2014 07 15 cmyk na 04 - the wall street...

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YELLOW ****** TUESDAY, JULY 15, 2014 ~ VOL. CCLXIV NO. 12 WSJ.com HHHH $2.00 The race by companies to sidestep U.S. taxes reached a fe- ver pitch as two drug firms un- veiled foreign mergers that will help them slash their tax rates. The moves—by Illinois-based AbbVie Inc. and Pennsylvania- based Mylan Inc.—show how U.S. drug makers fear being at a disadvantage if they don’t find a foreign merger partner to help ease their tax bills. AbbVie on Monday was finally close to a takeover of Dublin- based Shire PLC for nearly $54 billion. And Mylan said it agreed to pay $5.3 billion for Abbott Laboratories’ overseas generic- drugs business. The tie-ups are the latest in the growing craze for so-called Please turn to the next page BY LIZ HOFFMAN AND HESTER PLUMRIDGE Race to Cut Taxes Fuels Urge To Merge Egypt made the first serious diplomatic move to halt the weeklong air war between Israel and Hamas, offering a detailed cease-fire proposal that would take effect Tuesday and inviting both sides and the U.S. to Cairo for talks. A top Israeli official said the country’s security cabinet would meet early Tuesday morning to discuss the Egyptian truce pro- posal. Hamas didn’t agree to the proposal. The U.S. was considering sending Secretary of State John Kerry to Cairo but it looked less likely late Monday night, accord- ing to U.S. officials. The Egyptian proposal calls for a de-escalation of the fight- ing starting at 9 a.m. local time in Gaza, with the aim of total calm 12 hours later. Israel would halt air and naval bombardments of Gaza and refrain from launch- ing a threatened ground offen- sive in exchange for Hamas and other Palestinian factions in Gaza holding their rocket fire. Once violence has stopped, the proposal calls for Israel to open a border crossing into Gaza to allow the movement of goods and people. Egypt has mediated before between Israel and Hamas, nota- bly during battles in 2009 and 2012. But it has been slow to join diplomatic efforts this time around because the current mili- tary-backed administration in Cairo views Hamas as an Isla- mist enemy linked to the Muslim Brotherhood. It is unclear whether Cairo can bring Hamas to a negotiating table. On Monday, missiles from Is- rael and rockets from Gaza con- tinued unabated with 163 Israeli airstrikes and 115 rockets launched from Gaza, according to the Israeli military. Late at night after the Egyp- tian proposal came out, Israel Radio reported that Israel at- tacked the house of the No. 2 in Hamas’s military wing, the Qas- sam Brigades, and there were many casualties. Hamas said the house was hit seven times with warning rock- ets then blasted with a missile Please turn to page A7 By Joshua Mitnick in Tel Aviv, Tamer El-Ghobashy in Jerusalem and Nicholas Casey in Gaza City Egypt Tries to Broker Mideast Truce No Agreement Yet on Proposed Cease-Fire; Rockets From Gaza and Israeli Airstrikes Continue WASHINGTON—As the seeds of the financial crisis were be- ing sown, a Citigroup Inc. trader sent an internal email warning about the poor quality of mortgages the bank was packaging into securities and selling to investors. “We should start praying,” the trader wrote in the email. On Monday, the bank agreed to pay $7 billion, including a $4 billion civil penalty to the Jus- tice Department, $500 million to the Federal Deposit Insur- ance Corp. and several states and $2.5 billion earmarked for “consumer relief,” to settle the U.S. government’s allegations it knowingly sold shoddy mort- gages ahead of the crisis. The settlement doesn’t ab- solve Citigroup or its employ- ees of facing any possible criminal charges, Attorney General Eric Holder said. He declined to say whether the government was pursuing criminal charges. Citigroup, in a statement of facts, admitted to repeatedly brushing aside warnings from both inside and outside the bank that many of the loans it had packaged had serious prob- lems and concealing that infor- mation from investors. Mr. Holder said the bank sold mortgage-backed securities Please turn to page A12 BY ANDREW GROSSMAN AND CHRISTINA REXRODE Citi to Pay $7 Billion To Settle Loan Probe Salvaged From the Sea, Headed to the Scrapheap Alessandro Bianchi/Reuters At a recent meeting of the Os- ceola County, Fla., board of com- missioners, many attendees bowed their heads in silence as they listened to an invocation delivered by an atheist. “Habit, I guess,” says David Williamson of Central Florida Freethought Community, who, in lieu of calling on the almighty, invoked the spirit of goodwill during his roughly one-minute speech. Mr. Williamson, the first non- believer invited to perform the county ritual, is among a handful of atheists around the country who have given or are scheduled to give invocations before local- government meetings. The speeches have championed self- government, the human condi- tion, intellectual openness and minority viewpoints. At the same time, several town boards that had done away with prayers that include refer- ences to specific faiths are try- ing to revive them. The groundswell is a reaction to a U.S. Supreme Court ruling in May that sanctioned prayers be- fore meetings of the town board in Greece, N.Y. The court rejected arguments that the overwhelm- ingly Christian prayers gave preference to one faith and vio- lated the First Amendment, which prohibits the government from establishing an official reli- gion. The decision was a blow to nonbeliever activists, but it also created an opportunity. Justice Anthony Kennedy, who wrote the 5-4 ruling, emphasized the importance of inclusion, holding the town to a policy that permits “a minister or layperson of any persuasion, including an athe- ist,” to give the invocation. And so on June 16, Mr. Wil- liamson, who lives outside Or- lando, found himself for the first Please turn to page A12 BY JOE PALAZZOLO Supreme Court Ruling Gives Atheists a Prayer i i i Nonbelievers’ Public Invocations Praised; Next Up, Pastafarians RUSTING HULK: Crews began refloating the Costa Concordia Monday at the Italian island where it ran aground in 2012, preparing it to be scrapped. DJIA 17055.42 À 111.61 0.7% NASDAQ 4440.42 À 0.6% NIKKEI 15296.82 À 0.9% STOXX 600 339.79 À 0.9% 10-YR. TREAS. g 8/32 , yield 2.548% OIL $100.91 À $0.08 GOLD $1,306.30 g $30.70 EURO $1.3619 YEN 101.54 TODAY IN PERSONAL JOURNAL The Meanest Stingers PLUS Make Up After a Fight CONTENTS CFO Journal .................. B4 Corp. News................ B2-3 Global Finance ............. C3 Health........................... D1-4 Heard on Street..........C8 In the Markets.............C4 Leisure & Arts ............. D5 Marketplace.................. B6 Opinion.................... A13-15 Sports................................D6 U.S. News...................A2-4 Weather Watch.......... B6 World News........... A6-12 s Copyright 2014 Dow Jones & Company. All Rights Reserved > What’s News i i i World-Wide n Egypt proposed a cease-fire between Israel and Hamas and invited both sides to Cairo for talks. Israeli officials will dis- cuss the plan early Tuesday. A1 n Hezbollah has started re- cruiting fighters in Syria and bringing in fresh forces to shore up the Assad regime. A6 n The U.N. Security Council voted unanimously to deliver aid to Syria without the ap- proval of Damascus. A6 n California is set to impose mandatory water restrictions for the first time amid one of the state’s worst droughts. A2 n Iran has signaled for the first time that it is willing to accept modest reductions in nuclear enrichment. A7 n Ukraine said a rocket prob- ably fired from Russia downed a Ukrainian military cargo plane close to the border. A8 n Bergdahl is returning to regular duty at a base in Texas after five years as a Taliban captive, the Army said. A4 n Combating cybercrime will be a priority, the new head of the Justice Department’s criminal division said. A3 n The head of the World Cup’s hospitality provider, accused of supplying tickets to scalp- ers, turned himself in. A7 n China’s territorial claims could lead to war, majorities in many Asian nations fear. A11 n The U.N. said it is tempo- rarily withdrawing its staff from Libya amid clashes. A7 n Died: Nadine Gordimer, 90, South African novelist and apartheid opponent. A8 i i i C itigroup agreed to pay $7 billion to settle gov- ernment allegations it know- ingly sold shoddy mortgages ahead of the financial crisis. A1 The Dow climbed 111.61 points to 17055.42, helped by a better-than-expected earnings report from Citigroup. C1 n AbbVie neared a deal for Ireland’s Shire and Mylan agreed to buy Abbott’s foreign generics unit as the U.S. drug firms seek to cut their taxes. A1 n Strains persist at Pimco be- tween founder Gross and top executives as clients continue to leave the bond fund. A1 n China’s big banks halted an experimental program that helped people transfer large sums of money abroad. C1 n AIG’s incoming chief will get a small pay boost but stands to earn much more if the in- surer continues to recover. C1 n The NBA is seeking to dou- ble the TV-rights fees it re- ceives from ESPN majority owner Disney and Turner. B1 n Merck’s effort to revive its Zilmax cattle-feed additive is stalling amid resistance from big beef processors. B1 n Pilot agreed to pay $92 mil- lion to settle a probe over al- leged fuel-rebate skimming. B6 n The EPA proposed that auto makers be required to road test their mileage claims. B1 n Fox is combining its broad- cast unit and TV studio under the same leadership team. B5 n The Justice Department is probing possible price coordi- nation by music publishers. B2 Business & Finance Sgt. Bergdahl Returns to Duty NEW POST: After being held prisoner by the Taliban for five years, Army Sgt. Bowe Bergdahl, shown in an undated photo, has been assigned to administrative duty in Texas, following a ‘reintegration process.’ A4 U.S. Army/Reuters NEWPORT BEACH, Calif.—In early June, before hundreds of employees at Pacific Investment Man- agement Co.’s new 21-story headquarters here, Chief Executive Douglas Hodge spoke effusively about Bill Gross’s enduring passion for investing. “Forty-three years ago, he founded Pimco with a vision and a fire in his belly, and we are living that vision today,” Mr. Hodge said, with the 70-year-old Mr. Gross, the firm’s chief investment officer, stand- ing beside him. “We all owe so much. Thank you.” Employees gave Mr. Gross a standing ovation. The two executives shook hands, almost hugging, accord- ing to people in attendance. It was a show of warmth at the bond giant known for its high-pressure envi- ronment and a display of unity amid a closely watched leadership transition. Behind the scenes, however, strains persist more than six months after the abrupt January resignation of Pimco’s previous CEO, Mohamed El-Erian, accord- ing to people familiar with the matter. About three months ago, a group of Pimco senior executives became so concerned about Mr. Gross’s dealings with the media that they warned him to stop making public comments they viewed as divi- sive, according to people familiar with the matter. Mr. Gross, the face of a firm that manages $1.97 tril- lion and its star investor, has threatened to quit more than once since Mr. El-Erian’s March departure, in- cluding after that warning, the people say. A key reason for the tension: Clients continue to leave Pimco and, in particular, Mr. Gross’s fund. His Total Return fund, the world’s largest bond fund, saw $4.5 billion of net investor outflows in June—its 14th consecutive month of defections—despite outpacing two-thirds of it rivals in the second quarter, accord- Please turn to page A12 BY GREGORY ZUCKERMAN AND KIRSTEN GRIND INSIDE PIMCO A Bond Giant and Its Founder Struggle to Heal Strains Gauging the U.S. revenue hit... A2 Heard: AbbVie opens wallet... C8 Citi earnings help lift stocks... C1 Heard: The bank’s paradox...... C8 C M Y K Composite Composite MAGENTA CYAN BLACK P2JW196000-6-A00100-1--------XA CL,CN,CX,DL,DM,DX,EE,EU,FL,HO,KC,MW,NC,NE,NY,PH,PN,RM,SA,SC,SL,SW,TU,WB,WE BG,BM,BP,CC,CH,CK,CP,CT,DN,DR,FW,HL,HW,KS,LA,LG,LK,MI,ML,NM,PA,PI,PV,TD,TS,UT,WO P2JW196000-6-A00100-1--------XA

