The Washington Post - 02.11.2019

(Steven Felgate) #1

A16 EZ RE THE WASHINGTON POST.SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 2 , 2019


THE MARKETS

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EExchange-Traded
(Ticker) 5D % Chg$$718 $
Coffee (COFF.L) 3.
Copper (COPA.L) -1.
Corn (CORN.L) -0.
Cotton (COTN.L) -1.
Crude Oil (CRUD.L) -2.
Gasoline (UGAS.L) -0.
Gold (BULL.L) 0.
Natural Gas (NGAS.L) 6.
Silver (SLVR.L) -0.


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New Car Loan Natl
4 4.

CCurrency Exchange

Close
8,386.

2-yr note
Yield:
1.55%

Markets YTD % Chg

Americas Close

Weekly
% Chg-23.2% +23.2%
BRAZIL IBOVESPA INDEX 108195.60 0.
S&P/TSX COMPOSITE INDEX 16594.07 1.
S&P/BMV IPC 43814.55 1.

S&P 500 Industry Group Snapshot

Industry Group

Weekly
% Chg

-44.5% Chg % 1Yr +44.5%

Distributors 5 5.
Industrial Conglomerates 5 5.
Auto Components 4 4.
Biotechnology 4 4.
Real Estate Mgmt & Dev 4 4.
Construction Materials --2.
Textiles & Apparel --1.
Multiline Retail --1.
Personal Products --1.
Energy Equipment & Svcs --1.

$1000 invested over 1 Month

Bloomberg

ND J FMA M J J A S ON

21,

24,

27,
'

LIBOR 3-Month
1.90%

5D % Change
1.4%

Bank Prime
4.75%

EU €
0.

Money Market Natl
0.

ND J FMA M J J A S ON

6,

7,

8,
'



$1000 invested over 1 Year

Asia Pacific -31.3% +31.3%
S&P/ASX 200 INDEX 6669.10 -1.
CSI 300 INDEX 3952.39 1.
HANG SENG INDEX 27100.76 1.
NIKKEI 225 22850.77 0.

    
 


 


10-yr note
Yield:
1.71%

Japan ¥
108.

'

1Yr CD Natl
1.

5D % Change
1.7%

1-Yr ARM
3.55%





  

Note: Bank prime is from 10 major banks. Federal Funds rate is the market
rate, which can vary from the federal target rate. LIBOR is the London
Interbank Offered Rate. Consumer rates are from Bankrate. All figures as of
4:30 p.m. New York time.

Close
3,066.

Britain £
0.

Consumer Rates

  


30-Yr Fixed mtge
3.75%

5-yr note
Yield:
1.54%

5Yr CD Natl
1.

    
 

Federal Funds
1.75%

YTD % Change
26.4%

Mexico $
19.

15-Yr Fixed mtge
3.16%

6-month bill
Yield:
1.53%

YTD % Change
22.3%

6Mo CD Natl
0.
Home Equity Loan Natl
6.

ND J FMA M J J A S ON

2,

2,

3,
'

Canada $
1.

Gainers and Losers from the S&P 1500 Index
Company Close

5D %
Chg
Cirrus Logic Inc 72.43 29.
Tiffany & Co 127.00 28.
Unisys Corp 10.38 27.
Harmonic Inc 8.00 25.
Qorvo Inc 97.22 23.
Murphy USA Inc 113.57 22.
El Pollo Loco Inc 15.00 22.
Ultra Clean Inc 22.13 22.
eHealth Inc 73.14 21.
AnixterInternational 84.77 21.
Briggs & Stratton 8.53 20.
Invacare Corp 8.13 20.
ABIOMED Inc 216.79 18.
Sanderson Farms Inc 159.76 18.
OneSpan Inc 18.70 18.
Installed Bldng Prod 75.70 18.
Ruth's Hospt Grp 24.28 17.
PH Glatfelter Co 18.15 17.
Mattel Inc 11.89 16.
LibertyPropertyTrust 59.06 16.

