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    Fed’s Waller says officials can ‘wait, watch and see’ before acting on interest rates

    Federal Reserve Governor Christopher Waller on Wednesday indicated the central bank can afford to hold off on interest rate increases as it watches incoming data.
    “I believe we can wait, watch and see how the economy evolves before making definitive moves on the path of the policy rate,” he said in prepared remarks for a speech in London.

    Federal Reserve Governor Christopher Waller on Wednesday indicated the central bank can afford to hold off on interest rate increases while it watches progress unfold in its efforts to bring down inflation.
    With the Fed set to meet again in two weeks, Waller said he is weighing recent data points against each other to see whether the central bank is succeeding in bringing down demand and slowing inflation, or if the economy continues to show resilience and pushes harder on prices.

    “As of today, it is too soon to tell,” he said in prepared remarks for a speech in London. “Consequently, I believe we can wait, watch and see how the economy evolves before making definitive moves on the path of the policy rate.”
    The remarks come a day before Fed Chair Jerome Powell is set to deliver what could be a key policy speech in New York.
    In recent days, multiple Fed officials have said rising Treasury yields are indicative that financial conditions are tightening, possibly making additional rate hikes unnecessary. The 10-year Treasury yield topped 4.9% on Wednesday, a first since 2007.
    Indeed, Waller noted the backup in yields and said economic reports over the past several months have been “overwhelmingly positive” regarding inflation. Widely watched indicators such as the consumer price index and the Fed’s preferred personal consumption expenditures price index show rolling core inflation on a three-month basis, respectively at 3.1% and 2%, he noted.

    However, officials are wary of head fakes on inflation that have confounded past policy decisions. Few if any Fed officials see rate cuts in the future, but many are leaning toward the idea that the current hiking cycle could be over.

    Waller has been one of the more hawkish Fed officials, meaning he favors higher rates and tighter policy. As a governor, he automatically gets a vote on the rate-setting Federal Open Market Committee. His remarks pointed to a near-term halt, without a commitment beyond that.
    “Should the real side of the economy soften, we will have more room to wait on any further rate hikes and let the recent run-up on longer-term rates do some of our work,” he said. “But if the real economy continues showing underlying strength and inflation appears to stabilize or reaccelerate, more policy tightening is likely needed despite the recent run up in longer term rates.”
    Recent economic reports showed a strong labor market, with nonfarm payrolls rising by 336,000 in September. A Commerce Department report Tuesday showed robust retail spending up 0.7% in September, outpacing inflation and Wall Street estimates.
    Waller said he will be watching that data as well as figures on nonresidential investment such as factories, as well as construction spending and next week’s first look at third-quarter gross domestic product growth.
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    Morgan Stanley beats estimates on trading, but shares dip as wealth management disappoints

    Morgan Stanley reported third-quarter earnings Wednesday.
    The bank topped profit expectations and roughly matched estimates for revenue.
    Shares of Morgan Stanley dipped 3.2% in premarket trading.

    Morgan Stanley Chairman and Chief Executive James Gorman speaks during the Institute of International Finance Annual Meeting in Washington, October 10, 2014.
    Joshua Roberts | Reuters

    Morgan Stanley posted third-quarter results Wednesday that topped profit estimates on better-than-expected trading revenue.
    Here’s what the company reported:

    Earnings per share: $1.38, vs. $1.28 estimate from LSEG, formerly known as Refinitiv
    Revenue: $13.27 billion, vs. expected $13.23 billion

    Profit fell 9% to $2.41 billion, or $1.38 a share, from a year ago, the New York-based bank said in a statement. Revenue grew 2% to $13.27 billion, essentially matching expectations.
    Morgan Stanley’s trading operations helped offset revenue misses elsewhere at the firm. The bank’s bond traders produced $1.95 billion in revenue, roughly $200 million more than the StreetAccount estimate, while equity traders brought in $2.51 billion in revenue, $100 million more than expected.
    But the bank’s all-important wealth management division generated $6.4 billion in revenue, below the estimate by more than $200 million, as compensation costs in the division rose.
    Investment banking accounted for another miss in the quarter, producing $938 million in revenue, below the $1.11 billion estimate, as the company cited weakness in mergers and IPO listings. The bank’s investment management division essentially met expectations with $1.34 billion in revenue.
    Shares of Morgan Stanley dipped 3% in premarket trading.

