2013 01 24 cmyk na 04 - the wall street...

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YELLOW ***** THURSDAY, JANUARY 24, 2013 ~ VOL. CCLXI NO. 19 WSJ.com HHHH $2.00 Apple’s Magic Wears Thin As Its Earnings Disappoint Mali Exposes Flaws in West’s Security Plans CONTENTS Corporate News B2,3,10 Global Finance........... C3 Heard on the Street C10 In the Markets.......... C4 Leisure & Arts............ D4 Media & Marketing B6 Opinion.................. A15-17 Small Business.......... B9 Sports.............................. D5 Style & Travel.... D2,3,6 U.S. News ................ A2-6 Weather Watch...... B12 World News... A7-12,18 DJIA 13779.33 À 67.12 0.5% NASDAQ 3153.67 À 0.3% NIKKEI 10486.99 g 2.1% STOXX 600 288.22 À 0.2% 10-YR. TREAS. unch. , yield 1.835% OIL $95.23 g $1.45 GOLD $1,686.30 g $6.50 EURO $1.3318 YEN 88.62 s Copyright 2013 Dow Jones & Company. All Rights Reserved Vital Signs Union membership fell in 2012, continuing a decadeslong drop. Labor unions represented 11.3% of employed workers last year, down half a percentage point from 2011 and a new postwar low. The latest decline partly reflected a drop in public- sector workers, as states cut jobs to repair budgets. At their peak, unions represented roughly a third of employed workers in the mid-1950s. A6 Union members, as a percentage of all employed Source: Labor Department ’80s 8 12 16 20% '90s '00s '10s > A pple recorded flat profit despite selling 18 million more iPhones and iPads, as it spent heavily to roll out new products to fend off rivals. The company’s stock fell 9.7% in after-hours trading. A1 n Netflix shares jumped about 35% after hours as the firm posted a surprise profit and added more Internet sub- scribers than expected. B1 n A government informant has implicated a prominent ex- trader at SAC, telling investi- gators the two swapped con- fidential stock tips for years. C1 n The Dow industrials rose 67.12 points to 13779.33, with almost all of the gain coming from IBM, to record their ninth advance in 10 sessions. C4 n Novartis’s chairman, Dan- iel Vasella, is stepping down. The firm nominated Bayer HealthCare chief Joerg Rein- hardt to succeed him. B3 n Japanese officials said data from a Boeing 787 Dream- liner that made an emergency landing show no evidence its battery was overcharged. B2 n Michael Dell has a deal to get a Dreamliner, numbering him among planned customers potentially affected by the out- come of the jet’s troubles. B2 n Chesapeake Energy agreed to let the EPA conduct tests at one of its natural-gas drilling sites as part of a safety probe of hydraulic fracturing. B3 n General Dynamics swung to a loss, posting a $2 billion write-down in its information- technology business that the firm’s CEO called a “reset.” B4 n Neel Kashkari, who ran TARP during the financial crisis, is leaving Pimco to consider running for office in California as a Republican. C1 n NYSE Euronext has no in- tention of selling its Euro- pean unit to a rival following a planned takeover by ICE, NYSE chief Niederauer said. C3 n Goldman Sachs is trying to block a shareholder pro- posal for an independent chair- man of its board from ap- pearing on the proxy ballot. C3 n McDonald’s earnings beat expectations, reversing two quarters of misses, but the restaurant chain said it ex- pects tough times ahead. B4 n Italian lender Monte dei Paschi looked headed for more turmoil amid fears about the impact of years-old struc- tured-product contracts. C3 n Xinhua Finance’s founder, who was indicted over an al- leged $50 million fraud, has agreed to a plea deal and ap- pears poised to plead guilty to a reduced charge. C3 n Creditors are seeking to claw back over $21 million from insiders and affiliates of the pharmacy tied to a fa- tal meningitis outbreak. A6 n Hedge-fund manager Da- vid Einhorn said his firm profited from a bet against Herbalife shares last year. C3 n The House passed a short- term debt-ceiling extension. The measure extends federal borrowing authority through May 18. It passed with strong GOP support, despite previ- ous Republican opposition to such a move if it didn’t in- clude spending cuts. GOP Rep. Ryan promised he would submit a budget plan that would erase the federal defi- cit within a decade by cutting government spending—and without raising tax revenue. A4 The government neared the $16.394 trillion debt ceiling on Dec. 31, but the Treasury has juggled assets so it can continue borrowing money. n The Pentagon is dropping the last vestiges