¬

Company Close

5D %
Chg
GrubHub Inc 33.72 -42.
Tupperware Brands 9.73 -40.
US Silica Inc 4.90 -36.
Comty Health Systems 3.20 -28.
Arista Networks Inc 185.30 -24.
Diebold Nixdorf Inc 7.48 -22.
Etsy Inc 45.66 -22.
Unit Corp 2.08 -22.
MeritMedicalSystems 24.15 -19.
Michaels Cos Inc/The 8.69 -19.
HMS Holdings Corp 26.53 -19.
AMAG Pharmaceuticals 9.94 -18.
Owens-Illinois Inc 8.74 -18.
World Wrestling Ent 55.96 -18.
Lydall Inc 19.60 -17.
CHRobinsonWorldwide 74.70 -17.
Orthofix Medical Inc 41.52 -17.
Newpark Resources 6.02 -17.
World Acceptance 104.68 -16.
LSB Industries Inc 4.55 -16.

Brazil R$
3.

5D % Change
1.5%

Close
27,347.

YTD % Change
17.2%

Futures Close 5D % Chg
Copper 2.65 -0.
Crude Oil 56.20 -0.
Gold 1511.40 0.
Natural Gas 2.71 18.
Orange Juice 0.99 -2.


¬

Futures Close 5D % Chg
Silver 18.05 0.
Sugar 12.48 1.
Soybean 9.37 0.
Wheat 5.16 -0.
Corn 3.89 0.

Dow Jones 30 Industrials


Company Close


5D %
Chg

Chg %
3M
3M Co 170.09 2.4 -1.
AmerExpCo 119.14 0.7 -4.
Apple Inc 255.82 3.7 22.
Boeing 345.19 1.6 3.
Caterpillr 144.49 3.4 14.
Chevron 116.21 -2.1 -3.
Cisco Sys 47.03 0.3-15.
Coca-Cola 53.90 0.3 3.
Dow Inc 52.31 3.6 11.
ExxonMobil 69.60 0.5 -3.
Gldman Schs 217.39 1.5 2.
Home Depot 237.34 1.3 11.
IBM 135.53 0.1 -9.
Intel Corp 56.51 0.1 14.
J&J 131.20 2.2 0.


¬

Company Close

5D %
Chg

Chg %
3M
JPMorgan 127.80 1.4 13.
McDonald's 193.94 -0.3 -8.
Merck & Co 84.94 3.3 1.
Microsoft 143.72 2.1 4.
NIKE Inc 89.18 -1.9 7.
Pfizer Inc 38.39 4.4 0.
Prcter& Gmbl 123.87 0.5 6.
Travelers Cos I 130.72 0.2 -10.
UnitedTech 146.68 2.6 11.
UntdHlthGr 252.21 3.0 1.
Verzn Comm 60.37 0.0 9.
Visa Inc 180.93 1.7 1.
Walgreens 57.38 3.5 6.
Walmart 117.62 -1.2 7.
Walt Disney 132.75 1.4 -6.

Europe -22.8% +22.8%
STXE 600 (EUR) Pr 399.43 0.
CAC 40 INDEX 5761.89 0.
DAX INDEX 12961.05 0.
FTSE 100 INDEX 7302.42 -0.

BY ELI ROSENBERG
AND THOMAS HEATH

The United States added
128,000 jobs in October as the
jobless rate ticked up to 3.6 per-
cent, outperforming analyst fore-
casts during a month in which
one of the largest private-employ-
er strikes in recent years weighed
on the economy.
The number was below recent
averages but signaled that the
labor market remains resilient
and healthy 11 years into the
economic expansion. The Stan-
dard & Poor’s 500 and Nasdaq
stock indexes closed at record
highs amid growing signs that
recession fears several months
ago might have been overblown.
The new data was somewhat
skewed because of a General Mo-
tors strike, in which 46,000 work-
ers shut down production for six
weeks at the automaker, causing
layoffs from Canada to Mexico in
related industries, and sent un-


