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    Flights disrupted across UK as air traffic control reports a ‘technical issue’

    “We are currently experiencing a technical issue and have applied traffic flow restrictions to maintain safety,” the U.K.’s air traffic control provider said Monday.
    There have been reports of disruption in air travel across the country.
    Scottish airline Loganair earlier said on X that there was a “network-wide failure of UK air traffic control computer systems this morning.”

    Virgin Atlantic Airways Airbus A350-1000 aircraft seen taxiing in front of the air traffic control tower at London Heathrow airport in U.K.
    Nurphoto | Nurphoto | Getty Images

    The U.K.’s air traffic control provider reported a technical issue Monday which saw flights across the country disrupted.
    “We are currently experiencing a technical issue and have applied traffic flow restrictions to maintain safety,” NATS said in a statement. “Engineers are working to find and fix the fault.”

    NATS clarified that “UK airspace is not closed” following reports on social media site X, formerly known as Twitter.
    It did not provide further details on the cause of the issue or what flight restrictions had been put into place.
    Gatwick Airport, London’s second-largest airport, said it was “seeing delays, and [flight] cancellations are likely,” while Luton Airport said the air traffic control issue was “affecting UK airspace, resulting in disruption to flights.”
    Meanwhile, Stansted Airport said it was “aware of a nationwide air traffic control issue that is affecting flights in and out of airports across the country.”
    Edinburgh Airport said passengers should not come to the airport before checking the status of their flight with their airline.

    The issue with air traffic control was announced earlier by Scottish airline Loganair, which said on X that there was a “network-wide failure of UK air traffic control computer systems this morning.”
    Flight tracking website Flightradar24 shared an image on X of live air traffic data at 12:35 p.m. London time.
    In an accompanying statement, it said that U.K. airports, including Heathrow, appear to be “significantly limiting departures,” although arrivals continue. It added that all of its most tracked flights are currently London arrivals. More

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    European stocks higher after Fed chair signals more rate hikes possible

    European shares traded higher on the final trading week of August, as traders weighed the prospect of higher interest rates from the U.S. Federal Reserve and looked ahead to upcoming economic data later in the week.

    European markets

    Germany’s DAX 30 was 0.8%, France’s CAC 40 climbed 1.1%, and the Italian FTSE MIB gained 1.1% by 1.40 p.m. London time.

    Markets are closed in the U.K. for a public holiday.
    It came as investors continued to reflect on a roundup of commentary from the Kansas City Federal Reserve’s annual retreat in Jackson Hole, Wyoming, last week.
    The most closely watched speech of the event came from Fed Chair Jerome Powell. The U.S. central bank head said that inflation remains too high and that the Fed is ready to continue hiking interest rates to tame persistently high prices.
    While Powell said the Fed could be flexible, he added it still has further to go to fight inflation. “Although inflation has moved down from its peak — a welcome development — it remains too high,” he said in prepared remarks.
    “We are prepared to raise rates further if appropriate, and intend to hold policy at a restrictive level until we are confident that inflation is moving sustainably down toward our objective.”

    China cuts trading duty

    In Asia-Pacific, stocks began the week higher, with mainland Chinese and Hong Kong stocks leading gains in the region.
    The main event driving the rally in Asia was a stock market policy change from the government. China’s Ministry of Finance on Monday cut the stamp duty on stock trades by half in an effort to boost investment in its stock market. It came after China’s CSI 300 index fell to a nine-month low.
    Still, concerns linger among economists over structural issues in China’s economy, such as debt, demographics, and Beijing’s deteriorating relationship with the West.
    Within the Chinese market, shares of the world’s most indebted property developer, China Evergrande Group, tumbled 87% as trade resumed after 17 months.
    Back in Europe, developments are quiet on the corporate front as the region has wrapped up a busy earnings season.
    Swiss bank Credit Suisse, which is now a subsidiary of UBS after a government-facilitated takeover, posted a 3.5 billion Swiss franc ($4 billion) loss, according to a report in the SonntagsZeitung citing insiders at the bank.
    Shares of UBS rose about 1% Monday. The bank is set to report earnings on Thursday.
    Technology and telecoms stocks were the best-performing sectors in the region, climbing 1.4% and 0.9%, respectively.
    Looking at individual stocks, Italian telecoms firm Telecom Italia was the top performer on the Stoxx 600, rising 3.9%.
    Later in the week, the U.S. Labor Department is set to release nonfarm payrolls showing the pace of jobs and wage growth, which could guide the Fed on how to proceed with its monetary policy. More

