Kamis, 17 Oktober 2019

Deal keeps Detroit-Hamtramck open with electric pickup - Detroit Free Press

Detroit-Hamtramck Assembly Plant would remain open to produce an electric pickup under the proposed deal between the UAW and General Motors, according to people familiar with the tentative agreement.

The news Wednesday confirms earlier Free Press reporting that an electric pickup is slated for the plant closest to General Motors' headquarters at the Renaissance Center in downtown Detroit.

Additional details, including the number of electric pickups to be produced at D-Ham, as it's known locally, how many workers would be needed and when the plant would be retooled, were not immediately available. The fate of the tentative agreement is contingent on a positive ratification vote.

The 4-million-square-foot plant, which straddles the border of Detroit and Hamtramck, was among those slated to be "unallocated" in GM's surprise announcement on future product last year. However, the plant was not idled before the strike, and was still operating on an extension granted in February to produce the Cadillac CT6 and Chevrolet Impala. News about the future of other unallocated plants, such as the one in Lordstown, Ohio, was not available.

Workers on the picket line at D-Ham Wednesday who spoke to the Free Press before the electric pickup news was confirmed sounded pleased at the prospect of a new vehicle but were also wary about what it would mean for them. Automakers have been ramping up production plans for more electrification in their fleets, but EVs are still a fraction of the new vehicle market.

"Any product is a good product. Whether people are ready for an electric pickup ...," pondered Kurt Fiegel, 66, of Roseville, noting that "they didn't have much luck with the Volt."

The Chevy Volt, a plug-in hybrid, was made at D-Ham but was among a number of car models discontinued by GM, with production ending earlier this year. The company still has its all-electric Chevy Bolt, but that vehicle is a relatively low volume offering.

More: GM, UAW proposed tentative agreement's ratification bonus and vacation

More: GM, UAW tentative deal: Everything we know, what's next

More: UAW to boost strike pay to $275 per week

GM finds itself in competition on electric pickups with not just established players that have announced plans for them, but also newcomers, such as Rivian, which has generated lots of interest for its planned electric SUV and pickup.

Rivian, with which GM had reportedly been in talks at one point, has secured significant investments from Ford and Amazon. That company, with offices in Plymouth Township west of Detroit, on Sunday drew a crowd as it showed off its vehicles in Normal, Illinois, where it has its manufacturing plant.

Kristin Dziczek, vice president of industry, labor and economics at the Center for Automotive Research in Ann Arbor, said details on production of any new electric vehicle will be key for D-Ham in part because of the competition.

"Everybody's got electric pickups coming in the next couple of years, even an electric F-150. They're all trying to get that out to market pretty soon," Dziczek said.

The depletion of $7,500 federal tax credits for buyers of electric vehicles from both GM and Tesla raises questions about the companies' abilities to maintain or grow electric vehicle demand as they face competitors that still retain the incentives, she said.

For D-Ham, another issue would be how many electric pickups would be built. If it's 50,000 or less, another product would likely be needed there, she said.

While many predict that electric vehicles are the future for the automotive industry, production of the vehicles themselves are expected to employ fewer workers because the vehicles have fewer parts. 

Getting the news

Word that a tentative agreement with GM had been reached came as Maurice Faust arrived for his four-hour picket shift in the midst of a cold drizzle at D-Ham at noon Wednesday.

"I just got it off my text as I was pulling up in my truck," said Faust, a 42-year GM veteran who lives in Southfield and has worked at the plant since 1997.

Faust, 63, is hopeful the deal will meet the needs of workers, but if not, he said he's prepared to stay on strike longer, noting his weather-appropriate jacket.

"If need be I'll do what I have to do," he said, noting the message behind the strike. "You've got to show them you can starve, just like they can starve."

The announcement of a proposed tentative agreement on the 31st day of the UAW's national strike against GM does not mean workers will automatically return to their jobs. The UAW National GM Council is set to meet Thursday to consider recommending the deal to the full membership and could either continue the strike pending ratification or stop it. 

D-Ham workers walking the picket line in their rain gear Wednesday sounded, like Faust, generally pleased with the news of a potential deal but insisted that certain issues, including job security and a path for temporary workers to become permanent, must be addressed. Several said they thought the presence of GM Chairman and CEO Mary Barra at recent negotiating sessions likely had an impact on talks. 

'Beautiful day to picket'

In spite of the rain, Fiegel said it was a "beautiful day to picket," as he considered the prospect of a settlement. He's three months away from retirement, but remains concerned about the other workers, including a son-in-law, who will deal with the results of any new contract. He'd like to see a better pension benefit, but also a better deal for temps, with some workers making half what others make and creating "an unhappy workplace."