employment claims in states such
as Michigan surging.
“For now, we can take solace
that there are sufficient job and
wage gains to support the econo-
my and keep it miles away from
any recession,” Joseph Brusuelas,
the chief economist at the tax and
consulting firm RSM, said in an
interview.
The jobs data lifted two Wall
Street indexes to record levels.
The S&P 500 stock index rose
1 percent to 3,067, and the Nasdaq
rose 1.1 percent to 8,386. The Dow
Jones industrial average closed
near a record, rising more than
300 points.
The Bureau of Labor Statistics,
which released the report, noted
the effects of the GM strike. The
number of workers in auto and
parts manufacturing declined by
42,000. Federal employment de-
creased by about 17,000, as tem-
porary workers engaged in the
2020 Census completed their
work.

Brusuelas said those numbers
indicated the economy would
have generated about 187,
jobs in October if not for the
strike and census completions,
besting the monthly average of
about 167,000 for the year.
“For forward-looking policy-

makers and investors, that would
be the number you want to hang
your hat on going forward,” he
said in an interview. “That im-
plies strong spending going for-
ward, which will prevent the
economy from entering a down-

turn anytime soon.”
Daniel Zhao, a senior econo-
mist at Glassdoor, agreed.
“If not for the strike, the report
would have been a blockbuster,”
he said.
The Bureau of Labor Statistics
also revised the monthly job total

from August and September up-
ward, to a net of 95,000 more
jobs.
The positive jobs report came
two days after the Commerce
Department issued data showing
that the economy had slowed

from July through September, in
part because of a contraction in
business investment. The Federal
Reserve lowered interest rates
this week for the third time this
year in an effort to boost the
economy and insulate it from the
downward drag of the trade war
and weakening growth abroad.
The job news was coupled Fri-
day with the release of the Insti-
tute for Supply Management’s in-
dex for October, a closely watched
gauge that indicated a contrac-
tion in the manufacturing sector
for the third straight month.
The slowing but positive
growth, weaker business invest-
ment and resilient labor market
paint a picture of an economy
that has decelerated a bit from
2018’s strength but doesn’t ap-
pear close to dipping into a reces-
sion, despite fears that were
sparked several months ago.
The job gains in October came
primarily in industries such as
health care and social assistance,

which added 34,000 jobs, and
leisure and hospitality industry,
which added 61,000.
Wage growth has remained
stubborn at around 3 percent,
puzzling economists who don’t
understand why it has failed to
rise more dramatically as the job
market has tightened.
President Trump, who is stak-
ing his reelection campaign in
part on the growth the economy
has recorded in recent years,
cheered the jobs report.
“Wow, a blowout JOBS number
just out,” he wrote. “This is far
greater than expectations. USA
ROCKS!”
David Berson, the chief econo-
mist at Nationwide Insurance,
said it is getting harder and hard-
er for employers to find workers.
He forecast that wage growth
would become stronger if the
unemployment rate sinks further.

Heather Long contributed to this
report.

BY TAYLOR TELFORD

A former employee has accused
WeWork and ousted chief execu-
tive Adam Neumann of pregnan-
cy discrimination, alleging she
was publicly and privately de-
meaned, demoted and eventually
fired because of her pregnancies.
The complaint is the latest to
emerge about the company’s cul-
ture under Neumann’s leader-
ship.
Medina Bardhi, who served as
Neumann’s chief of staff, alleges
that female employees were sub-
jected to “sexually offensive con-
duct,” disparaged for taking ma-
ternity leave and often paid signif-
icantly less than their male coun-
terparts, according to a complaint
filed Thursday with the Equal Em-
ployment Opportunity Commis-
sion. Bardhi had two children
during her more than five years at
WeWork and claims Neumann re-
ferred to maternity leave as “re-
tirement” and “vacation,” accord-
ing to the complaint.
She alleges she was demoted
after both pregnancies — and re-
placed by men at higher wages —
and given no instruction about
her new responsibilities.
“During and after both leaves,
Ms. Bardhi paid the price in her