of rules bar- ring women in combat. The new policy should allow women to serve alongside infantry troops in such roles as battlefield medics and special-operations pilots. A1 n Clinton defended the ad- ministration’s handling of the attack on the U.S. consulate in Benghazi, Libya, in testimony before a Senate panel. A6 n The House voted to with- hold senators’ pay unless the Senate passes a budget by mid- April, but some scholars say the bill is unconstitutional. A4 n Israel’s Netanyahu faces the difficult task of forming a governing coalition after his two-party bloc won only half the seats in parliament. A8 n Scientists stored audio and text on DNA fragments and then retrieved them, a method that may one day help handle the flood of digital data. A3 n North Korea warned that it is prepared to conduct a nu- clear test and carry out more long-range rocket launches. A12 n Los Angeles police arrested a former elementary-school teacher, alleging he molested 20 children and one adult. A2 n Libya is boosting security at its oil fields to avoid a re- peat of the terrorist attack on an Algerian gas complex. A10 n Turkey is pushing for a no-fly zone over Syria, but its foreign minister admitted the option appears unlikely. A12 n A suicide bomber struck a Shiite funeral in northern Iraq, killing at least 25, an attack likely to deepen a sectarian rift. n An Indian panel called for laws to crack down on sexual assault and harassment and speed access to justice. A12 n An Arctic chill settled over the Midwest, with tempera- tures in northern Minnesota nearing 40 below zero. A2 n Scientists are resuming research on bird flu that they halted last year as countries adopt new safety rules. n Jordanians voted for a par- liament with wider authority, in a bid by the monarchy to avoid an Arab uprising. n Died: A.W. Clausen, 89, Bank of America CEO who later led the World Bank. B10 Business & Finance World-Wide Follow the news all day at WSJ.com personal Journal. (right) Getty Images Collar ID WhatYour Shirt Says AboutYou When Two Tickets Are Cheaper Than One What’s News– i i i i i i France’s attack on Islamic extremists in Mali this month is exposing major strains in the Western world’s security strategy. As the French assault gained steam in West Africa, France sought help from its allies— only to find that the U.S. and other North At- lantic Treaty Organization states either weren’t ready or couldn’t offer much. Canada and the U.K. quickly ponied up three cargo planes, two of which broke down en route. By far the biggest breakdown, however, played out between the U.S. and France, as Washington sent what Paris saw as mixed messages about U.S. levels of commitment to taking on an al Qaeda affiliate in Mali before and after the French attack began. French officials involved in planning the Mali campaign say they had expected quick, robust U.S. military support based on com- ments by Pentagon officials in a series of pri- vate meetings, including one last October in Paris about how to tame violence in North and West Africa. According to French officials in attendance, the message that day from Michael Sheehan, the Pentagon’s point man for special operations, seemed clear: Stop the group known as AQIM—al Qaeda in the Is- lamic Maghreb—and its allies from creating a desert safe haven. NATO officials at the meetings also say U.S. Defense Secretary Leon Panetta’s message to France and other allies on the sidelines of a NATO summit last fall was that the Pentagon would do “whatever it takes” to help with an intervention in Mali against AQIM. Senior U.S. defense officials dispute those accounts, saying Washington’s messages to France may have been “lost in translation.” During the meetings, the U.S. officials said, neither Mr. Panetta nor Mr. Sheehan directly urged France to use force and didn’t promise specific support. Please turn to page A14 Apple Inc. recorded a flat profit despite selling 18 million more iPhones and iPads, as it spent heavily to roll out new products to fend off intensifying competition. Spooked investors erased nearly $47 billion from the com- pany’s stock-market value in af- ter-hours trading, about as much as the combined worth of Dell Inc., Nokia Corp. and Research In Motion Ltd. The flat earnings in the holi- day quarter come after several years of supercharged growth that made Apple the most valu- able U.S. company and fan wor- ries about the Silicon Valley gi- ant’s momentum and demand for its new devices. Apple