai International Automobile Industry, National Exhibition, Convention Center, Visual China, Getty, U.S, General Motors, Caresoft, Alliance for American Manufacturing, Overseas, Chevrolet, Nissan Leaf, Bolt, Chicago Federal Reserve, BYD, CNBC, Cox Automotive, Seagull, Tesla, Toyota Motor, Nissan Motor, Honda Motor, Hyundai, Kia, — GM, Ford, Chrysler, U.S ., Washington , D.C, Bloomberg, Republican, North American Free Trade, Republicans, Buick, SAIC, GM, GM Dong Yue Motors Co, Detroit Locations: Shanghai, LIVONIA, Mich, , China, Europe, Latin America, Detroit, Texas, Germany, Japan, U.S, Livonia , Michigan, America, XPENG, Mexico, Thailand, Brazil, Indonesia, Hungary, Uzbekistan, ., Washington ,, United States, Marco Rubio of Florida, Yantai, Shandong Province
Volkswagen employees in Tennessee who are hoping to join the United Automobile Workers asked a federal agency on Monday to hold an election, a key step toward the union’s longtime goal of organizing nonunion factories across the South. With the union’s backing, Volkswagen workers filed a petition with the National Labor Relations Board asking for a vote on U.A.W. representation, saying that more than 70 percent of the 4,000 eligible workers at the plant had signed cards supporting the union. “Today, we are one step closer to making a good job at Volkswagen into a great career,” Isaac Meadows, an assembly worker at the plant, said in a statement. If held, an election would be the first test of the U.A.W.’s newfound strength after staging a wave of strikes in the fall against the three Detroit automakers — General Motors, Ford Motor and Stellantis — and winning record wage increases.
Persons: ” Isaac Meadows, , Organizations: United Automobile Workers, Volkswagen, National Labor Relations Board, , Detroit, , Motors, Ford Motor Locations: Tennessee
The Ami is most ridiculous "car" I've ever driven — but it turns heads and is a lot of fun too. I thought I knew what to expect, but it wasn't until the "car" was driven off the trailer that I realized I'd taken custody of a large lawnmower. A large electric lawnmower. The Ami (French for "friend") also looked like it'd been washed in an army surplus cycle. Appropriately enough I almost made a new friend before I'd even parked, as a passer-by asked if I'd just bought it.
Persons: Ami, , Ram, Romeo —, I'd Organizations: Service, Dodge, Peugeot Locations: London
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
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
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
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 .
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
SoFi Technologies — Shares seesawed as traders digested the company's latest quarterly results. McDonald's — Shares gained 2.3% after the company beat both top and bottom lines for the third quarter. Western Digital — Shares of the data storage company jumped 6% after the company performed better than analysts polled by LSEG expected in the fiscal first quarter. Invitation Homes — The home leasing company rose nearly 1% following an upgrade to outperform by Oppenheimer. Saia — The transportation stock rose 3.4% on the back of an upgrade to outperform from peer perform by Wolfe Research.
Persons: SoFi, originations, McDonald's, Stellantis, LSEG, Revvity, FactSet, Oppenheimer, L3Harris, Raymond James, Eastman, AbbVie, Tesla, Bernstein, TD Cowen, , Femsa, Saia, Jesse Pound, Samantha Subin, Pia Singh, Hakyung Kim, Justin Sullivan Organizations: General Motors, GM, CNBC, Ford, Spirit Realty Capital, Realty, Western Digital, Semiconductor, FactSet, Eastman Chemical —, JPMorgan, Barclays, Citi, Wolfe Research, SoFi Technologies Locations: U.S, San Francisco , California
CNN —People shopping for electric vehicles starting next year will be able to get a $7,500 federal tax credit off the sticker price while at the dealership, rather than having to wait months to receive their tax returns. The changes to how car buyers can get the federal tax break on EVs — part of the Inflation Reduction Act — were announced by the Biden administration on Friday, and are being rolled out to car dealerships before they take effect starting January 1. More foreign companies are building EV factories in the US in order to take advantage of the tax credits in the future. The Biden administration is currently contacting dealers with information on how they register with a new federal website to eventually offer consumers up-front tax credits. Car dealers will then be reimbursed by the government within 72 hours of selling the car, according to a Treasury news release.
Persons: Biden, , Laurel Blatchford, Ford Organizations: CNN, Treasury, , IRS, General Motors, Volkswagen, George Washington University
In a few cases, according to NHTSA, ARC air bag inflators could be blocked by small pieces of debris, stopping the gases from escaping as they should. In May 2023, General Motors recalled 1 million GM vehicles with the air bags. NHTSA estimated the risk of one of these inflators rupturing at one in every 370,000 air bag deployments. But officials said the only way to know if an air bag has the defect is for it to actually rupture. NHTSA and various automakers are still working to get vehicle owners to replace all the air bags involved in that recall.
Persons: Jacob Tarvis, Marlene Beaudoin, Tarvis, inflators, Kia Optima, General Motors, , Donna Glassbrenner, Steve Gold, Gold, , — Ford Organizations: CNN, Traffic Safety Administration, ARC Automotive, Delphi Automotive Systems, NHTSA, ARC, Chrysler Town &, General, GM, BMW, Fiat Chrysler Automobiles —, Hyundai, Kia, Benz, Porsche, Tesla, Toyota, Volkswagen Locations: United States, Canada, Turkey, Traverse
By 9 am ET, more than 75,000 Kaiser workers plan to join picket lines, marking the largest health care strike in US history. In the wake of pandemic, however, health care workers in particular have been fighting for safer and more secure work environments. Many health care employees are set to join the picket lines, including nursing staff, dietary workers, receptionists, optometrists, and pharmacists. Kaiser Permanente “members” pay dues to the organization to gain access to Kaiser Permanente’s wide-ranging health care services. The increased number of health care strikes have happened despite health care workers making up only about 9% of private sector union members nationwide.
Persons: Kaiser, Kaiser Permanente, James Santos, , , Permanente, ” Renee Saldana, they’re, , “ Kaiser Permanente, CNN’s Chris Isidore Organizations: CNN, Kaiser Permanente, Kaiser, Washington DC, SEIU, UHW, “ Workers, United Auto Workers, Ford, General Motors, Writers Guild of America, Hollywood, of Labor Statistics Locations: Virginia, Washington, DC, United States, California , Colorado, Washington and Oregon, Kaiser, York City, “ Kaiser
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