position and earning power at the
Company, by having her role dras-
tically and materially reduced, be-
ing demoted, and having male
employees elevated over and re-
placing her,” the complaint states.
The EEOC will investigate the
allegations; if it finds that dis-
crimination occurred, then Bar-
dhi and WeWork will be invited to
participate in a conciliation proc-
ess with the agency. If it isn’t
resolved through conciliation, the
agency could file a federal lawsuit.
Should it decide against litiga-
tion, Bardhi would then have the
right to sue.
WeWork already faces lawsuits
alleging age, gender and pay dis-
crimination from multiple wom-
en, including a former executive.
Once valued at as much as $47 bil-
lion, the co-working company has
had a tumultuous run since it
postponed its IPO in September
amid troubling reports about
Neumann’s behavior and ques-
tions about the company’s true
worth. WeWork was on the brink
of running out of money before it
secured a $9.5 billion bailout from
SoftBank. Last month, Neumann
severed nearly every tie with the
company he founded, his depar-
ture sweetened by $1.7 billion in
cash and credit.

“WeWork intends to vigorously
defend itself against this claim,”
the company said in a statement
emailed to The Washington Post.
“We have zero tolerance for dis-
crimination of any kind. We are
committed to moving the compa-
ny forward and building a compa-
ny and culture that our employees
can be proud of.”
A personal spokesperson for
Neumann did not immediately
respond to a request for comment.

According to Bardhi’s com-
plaint, the discrimination began
at her October 2013 job interview,
when Neumann “unlawfully and
intrusively” asked when she was
going to get married and become
pregnant — a question he routine-
ly asked female candidates. When
she became pregnant in
March 2016, the document says,
she was “scared” to disclose it but
felt obligated to explain why she
couldn’t accompany Neumann on

business travels, “due to his pen-
chant for bringing marijuana on
chartered flights and smoking it
throughout the flight.” She did not
want to expose her unborn child
to the smoke.
The complaint also alleges that
Jennifer Berrent, the chief operat-
ing officer, repeatedly referred to
Bardhi’s pregnancy and impend-
ing maternity leave as a “problem”
that had to “be fixed.” Two months
after Neumann learned of Bar-

dhi’s pregnancy, he told her that a
search for her replacement was
underway
“It was clear that WeWork was
not just looking for temporary
coverage, but a permanent re-
placement, in direct response to
her pregnancy,” the complaint
states.
The male employee who suc-
ceeded Bardhi after the first preg-
nancy was offered $400,000 a
year, plus a $175,000 signing bo-
nus, the complaint says, while she
earned $150,000. Though she was
eventually reinstated, the se-
quence was repeated after she
became pregnant in February, the
filing shows: She was replaced by
a male hire, demoted and not
given any meaningful work for
months, the complaint states.
Bardhi says she was fired over
the phone in early October, six
months after giving birth and
days after Neumann’s exit. She
had worked with Neumann since
2005, at his previous company,
Egg Baby. She was told there was
no longer a role for her with
Neumann’s departure, although
she had not worked closely with
him for months.
“Our hope is that this class
action complaint will send a loud
and clear message to WeWork and
other start-ups that pregnant
women cannot be forced out of
their jobs, that women must be
paid fairly and afforded equal op-
portunities, and that you cannot
retaliate against any person who
voices a complaint of discrimina-
tion,” Bardhi’s attorney, Douglas
Wigdor, said in a statement.
[email protected]

Ex-employee: WeWork


discriminated against


her during pregnancy


S&P, Nasdaq peak as jobs report sparks new optimism


MARY ALTAFFER/ASSOCIATED PRESS
In a complaint filed with the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, a former WeWork
employee alleges that her pregnancies led to her demotion and eventual termination from the company.

The government’s jobs report for October


“implies strong spending going forward, which will


prevent the economy from entering a downturn


anytime soon.”
Joseph Brusuelas, chief economist at the tax and consulting firm RSM
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