Selasa, 08 Oktober 2019

General Electric freezing pension plan for 20000 US employees - msnNOW

A sign outside the corporate headquarter© Stan Honda / AFP/Getty Images A sign outside the corporate headquarter
  • General Electric is freezing the pensions of 20,000 U.S. salaried workers to reduce billions in future pension obligations and trim debt.
  • About 700 employees in its supplemental pension program, geared toward executives, will also have their pension benefits frozen.
  • The company said the change won't impact already retired GE workers.

General Electric announced it will freeze the pensions of 20,000 U.S. salaried workers, a measure designed to reduce its pension deficit and trim debt. The move will shave GE's pension deficit by as much as $8 billion and its net debt by as much as $6 billion.

As part of the pension freeze, the industrial conglomerate said it will freeze supplementary pension benefits for approximately 700 employees who became executives before 2011. Supplemental pension plans are typically designed for higher-ranking employees and offer benefits beyond the typical pension plan.

"Returning GE to a position of strength has required us to make several difficult decisions, and today's decision to freeze the pension is no exception," said Kevin Cox, chief human resources officer at GE.

As part of such efforts, the company said last month it would spend $5 billion to pay down debt. But the effort to reduce debt could also damage employee morale at a time when CEO H. Lawrence Culp Jr. is trying to turn around the troubled conglomerate.

"The impact on employee engagement/morale of some of these pension measures is unlikely to be positive, but in a situation of 'corporate battlefield surgery,' this tends to be a typical, if unfortunate casualty," noted Barclay's analyst Julian Mitchell in a Monday research note.

Culp, a turnaround specialist, was paid more than $15.3 million last year, or 345 times the 2018 median GE employee wage of around $43,500, according to Equilar. 

What is a pension freeze?

A pension freeze effectively puts a hold on new benefits from accruing to a retirement account, according to the Pension Rights Center. GE said the 20,000 workers affected by the change won't accrue additional benefits nor make employee contributions after January 1, 2021.

GE said the pension freeze won't impact GE retirees already collecting pension benefits or employees with production benefits.

Like other corporations, GE has been phasing out its pension amid a push toward self-directed retirement plans such as 401(k)s. GE said it hasn't allowed new workers into its pension plan since 2012.

"Today's actions more closely aligns GE benefits with current industry standards and competitive market practices," the company said Monday in a statement.

Additionally, GE also said it's offering a lump-sum option to about 100,000 former employees who have not started their monthly pension payments. The company said it's sending out notices to those eligible employees, and will pay the lump sum in December. 

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https://www.msn.com/en-us/money/companies/general-electric-freezing-pension-plan-for-20000-us-employees/ar-AAIoS45

2019-10-08 05:05:00Z
52780403447213

Asian markets gain ahead of U.S.-China trade talks - MarketWatch

Asian markets gained in early trading Tuesday amid hopes that progress can be made at U.S.-China trade talks later this week.

China confirmed that its top trade negotiator, Vice Premier Liu He, would lead its delegation in Washington for high-level talks starting Thursday. China has reportedly taken some issues that the U.S. views as points of contention off the negotiating table, however.

President Donald Trump on Monday said there was a “good possibility” of reaching a deal with China to end the yearlong tariff war, though he added he would not be satisfied with a partial deal.

Meanwhile, the U.S. blacklisted a group of Chinese artificial-intelligence companies that it said was making technology that the Chinese government was using to repress its Muslim minority.

The U.S. on Monday also signed a limited trade deal with Japan, giving U.S. farmers benefits they lost when Trump pulled the U.S. out of the Trans-Pacific Partnership in 2017.

Japan’s Nikkei NIK, +0.99%   rose 1.1% and Hong Kong’s Hang Seng Index HSI, +0.63%   gained 1% as it reopened after a holiday Monday. Mainland China’s markets reopened after a weeklong holiday, with the Shanghai Composite SHCOMP, +0.29%   up 0.8% and the Shenzhen Composite 399106, +0.14%   up 1%. South Korea’s Kospi 180721, +1.21%   gained 1% and benchmark indexes in Taiwan Y9999, +0.75%  , Singapore STI, +0.56%   and Indonesia JAKIDX, +0.42%   advanced. Australia’s S&P/ASX 200 XJO, +0.45%   rose 0.4%.

Shares of Hong Kong Exchanges and Clearing Ltd. 388, +3.01%   jumped after the company announced it was dropping its $37 billion bid to buy the London Stock Exchange, after the two companies’ boards were “unable to engage.” The LSE had previously rejected HKEX’s bid, which turned hostile.