For Kathy Faith, 48, of Casco, "seeing is believing."

While the news of a tentative agreement sounds promising, Faith wants to see details. Like her co-workers, she's also concerned about temporary workers.

"You work for a company for so long, that should count," said Faith, who works in the paint shop.

As for an electric pickup at the plant? That's a positive for Faith because it means D-Ham would stay open, but she also called it a win-lose situation because of the expectation of fewer workers.

If the plant were to get additional products beyond just an electric pickup, "it'd be wonderful," she said.

GM in general should make more products in U.S. plants, Faith said.

"We buy the products, we should be making the products," she said, noting that she means no disrespect to Mexican workers.

Contact Eric D. Lawrence: elawrence@freepress.com or (313) 223-4272. Follow him on Twitter: @_ericdlawrence.

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https://www.freep.com/story/money/cars/general-motors/2019/10/17/uaw-gm-detroit-hamtramck-electric-pickup/3998740002/

2019-10-17 10:00:00Z
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Is the G.M. Strike Over? 5 Key Questions, Answered - The New York Times

After a monthlong strike that has idled General Motors plants across the Midwest and South, union leaders will gather on Thursday in Detroit to consider a deal that could send the picketing autoworkers back to the assembly lines.

The details of the tentative agreement have not been announced, but the union, the United Automobile Workers, said it had “achieved major wins.” According to people familiar with the agreement, it includes wage increases and a formula for allowing temporary workers to become full-time employees.

But details about some of the most contentious issues in the negotiations, including the status of plants that G.M. planned to shut down, have yet to emerge. It was also unclear what commitments G.M. made about expanding domestic factory capacity or shifting production to the United States from Mexico, both union priorities.

An end to the strike would come as a relief to the trucking companies and auto suppliers that provide parts to G.M. Since the strike began on Sept. 15, suppliers have had to lay off or cut wages for tens of thousands of workers, as the economic ripple effects of the strike have spread from Canada to Mexico.

People familiar with the agreement said that it included a signing bonus higher than the $8,000 each worker received in the last contract in 2015, and that it would make no change to the employee share of health care contributions. They said workers would also get 3 percent wage increases in two of the four years of the contract and 4 percent lump-sum payments in the other two.

The deal would provide a formula for temporary workers to become full-fledged employees, they said, but they did not elaborate. The use of temporary employees, who make up 7 percent of the G.M. work force, was reportedly a sticking point in the talks, along with possible modifications to a two-tier wage system that paid less to more recent hires.

If officials of the union’s G.M. locals accept the tentative agreement on Thursday, they could call an immediate end to the strike. They could also continue the walkout until the deal is ratified by a majority of the 49,000 U.A.W. members employed by G.M.

Wiley Turnage, president of Local 22, which represents 700 workers at G.M.’s Detroit-Hamtramck plant, said he needed to review the details of the agreement before deciding whether to vote in favor of it on Thursday.

“It has to be fair to our members,” he said.

Ratification is not a foregone conclusion. The last time the U.A.W. negotiated a contract with G.M., approval was delayed for a month in part because the automaker’s skilled-trades workers rejected the terms.

One of the union’s main objectives was getting G.M. to reopen a car factory in Lordstown, Ohio, a goal that President Trump endorsed. G.M. closed that plant, and others in Baltimore and in Warren, Mich., as part of a cost-cutting effort that eliminated 2,800 factory jobs and thousands of white-collar positions.

Another sticking point was the automaker’s tiered wage structure: While workers who started with G.M. before 2007 earn about $31 an hour, most of those hired since then make much less, and so-called temporary workers are at the bottom of the scale at about $15 an hour.

Every day the strike continued, the economic ramifications spread throughout the auto supply chain, resulting in layoffs at factories that supply G.M. with parts and disrupting restaurants that rely on the patronage of autoworkers.

In Mexico and Canada, G.M. plants that depend on American factories have been shut down, putting thousands out of work. In Flint, Mich., at least 1,200 truckers and production employees from suppliers were out of work because of the strike, including hundreds from Lear, a supplier of seats to G.M.

The strike also cost the union, its members and G.M. hundreds of millions of dollars in lost dues, wages and revenue. In the United States, 34 G.M. plants went dark, forcing striking workers to make do with a $250-a-week subsidy from the union.

