Read more at The Wall Street Journal.
Starbucks asked the Supreme Court to limit the NLRB, a government labor board that has been eager to support union drives.
Date: |
Sort by
Filter
Date
Items per page
-
Amazon CEO Jassy's Anti-Union Comments Broke the Law, Says Labor Judge
Claims made on CNBC broadcast that employees "would be better off without" a union were unlawful, a National Labor Relations Board judge ruled.Inc. - Business - Amazon
More from The Wall Street Journal
-
China Services-Sector Gauge Shows Slower Activity Expansion
A private gauge of China’s services sector showed activity grew at a slightly slower pace in April, though there are signs of a recovery in consumption given strong spending over recent holidays.The Wall Street Journal - World - China -
EQT to Buy U.S. Digital Consultancy Perficient For $3 Billion
Swedish private-equity firm EQT said it will pay $76 a share, a 58% premium to Perficient’s closing price on Friday.The Wall Street Journal - World -
Eurozone Bond Weakness in April Was Mainly Driven by U.S. Treasurys
Eurozone government bonds remained primarily stuck in a bond-negative pull in April, emanating from the Treasury market, LBBW said.The Wall Street Journal - World -
Nordic Stocks Tipped to Open Slightly Higher
Nordic markets may open slightly higher after data on Friday that showed a weaker labor market in the U.S. gave strong support to stocks, SEB said.The Wall Street Journal - World - US Open -
Atos Receives Four Restructuring Offers
Atos said the proposals were from a group of bondholders and banks, Bain Capital, EP Equity Investment and Onepoint, adding that it had signed a $108 million interim financing deal with bondholders.The Wall Street Journal - World