Lost Pension Plan: A Hot-Button Issue for Striking Workers
Boeing union workers, in their seventh week of a strike, are seeking higher wages along with the restoration of the company’s pension plan, which has been frozen since 2014.
The conversion of the prime funds—those that invest in corporate securities—seems to anticipate a mass move by investors out of prime funds in response to new Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) regulations. Those rules will require institutional prime funds to adopt a floating net asset value (NAV), instead of the stable, $1-a-share NAV investors are accustomed to, and will allow funds to use redemption fees and gates to discourage withdrawals in times of market stress.
The changes are expected to discourage many corporate treasurers from investing in prime funds. But proposals by the federal government that would alleviate some problems related to the rules changes, and the prospect of higher yields on prime funds, could help reconcile treasurers to using prime funds in their altered form, some observers say.
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Boeing union workers, in their seventh week of a strike, are seeking higher wages along with the restoration of the company’s pension plan, which has been frozen since 2014.
“A considerable level of uncertainty is likely to dominate the Mexican legal landscape for the foreseeable future.”
The decision may turbocharge challenges to the agency’s efforts on everything from crypto to insider trading.
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