If the General Motors contract is ratified, the U.A.W. will turn its focus to Ford Motor or Fiat Chrysler. Contracts with those manufacturers expired on Sept. 14, but workers continued reporting to assembly lines while the union negotiated with G.M.

G.M. has a smaller U.A.W. work force than its Detroit rivals. But the union took aim at G.M. as the automaker has earned solid profits — it made $35 billion in North America over the last three years — while closing plants in the United States.

The U.A.W. is likely to try to reach similar terms with Ford and Fiat Chrysler, a standard practice known as pattern bargaining.

Neal E. Boudette contributed reporting.

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https://www.nytimes.com/2019/10/17/business/gm-strike-whats-next.html

2019-10-17 09:00:00Z
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Dow Jones Futures: Netflix Earnings Crush Views, Marijuana Stock Cronos Group Soars; IBM Dives - Investor's Business Daily

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Dow Jones Futures: Netflix Earnings Crush Views, Marijuana Stock Cronos Group Soars; IBM Dives  Investor's Business Daily
https://www.investors.com/market-trend/stock-market-today/dow-jones-futures-netflix-earnings-marijuana-stocks-cronos-group-ibm/

2019-10-17 02:49:31Z
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Rabu, 16 Oktober 2019

Bank of America's stock jumps after profit beats expectations, revenue surprisingly rises - MarketWatch

Shares of Bank of America Corp. BAC, +2.02% rose 1.8% in premarket trading Wednesday, after the bank reported a third-quarter profit that fell less than expected, while revenue surprisingly increased, as consumer and global banking and wealth and investment management revenue increased to offset a slight decline in global markets revenue. Net income fell to $5.78 billion, or 56 cents a share, from $7.17 billion, or 66 cents a share, in the year-ago period. Total revenue rose to $22.81 billion from $22.72 billion, while the FactSet consensus was for a decline to $22.58 billion. Net interest income grew to $12.19 billion from $12.06 billion, above the FactSet consensus of $12.15 billion, and non-interest income slipped to $10.62 billion from $10.66 billion but topped expectations of $10.38 billion. Average loans rose 5% to $9 billion, driven by residential mortgages. Equities revenue grew 13% to $1.1 billion, helped by growth in client financing activities, while fixed income, currency and commodities revenue was flat at $2.1 billion as improvement in mortgages and municipal products was offset by weaker trading in FX and credit products. The stock has gained 2.6% over the past three months through Tuesday, while the Dow Jones Industrial Average DJIA, +0.89% has slipped 1.1%.

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https://www.marketwatch.com/story/bank-of-americas-stock-jumps-after-profit-beats-expectations-revenue-surprisingly-rises-2019-10-16

2019-10-16 11:05:00Z
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EU tells Broadcom to stop certain business deals in unusual move - CNBC

Broadcom Corp. signage is displayed outside of the company's headquarters in Irvine, California.

Patrick Fallon | Bloomberg | Getty Images

Broadcom has been ordered to stop applying certain exclusivity deals it has with six of its customers, amid an antitrust investigation carried out by the European Union.

The Brussels-based institution believes that part of Broadcom's business could be creating "serious and irreparable harm to competition."

The European Commission opened an in-depth investigation into the U.S. company in June. As part of this investigation, the Commission announced Wednesday that it's imposing interim measures to prevent any likely "harm" to competition, for three years. Broadcom must comply with these measures within 30 days from Wednesday.

"We have strong indications that Broadcom, the world's leading supplier of chipsets used for TV set-top boxes and modems, is engaging in anti-competitive practices," Margrethe Vestager, the EU's competition chief, said in a statement.

"We cannot let this happen, or else European customers and consumers would face higher prices and less choice and innovation. We, therefore, ordered Broadcom to immediately stop its conduct," Vestager added.

Broadcom, which is a major supplier to Apple, can choose to appeal to Wednesday's decision. Khanh Lam, spokesperson for Broadcom told CNBC via email: "Broadcom's contracts with the customers that the European Commission characterizes as exclusivity-inducing remain in force, other than the provisions at issue, and we intend to continue to support these customers going forward. We do not believe that these provisions have a meaningful effect on whether the customers choose to purchase Broadcom products."

The same spokesperson added: "We intend to appeal the Commission's decision to the European Courts and in the meantime comply with the Commission's order."

Broadcom shares closed at 290.32 on Tuesday, up by about 3% on the day. The stock is about 14% higher over the last 12 months.

European Commission gets tough

Wednesday's decision marks the first time in 18 years that the European Commission has decided to implement interim measures, opening a precedent to ongoing and future competition probes.

