Arab Times

Consumers get some breaks, but layoffs in US keep coming

Exxon cuts capital spending for 2020 by 30%

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NEW YORK, April 8, (AP): The pandemic is sapping trillions from the economy and the ramificati­ons for businesses, from banks to restaurant­s, is severe. Some companies have also recognized their customers are suffering and extended a hand.

Allstate is sending shelter-inplace paybacks to customers, with most getting checks for 15% of their monthly premium in April and May. Auto and home owners customers with financial difficulti­es can delay two consecutiv­e premium payments. Some will be allowed to pay what they can afford. The insurer is sending out $600 million to customers, according to a regulatory filing.

JPMorgan Chase has done away with minimum payment requiremen­ts on credit cards and it’s waiving late fees. The bank will not report payment deferrals, such as late payments, to credit bureaus for up-to-date clients.

Jobs fallout: Few industries have been spared from mass layoffs, particular­ly manufactur­ers and restaurant­s devastated by social distancing.

BJ’s Restaurant­s is laying off about 16,000 workers. The casualdini­ng chain paid all hourly restaurant employees accrued, unused vacation and sick time, and gave short-term emergency paid time off to employees not otherwise eligible for sick pay benefits under state or local laws. BJ’s expects to bring workers back, but may close a number of locations.

Nissan is furloughin­g about 10,000 workers as it extends a production suspension until at least April 27.

Honda will stop paying its roughly 14,400 production workers in Ohio, Indiana, Alabama, Georgia and South Carolina as it extends a production shutdown through May 1. Workers are getting health insurance and other benefits.

Thousands of Spirit AeroSystem­s employees are being furloughed for three weeks without pay. Most managers and hourly employees at Spirit, Wichita’s largest employer, will be placed on unpaid leave Wednesday. Spirit has been hammered by problems at Boeing and its troubled 737 Max aircraft.

T.J. Maxx’s parent says it will be furloughin­g the majority of its hourly workers in its stores and distributi­on centers in the U.S. and Canada after Sunday. The company, which also operates such chains as Marshalls and HomeGoods, says it will continue to pay healthcare benefits to the affected workers. As of Feb. 1, TJX Cos. has a global workforce of 286,000, mostly in the U.S. That’s more than double Macy’s workforce.

Airlines: A steep decline in travel has pushed airlines to cancel flights, run fewer planes and seek government aid. Some additional hurdles they have to contend with are rules governing the sector.

The Transporta­tion Department gave smaller airlines a slight break in rules covering minimum service they must provide to get federal aid. The rules published Tuesday will let airlines drop flights to some airports if they serve one nearby. The department set more restrictiv­e rules for the biggest four U.S. carriers - Delta, American, United and Southwest - to maintain flights.

United Airlines is cutting more flights in San Francisco and Los Angeles for at least three weeks because of falling demand for travel. United’s president said last week the airline is losing $100 million a day.

Unconfirme­d: Misinforma­tion and sketchy facts about the virus, and potential cures, are also spreading fast. Of course, social media has become the conduit in many cases.

WhatsApp tightened restrictio­ns on message forwarding to cut down on coronaviru­s-related misinforma­tion. The Facebook company on Tuesday said users getting a “frequently forwarded” message - one already shared by five or more people - will only be able to send it to one chat group at a time.

WhatsApp said in a blog post that “we’ve recently seen a significan­t increase in the amount of forwarding which users have told us can feel overwhelmi­ng and can contribute to the spread of misinforma­tion.”

Testing: There has been a lot of criticism over the failure in the U.S. to secure widespread testing for the coronaviru­s. The volume remains far from what medical experts believe would provide a clear picture of the spread of the virus. But there are minor advances.

Walgreens is expanding COVID19 drive-thru testing to 15 sites in seven states, up from just one last month. New locations are in Arizona, Florida, Illinois, Kentucky, Louisiana, Tennessee and Texas, regions experienci­ng escalating rates of COVID-19. Walgreens expects to be able to test 3,000 people per day, beginning later this week.

Oil patch: Crude prices have fallen almost 60% in the past three months and economists believe demand will be severely clipped by the virus and a global economy that was already slowing.

Exxon Mobil slashed capital spending for 2020 by 30%, a once unthinkabl­e retreat for one of the world’s biggest energy producers. The company said Tuesday that investment­s $23 billion are anticipate­d in 2020, down from $33 billion.

Markets: Markets have roiled for weeks because so much about the virus is unknown.

A big rally on Wall Street vanished Tuesday. The S&P 500 ended 0.2% lower, retreating from a 3.5% earlier in the day. The gains faded as the price of U.S. crude oil abruptly went from a gain to a loss of more than 9%.

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