executives predicted growth would continue to slow. The company expects revenue to rise about 7% in the current pe- riod after reporting an 18% gain in the holiday quarter. Apple’s quarterly report was considered among the most im- portant in years for the company, as concerns about demand for its new iPhone 5 and its iPad tablets dragged its stock from highs of more than $700 a share in Sep- tember to less than $500 in mid- January. In after-hours trading Wednesday, Apple’s stock fell 9.7% to $464.09. Late last year, the company warned that its aggressive prod- uct rollout schedule for the holi- days, including new iPhones, iPads, iPods and a new iMac desktop, would hurt profit as the company perfected manufactur- ing efforts. Manufacturing costs more in early stages until the company perfects production Please turn to the next page BY IAN SHERR The Pentagon is dropping the last vestiges of rules barring American women from serving in combat, paving the way for the largest expansion ever of their role on the front lines. Women in the military already are allowed to serve on most Navy ships, as combat pilots and in hundreds of support jobs, includ- ing those in war zones. But they have been historically excluded from direct combat roles, by fed- eral law in earlier times and more recently by military policy. That will change Thursday when Defense Secretary Leon Panetta rescinds the 1994 Penta- gon policy that bans women, who now make up about 14% of active- duty military personnel, from combat. The new measure will al- low women to serve in combat roles—but, importantly, allow the military services to establish ex- ceptions. The change is an acknowledg- ment that women on modern bat- tlefields already are in the fight—152 women have died in Please turn to page A6 BY JULIAN E. BARNES AND DION NISSENBAUM Combat Ban for Women To End By Adam Entous and Julian E. Barnes in Washington and Drew Hinshaw in Bamako, Mali Jim Lo Scalzo/European Pressphoto Agency This British Assault on an Island Off Argentina Is for the Birds i i i Mission: Kill Rampaging Rats, Save Pipits; ‘They Will Outthink You’ LITTLE DOWNHAM, U.K.— Britain is dispatching a band of skilled killers to an island off the Argentine coast on a boat carry- ing a lethal arsenal. No, not to repeat the Falklands War. This time, it is to attack a problem that has been brewing in a re- mote British overseas territory for more than 200 years: ram- paging rats. Specialists from the U.K. are calling it the world’s biggest rat cull. The location is the glacial island of South Georgia in the Atlantic, about 1,200 miles east of the tip of South America. The problem: the island is overrun with the rats that were first brought by sealing and whaling ships in the 18th century. South Georgia is uninhabited by people. But the rats are a seri- ous nuisance, conservationists say, because they eat the eggs and chicks of many species of birds—killing tens of thousands every year. That includes some that are unique to the island and in danger of extinction, such as the small, brown- speckled South Geor- gia Pipit, the Antarc- tic’s only songbird. Leading “Team Rat” is Anthony Mar- tin, a 58-year-old white-bearded zoolo- gist, whom some have called “the Pied Piper” for his role in the rat cull. Mr. Martin needs more than a magic flute to get rid of the rats. The monthslong mission involves dis- tributing by helicopter about 200 tons of rat bait laced with a pow- Please turn to page A14 Brown rat BY CASSELL BRYAN-LOW A Fiery Clinton Pushes Back at Benghazi Hearings ‘We had four dead Americans. Was it because of a protest, or was it because of guys out for a walk one night who decided they’d go kill some Americans? What difference, at this point, does it make?’ —Responding to criticism of erroneous early accounts of attacks, A6 Expanding Ranks Percentage of active-duty military personnel who are female Source: U.S. Dept. of Defense The Wall Street Journal 15 0 5 10 % % 1950 ’60 ’70 ’80 ’90 2000 2010: 14.4% Heard on the Street: Were the results really that bad? .......... C10 Copyright © 2012, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. oracle.com/exadata or call 1.800.ORACLE.1 5 of the 5 Top Banks Run Exadata Fast Reliable Secure C M Y K Composite Composite MAGENTA CYAN BLACK P2JW024000-5-A00100-107FFB7078F CL,CX,DL,DM,DX,EE,EU,FL,HO,KC,MW,NE,NY,PH,PN,RM,SA,SC,SL,SW,TU,WB,WE BG,BM,BP,CH,CK,CP,CT,DN,DR,FW,HL,HW,KS,LA,LG,LK,MI,ML,NM,PI,PV,TD,TS,UT,WO P2JW024000-5-A00100-107FFB7078F

