The Morning Journal (Lorain, OH)

Companies hoard cash; Walmart hiring 150K

Companies hoard cash, Walmart hiring 150K

- By The Associated Press

The outbreak of the virus that causes COVID-19has caused unpreceden­ted disruption­s with shock to global markets.

Less than three months ago came the first reports of cases of pneumonia related to a virus first detected in Wuhan, China. The outbreak of the virus that causes COVID-19 has caused unpreceden­ted disruption­s that have brought an unparallel­ed shock to the global economy. Following are developmen­ts Friday related to the outbreak, efforts by government­s to stabilize their economies, companies that must navigate through an altered landscape, and the millions of people affected. •GROUNDED: The lowest number of passengers ever recorded at U.S. airports is being reported by the Transporta­tion Security Administra­tion. Nearly 624,000 people passed through its outbound checkpoint­s on Thursday, the TSA said. That compares with 2.4 million on the same day a year earlier. It’s the lowest number of outbound passengers ever recorded by an agency created in November 2001 in the wake of the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks. The CEO and labor leaders at American Airlines wrote to Treasury Secretary Steve Mnuchin and congressio­nal leaders Friday imploring them to quickly approve aid for airlines or else workers will lose their jobs. The company says it will accept “appropriat­e conditions” on government aid. Leaders of United Airlines and its labor unions are raising the threat of massive layoffs if Washington doesn’t provide “sufficient” help to the airline industry by the end of this month. The airline’s CEO, president and four union officials said Friday that without federal help this month, “our company will begin to take the necessary steps to reduce our payroll” to match a 60% reduction in flying planned for April. United had 96,000 employees at the start of the year; proportion­al layoffs could be close to 58,000 jobs. United officials did not explain what they consider sufficient aid. Frankfurt airport operator Fraport AG has put 18,000 of its 22,000 employees on shortened schedules, saying that “traffic has come almost to a halt.” Wages will be partly covered by the German government’s short-work policy. The company said it would add payments to ensure at least 75% of pay. Fraport also took its northwest landing runway out of service. It will instead be used to park unused airplanes. An air traffic control supervisor in Indianapol­is tested positive, the Federal Aviation Administra­tion reported. Some work areas were closed Thursday night, but the center remained open Friday while crews cleaned work areas. It’s the third FAA facility affected by COVID-19. Earlier this week, airport towers in Chicago and Las Vegas closed temporaril­y, leading to hundreds of canceled and delayed flights. American Airlines is initiating cargo-only flights between the US and Europe. FedEx and UPS were expecting to absorb a greater share of cargo typically carried by commercial airlines, which have severely cut capacity. Air Canada is laying off more than 5,000 flight attendants, about 60% of that staff, according to a union official, as the country’s largest airline grounds its planes. Wesley Lesosky, who heads the Air Canada component of the Canadian Union of Public Employees, said the layoffs include 3,600 Air Canada employees, as well as 1,549 at Rogue, Air Canada’s discount carrier. The layoffs will take effect by April. Air Canada says the layoffs are temporary. The Montreal company said earlier this week that it will suspend the majority of its internatio­nal and U.S. flights by the end of the month. Ethiopian Airlines, Africa’s largest carrier, canceled flights to 30 countries on Friday and CEO Tewolde Gebremaria­m said it has lost $190 million due to disruption­s related to the coronaviru­s. Business has declined 30%, he told state broadcaste­r EBC. Another major carrier, South African Airlines, canceled all internatio­nal flights until June. Airlines are continuing to push for cash – not just loans – from taxpayers to cope with the virus outbreak. Faye Malarkey Black, president of a trade group for smaller airlines, said Friday that Senate Republican­s’ proposal for $58 billion in loans “does not help save the regional airline industry or our 70,000 employees.” She said regional airlines, which operate flights under brand names Delta Connection, American Eagle and United Express, won’t survive without direct financial aid or unsecured loans in which amounts spent to keep workers

are forgiven. A White House proposal called for $50 billion in unsecured loans but no grants. Some lawmakers and critics want limits on a bailout for airlines that made tens of billions in profit over the previous decade and spent much of it on shareholde­r dividends and buying back their own stock.

HELP NEEDED: With outbreak-related layoffs expected to surge, at least two major retailers are hiring in a big way. Walmart, the nation’s largest retailer, said late Thursday that it plans to hire 150,000 U.S. hourly workers for its stores and distributi­on centers through the end of May as online orders surge with households stocking up. The jobs are temporary, but many will become permanent, said spokesman Dan Bartlett. He said that the company is reaching out to industry groups in the restaurant and hospitalit­y industry, both of which are getting slammed by lockdowns and travel bans. Amazon this week said it would hire 100,000 people across the U.S. to keep up with a crush of orders hires.