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    Stocks making the biggest moves premarket: 3M, CrowdStrike, Xpeng and more

    Xpeng G9 SUV is on display during the 20th Shanghai International Automobile Industry Exhibition at the National Exhibition and Convention Center (Shanghai) on April 18, 2023 in Shanghai, China.
    VCG | Visual China Group | Getty Images

    Check out the companies making headlines before the bell.
    Xpeng — U.S.-traded shares of the Chinese electric vehicles company jumped 5% Monday premarket. Xpeng announced it would buy Didi’s smart electric car business in a deal worth $744 million. 

    3M — Shares rallied more than 5% after Bloomberg News reported the company tentatively agreed to resolve more than 330,000 lawsuits related to its defective earplugs, The company will pay more than $5.5 billion in the settlement, according to the report.
    Mister Car Wash — The car wash stock climbed 5.7% in premarket trading following an upgrade to overweight from neutral by Piper Sandler. The firm said Mister Car Wash has upside potential over the next two years.
    CrowdStrike — Shares of the cybersecurity company fell 2.6% in premarket trading after Morgan Stanley downgraded CrowdStrike to equal weight from overweight. The investment firm warned in a note to clients that Crowdstrike’s upcoming earnings report could show slowing revenue growth ahead.
    Akero Therapuetics — The biotech company’s shares added 2.2% after UBS initiated Akero with a buy rating and a price target that implies sharp gains ahead. UBS thinks the company’s treatment for non-alcoholic steatohepatitis could create an underappreciated market opportunity worth more than $20 billion. 
    Chinese stocks — Alibaba and JD.com rose 1.3% and 1.6%, respectively after the Chinese government said it would reduce a tax on trading, among other measures,  to boost its stock market.

    RPT Realty — Shares of the real estate investment trust rallied more than 11% on news RPT is being acquired by Kimco Realty for $2 billion in stock. The deal is expected to close in early 2024. “Approximately 70% of RPT’s portfolio aligns with our key strategic markets,” Kimco CEO Conor Flynn said in a statement.
    Abcam — Shares of protein consumables supplier Abcam fell more than 3% after Danaher announced it would acquire the company in a deal valued at around $5.7 billion. Danaher shares gained less than 1%.
    Boston Scientific — Boston Scientific jumped 5.5% after the medical device maker announced positive results Sunday for its treatment for patients with atrial fibrillation, or abnormal heartbeats.
    — CNBC’s Jesse Pound, Sarah Min and Alexander Harring contributed reporting. More

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    IHOP rolls out biscuits menu nationwide for the first time as the chain fights slowing sales

    IHOP, best known for its pancakes, is making its biscuits menu available nationwide for the first time.
    The restaurant chain has been branching out into different menu categories, such as burritos and savory crepes.
    In its latest quarter, IHOP’s same-store sales grew just 2.1%.

    IHOP’s new lineup of biscuit sandwiches.
    Source: IHOP

    For the first time ever, IHOP is making its biscuits menu available nationwide.
    The Dine Brands chain, best known for its pancakes, has been branching out into different categories, from burritos to savory crepes, after slashing its menu by a third during the early days of the Covid-19 pandemic. The new menu items have largely focused on drawing in diners during lunch and dinner hours and attracting more takeout orders. IHOP has also brought back some old favorites, such as its Cinn-A-Stack pancakes.

    However, the chain’s menu strategy hasn’t been enough to offset consumers’ cautious spending behavior. In its latest quarter, IHOP’s same-store sales grew just 2.1%, despite higher menu prices compared with the year-ago period. Sister brand Applebee’s fared even worse, reporting a same-store sales decline of 1% for the same period.
    Shares of Dine Brands have fallen 25% this year, dragging its market value down to $856 million.
    Starting Monday, IHOP’s sales — and Dine Brands’ stock — could get a boost from its biscuits menu. The chain has sold biscuits in certain regions, such as the South, but it decided to take the plunge and bring them to menus nationwide.
    The new lineup includes a buttermilk biscuit; a breakfast biscuit sandwich made with bacon, American cheese, cheese sauce and eggs; a chicken biscuit sandwich that features pickle chips and country gravy; and a fresh strawberries and cream biscuit filled with cheesecake mousse, strawberries and syrup.
    The breakfast biscuit sandwich, with a choice of a side, will be available until Sept. 26 for $7 to appeal to budget-minded consumers.