    Stock chart icon

    Morgan Stanley shares have been under pressure this year.

    CEO James Gorman cited a “mixed” environment for his businesses and acknowledged that the firm’s wealth management division gathered fewer new assets than in recent quarters. That’s because surging interest rates have made money market funds and Treasuries attractive, he told analysts Wednesday. The wealth management business was still tracking to hit his three-year goal of generating $1 trillion in new assets, he added.
    “When people have a choice of making a 4%, 5% return by doing nothing, they’re not going to be trading in the markets,” Gorman said.

    ‘Clean slate’

    Led by Gorman since 2010, Morgan Stanley has managed to avoid the turbulence afflicting some rivals lately. While Goldman Sachs was forced to pivot after a foray into retail banking and as Citigroup struggles to lift its stock price, the main question at Morgan Stanley is about an orderly CEO succession.
    In May, Gorman announced his plan to resign within a year, capping a successful tenure marked by massive acquisitions in wealth and asset management. Morgan Stanley’s board has narrowed the search for his successor to three internal executives, he said at the time.
    Gorman reiterated his desire to hand over the CEO position to a successor within months.
    “This firm is in excellent shape notwithstanding the geopolitical and market turmoil that we find ourselves in,” Gorman said. “My hope and expectation is to hand over Morgan Stanley with as clean a slate as possible and deal with a few of our outstanding issues in the next couple of months.”
    Last week, JPMorgan Chase, Wells Fargo and Citigroup each topped expectations for third-quarter profit, helped by low credit costs. Goldman Sachs and Bank of America also beat estimates on stronger-than-expected bond trading results.
    This story is developing. Please check back for updates. More

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    Procter & Gamble tops earnings, revenue estimates even as higher prices drive some consumers away

    Procter & Gamble topped quarterly earnings and revenue estimates.
    The company’s volume fell for the sixth consecutive quarter.
    P&G has consistently raised prices, causing some consumers to choose private-label alternatives.

    Tide laundry detergent is shown on display in Compton, California.
    Mike Blake | Reuters

    Procter & Gamble on Wednesday reported quarterly earnings and revenue that topped analysts’ expectations, despite volume falling for the sixth consecutive quarter.
    Shares of the company rose 1.5% in premarket trading.

    Here’s what P&G reported compared with what Wall Street was expecting, based on a survey of analysts by LSEG, formerly known as Refinitiv:

    Earnings per share: $1.83 vs. $1.72 expected
    Revenue: $21.87 billion vs. $21.58 billion expected

    P&G reported fiscal first-quarter net income attributable to the company of $4.52 billion, or $1.83 per share, up from $3.94 billion, or $1.57 per share, a year earlier.
    Net sales rose 6% to $21.87 billion. The company’s organic revenue increased 7% in the quarter, helped by higher prices for P&G’s products.
    But the company’s volume shrank 1%. The metric excludes the impact of currency and pricing changes to reflect demand.
    For roughly two years, P&G has been raising prices on its products like Tide detergent and Charmin toilet paper.

    “For obvious reasons we don’t comment on the future direction of pricing, but I will tell you that we’re happy with where we sit currently,” CEO Jon Moeller said Wednesday on CNBC’s “Squawk Box.”
    But some consumers aren’t happy with P&G’s higher prices. Some shoppers have switched to cheaper private-label alternatives as a result, and P&G said it saw “pricing-related volume declines” across many of its brands.
    The company’s baby, feminine and family care segment reported its volume fell 3%. The division includes brands like Pampers and Bounty.
    P&G’s grooming segment, which includes Venus and Gillette products, reported a 2% drop in volume.
    The company’s fabric and home-care business saw its volume shrink 1%, even as customers bought more of its premium cleaning products, which include Swiffer and Cascade.
    P&G’s health-care division was the only segment to report volume growth for the quarter. The company said it saw strong demand for respiratory products, like those made by Vicks.
    The company also widened its outlook for fiscal 2024 revenue as it anticipates that foreign exchange rates could be a larger drag than previously expected. The company now projects revenue growth of 2% to 4%, rather than its prior forecast of 3% to 4%.
    P&G reiterated its full-year forecast for organic revenue growth, which strips out the impact of acquisitions, divestitures and foreign currency, and for earnings per share growth.
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    Mortgage demand falls to the lowest level since 1995 as interest rates near 8%