Among individual stocks, Japan Steel Works 5631, +3.60%   gained in Tokyo trading, along with Fast Retailing 9983, +1.17%   and Toyota 7203, +1.45%  . In Hong Kong, Volvo parent Geely Automobile 175, +3.19%  , PetroChina 857, +2.53%   and property developer Country Garden 2007, +0.19%   rose. Samsung 005930, +2.41%   gained in South Korea after warning of a sharp drop in quarterly operating profit, though it said its chip sales could start recovering after the new year. Mining giant Rio Tinto RIO, +1.12%   was up in Australia.

“Having sold off through late September, this positioning ahead of the trade talks suggests that the market is not entirely pessimistic towards the outcome,” said Jingyi Pan, market strategist for IG in Singapore.

On Wall Street, the market extended its losing streak into a fourth week on Monday.

The market is coming off a three-week skid following a mostly discouraging batch of economic data that stoked investors’ worries that a slowdown in U.S. economic growth could worsen.

The combination of uncertainty over the costly trade war between the U.S. and China and the impeachment inquiry unfolding in Washington is likely to continue to drag on the economy and weigh on markets.

The S&P 500 SPX, -0.45%   fell 13.22 points, or 0.4%, at 2,938.79. The Dow Jones Industrial Average DJIA, -0.36%   slid 95.70 points, or 0.4%, to 26,478.02. The Nasdaq COMP, -0.33%   dropped 26.18 points, or 0.3%, to 7,956.29.

Benchmark crude oil CLX19, +0.68%   added 32 cents to $53.07 a barrel. It fell 6 cents to $52.75 a barrel on Monday. Brent crude oil BRNZ19, +0.62%  , the international standard, rose 35 cents to $58.70 a barrel.

The dollar USDJPY, +0.09%   rose to 107.32 Japanese yen from 106.84 yen on Monday.

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https://www.marketwatch.com/story/asian-markets-gain-ahead-of-us-china-trade-talks-2019-10-07

2019-10-08 03:09:00Z
52780403809180

Senin, 07 Oktober 2019

Coal and bitumen: Why the Norwegian pension fund is ditching the oilsands - CBC.ca

Norway's largest pension fund is no stranger to Alberta's oilsands, having invested in several different oil producers over the last decade including Canadian and Norwegian-based companies. Now, those investments toward ramping up production from the bitumen-rich areas of northern Alberta have come to an end.

KLP, which has assets of about $94 billion, has sold its stocks in oilsands companies.

In its evaluation of the oilsands, the pension fund came to the conclusion that the oil production in the Fort McMurray region was akin to the coal industry in its harmful impacts to the environment.

"Both are very high in emissions in producing the energy or fuel and we've decided to treat them similarly," said Jeanett Bergan, KLP's head of responsible investment during a phone interview with CBC News from Jeddah, Saudi Arabia.

"We are seeing a lot of signs in society that say 'This is not what the future will look like.'"

The pension fund will no longer invest in any company with more than five per cent of its revenue derived from the oilsands or coal sectors. Previously, KLP had a 30 per cent threshold for oilsands revenue.

The decision affects five companies: Russia's Tatneft PAO and Canada's Cenovus Energy, Suncor Energy, Husky Energy and Imperial Oil. Recently, KLP sold $77 million in shares of those companies.

The oilsands sector is facing increasing scrutiny over its environmental performance because of climate change concerns. The industry has said it is making strides.

With the latest advances in technology and techniques, some oilsands companies, like Suncor, say emissions per barrel of oil produced from certain facilities is on par with the average barrel from the U.S.

Cenovus has said it reduced its greenhouse gas intensity by one-third over the last decade.

Since 2012, Canadian Natural Resources, another oilsands producer, reports it has cut the amount of greenhouse gases per barrel of oil it produces, company-wide, by 29 per cent. It's also reduced its methane emissions by 78 per cent during that time.

The advances in technology and environmental performance aren't lost on KLP. Still, it's not enough.

A heavy hauler mining truck dumps a load of bitumen ore at the Fort Hills, Alta., oilsands facility. (Kyle Bakx/CBC)

"Of course, there are a lot of efforts in doing things better all the time," said Bergan. "At some point, you just have to take one more step and say 'This is not part of the future. This is not part of the solution.'"