    IHOP Chief Marketing Officer Kieran Donahue told CNBC that consumer research showed diners across the country would be interested in eating the chain’s biscuits.
    “We wouldn’t have put this on our menu if we didn’t think it had national appeal,” she said.
    But first, the chain upgraded its biscuit recipe. The result is a biscuit that’s flaky with a little crunch on the top, according to Donahue.
    Biscuit sandwiches have been growing more popular with consumers, according to data from Datassential, a food and beverage market research firm.
    Chick-fil-A’s national expansion outside its Southeast stronghold has brought the Southern breakfast staple further into the mainstream. When Wendy’s rolled out its breakfast nationwide in early 2020, biscuits joined croissants and English muffins as the bases for its breakfast sandwiches.
    But biscuits aren’t on menus as much as they used to be. They can be found at 11.8% of U.S. restaurants, down from 14% in 2020, according to Datassential. Still, while their availability has shrunk, biscuits are growing more popular as sides and appetizers, the firm found.
    In line with that trend, IHOP crafted its biscuits menu to be versatile. For example, the fresh strawberries and cream biscuit could be a sweet breakfast or a dessert.
    Donahue also said that the chain made sure the biscuits could work for takeout as well. More than a fifth of IHOP’s sales come from to-go orders. More

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    Chinese EV startup Xpeng shares soar 13% after announcing $744 million deal with Didi

    Chinese electric car company Xpeng said Monday it is buying Didi’s smart electric car development business in an exchange of shares worth $744 million.
    With the strategic partnership and new assets from Didi, Xpeng said it plans to develop an electric car for launch next year under a new mass market brand.
    Didi itself has tried to develop robotaxis and electric vehicles, amid business setbacks in the last two years.

    Didi launched a free robotaxi service in parts of Shanghai in 2020.
    Vcg | Visual China Group | Getty Images

    BEIJING — Chinese electric car company Xpeng said Monday it is buying Didi’s smart electric car development business in an exchange of shares worth $744 million.
    The Chinese ride-hailing company will become a strategic shareholder of Xpeng, and the two companies are looking to cooperate in marketing, financial and insurance services, charging, robotaxis and international expansion. That’s according to releases from both companies.

    Xpeng shares rose more than 13% in Hong Kong trading as of Monday morning.

    Stock chart icon

    With the strategic partnership and new assets from Didi, Xpeng said it plans to develop an electric car for launch next year under a new mass market brand that will target the 150,000 yuan ($20,580) price range.
    Xpeng’s cars typically sell for around 200,000 yuan or more. The new brand, developed under the project name “MONA,” is set to be different from that of Xpeng.

    The startup’s deal with Didi comes as many companies look for ways to grab a slice of China’s growing but highly competitive electric car market.
    In late July, Xpeng and German auto giant Volkswagen signed a deal to develop two new electric cars for China under the VW brand, that’s set to launch in 2026.

    Under the agreement, Volkswagen plans to invest about $700 million in Xpeng for a 4.99% stake.

    Still operating at a loss

    The deals come as traditional auto giants have the cash that electric car startups lack.
    Earlier this month, Xpeng reported second-quarter net loss 2.8 billion yuan ($384.5 million) — a wider loss than analysts expected and the biggest quarterly loss since the company went public three years ago.
    Xpeng offers some of the most advanced assisted driving technology available to drivers in China. But the startup’s monthly car deliveries have remained low versus competitors’ such as BYD and Li Auto.
    The Didi electric car business — held by a subsidiary called Da Vinci Auto Co. — has also racked up losses. Those for 2022 more than tripled from the prior year to 2.64 billion yuan, according to a Hong Kong stock exchange filing. The unit had net assets of 937 million yuan as of June 30.
    Those financial results are set to be consolidated into Xpeng’s financial statements after the initial deal, the filing said.