    The average contract interest rate for 30-year fixed-rate mortgages with conforming loan balances ($726,200 or less) increased to 7.70% from 7.67%.
    Applications for a mortgage to purchase a home dropped 6% week to week and were 21% lower than the same week one year ago.
    Applications to refinance a home loan fell 10% for the week and were 12% lower than one year ago.

    Signage is seen at The Collection at Morristown, a housing development by Lennar Corporation, in Morristown, New Jersey, November 13, 2021.
    Andrew Kelly | Reuters

    Mortgage rates last week rose for the sixth straight week, causing demand for home loans to drop to the lowest level since 1995.
    Total application volume fell 6.9% compared with the previous week, according to the Mortgage Bankers Association’s seasonally adjusted index.

    The average contract interest rate for 30-year fixed-rate mortgages with conforming loan balances ($726,200 or less) increased to 7.70% from 7.67% and points decreased to 0.71 from 0.75 (including the origination fee) for loans with a 20% down payment. That is the highest rate since November 2000. The rate was 6.94% during the same week one year ago.
    Applications for a mortgage to purchase a home dropped 6% week to week and were 21% lower than the same week one year ago.
    Applications to refinance a home loan fell 10% for the week and were 12% lower than a year ago.
    “Both purchase and refinance applications declined, driven by larger drops for conventional applications,” said Joel Kan, vice president and deputy chief economist at the MBA, in a release. He added that the adjustable-rate mortgage (ARM) share was 9.3%, the highest share in 11 months.
    ARMs offer lower rates and can be fixed for up to 10 years before the rate resets. More borrowers are turning to these loan products to gain purchasing power, as both interest rates and home prices are rising.

    Mortgage rates moved even higher to start this week, with the 30-year fixed hitting 7.92% on Tuesday, according to Mortgage News Daily. That is a cyclical high. The increase was due to a much stronger-than-expected monthly retail sales report.
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    Walmart beefs up its third-party marketplace as it challenges bigger online rival Amazon

    Walmart is banking on its third-party online marketplace to boost holiday sales.
    While Walmart is the biggest retailer, its e-commerce business is still much smaller than rival Amazon.
    Online sales for Walmart U.S. rose sharply recently, while other major retailers such as Macy’s and Target reported declines.

    Walmart hosted its first seller summit for its third-party marketplace this summer. At the invitation-only event, CEO Doug McMillon made his pitch on why small businesses and brands should work with the retail giant.

    It was summer in Las Vegas — the temperature hit nearly 110 degrees that late August day — but Christmas was on everyone’s minds.
    While Santa Claus wandered around during an invitation-only conference, businesses that sell items on Walmart’s website attended how-to sessions and swapped advice. Walmart leaders gave third-party marketplace sellers an early gift, too: Waiving extra fees for storing merchandise during the peak season.

    Doug McMillon, who leads the world’s largest retailer, took the stage and made a sales pitch to the smaller businesses and brands.
    “We hope you’ll choose to grow with us,” the CEO told the more than 1,500 attendees, invoking the memory of company founder Sam Walton, who was at one time a small-town entrepreneur. “We want you to bring great items to our marketplace. Our team is here to serve you.”
    As Walmart heads into the retail industry’s most important season, the company is trying to recruit and retain hundreds of thousands of independent sellers that fill the company’s virtual shelves with items ranging from lip gloss to Rolex watches. It is also working to coax those sellers into paying Walmart to pack and ship — and even advertise — their products. It is leaning into a moment when inflation has pushed more high-income shoppers to its stores and website.
    This holiday season will put Walmart’s e-commerce strategy to the test. Already, the company is using the third-party marketplace to try to drum up early business.
    More than half the items included in Walmart’s sales event last week, which kicked off the season, were from its third-party marketplace. The event coincided with Amazon’s Prime Big Deals Days event, but there were no comparisons available.