"It is for me something special. It doesn't say that now we have all cases lined up, where interim measures will be used, but it means that the tool is on the table and if we find cases that live up to the two things that have to be fulfilled at the same time, yes we will indeed use interim measures more often," Vestager told reporters in Brussels on Wednesday.

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https://www.cnbc.com/2019/10/16/broadcom-decision-by-european-commission-on-competition-probe.html

2019-10-16 10:53:28Z
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Selasa, 15 Oktober 2019

Stock futures edge higher as banks kick off earnings season - MarketWatch

Stock-index futures point to a slightly higher start for Wall Street Tuesday as the corporate earnings reporting season gets fully under way for the third quarter and investors weigh the implications of a partial U.S.-China trade deal

How are the major benchmarks faring?

Futures on the Dow Jones Industrial Average YMZ19, +0.42%  rose 78 points, or 0.3%, to 26,813, while S&P 500 futures ESZ19, +0.35%  gained 9.25 points, or 0.3%, to 2,974.75. Nasdaq-100 futures NQZ19, +0.26%  rose 22.5 points, or 0.3%, to 7,880.

The Dow DJIA, -0.11%  edged 29.23 points lower on Monday to end at 26,787.36, a loss of 0.1%. The S&P 500 SPX, -0.14%  closed 4.12 points lower, down 0.1%, at 2,966.15, while the Nasaq Composite COMP, -0.10%  lost 8.39 points, or 0.1%, to finish at 8,048.65.

Read: 5 prominent U.S. companies are most at fault for the earnings recession

What’s driving the market?

Third-quarter earnings season kicked off Tuesday morning with the release of a series of earnings reports from the nation’s largest banks reflecting a relatively healthy U.S. consumer and a more wary business sector.

Shares of JPMorgan Chase & Co. JPM, +0.27%  were higher in premarket action after reporting revenue and earnings that rose more than expected on the back of its consumer banking division, while Wells Fargo & Co. WFC, +0.12% reported a surprise increase in revenue, though its third-quarter profits fell more than expected.

Citigroup Inc. C, +0.20% shares rose before the start of trade on better-than expected increases in third-quarter profit and sales, but Goldman Sachs Group Inc. GS, +0.56% GS, +0.56% reported a steep 26% decline in profit from the year ago period, reflecting weakness in the mergers and acquisitions market and debt and equity underwriting.

“It’s a better time to be a traditional, consumer-facing bank than more of an institutional or trading bank,” Stephen Biggar, director of financial institution research at Argus Research told MarketWatch. “Underwriting and financial advisory were weak spots [in the third quarter], but the consumer is by and large steady-as-she -goes,” he added.

However, S&P 500 index company earnings are expected to fall 4.6% in the third quarter, according to Factset. This would be the first time that index company earnings have fallen for three straight quarters since the fourth of quarter of 2015 through the second quarter 2016, Factset analyst John Butters said.

Earnings forecasts focused on headwinds from the global economic growth slowdown and international trade policy uncertainty, with profit margins seen under pressure. However, corporate buybacks are again seen supporting earnings per share.

Check out: Banks look to put earnings recession in revers, but aren’t expected to succeed

Enthusiasm over a U.S.-China trade deal boosted stocks at the end of last week, but analysts said a lack of detail around planned tariff increases and other elements damped enthusiasm, leaving stocks to drift lower on Monday.

“The latest twist in the U.S.-China trade conflict is yet another reminder to investors not to get caught up in the hype,” said Han Tan, market analyst at FXTM, in a note. “Trying to bridge the conflicting interests between the world’s two largest economies is a gargantuan task; an undertaking that has already proven to be protracted and complicated.”

Speaking with reporters in London, St. Louis Fed President James Bullard said investors might be too optimistic about how long it takes to reach trade deals. He also emphasized that data on consumption, while strong, was “backwards looking” and said that was why he has been “emphasizing these downside risks and also emphasizing pre-emptive types of action to stay out of recession.”

Bullard dissented last month from the Federal Reserve’s decision to cut interest rates by a quarter point, calling instead for half-point decrease.

In its World Economic Outlook, published Tuesday, the IMF sees global economic growth falling to 3% this year, slowest pace since 2008 financial crisis.

Which stocks are in focus?

Shares of Dow component UnitedHealthGroup Inc. UNH, -0.67%  jumped in premarket trade after earnings and revenue came in above expectations and after the health-care services company raised its full-year outlook.