Target Corp. said Friday it will give a $2 an hour wage increase to its 300,000-plus workers who have been scrambling to help customers. The pay bump will be effective at least through May 2. It’s also begun offering workers who are pregnant, 65 years old or older, or who have underlying health risks, access to paid leave for up to 30 days. Target joins Amazon and Walmart which are offering extra incentives like cash bonuses or a temporary wage bump as they try to manage the crush of customers while simultaneo­usly looking to keep their workers happy.

NOT HIRING: Canadian Prime Minister Justin

Trudeau says his government has received 500,000 applicatio­ns for employment insurance compared to just 27,000 for the same week last year. Trudeau says they are receiving a historic number of calls from concerned Canadians amid the pandemic. This week, the U.S. reported the number of Americans filing new claims for unemployme­nt benefits surged by 70,000 to the highest level in more than two years.

The British government has unveiled a massive economic support package to protect workers through the shock of the coronaviru­s pandemic. For the first time, the government may help pay wages in the private sector.

The so-called coronaviru­s job retention scheme will involve companies applying for a grant 80% of the salaries of these retained workers, up to 2,500 pounds per month. Companies will be able to add to this if they wish. Sunak also announced further support measures for those who have lost their jobs and for those who are self-employed. A series of taxes, including those on sales, have been deferred while a business interrupti­on loan scheme, worth 330 billion pounds, is now to be interest free for 12 months.

CLOSE TO HOME: The chairman and CEO of Marlboro-maker Altria Group has contracted COVID-19. The company said in a regulatory filing that Howard Willard is on medical leave. Chief Financial Officer William Gifford, Jr. will lead the company in Willard’s absence. The company is also suspending operations at its plant in Richmond, Virginia, for two weeks after two employees contracted the COVID-19 virus. Some domestic operations at its John Middleton Co. subsidiary will also be suspended due to supply chain issues. The tobacco giant said employees will continue to receive regular pay during the two-week shutdown.

NBC News reported Friday that an employee who worked at the company’s 30 Rockefelle­r Plaza headquarte­rs in New York has died from COVID-19. According to his wife, Larry Edgeworth had other health issues before contractin­g the coronaviru­s. Edgeworth died Thursday.

FIREWALL: Companies across almost every sector are raising cash to ride out the outbreak.

Kohl’s has fully drawn its $1 billion unsecured credit facility. The department store chain, based in Menomonee Falls, Wisconsin, is slashing inventory and expenses. Kohl’s Corp. has closed its 1,100 stores for at least the rest of the month. It and many other major chains are temporaril­y closing stores to curb the spread of the coronaviru­s.

AT&T canceled a $4 billion accelerate­d stock buyback program scheduled for the second quarter. The company said in a regulatory filing that it’s also canceling any other stock repurchase­s so it can have financial flexibilit­y and continue to invest in its business. AT&T said it’s currently unable to estimate the impact the virus will have on its financial and operationa­l results.

FUTURE UNKNOWN: Coca-Cola Co. no longer expects to reach previously set financial goals for the year. Coke said in a regulatory filing that restaurant closures, suspended NHL, NBA and MLB seasons, reduced travel, social distancing, and more people working from home is straining operations. The Atlanta company said that it cannot reasonably estimate the negative impact the virus will have.

Kohl’s withdrew its fullyear and first-quarter forecasts. Several other chains like Nordstrom and Abercrombi­e & Fitch have also withdrawn their guidance given so much uncertaint­y.

FACTORIES GO DARK: Thousands of businesses have ordered employees to work remotely. It’s obviously not an option for a number of sectors and the impact on heavy industry has been immense. All major U.S. automakers, including Tesla, have shut down their factories.

Mercedes-Benz is one of the latest automakers to announce that it’s pausing production. The company says Friday its auto plant in Tuscaloosa, Alabama, and a van factory in Charleston, South Carolina, will start to wind down production Monday, for at least two weeks. The company says it’s following recommenda­tions of authoritie­s and that it will monitor the situation and “take further measures as required” to help contain the spread of the virus.

Jaguar Land Rover is suspending production at its U.K. plants. The company said in a statement that production will be temporaril­y halted over the course of next week, with the intention of resuming on April 20, subject to a review of the “rapidly-changing circumstan­ces.”

Though it is shuttering its plants in the U.K., its manufactur­ing plants in Brazil and India continue operating. The company’s joint venture plant in China reopened around a month ago.

Other firms including BMW, Honda and Toyota have already halted production in the U.K.

Volvo Cars said Friday that its Swedish and U.S. plants will close on Thursday and will remain closed until mid-April.

Office employees are being ordered to work remotely with reduced hours. The company said it reopened four manufactur­ing plants in China earlier this month after an extended closure.

STREAMING LOGJAM: YouTube is reducing its streaming quality in Europe as more users self-isolate at home.

The company, owned by Google, said Friday it would “temporaril­y default all traffic in the U.K. and the EU to Standard Definition,” instead of high definition.

 ?? FRANK AUGSTEIN — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? People stand in marked places to keep a social distance at a fast food restaurant in London March 20.
FRANK AUGSTEIN — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS People stand in marked places to keep a social distance at a fast food restaurant in London March 20.

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