    About 70% of items included in Walmart Plus Week, which coincided with Amazon Prime Day in July, were marketplace items. Walmart wouldn’t share comparisons with sales events in prior years, but said more sellers are participating in the events overall.
    There are signs Walmart’s growing third-party marketplace could help the company defy slower spending patterns and capitalize on inflation-wary shoppers.
    Online sales for Walmart U.S. rose sharply the past two fiscal quarters, even as other major retailers such as Macy’s and Target reported declines. As shoppers at many stores, including Walmart’s own, skipped over discretionary purchases, Walmart’s third-party marketplace saw sales in some discretionary categories such as home and apparel rise by double digits in the most recent fiscal quarter.
    Tom Ward, chief e-commerce officer for Walmart U.S., said the company’s app and website have a fresh look, its fulfillment centers and stores have automation that’s helping power more late-night and last-minute deliveries and its growing marketplace has helped create an “endless aisle” of electronics, toys and groceries to give customers a reason to return.
    “Customers want choice,” he said. “They want that selection. They want that variety. And as they visit us more and more often, they expect to see it.”

    ‘Second-best mall’

    When it comes to e-commerce, Walmart is in a rare spot: the underdog. Its online sales are just a tiny fraction of what Amazon rings up — and that carries over to the companies’ third-party marketplaces, too.
    Customers who shop on Amazon and Walmart’s website see a mix of items. Some items are sold directly by the retailers and others are sold by sellers that own the inventory, list items on other retailers’ websites and share a cut of the profits with those retailers.
    Amazon has more than one million active sellers, and Walmart has roughly 100,000, according to Marketplace Pulse, a third-party firm that collects data on e-commerce marketplaces including Amazon, eBay and Etsy. Amazon and Walmart do not disclose how many active sellers they have.

    For Walmart, closing that large gap is an uphill climb, and also an opportunity, said Rick Watson, CEO of RMW Commerce Consulting, an e-commerce consulting firm with clients that cut across categories such as furniture, fashion and food and beverage categories.
    “Amazon has never been known as the most seller-friendly place to do business,” he said. “Something I’ve seen recently is a lot of sellers actually cheering for Walmart because they want an alternative.”
    Tension between Amazon and some of its sellers is at the heart of an antitrust lawsuit filed in late September by the Federal Trade Commission against Amazon. The suit accuses the e-commerce behemoth of anticompetitive practices, such as punishing sellers for offering cheaper prices on other websites and strong-arming them into using its fulfillment services.
    Amazon denied the allegations in a blog post, saying the company has helped, not harmed, customers, and contributed to lower prices and speedier services.
    Watson said sellers can struggle to get someone on the phone on Amazon. At Walmart, on the other hand, he said sellers tend to get more “red carpet treatment.”
    But first, Walmart often has to persuade successful sellers on Amazon to take a chance on the relative newcomer, such as companies like Lucky 21.

    About a year and a half ago, the apparel retailer that represents national brands such as Disney, New Balance and Reebok tested sales of some items on Walmart’s marketplace.
    Melissa LaCognata, vice president and divisional merchandise manager for Lucky 21, said the company knew Walmart was years behind Amazon. Yet, she said it heard about Walmart’s investments in marketplace and knew Walmart already had a large brick-and-mortar customer base and sizable online traffic.
    “It’s like being in the second-best mall in the world,” she said. “Why not?”
    Last year, Lucky 21 became the largest third-party seller of children’s apparel on Walmart’s website.
    But Walmart has had to play a major game of catch-up, such as simplifying the on-boarding process to make it easier for new marketplace sellers to join and launching membership program, Walmart+, to drive more online sales. Three years ago, it launched Walmart Fulfillment Services, which allows sellers to pay the retailer to store inventory and pack and ship orders. Amazon began offering a similar picking-and-packing service in 2006.
    This summer, Walmart announced another wave of features to better compete with Amazon. It has begun to offer fulfillment for sellers’ big and bulky items as well as merchandise that comes in multiple boxes, such as canoes or patio sets. It also debuted tools to support sellers’ businesses, such as allowing them to hire Walmart to make local deliveries of cakes or other online orders or pay Walmart for software to power curbside pickup at shops.