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Page 1: 2013 01 24 cmyk NA 04 - The Wall Street Journalonline.wsj.com/public/resources/documents/PageOne...pectstough times ahead. B4 n Italian lender Montedei Paschi looked headed formore

YELLOW

* * * * * THURSDAY, JANUARY 24, 2013 ~ VOL. CCLXI NO. 19 WSJ.com HHHH $2 .00

Apple’s Magic Wears ThinAs Its Earnings Disappoint

Mali Exposes Flaws inWest’s Security Plans

CONTENTSCorporate News B2,3,10Global Finance........... C3Heard on the Street C10In the Markets.......... C4Leisure & Arts............ D4Media & Marketing B6

Opinion.................. A15-17Small Business.......... B9Sports.............................. D5Style & Travel.... D2,3,6U.S. News................ A2-6Weather Watch...... B12World News... A7-12,18

DJIA 13779.33 À 67.12 0.5% NASDAQ 3153.67 À 0.3% NIKKEI 10486.99 g 2.1% STOXX600 288.22 À 0.2% 10-YR. TREAS. unch. , yield 1.835% OIL $95.23 g $1.45 GOLD $1,686.30 g $6.50 EURO $1.3318 YEN 88.62

s Copyright 2013 Dow Jones & Company. All Rights Reserved

Vital Signs

Union membership fellin 2012, continuing adecadeslong drop. Laborunions represented 11.3% ofemployed workers last year,down half a percentage pointfrom 2011 and a new postwarlow. The latest decline partlyreflected a drop in public-sector workers, as states cutjobs to repair budgets. Attheir peak, unions representedroughly a third of employedworkers in the mid-1950s. A6

Union members, as apercentage of all employed

Source: Labor Department

’80s8

12

16

20%

'90s '00s '10s

>

Apple recorded flat profitdespite selling 18 million

more iPhones and iPads, as itspent heavily to roll out newproducts to fend off rivals.The company’s stock fell9.7% in after-hours trading. A1nNetflix shares jumped about35% after hours as the firmposted a surprise profit andadded more Internet sub-scribers than expected. B1n A government informanthas implicated a prominent ex-trader at SAC, telling investi-gators the two swapped con-fidential stock tips for years. C1n The Dow industrials rose67.12 points to 13779.33, withalmost all of the gain comingfrom IBM, to record their ninthadvance in 10 sessions. C4n Novartis’s chairman, Dan-iel Vasella, is stepping down.The firm nominated BayerHealthCare chief Joerg Rein-hardt to succeed him. B3n Japanese officials said datafrom a Boeing 787 Dream-liner that made an emergencylanding show no evidence itsbattery was overcharged. B2nMichael Dell has a deal toget a Dreamliner, numberinghim among planned customerspotentially affected by the out-come of the jet’s troubles. B2n Chesapeake Energy agreedto let the EPA conduct testsat one of its natural-gas drillingsites as part of a safety probeof hydraulic fracturing. B3n General Dynamics swungto a loss, posting a $2 billionwrite-down in its information-technology business that thefirm’s CEO called a “reset.” B4n Neel Kashkari, who ranTARP during the financialcrisis, is leaving Pimco toconsider running for office inCalifornia as a Republican. C1n NYSE Euronext has no in-tention of selling its Euro-pean unit to a rival followinga planned takeover by ICE,NYSE chief Niederauer said. C3n Goldman Sachs is tryingto block a shareholder pro-posal for an independent chair-man of its board from ap-pearing on the proxy ballot. C3nMcDonald’s earnings beatexpectations, reversing twoquarters of misses, but therestaurant chain said it ex-pects tough times ahead. B4n Italian lender Monte deiPaschi looked headed for moreturmoil amid fears about theimpact of years-old struc-tured-product contracts. C3nXinhua Finance’s founder,who was indicted over an al-leged $50 million fraud, hasagreed to a plea deal and ap-pears poised to plead guiltyto a reduced charge. C3n Creditors are seeking toclaw back over $21 millionfrom insiders and affiliatesof the pharmacy tied to a fa-tal meningitis outbreak. A6n Hedge-fund manager Da-vid Einhorn said his firmprofited from a bet againstHerbalife shares last year. C3