    Read more about electric vehicles, batteries and chips from CNBC Pro

    The deal is expected to be completed in stages, with Didi set to receive more shares if the new mass market car brand does well for an expected total 3.25% stake in Xpeng.
    Under the agreement, Didi cannot sell the shares for two years after the initial closing of the deal.
    The strategic cooperation agreement is set to last for at least five years.
    Didi itself has tried to develop robotaxis and electric vehicles, amid business setbacks in the last two years.
    The ride-hailing giant delisted from the New York Stock Exchange just months after going public in 2021, and went through a now-concluded government probe. While the stock remains tradeable over-the-counter, plans for an expected Hong Kong listing remain unclear.
    — CNBC’s John Rosevear and Arjun Kharpal contributed to this report. More

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    Singapore’s OCBC bank suffers brief outage, shares gain 1%

    Southeast Asia’s fourth largest bank said it was facing “technical problems impacting our banking channels.”
    Services for cards, ATMs and at bank branches we’re restored almost an hour later.

    The rebranded logo of OCBC.

    SINGAPORE — Southeast Asia’s fourth largest bank OCBC suffered a short outage on Monday that affected its digital and card banking channels.
    At 9.43 a.m. Singapore time, the bank said in a Facebook post that it was facing “technical problems impacting our banking channels.”

    About an hour later at 10.37 a.m., OCBC announced that card and branch services were restored, followed by ATM services.
    Shares of the Singapore-headquartered lender gained 1.05% in afternoon trade.
    In a statement to CNBC, OCBC sought to assure customers there was no security breach.
    “We want to assure them that their monies remained safe and customer data was secured throughout. We are investigating the cause of the technical problem and will provide an update as soon as we can,” an OCBC spokesperson said.

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    These four trends are shaping the gun industry

    The gun industry is finding its footing after sliding from a record-setting sales streak during the pandemic.
    Top manufacturers have had to slow down production and slash prices to retain profits.
    Many in the industry are banking on newer weapons and better marketing strategies to woo consumers.

    People fire an assortment of guns at the annual Machine Gun Shoot sponsored by Shooters Gauntlet on June 03, 2023 in Monroe, Pennsylvania. The shoot, which has been held since 2016, lets gun enthusiast and others shoot machine guns at targets in a controlled and secure wooded location.
    Spencer Platt | Getty Images

    The gun industry is finding its footing after a post-pandemic sales slump forced some of the largest manufacturers roll back production.
    In July, Americans bought an estimated 1.19 million guns, down 17% from the previous July, according to FBI data analyzed by gun watchdog site The Trace.

    However, while fewer firearms are being sold across the U.S, the business is still profitable as manufacturers adapt to meet changing consumer demand, develop a new generation of weapons, and employ marketing strategies that increasingly resonate with younger, more diverse consumers.
    Gun makers, in turn, such as Smith & Wesson and Sturm, Ruger & Company have seen their declines stabilize. Smith & Wesson shares are up about 40% so far this year, while Sturm, Ruger is up 2%.
    They’re assuring investors that their business models have weathered the slowdown and that a handful of positive trends will help the industry rebound.
    Here are four trends that are shaping the gun industry today:

    Market normalization

    Several companies in the gun market are slowing down production and slashing prices as they combat material cost increases and waning demand for their weapons.

    During the pandemic, more Americans than ever purchased firearms. In 2020, at the height of the sales boom, new gun ownership rates hit a record 21 million, according to trade group National Shooting Sports Foundation. NSSF uses FBI data and background checks to estimate new gun ownership rates.
    However, by 2022, feelings of insecurity and instability experienced by many Americans amid the pandemic subsided, and so did the surge in firearms sales. Gun purchases that year fell to 16.4 million, which is more akin to pre-pandemic numbers.
    “The industry’s bottomed-out and has stabilized,” Aegis Capital analyst Rommel Dionisio told CNBC.
    Smith & Wesson, the country’s largest firearms manufacturer by revenue, reported fourth quarter net sales of $144.8 million, a 20% decrease from comparable quarter last year.
    On a conference call with investors, CEO Mark Smith said the company is “adjusting production rates to match normalizing demand patterns.” Smith added that “focused consumer promotions” have helped the company maintain its leading market share and retain profits.
    In its most recent earnings report, Sturm, Ruger & Company reported flat sales for its second quarter amid softening demand for some of its most popular product categories like its polymer pistols.
    However, the company’s bottom line during the second quarter, while down from the prior-year period, improved from the first quarter.
    CEO Christopher J. Killoy said the company will “continue to adjust our level of production and product mix to better align our output with current, and expected, consumer demand.”
    “It’s not really going down from here,” Aegis Capital’s Dionisio said. The industry, if anything, may even begin to ramp up production if there’s another surge in demand brought about by the 2024 presidential election. Gun sales typically see a spike during presidential elections, Dionisio added.

