oldupsman
Well-Known Member
I believe you are correct.I think it was right before hourlies could buy it
Imagine that
I believe you are correct.I think it was right before hourlies could buy it
Imagine that
I don’t know the answer. I just remember making a boatload when we went public.I think it was right before hourlies could buy it
Imagine that
These elite s are just toying with us. All the signs point to a deal by the 1st.The post strike buy, though, might be a more reliable way to make a little money, than trying puts right now. There's some heavyweight screwing with the prices going on right now.
Splitting the stock after the dust settles could be a good move by the company. Especially, if the Teamsters make concessions, and the company gets it way. Wall Street loves blood on the company floor. Publicly abusing your employees gets your stock some love from investors... And, that fits with Carol's style and "Better not Bigger" trajectory.
But, the days of UPS doubling stock price overnight are over... Unless something crazy happens. Like shedding the Teamsters, selling out to Amazon, merging with a competitor, etc.
Nope, hourlies could buy before the split.I think it was right before hourlies could buy it
Imagine that
I think it was right before hourlies could buy it
Imagine that
I had money in the Thrift Plan and when that was done away with I bought some stock and put the rest in an IRA. I was hourly my whole career so it was sold to us right before it went public. It went from $25 a share to $50, I still have those 144 shares that are worth $26,578 right now.Ok. Now my question, is that before this lowly driver was allowed to buy stock? Now that this has
come up I'm remembering the split but I don't think us newbies were included
I had money in the Thrift Plan and when that was done away with I bought some stock and put the rest in an IRA. I was hourly my whole career so it was sold to us right before it went public. It went from $25 a share to $50, I still have those 144 shares that are worth $26,578 right now.
Clown=?“The Biden administration needs to stand up to the Teamsters and make clear their ask is way too high.”
How does he know our ask is way too high when nothing about economics on the bargaining table has been made public? What a clown.
The last time I saw anything lean that far to the left was when I watched The Poseidon Adventure.I hate this Newsweek guy.
Biden Must Stand Up to the Teamsters, Prevent a Strike—and Save His Economy
At this precarious moment, the Teamsters have decided to push for pay increases. The demands are too aggressive, and Biden needs to step in and make that clear.www.newsweek.com
I'm not sure of the exact year.@scratch .. do you remember the year we had to exit the Thrift Plan, I believe it was in 1995..?
@scratch .. do you remember the year we had to exit the Thrift Plan, I believe it was in 1995..?
UPS stock went public in “99”, a question was asked about when we Union folk were permitted to purchase UPS stock before that? I know we had access to it when the Thrift Plan was terminated and did the stock split before it went public or after?
The question is out there for the old timers also..
I'm in the same era as you two and now I'm really confused. I thought that both the end of theI'm not sure of the exact year.
I hope alot of the public reads that article, pretty well done.Sean O’Brien also wrote an article in Newsweek, published on the same day as the Rogers crap.
If Your Packages Get Delayed, Don't Blame Exploited Workers
Your UPS driver—plus hundreds of thousands of other UPS workers represented by the Teamsters—needs your support, understanding, and compassion. Because they're in a fight for their lives.www.newsweek.com