Two days before KLP's announcement, Norwegian energy giant Equinor ASA began operations of a massive new offshore oil project in the North Sea. The Johan Sverdrup field mega-project is expected to produce oil for the next five decades, which is beyond the time when experts say the world's greenhouse gas emissions should be net-zero to avoid warming of more than 1.5 degrees.

Besides greenhouse gas emissions, the pension fund took into consideration other environmental impacts of the oilsands such as water use and land disturbance.

"It's kind of a holistic approach," said Bergan. "We are thinking, 'Can we invest this money otherwise and invest more in other companies that are taking more more sustainable?'"

Alberta's oilsands produce 9.3 per cent of Canada's overall greenhouse gas emissions.

In an email, Keith Stewart with Greenpeace Canada, said institutional investors are continuing to abandon high-carbon investments because they "can see where the puck is heading."

KLP also avoids investing in companies involved in other industries such as tobacco, alcohol, weapons and gambling.

The majority of emissions from a barrel of oil are produced at the point of consumption, such as using gas in a vehicle.


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October 08, 2019 at 06:18AM

China narrows scope for U.S. trade deal — taking Trump's core demand off the table — ahead of talks - Financial Post

Chinese officials are signalling they’re increasingly reluctant to agree to a broad trade deal pursued by President Donald Trump, ahead of negotiations this week that have raised hopes of a potential truce.

In meetings with U.S. visitors to Beijing in recent weeks, senior Chinese officials have indicated the range of topics they’re willing to discuss has narrowed considerably, according to people familiar with the discussions.

Vice Premier Liu He, who will lead the Chinese contingent in high-level talks that begin Thursday, told visiting dignitaries he would bring an offer to Washington that won’t include commitments on reforming Chinese industrial policy or the government subsidies that have been the target of longstanding U.S. complaints, one of the people said.

That offer would take one of the Trump administration’s core demands off the table. It’s emblematic of what analysts see as China’s strengthening hand as the Trump administration faces an impeachment crisis — which has recently drawn in China — and a slowing economy blamed by businesses on the disruption caused by the president’s trade wars.

People close to the Trump administration say the impeachment inquiry isn’t affecting trade talks with China. Any attempt to portray anything different is an attempt to weaken the U.S. hand at the negotiating table and, they argue, would be a miscalculation by the Chinese.

China’s foreign and commerce ministries in Beijing didn’t immediately respond to faxed requests for comments Monday. The Chinese government was expected to resume normal work Tuesday after a weeklong National Day holiday.

U.S. stock futures fell, the yen edged up and the yuan slipped Monday after the report. Treasuries climbed.

China — beset by its own escalating political crisis in Hong Kong — was drawn into the Washington furor after Trump last week called for a Chinese investigation into his Democratic rival Joe Biden and the former vice president’s son, moments after threatening another escalation in the trade spat.

Trump insisted on Friday that there’s no linkage. Yet the president’s latest comments suggest why Chinese leaders, already frustrated with what they see as the president’s impetuous conduct in the trade talks, may see room to take advantage.

China’s leadership “are interpreting the impeachment discussion as a weakening of Trump’s position, or certainly a distraction,” said Jude Blanchette, an expert on China’s elite politics at the Center for Strategic and International Studies.

“Their calculation is that Trump needs a win” and is willing to make compromises on substance as a result, he said.

‘Very Tough Deal’

Trump has said repeatedly he would entertain only an all-encompassing deal with China. People close to him say he remains firm in that view.

“We’ve had good moments with China. We’ve had bad moments with China. Right now, we’re in a very important stage in terms of possibly making a deal,” Trump told reporters on Friday. “But what we’re doing is we’re negotiating a very tough deal. If the deal is not going to be 100 per cent for us, then we’re not going to make it.”

People familiar with the state of play say contacts that resumed over the summer after a breakdown in May have focused on how to resume negotiations and avoid further escalating the tariff wars that have unnerved financial markets.

If the deal is not going to be 100 per cent for us, then we're not going to make it.

U.S. President Donald Trump

Yet those talks have centred more on a timeline for implementing a limited deal rather than the substance of provisions where the two sides are at odds.

Discussions have focused on what U.S. administration officials view as a three-phase process, people familiar with the talks said. The sequence would involve large-scale purchases of U.S. agricultural and energy exports by China, implementing intellectual-property commitments China made in a draft agreement this year and, finally, a partial rollback of U.S. tariffs.