    Smart guns

    The next generation of firearms appear to be on the horizon: lightweight, cost-effective weapons that incorporate advanced technology and some safety features.
    Gun startups like Biofire Technologies are leading the charge with its 9mm handgun handgun that utilizes facial recognition and fingerprint verification technology to operate. CEO and founder Kai Kloepfer said the smart-gun, which is the first to come to market after years of failed attempts by other companies, can help reduce accidental firings and suicides.
    “When you pick the firearm up, it uses either your fingerprint or your face to unlock, so only an authorized user can fire it,” Kloepfer told CNBC.
    Kloepfer said thousands have already placed preorders online, with some models selling out. Biofire said it cannot share specifics around the volumes produced since it is somewhat “sensitive competitively.”
    Their guns retail between $1,499 and $1,899. When they ship in December, they’ll become the first smart guns to enter U.S. circulation. Investors in Biofire include venture capitalist Ron Conway and Peter Thiel’s Founders Fund
    Biofire’s smart gun comes as gun manufacturers increasingly look for different materials and technologies to make their products more appealing to consumers.
    Mark Oliva, an executive at the National Shooting Sports Foundation, said red dot sights have become a popular accessory among consumers in recent years.
    An alternative to the more traditional iron sight, which requires shooters to look through an optical telescope for aim, red dot sights project a small light directly onto a target.
    “My eyes aren’t getting any better,” said Oliva, “so I’m one of the people who’s switched over to using a red dot sight on my handgun.”
    Oliva also said the industry is turning towards more lightweight materials such as polymer to make slimmer, more durable guns that are cheaper than metal or steel alternatives. These days, said Oliva, polymer can be found in every type of modern firearm, including those produced by startup Biofire.
    Anti-firearm violence nonprofit Everytown for Gun Safety sees the positive potential in smart guns.
    “Smart guns can ensure that guns are accessible by their owners and no one else,” said Nick Suplina, senior vice president for law and policy at Everytown, who has tested Biofire’s smart gun. “Gun manufacturers now have a viable road map for innovating towards safety — and it’s on them to act.”

    Changing demographics

    The pandemic-era sales boom for firearms showed the face of gun ownership in the U.S. is changing.
    Of the 7.5 million Americans who bought guns for the first time between January 2019 and April 2021, half were female, a fifth were Black, and another fifth were Hispanic, according to a study by Matthew Miller, a professor of health sciences and epidemiology at Northeastern.
    By contrast, gun owners overall are 63% male and 73% white, the study found.
    Another study by NORC at the University of Chicago noted similar trends.
    First-time gun purchasers during the pandemic, according to the study, were younger than previous, pre-pandemic U.S. gun owners.
    Eighty-six percent of first-time gun buyers during the pandemic were younger than 45. Prior to the pandemic, 41% of all gun owners were under 45, according to NORC. The group began tracking this data in March 2020.
    “The idea that gun owners are only old, male and pale isn’t holding true,” NSSF’s Oliva told CNBC. “Today’s gun buyers are more representative of America.”

    Self protection

    Gun owners are increasingly ranking personal protection as the top reason for buying a firearm.
    Nearly three-quarters of U.S. gun owners cited protection more than any other factor as the main reason they own a gun, according to a 2023 Pew Research center survey.
    The survey found respondents cited other factors such as hunting and sport shooting at 30% and 32%, respectively.
    In 2017, when the survey was last conducted, 67% of respondents cited protection as a major reason for owning a firearm.
    This increase is consistent with how gun culture has evolved over the last few decades, according to a 2020 survey by online academic journal Palgrave Communications.
    Many manufacturers, especially amid the social upheaval experienced within the U.S. over the last few years, have moved away from themes of hunting and recreation to advertise their guns, and have instead leaned into themes of personal protection and self defense to reach consumers.
    “Although we recognize the continuing existence of various subcultures of guns in the U.S., these changes suggest the movement of self-defense to the core of American gun culture today,” authors for the study said. “With this shift, previously dominant subcultures like hunting and recreational target shooting have become more marginal.”
    This is also consistent with what types of guns have risen in popularity. Oliva said he’s been seeing gun buyers gravitate towards handguns, such as semiautomatic pistols or “glocks,” which are more compact, easily concealed and designed for self defense. More

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    Labor unions are pushing hard for double-digit raises and better hours. Many are winning

    More workers across industries have taken a hard stance against companies for dramatic improvements in compensation and working conditions.
    More than 320,000 workers have participated in at least 230 strikes so far this year, according to data from the Cornell University School of Industrial and Labor Relations.
    UPS workers and airline pilots have won rich labor deals. Hollywood writers and actors as well as auto workers could be next.