n The House passed a short-term debt-ceiling extension.The measure extends federalborrowing authority throughMay 18. It passed with strongGOP support, despite previ-ous Republican opposition tosuch a move if it didn’t in-clude spending cuts. GOPRep. Ryan promised he wouldsubmit a budget plan thatwould erase the federal defi-cit within a decade by cuttinggovernment spending—andwithout raising tax revenue. A4The government neared the$16.394 trillion debt ceilingon Dec. 31, but the Treasuryhas juggled assets so it cancontinue borrowing money.n The Pentagon is droppingthe last vestiges of rules bar-ring women in combat. Thenew policy should allowwomen to serve alongsideinfantry troops in such rolesas battlefield medics andspecial-operations pilots. A1n Clinton defended the ad-ministration’s handling of theattack on the U.S. consulate inBenghazi, Libya, in testimonybefore a Senate panel. A6nThe House voted to with-hold senators’ pay unless theSenate passes a budget bymid-April, but some scholars saythe bill is unconstitutional. A4n Israel’s Netanyahu facesthe difficult task of forming agoverning coalition after histwo-party bloc won only halfthe seats in parliament. A8n Scientists stored audio andtext on DNA fragments andthen retrieved them, a methodthat may one day help handlethe flood of digital data. A3nNorth Korea warned that itis prepared to conduct a nu-clear test and carry out morelong-range rocket launches.A12n Los Angeles police arresteda former elementary-schoolteacher, alleging he molested20 children and one adult. A2n Libya is boosting securityat its oil fields to avoid a re-peat of the terrorist attack onan Algerian gas complex. A10n Turkey is pushing for ano-fly zone over Syria, but itsforeign minister admitted theoption appears unlikely. A12nA suicide bomber struck aShiite funeral in northern Iraq,killing at least 25, an attacklikely to deepen a sectarian rift.nAn Indian panel called forlaws to crack down on sexualassault and harassment andspeed access to justice. A12nAn Arctic chill settled overthe Midwest, with tempera-tures in northern Minnesotanearing 40 below zero. A2n Scientists are resumingresearch on bird flu that theyhalted last year as countriesadopt new safety rules.n Jordanians voted for a par-liament with wider authority,in a bid by the monarchy toavoid an Arab uprising.n Died: A.W. Clausen, 89,Bank of America CEO wholater led the World Bank. B10

Business&Finance World-Wide

Follow the news all day at WSJ.com

personalJournal.

(right)G

etty

Images

Collar IDWhatYour Shirt Says AboutYou

WhenTwoTicketsAreCheaperThanOne

What’s News–i i i i i i

France’s attack on Islamic extremists inMali this month is exposing major strains inthe Western world’s security strategy.

As the French assault gained steam in WestAfrica, France sought help from its allies—only to find that the U.S. and other North At-lantic Treaty Organization states eitherweren’t ready or couldn’t offer much. Canadaand the U.K. quickly ponied up three cargoplanes, two of which broke down en route.

By far the biggest breakdown, however,

played out between the U.S. and France, asWashington sent what Paris saw as mixedmessages about U.S. levels of commitment totaking on an al Qaeda affiliate in Mali beforeand after the French attack began.

French officials involved in planning theMali campaign say they had expected quick,robust U.S. military support based on com-ments by Pentagon officials in a series of pri-vate meetings, including one last October inParis about how to tame violence in Northand West Africa. According to French officialsin attendance, the message that day fromMichael Sheehan, the Pentagon’s point manfor special operations, seemed clear: Stop thegroup known as AQIM—al Qaeda in the Is-

lamic Maghreb—and its allies from creating adesert safe haven.

NATO officials at the meetings also say U.S.Defense Secretary Leon Panetta’s message toFrance and other allies on the sidelines of aNATO summit last fall was that the Pentagonwould do “whatever it takes” to help with anintervention in Mali against AQIM.

Senior U.S. defense officials dispute thoseaccounts, saying Washington’s messages toFrance may have been “lost in translation.”During the meetings, the U.S. officials said,neither Mr. Panetta nor Mr. Sheehan directlyurged France to use force and didn’t promisespecific support.

PleaseturntopageA14

Apple Inc. recorded a flatprofit despite selling 18 millionmore iPhones and iPads, as itspent heavily to roll out newproducts to fend off intensifyingcompetition.

Spooked investors erasednearly $47 billion from the com-pany’s stock-market value in af-ter-hours trading, about as muchas the combined worth of DellInc., Nokia Corp. and Research InMotion Ltd.

The flat earnings in the holi-day quarter come after severalyears of supercharged growth

that made Apple the most valu-able U.S. company and fan wor-ries about the Silicon Valley gi-ant’s momentum and demand forits new devices.

Apple executives predictedgrowth would continue to slow.The company expects revenue torise about 7% in the current pe-riod after reporting an 18% gainin the holiday quarter.