Bloomberg News reported in September that Trump’s team was discussing a potential limited agreement that includes those elements. That could clear the way for broader negotiations next year. Yet if China insists it will not engage in any discussions on industrial policy, those plans could be scuttled.

Fundamental Conflict

Hopes have always been limited that China would agree to give up its economic model in a trade deal with the U.S. A draft agreement reached in April before talks broke down included few substantive commitments from China to abandon the sort of industrial policies the Trump administration and others before it have complained about, according to people familiar with the talks.

That draft focused on securing more transparency from China on the extent of its subsidies. It included a commitment essentially to disavow Made in China 2025, Xi Jinping’s plan for Chinese domination of key 21st century industry such as artificial intelligence, robotics and electric vehicles, though it lacked a schedule for removing Chinese government subsidies that fuel the plan.

One reason for that is U.S. Trade Representative Robert Lighthizer’s focus on what he views as pragmatic demands for Chinese change, rather than shriller calls for a wholesale abandonment of Beijing’s industrial policy some hawks believe should be required of Beijing.

Lighthizer declined to comment on the state of negotiations through an aide. While he’s unlikely to accept any Chinese offer that doesn’t address industrial subsidies or policy, people close to him say he may be willing to embrace “sequencing” a deal and an “early-harvest” agreement as long as broader talks continue.

Still, people close to the administration say Trump’s trade chief probably would need some kind of commitment resembling a concession on subsidies and industrial policy to sell the agreement at home.

Japan-U.S. Deal

A possible model is last month’s U.S. deal with Japan on agriculture, digital trade and a limited number of industrial tariffs, which was presented as the first phase of a longer negotiation.

Any such deal would leave the fate of a major Trump administration demand hanging in the wind, putting the president on the defensive at home ahead of the 2020 election.

Addressing issues such as industrial subsidies “were the whole reason this case started in the first place,” said Rufus Yerxa, a former U.S. trade official who heads the National Foreign Trade Council, a lobby group that’s critical of Trump’s trade wars. “At a minimum the administration will have a lot of explaining to do if those drop off the table.”

David Dollar, a former U.S. Treasury representative in China now at the Brookings Institution, says China’s push to narrow the discussions is more evidence that both sides are hardening their positions on a broader deal.

The U.S. and China increasingly have reasons to strike a “mini deal” and avoid an escalation, he said. China needs agricultural products such as pork that Trump wants it to buy so he can placate American farmers. And even people in the White House concede there’s a U.S. incentive to hold off on further tariffs to avoid a worsening economic slowdown going into 2020.

“It’s a funny kind of negotiation where both sides’ so-called concession is something that they need,” Dollar said.

Bloomberg.com



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October 07, 2019 at 08:49PM

President’s Choice infant formula recalled over possible bacteria contamination - Global News

Loblaw Companies Ltd, is recalling its President’s Choice brand Lower Iron milk-based powdered infant formula due to possible contamination by Cronobacter bacteria.

READ MORE: Baby formula recalled due to rancidity, off-colour product

The Canadian Food Inspection Agency says the product was sold in stores across the country in 900 gram packages with a best before date of Aug. 29, 2021.

The agency says no illnesses have been linked to the product.

According to the Canadian Food Inspection Agency, recalled products should be thrown out or returned to the store where they were purchased.
According to the Canadian Food Inspection Agency, recalled products should be thrown out or returned to the store where they were purchased. Canadian Food Inspection Agency

It notes that while Cronobacter is not commonly linked to human illness, in rare cases it can cause serious or even fatal infections.

Story continues below advertisement

© 2019 The Canadian Press

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October 07, 2019 at 05:18PM

GE freezes pensions for 20K, trimming up to $6B in debt - CTV News


Cathy Bussewitz, The Associated Press
Published Monday, October 7, 2019 10:02AM EDT
Last Updated Monday, October 7, 2019 5:40PM EDT

NEW YORK -- General Electric is freezing the pension plans of about 20,000 of its workers and offering pension buyouts to 100,000 former employees as it attempts to reduce its mountain of debt.

The industrial conglomerate has been selling off assets and streamlining its operations amid sagging profits and other setbacks in recent years. It has about $105.8 billion in overall debt, and whittling that down has become a priority for CEO Larry Culp.

The Boston company said Monday that its actions would trim its pension deficit by about $5 billion to $8 billion, and net debt by about $4 billion to $6 billion.