    Members of the United Auto Workers union hold a rally and practice picket near a Stellantis plant in Detroit, Aug. 23, 2023.
    Michael Wayland / CNBC

    From writers’ rooms to car factories, workers are pressing companies for higher pay and better quality of life. Many are willing to walk off the job to get there, and some are winning.
    Emboldened in the wake of shifting job security and grueling conditions during the Covid-19 pandemic, skyrocketing company profits, inflation, a decades-high approval rating for labor unions and growing disparity between worker pay and executive compensation, more workers across industries have taken a hard stance against companies for dramatic improvements in compensation and working conditions.

    Some, like UPS’ workers’ union, are nailing down record labor deals following threats of striking. Others have gone on strike to force the issue. Workers at key Boeing supplier Spirit AeroSystems in June approved a deal with the company after a brief work stoppage. Writers Guild of America members have now been on strike for more than 100 days.
    The rich contracts and work stoppages in recent months follow high-profile organizing efforts by workers across the country that started prior to the Covid-19 pandemic and have grown increasingly more intense following the global health crisis, affecting companies from Amazon and Starbucks to airlines and automakers.
    “The pandemic shook the ground of everybody,” said Robert Bruno, director of the Labor Studies Program at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign.

    Striking Writers Guild of America workers picket outside Paramount Studios in Los Angeles, July 12, 2023.
    Mario Tama | Getty Images

    More than 320,000 workers have participated in at least 230 strikes so far this year, according to data from the Cornell University School of Industrial and Labor Relations. That’s already higher than the roughly 224,000 workers who participated in roughly 420 strikes in 2022, due in large part to tens of thousands of striking workers with the Screen Actors Guild – American Federation of Television and Radio Artists and Writers Guild of America.
    “Major” strikes involving 1,000 or more workers so far amount to just 16 such work stoppages this year, according to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics. That compares to a recent high of 25 recorded major work stoppages in 2019 and 23 last year.

    The actions have led to more organizing efforts and greater support by Americans for organized labor. Gallup reports 71% of Americans approved of labor unions in 2022 — the highest since 1965.

    There’s potentially more striking ahead.
    The United Auto Workers is in the middle of national contract negotiations for nearly 150,000 workers with General Motors, Ford Motor and Stellantis, with an 11:59 p.m. Sept. 14 deadline fast approaching.
    “I don’t want to strike, but I will. I will absolutely,” said Daniel “Chris” Wells, a Stellantis employee and UAW member of about three years. “Whatever it takes to get what we need and what we deserve.”
    UAW President Shawn Fain on Friday said the union’s goal is not to strike, but that it will do so to win a “fair and just contract.” However, the pugnacious union leader has been more combative and quicker to use strike rhetoric than previous union leaders.

    Big contracts

    Many of the work stoppages so far this year have led to major victories for union members.
    Following strikes against companies such as Deere and CNH Industrial, the UAW achieved much of what it was demanding: double-digit wage gains, addition or improvements of pensions and restoration of cost-of-living adjustments.

    Daniel “Chris” Wells, a Stellantis employee and United Auto Workers member of about three years, stands with UAW President Shawn Fain during a union rally in Detroit, Aug. 23, 2023.
    Michael Wayland / CNBC

    It’s now calling for similar improvements from the Detroit automakers, following other high-profile collective bargaining wins elsewhere in the country.
    UPS workers on Tuesday ratified a massive five-year labor deal that includes big wage increases and other improvements to work rules and schedules. The company’s drivers — represented by the Teamsters Union, which represents about 340,000 workers at the delivery giant — will average $170,000 in pay and benefits at the end of the five-year deal.
    “It’s like this perfect storm for workers,” said Melissa Atkins, a labor and employment partner at Obermayer. “Individuals are living paycheck to paycheck, and right now they have the bargaining power.”

