Showing posts with label jobs. Show all posts
Showing posts with label jobs. Show all posts

JPMorgan CEO Jamie Dimon on the US economy


Jamie Dimon, JP Morgan Chairman and CEO, joins Halftime Report live to discuss the market, real estate, lending and more.

Big banks are quietly cutting thousands of employees, and more layoffs are coming

Even as the economy has surprised forecasters with its resilience, lenders have cut headcount or announced plans to do so, with the key exception being JPMorgan Chase.

The next five largest U.S. banks cut a combined 20,000 positions so far this year, according to company filings.

A key factor driving the cuts is that job-hopping in finance slowed drastically from earlier years, leaving banks with more people than they expected.

Read the full story HERE.

95,000 Hours Saved: Unique Ways Companies Are Tackling Worker Frustration


As more workers say they’re less engaged on the job, some companies are taking steps to improve the day-to-day experience for employees. 
WSJ’s Russell Adams joins host J.R. Whalen to discuss why the changes don’t always include pay raises.

Artificial Intelligence - The What, Where & How


What is Artificial Intelligence, how does it work and where it might be taking us. We’ll try and see if as an investor you should worry about missing the boat on AI, and as an individual should you worry about losing your job to these new technologies?

Tech Layoffs Are Leaving H1B Visa Workers Scrambling for New Jobs


Layoffs sweeping the tech industry have not spared workers on temporary visas, known as H1Bs. They have just 60 days to find a new visa sponsored position before they are forced to leave the US. 

Host Zoe Thomas speaks with one worker facing this challenge and WSJ reporter Te-Ping Chen about the wider ramifications.

Amazon to Slash More Than 18,000 Jobs


Amazon is now saying it is laying off more than 18,000 employees, which is significantly more than previously planned and the latest sign that the tech slump is deepening. Su Keenan reports on Bloomberg Television.

Popular Posts