"Returning GE to a position of strength has required us to make several difficult decisions, and today's decision to freeze the pension is no exception," said Kevin Cox, chief human resources officer at GE, in a prepared statement. "We carefully weighed market trends and our strategic priority to improve our financial position with the impact to our employees."

GE closed its pension plan to new beneficiaries in 2012. Companies nationwide have been capping or freezing defined-benefit pension plans, which promise regular retirement payments for the remainder of a beneficiary's life. Many switched to 401k plans, which often include contributions from employers and employees but which do not guarantee a certain level of payments.

GE's pension actions should have been taken much sooner, but the company needed to first secure the funding from its portfolio sales so it could re-deploy those proceeds, said Deane Dray, managing director of RBC Capital Markets, in a note to investors.

"Freezing the pension plan is sort of a 'stop the bleeding' type of measure," said Zorast Wadia, principal and consulting actuary at Milliman, an actuarial firm. "It does nothing to that deficit. Essentially what you're doing is you're limiting future accruals."

For the pension buyouts, GE is offering a one-time lump-sum payment to former employees who have not started monthly pension plan payments. Those who take GE up on the offer will receive, in one payment, the total amount that actuaries estimate they would have received after retiring at around age 65.

Some former employees might find the lump sum option more attractive than waiting until retirement to receive benefits, because if the company were to go bankrupt, they might not receive the full benefits they were entitled to, said Olivia Mitchell, executive director of the Pension Research Council at the Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania.

The number of entities offering defined benefit pension plans has been "dropping like a stone," Mitchell said. Back in the early 1980s, there were 146,000 defined benefit pension plans, and the most recent data suggests there are now about 45,000, she added.

"The defined benefit plan was a form of compensation which really encouraged employees to stick to their firms for life," and today's workforce is much more mobile than it was 40 years ago, Mitchell added.

Wadia said that the majority of companies his firm tracks have frozen their pension funds, but some -- primarily in financial services or the not-for-profit sector -- have pension plans where beneficiaries continue to accrue benefits.

About 21% of employers, including private, government and non-profit entities, offer defined pension plans that are open to all employees, according to the Society for Human Resource Management.

GE also said it plans to make early payments to cover its 2020 pension obligations using funds it raised by selling its stake in Wabtec, a transportation business, and selling part of its stake in Baker Hughes, the oil and gas company. It also plans to use funds it expects to raise when it sells its BioPharma unit.

Pension obligations represent about $21 billion of GE's overall debt. GE said it will continue to evaluate its options to strengthen its balance sheet.



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October 07, 2019 at 09:02PM

Oil Bounces Back After Hedge Fund Selling Spree | OilPrice.com - OilPrice.com

Cushing

Hedge funds have already left behind the attacks on Saudi oil infrastructure in mid-September and have been net sellers of petroleum futures in the past two weeks as gloomy outlooks on the global economy took center stage in the oil market.

Money managers sold the equivalent of 64 million barrels of WTI Crude another 17 million barrels of Brent Crude futures positions in the most recent reporting week to October 1, according to data from regulators and exchanges compiled by Reuters market analyst John Kemp.

The hedge funds’ overall net long position—the difference between bullish and bearish bets—of 532 million barrels in the six most important oil-linked futures contracts is now back essentially the same as it was in early September, before the September 14 attacks on critical Saudi oil facilities, which took 5.7 million bpd—or 5 percent of global supply—offline.

Despite the unprecedented attack, however, portfolio managers have started to fret over mounting signs of slowing economic and oil demand growth rather than on the possibility of another major disruption to global oil supply.

Oil prices are now lower than they were just before the attacks on critical Saudi oil facilities. Hedge funds and other money managers have winded down bullish bets on Brent and WTI over the past two weeks, reversing a build-up in the net long position that had accumulated in the two weeks prior to the attacks in Saudi Arabia.  

In the week to October 1, the bullish bets on WTI and Brent combined dropped to their lowest in eight months, according to exchanges data compiled by Bloomberg. The end of the driving season in the U.S. is also eroding bullish sentiment about demand, according to Bloomberg.

“A week of negative macro data last week is unlikely to have helped sentiment, and in the current environment, it is clearly going to take a significant amount to shift sentiment- the attack on Saudi Arabia in mid-September clearly demonstrated this,” Warren Patterson, ING’s Head of Commodities Strategy and Senior Commodities Strategist Wenyu Yao, said on Monday.

By Tsvetana Paraskova for Oilprice.com

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October 07, 2019 at 09:30PM