Fellow Dow constituent Johnson & Johnson JNJ, -0.46% reported earnings and revenue that rose more than Wall Street estimates, while the company raised its full-year guidance. The company’s stock rose 1.9% in premarket action.

Shares of BlackRock Inc. BLK, +0.05%  were on the rise before the start of trade Tuesday after reporting a smaller-than-expected fall in profit.

How are other markets trading?

The yield on the 10-year U.S. Treasury note TMUBMUSD10Y, -1.00%  fell to 1.696% from 1.748% late Friday. Bond markets were closed Monday for the Columbus Day holiday.

In commodities markets the price of crude oil CLX19, -0.07%  fell about 21 cents to $53.40 on the New York Mercantile Exchange and gold futures GCZ19, -0.37%  ticked down 50 cents to $1497.10 on Comex.

In Asia overnight, stocks trade mixed with Japan’s Nikkei NIK, +1.87%  rising 1.9%, the China CSI 300 000300, -0.43%  falling 0.4% and Hong Kong’s Hang Seng index HSI, -0.07%  falling 0.1%. In Europe, stocks were mostly higher, as the Stoxx Europe 600 SXXP, +0.47%  added 0.4%.

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https://www.marketwatch.com/story/stock-futures-edge-higher-as-banks-kick-off-earnings-season-2019-10-15

2019-10-15 12:15:00Z
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Stocks making the biggest moves premarket: JP Morgan, Goldman Sachs, BlackRock & more - CNBC

Check out the companies making headlines before the bell:

JPMorgan Chase – The bank reported quarterly profit of $2.68 per share, 23 cents a share above estimates. Revenue also beat Wall Street forecasts, helped by growth in home loans, auto loans, and credit cards.

BlackRock – The asset management firm beat estimates by 19 cents a share, with quarterly profit of $7.15 per share. Revenue came in essentially in line with analyst forecasts. Profit dropped from a year ago, however, as investors shifted money to fixed-income funds and other less profitable accounts.

Johnson & Johnson – The medical device and consumer products maker earned an adjusted $2.12 per share for the third quarter, compared to a consensus estimate of $2.01. Revenue also beat estimates, helped by growth in pharmaceuticals and medical devices.

Goldman Sachs – Goldman reported quarterly profit of $4.79 per share, 2 cents a share below estimates. Revenue was essentially in line with expectations.

UnitedHealth – UnitedHealth reported adjusted quarterly profit of $3.88 per share, beating consensus by 13 cents a share. Revenue came in above forecasts, as well. The company saw higher revenue in both its core health insurance business, as well as its pharmacy benefits management unit. The company also raised its full-year forecast.

Walmart – The retailer has begun its "InHome" service that deliveries groceries directly into a customer's home refrigerator. The service, which was first announced in June, will start in 3 areas – Kansas City, Pittsburgh, and Vero Beach, Florida.

Southwest Airlines – Southwest pilots are predicting that Boeing's 737 Max jet won't return to service until February. Boeing is still targeting a fourth-quarter return, and Southwest – along with United and American – are estimating that the jet will be back in the skies in January. Southwest is the biggest domestic user of the 737 Max jet.

Hilton Grand Vacations – The stock remains on watch after surging yesterday on a Bloomberg report that Apollo Global is offering $40 per share to buy the vacation time-share company.

General Motors – GM and the United Auto Workers union continue to negotiate, with a strike in its fifth week. The UAW has called a Thursday meeting of union leaders from around the nation to update them on the status of the talks.

Deere – Deere is spending billions to ramp up its leasing program, according to The Wall Street Journal, in an effort to combat declining demand for farm tractors and construction equipment.

Bloomin' Brands – The restaurant chain operator was downgraded to "hold" from "buy" at Deutsche Bank, which is cutting its third-quarter comparable sales estimate for the Outback Steakhouse parent to a 0.6% increase from 1.1%. Deutsche Bank is also becoming more conservative on comparable sales estimates for next year, as well.

Bed Bath & Beyond – Bed Bath & Beyond was upgraded to "overweight" from "sector weight" at KeyBanc, which points to a favorable near-term outlook for the housewares retailer as well as expected improvements in merchandising and operations under a new CEO.

Lowe's – Lowe's was upgraded to "overweight" from "neutral" at Piper Jaffray, citing an expected improvement in fundamentals for the home improvement retailer even as Street expectations remain modest.

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https://www.cnbc.com/2019/10/15/stocks-making-the-biggest-moves-premarket-jp-morgan-goldman-sachs-blackrock-more.html

2019-10-15 11:44:59Z
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