    Walmart is looking to its more than 4,600 stores across the country as another way to outmatch Amazon.
    The stores act as mini warehouses, with more than 50% of online orders fulfilled from its stores as of the end of its most recent quarter, which ended in late July. About 90% of Americans live within 10 miles of a Walmart store, proximity that makes it possible for Walmart to sometimes to get a package to customers’ doors faster than Amazon.
    So far, Walmart does not carry third-party marketplace items in its stores, which means customers can’t get those online orders through curbside pickup or ultra-speedy delivery to their homes.
    Yet, Jaré Buckley-Cox, vice president of Walmart Fulfillment Services and an Amazon veteran, said that is coming within the next five years and described it as “a high priority.”
    Some customers have gotten a glimpse of how that might look. One of Walmart’s popular marketplace items has become tires, which shoppers can ship to select stores and get installed at Walmart’s auto center.

    Does inflation give Walmart an advantage?

    As inflation weighs on Americans’ budgets, Walmart’s marketplace could help the retailer crack one of its longtime challenges: convincing shoppers to buy more high-margin items such as a sweater or purse, along with a box of cereal or loaf of bread.
    Walmart has tried and backed away from other strategies to do that. It previously went on an acquisition spree of direct-to-consumer brands with a fan following including Bonobos, Moosejaw and Eloquii after buying Jet.com in a $3.3 billion deal. It has since reversed course and sold off those companies, as it focuses on turning its online business profitable.
    Over the past year, Walmart, the country’s largest grocer, has reported market share gains for groceries coming from households that make more than $100,000 a year.
    That may be helping to lift the use of Walmart’s app. According to estimates by third-party firm Apptopia, which analyzes trends with mobile apps and connected devices, Walmart’s shopping app has now surpassed Amazon’s in terms of daily use.
    The third-party marketplace is another approach: a way to add items without the risk of buying pallets of inventory and wondering if it will sell — or get marked down.
    Walmart can monitor and quickly add popular or relevant products, said Michael Mosser, vice president of categories for Walmart’s U.S. marketplace. For example, he said, sellers helped Walmart bulk up on more hot pink and Barbie-themed items. They also can help in unexpected scenarios, such as when smoke from the Canadian wildfires caused East Coast residents to search for air filtration systems, he said.
    “We’re not buying products a year out or three quarters of a year out,” Mosser said. “If we see something trending in social media or we see something trending as a cultural moment, we can reach out to our community of sellers and be like, ‘Hey, we’re seeing this thing spiking. What do you have for available inventory?”

    Some items Walmart has tested and expanded on its website through marketplace are premium brands that Americans may not expect to find on Walmart’s website, such as Michael Kors, Dyson and Solo Stove.
    Solo Stove’s fire pits start at about $100 on Walmart.com, but range as high as $1,155 for a set that includes a fire pit, lid, shield and collection of portable camping accessories.
    John Merris, CEO of Solo Brands, said Solo Stove already had traction on Amazon and questioned whether Walmart would draw the kinds of customers willing to spring for a more expensive, discretionary item.
    “You wonder not only is it not your customer, but more importantly, does it cheapen your brand?” he said. “Is there a perception with consumers that if your product is found in Walmart that somehow means that you have a lower quality product?”
    He said Solo Stove’s perspective changed. It began to sell the smokeless fire pits on Walmart’s website early last year. It got a bump in business during Walmart’s competing sales event during Amazon’s Prime Day in July. Solo Stove’s sales are up 300% on Walmart’s marketplace as of this fall, compared with the year-ago period.
    Soon, the fire pits will hit Walmart’s store shelves. Merris got surprised with a purchase order at the company’s seller summit in late August. He joked that he has high hopes for store sales, especially since they’ll be a few aisles away from ingredients for s’mores.
    If Walmart uses stores to speed along deliveries and adds more brands across price points that customers love, Merris said the discounter “could be very dangerous for a marketplace like Amazon in the future.”
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    — CNBC’s Gabriel Cortés contributed to this report. More

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    Adidas shares climb after boost from Yeezy sales, guidance raise

    Adidas shares climbed 4% during early trade in Europe on Wednesday.
    The German sportswear giant projected a full-year operating loss of 100 million euros ($106 million), a significant improvement on its previous forecast of a 450 million euro loss.

