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UPS ends Teamsters strike risk with new contract before deadline

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United Parcel Service Inc. and the Teamsters union agreed to a new five-year contract covering 250,000 employees, erasing the risk that some business might be lost through just the threat of a strike.

The accord includes “substantial” pay raises, higher wages for new part-time employees and the creation of 2,000 more full-time jobs from the ranks of part-timers, the union said Thursday. The agreement will go to a ratification vote among rank-and-file drivers, package sorters and clerks before taking effect on Aug. 1.

Reaching the accord before the existing contract expires in July offers reassurance to shippers who might have begun shifting deliveries to FedEx Corp. or other competitors ahead of a possible walkout at the world’s largest package-delivery company. A two-week Teamsters strike in 1997 cut Atlanta-based UPS’ volumes as much as 6 percent and cost about $650 million.

The contract “removes an overhang on UPS shares,” Justin Yagerman, an analyst at Deutsche Bank in New York, wrote Friday in a note to clients.

UPS management probably included the higher wages in its full-year earnings forecast of $4.80 to $5.06 a share, which the company reaffirmed Thursday when it reported first-quarter results, said Yagerman, who recommends buying the stock.

UPS shares climbed 0.3 percent to $85.71 Friday. The shares previously gained 16 percent this year, compared with 11 percent for the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index.

The contract preserves health-care benefits and boosts pension contributions, making it a win for UPS Teamsters “at a time when workers and their pay, benefits and working conditions are under attack by corporate America,” Teamsters General President Jim Hoffa said in a statement.

Union employees sought higher pay, more full-time jobs, an increase in part-timers’ starting salaries and no co-pays on health-care premiums, according to the Teamsters for a Democratic Union, a splinter group of Teamsters workers.

UPS management wanted the union to share part of the burden of rising medical costs and had a goal of completing a contract by the end of March to avoid losing business, Scott Group and Ed Wolfe, analysts at Wolfe Trahan & Co. in New York, wrote in a March 22 note. Wolfe Trahan rates UPS as peer perform.


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