Apple’s quarterly report wasconsidered among the most im-portant in years for the company,as concerns about demand for itsnew iPhone 5 and its iPad tabletsdragged its stock from highs ofmore than $700 a share in Sep-

tember to less than $500 in mid-January. In after-hours tradingWednesday, Apple’s stock fell9.7% to $464.09.

Late last year, the companywarned that its aggressive prod-uct rollout schedule for the holi-days, including new iPhones,iPads, iPods and a new iMacdesktop, would hurt profit as thecompany perfected manufactur-ing efforts. Manufacturing costsmore in early stages until thecompany perfects production

Pleaseturntothenextpage

BY IAN SHERR

The Pentagon is dropping thelast vestiges of rules barringAmerican women from serving incombat, paving the way for thelargest expansion ever of theirrole on the front lines.

Women in the military alreadyare allowed to serve on most Navyships, as combat pilots and inhundreds of support jobs, includ-ing those in war zones. But theyhave been historically excludedfrom direct combat roles, by fed-eral law in earlier times and morerecently by military policy.

That will change Thursdaywhen Defense Secretary LeonPanetta rescinds the 1994 Penta-gon policy that bans women, whonowmake up about 14% of active-duty military personnel, fromcombat. The new measure will al-low women to serve in combatroles—but, importantly, allow themilitary services to establish ex-ceptions.

The change is an acknowledg-ment that women on modern bat-tlefields already are in thefight—152 women have died in

PleaseturntopageA6

BY JULIAN E. BARNESAND DION NISSENBAUM

CombatBan forWomenTo End

By Adam Entous andJulian E. Barnes in Washington

and Drew Hinshaw in Bamako, Mali

Jim

LoScalzo/EuropeanPresspho

toAgency

This British Assault on an IslandOff Argentina Is for the Birds

i i i

Mission: Kill Rampaging Rats,Save Pipits; ‘They Will Outthink You’

LITTLE DOWNHAM, U.K.—Britain is dispatching a band ofskilled killers to an island off theArgentine coast on a boat carry-ing a lethal arsenal.

No, not to repeat the FalklandsWar. This time, it is to attack aproblem that hasbeen brewing in a re-mote British overseasterritory for morethan 200 years: ram-paging rats.

Specialists fromthe U.K. are calling itthe world’s biggestrat cull. The locationis the glacial island ofSouth Georgia in theAtlantic, about 1,200miles east of the tipof South America. The problem:the island is overrun with the ratsthat were first brought by sealingand whaling ships in the 18thcentury.

South Georgia is uninhabitedby people. But the rats are a seri-ous nuisance, conservationistssay, because they eat the eggsand chicks of many species ofbirds—killing tens of thousandsevery year. That includes somethat are unique to the island andin danger of extinction, such as

the small, brown-speckled South Geor-gia Pipit, the Antarc-tic’s only songbird.

Leading “TeamRat” is Anthony Mar-tin, a 58-year-oldwhite-bearded zoolo-gist, whom somehave called “the PiedPiper” for his role inthe rat cull.

Mr. Martin needsmore than a magic

flute to get rid of the rats. Themonthslong mission involves dis-tributing by helicopter about 200tons of rat bait laced with a pow-

PleaseturntopageA14

Brown rat

BY CASSELL BRYAN-LOW

A Fiery Clinton Pushes Back at Benghazi Hearings

‘We had four dead Americans. Was it because of a protest,or was it because of guys out for a walk one nightwho decided they’d go kill some Americans?What difference, at this point, does it make?’

—Responding to criticism of erroneous early accounts of attacks, A6

Expanding RanksPercentage of active-duty militarypersonnel who are female

Source: U.S. Dept. of DefenseThe Wall Street Journal

15

0

5

10

%%

1950 ’60 ’70 ’80 ’90 2000

2010:14.4%

Heard on the Street: Were theresults really that bad?.......... C10

Copyright © 2012, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.

oracle.com/exadataor call 1.800.ORACLE.1

5of the 5TopBanks Run

ExadataFastReliableSecure

CM Y K CompositeCompositeMAGENTA CYAN BLACK

P2JW024000-5-A00100-107FFB7078F CL,CX,DL,DM,DX,EE,EU,FL,HO,KC,MW,NE,NY,PH,PN,RM,SA,SC,SL,SW,TU,WB,WEBG,BM,BP,CH,CK,CP,CT,DN,DR,FW,HL,HW,KS,LA,LG,LK,MI,ML,NM,PI,PV,TD,TS,UT,WO

P2JW024000-5-A00100-107FFB7078F