    Shoes are offered for sale at an Adidas store in Chicago, Feb. 10, 2023.
    Scott Olson | Getty Images

    Adidas on Tuesday hiked its full-year guidance and posted stronger-than-expected third-quarter earnings, aided by sales of its Yeezy inventory.
    The German sportswear giant, in a surprise preliminary estimates release, projected a full-year operating loss of 100 million euros ($106 million), a significant improvement on its previous forecast of a 450 million euro loss, and expects revenues to decline at a low-single-digit rate for 2023.

    Third-quarter operating profit came in at 409 million euros, down from 564 million for the same quarter in 2022.
    Adidas shares climbed 4% during early trade in Europe on Wednesday.
    “While the company’s performance in the quarter was again positively impacted by the sale of parts of its remaining Yeezy inventory, the underlying adidas business also developed better than expected,” Adidas said in its earnings report.
    The company terminated its partnership with Ye, formerly known as Kanye West, in October 2022 after the rapper made a series of offensive and antisemitic remarks. It has since been working to sell off its remaining inventory of his trademark Yeezy sneakers.
    “Including the positive impact from the two Yeezy drops in Q2 and Q3, the potential write-off of the remaining Yeezy inventory of now around € 300 million (previously: € 400 million) and one-off costs related to the strategic review of up to € 200 million (unchanged), adidas now expects to report an operating loss of around € 100 million in 2023 (previously: loss of € 450 million),” the company said. More

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    GM to delay all-electric truck production at Michigan plant until late-2025

    General Motors said Tuesday it is delaying production of all-electric trucks at Orion Assembly in suburban Detroit until late-2025.
    GM said the change is to “better manage capital investments” and implement improvements in an effort to make the new EVs more profitable.

    UAW Local 5960 member Kimberly Fuhr inspects a Chevrolet Bolt EV during vehicle production on May 6, 2021, at the General Motors Orion Assembly Plant in Orion Township, Michigan.
    Steve Fecht for Chevrolet

    DETROIT – General Motors said Tuesday it is delaying production of all-electric trucks at a Michigan plant by at least a year to “better manage capital investments” and implement improvements in an effort to make the new EVs more profitable.
    GM now plans to begin construction of its next-generation EVs at Orion Assembly in suburban Detroit by late 2025, instead of next year. The factory currently produces Chevrolet Bolt EV models, which GM will cease producing at the end of this year.

    The delay is the latest sign of potential trouble for the ambitious, multibillion-dollar plans of traditional automakers to move to electric vehicles. Adoption of EVs, which remain costly to produce and purchase, has been slower than many expected.
    “General Motors today confirmed it will retime the conversion of its Orion Assembly plant to EV truck production to late 2025, to better manage capital investment while aligning with evolving EV demand. In addition, we have identified engineering improvements that we will implement to increase the profitability of our products,” the company said in a statement.
    The change in plans is not connected to the company’s ongoing contract negotiations with the United Auto Workers union, according to a GM spokesman. However, the contentious talks do involve EVs, and current contract proposals by the company are expected to be more expensive than those in year’s past. The UAW, which represents workers at Orion Assembly, did not immediately respond for comment.
    The production delay calls into question GM’s previously announced EV goals, including cumulative production of 400,000 EVs in North American from 2022 through mid-2024, which had already been pushed back. GM also has a goal to exclusively offer consumer EVs by 2035.
    A GM spokesman late-Tuesday said there’s currently no change in plans to the company’s EV production targets.

    New electric versions of the Chevrolet Silverado and GMC Sierra that were supposed to be produced at Orion Assembly will be assembled at GM’s Factory Zero in Detroit, the company said. Limited production of the Silverado EV is underway, while Sierra is scheduled to begin next year.
    Alongside the Silverado EV, Factory Zero is currently building the GMC Hummer EV pickup and SUV and Cruise Origin shuttle.
    In January 2022, GM announced it would invest $4 billion to convert Orion Assembly to produce electric trucks. The plant was expected to be its second U.S. assembly plant to exclusively produce EVs. GM said construction includes significant facility and capacity expansion at the site, including new body and paint shops and new general assembly and battery pack assembly areas. 
    Roughly 1,000 hourly workers at Orion Assembly will have the option to transfer to other Michigan facilities until the retooling at Orion Assembly is completed.
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    Thousands of casino workers go on strike in Detroit

    Thousands of casino workers in Detroit have gone on strike.
    They are seeking higher wages and better working conditions.
    The cost of living has surged since the last labor contract, signed in 2020.

