|
The Morning Ledger: U.S. Jobless Claims, Benefits Payments Fall to Pandemic Lows |
|
|
| |
|
|
Good morning. Applications for unemployment benefits fell to a new pandemic low, showing a healing labor market, and the number of people receiving jobless aid has also trended lower as many states end enhanced pandemic programs. Last week’s applications count marked the lowest level for claims since March 2020, the month the Covid-19 pandemic hit the U.S. economy. New claims and benefits payments have trended downward in recent months, largely reflecting a strengthening economy. [Continued below…] |
|
|
|
|
|
Charles Schwab Corp., Kansas City Southern and State Street Corp. are among the companies scheduled to release earnings today. Economists estimate the Commerce Department will report that retail sales—a measure of purchases at stores, at restaurants and online—fell by 0.4% last month compared with May. |
|
|
Levi’s CFO Looks to Bring Down Debt Further as Business Recovers |
|
Levi Strauss & Co. is working to pay down the debt that the jeans maker took on during the onset of the pandemic, finance chief Harmit Singh said, joining other public companies that have reduced their financial obligations. |
|
|
|
| Morgan Stanley offices in Times Square. The firm is the last of the big six U.S. banks to report financial results. PHOTO: AMIR HAMJA FOR THE WALL STREET JOURNAL |
|
|
Morgan Stanley said second-quarter profit rose 10% from a year earlier, thanks to a boost in fees from deal making and advising wealthy clients. Like the other big banks that reported earnings this week, Morgan Stanley delivered strong results across several business lines on the back of corporate America’s rapid rebound this spring. |
|
|
|
|
$551.6 Billion | Value of global sustainable finance bonds during the first half of 2021, up 76% from the prior-year period, according to data provider Refinitiv. |
|
|
|
| A 2019 Chevrolet Bolt electric vehicle at the North American International Auto Show in Detroit in 2019. PHOTO: REBECCA COOK/REUTERS |
|
|
|
|
| A demonstrator protested in front of the New York Stock Exchange after Robinhood restricted trading in hot stocks such as GameStop. PHOTO: JOHN LAMPARSKI/SOPA IMAGES/SIPA |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Every weekend we select a handful of articles we think are worth a bit of your time, either because they peel back the layers on a compelling business story or somehow make us look at business in a different light. The Atlantic looks at why many Americans have received Amazon.com Inc. packages they didn’t think they ordered. New York Magazine’s The Cut explores the growing business of email newsletters. Tech companies compete over users’ private data, Protocol reports. |
|
|
Clover Health, a Nashville, Tenn.-based health insurer, said Chief Financial Officer Joseph Wagner plans to leave the company on Aug. 13 for personal reasons. Mark Herbers, a director at consulting firm AlixPartners LLP, is set to serve as interim CFO until a permanent one is hired. |
|
|
Southwestern Energy Co., a Spring, Texas-based natural-gas exploration firm, appointed Carl Giesler Jr. chief financial officer, effective July 19. Michael Hancock, who has served as CFO on an interim basis, will continue as vice president of finance and treasurer. Mr. Giesler most recently served as chief executive at SandRidge Energy Inc. Air Products and Chemicals Inc., an Allentown, Pa.-based seller of chemicals and gases, disclosed compensation details for its incoming chief financial officer, Melissa Schaeffer. She is set to receive a base salary of $550,000 and a target annual incentive plan payout of 75% of her salary. Ms. Schaeffer would also receive a target annual long-term equity incentive of $1.2 million, which would be granted in December, the company said. |
|
|
|