    Pilots at Delta Air Lines and American Airlines have ratified contracts worth billions, following months of pickets and strike authorization votes, though pilot strikes are extremely rare and require a long process under U.S. labor law. A pilot shortage has given unions more leverage in labor negotiations.
    United Airlines struck a preliminary agreement with its pilots union last month for up to 40% raises over four years. The deal prompted American Airlines to raise its offer for its own pilots.
    In airlines, the contract wins are partly the result of a years-long buildup. Airline unions were just starting industry-wide negotiations when the Covid-19 pandemic hit, derailing contract talks. Many employees such as pilots and flight attendants hadn’t received raises since their contracted pay increases had expired, even though inflation rose.
    Meanwhile, unions complained of grueling schedules, faulting airline management for flight disruptions.
    While airlines received $54 billion in taxpayer aid to keep workers in their jobs during the pandemic, carriers urged thousands to take early retirement packages that left them flat-footed when travel demand returned.

    In Hollywood, performers and scribes are pushing for higher wages and better backend payouts, tied to the success of streaming. Many have called out often pitiful royalty payments for episodes of a show or a movie that take off on streaming, such as the recent interest in “Suits” on Netflix.
    Writers are also pushing for compensation throughout the process of pre-production, production and post-production, a relative rarity in the industry now.
    In striking, writers and actors have not only halted production, but have hindered marketing efforts as well. Talent is not permitted to promote any current, future or past work that was part of a studio production, leading some theatrical releases such as Warner Bros. Discovery and Legendary Entertainment’s “Dune: Part Two” to flee to 2024.

    More than pay

    It’s not just higher pay that workers are seeking, but an increase in their quality of life, particularly in the wake of pandemic working conditions.
    “For unionized workers who are going on strike, it’s the first contract that many of them are negotiating since the beginning of the pandemic,” said Johnnie Kallas, a Ph.D. candidate and project director for Cornell’s ILR Labor Action Tracker. “While a lot of the issues that workers are striking about are certainly not new, the pandemic definitely exacerbated a lot of them.”
    Hollywood talent are looking for studios to implement new rules including minimum staffing requirements for writers as well as audition provisions, better working conditions and better health and pension benefits for actors. Both the WGA and SAG-AFTRA are also asking for guardrails when it comes to the use of artificial intelligence within the industry.

    Tensions continue to rise between the two guilds and Hollywood studios. The writers’ union and studios have returned to the negotiating table, though with little progress. Negotiations with SAG-AFTRA are likely to wait until WGA talks are settled.
    Southwest Airlines is still in negotiations with its pilots’ union, which has made better scheduling a core part of negotiations. Casey Murray, president of the Southwest Airlines Pilots Association, said frequent reassignments can wear pilots down, just as they would passengers.
    “They need that predictability,” he said, adding that the company has made some progress in talks with the pilots’ union in recent weeks. He said he is “cautiously optimistic” about reaching a preliminary deal this year, the last of the four largest U.S. carriers to get to that point.
    Regaining control of their schedules has been a common theme at several companies, including UPS’ Teamsters-negotiated deal. The union won limitations on forced overtime.
    “There’s an expectation that pay will substantially go up” when workers have more leverage, said UIUC’s Bruno. “But it’s also a chance to recraft the job.”

    He said it’s not only about the number of hours worked but “having a voice in the number of hours” on the schedule and other aspects of how an employee’s job is done.
    The UAW has targeted improving work-life balance for union members, many of whom are forced to work overtime or potentially lose their jobs. The union has proposed a 32-hour work week to even out circumstances with salaried employees.
    “They say the financial people are college educated, well you know what I say to that, big f***ing deal,” UAW President Fain said during a rally last week with hundreds of members. “Our members were deemed essential during Covid. If we didn’t show up, we lost our damn jobs. Our members were expected to risk their lives and some of them sacrificed their lives, to keep the economy moving during these times — while the ‘educated’ people, sat safely in their living rooms working remote.
    “We deserve the same treatment. Our lives matter, too,” he said.
    Tony Jordan, an auto repairman and UAW member of more than two decades, works 60 hours a week at a Stellantis plant in Detroit. He said his priorities are maintaining the union’s platinum health care, pay increases and the potential 32-hour work week for more time to spend with his new grandchild.
    He said he views these talks as a fight for the union’s “long-term viability.”
    “Why not fight now? Not only for us, but the working class,” he said.
    — CNBC’s Sarah Whitten contributed to this report. More