    MGM Resorts International’s MGM Grand Detroit hotel stands in Detroit on Oct. 30, 2013.
    Bryan Mitchell | Bloomberg | Getty Images

    Auto workers aren’t the only ones on strike in Detroit. Thousands of casino workers, seeking higher wages and better working conditions, walked off the job in the city Tuesday. Casino workers are seeking higher wages and better working conditions as the cost of living has increased in recent years.The work stoppage targets operations at the MGM Grand Detroit, owned by MGM Resorts International; MotorCity Casino; and Hollywood Casino at Greektown, owned by Penn Entertainment.
    Striking employees include 3,700 workers employed in positions across the properties, including dealers, cleaning staff, food and beverage workers, valets, engineers and more. They are represented by the Detroit Casino Council, which is made up of five unions including the United Auto Workers.

    The effect was immediately clear. MotorCity Casino updated its website showing that high-limit table games and poker rooms as well as casino valet were closed, in addition to its spa and some restaurants and bars.
    FanDuel, which operates the FD Sportsbook in conjunction with MotorCity, told CNBC it will be closed with the exception of a non-union MCC employee managing the cash at the counter for patrons needing to cash in tickets, which keeps with Michigan regulatory requirements.
    The Hollywood Casino at Greektown said in a statement to CNBC, “We are disappointed by the decision of the Detroit Casino Council as we have made generous, progressive settlement offers that position our team members and business for sustainable success.” The management says it will remain open for business.
    Matt Buckley, president and COO of MGM’s Midwest Group, sent a letter to employees of MGM Grand Detroit that made clear the company also intends to keep the property open and running.
    “Regarding the status of our negotiations, we’ve made six proposals to the union and our current offer includes the single largest pay increase in the history of MGM Grand Detroit. It is a significant proposal,” he wrote.

    The Detroit Casino Council argues casino workers agreed to a three-year contract during the pressure-packed earlier days of the Covid-19 pandemic. The deal, which has now expired, included 3% wage increases even as the cost of living has surged 20% amid high inflation, according to the union.
    “In contrast, industry gaming revenues have now surpassed pre-pandemic levels to reach a new record high,” the Detroit Casino Council wrote in a news release. “In 2022, the Detroit casino industry generated $2.27 billion in gaming revenue and is on track for another record-breaking year in 2023. The three Detroit casinos collectively reported $813 million more in total gaming revenues in 2022 than in 2019, but total wages paid to workers represented by the DCC were $34 million less when comparing those same years.”
    But brick-and-mortar casinos saw revenues of $1.2 billion in 2022, about a $200 million decline from 2019, before the Covid-19 pandemic.
    The Detroit Casino Council revenue numbers include iGaming and online sports revenues. They are required by Michigan gaming regulators to partner with land-based casinos to get a license to operate.
    The Detroit Casino Council estimates each day of a strike could put approximately $738,000 in city and state tax revenues and $3.4 million in casino operator revenues at risk.

    MGM Resorts, Caesars Entertainment and Wynn Resorts are also facing possible walkouts in Las Vegas. Nearly 40,000 members of the Culinary Union have authorized a strike, though it hasn’t yet been called. Negotiations are ongoing.
    MGM CEO Bill Hornbuckle told CNBC during a keynote presentation at the Global Gaming Expo last week that he and top leadership from the other casinos are involved in intense negotiations. But he said the unions in Las Vegas are influenced by other attention-grabbing strikes.
    “It doesn’t help when UAW in Detroit is asking for 40%. I mean, that’s a top line that’s hard to ignore,” Hornbuckle said at the time. “That being said, I think what matters here locally is people’s ability, particularly on the front line to exist, to pay rent and to get to the next step in life. And so I think that’s what’s relevant.”Don’t miss these CNBC PRO stories: More