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Page 1: 2014 07 15 cmyk NA 04 - The Wall Street Journalonline.wsj.com/public/resources/documents/pageone071514.pdf · RUSTING HULK: Crewsbegan refloating the CostaConcordia Mondayatthe Italian

YELLOW

* * * * * * TUESDAY, JULY 15, 2014 ~ VOL. CCLXIV NO. 12 WSJ.com HHHH $2 .00

The race by companies tosidestep U.S. taxes reached a fe-ver pitch as two drug firms un-veiled foreign mergers that willhelp them slash their tax rates.

The moves—by Illinois-basedAbbVie Inc. and Pennsylvania-based Mylan Inc.—show howU.S. drug makers fear being at adisadvantage if they don’t find aforeign merger partner to helpease their tax bills.

AbbVie on Monday was finallyclose to a takeover of Dublin-based Shire PLC for nearly $54billion. And Mylan said it agreedto pay $5.3 billion for AbbottLaboratories’ overseas generic-drugs business.

The tie-ups are the latest inthe growing craze for so-called

Pleaseturntothenextpage

BY LIZ HOFFMANAND HESTER PLUMRIDGE

Race toCut TaxesFuels UrgeToMerge

Egypt made the first seriousdiplomatic move to halt theweeklong air war between Israeland Hamas, offering a detailedcease-fire proposal that wouldtake effect Tuesday and invitingboth sides and the U.S. to Cairofor talks.

A top Israeli official said thecountry’s security cabinet wouldmeet early Tuesday morning todiscuss the Egyptian truce pro-posal. Hamas didn’t agree to theproposal.

The U.S. was consideringsending Secretary of State JohnKerry to Cairo but it looked lesslikely late Monday night, accord-ing to U.S. officials.

The Egyptian proposal callsfor a de-escalation of the fight-ing starting at 9 a.m. local time

in Gaza, with the aim of totalcalm 12 hours later. Israel wouldhalt air and naval bombardmentsof Gaza and refrain from launch-ing a threatened ground offen-sive in exchange for Hamas andother Palestinian factions inGaza holding their rocket fire.

Once violence has stopped,the proposal calls for Israel toopen a border crossing into Gazato allow the movement of goodsand people.

Egypt has mediated before

between Israel and Hamas, nota-bly during battles in 2009 and2012. But it has been slow tojoin diplomatic efforts this timearound because the current mili-tary-backed administration inCairo views Hamas as an Isla-mist enemy linked to the MuslimBrotherhood. It is unclearwhether Cairo can bring Hamasto a negotiating table.

On Monday, missiles from Is-rael and rockets from Gaza con-tinued unabated with 163 Israeli

airstrikes and 115 rocketslaunched from Gaza, accordingto the Israeli military.

Late at night after the Egyp-tian proposal came out, IsraelRadio reported that Israel at-tacked the house of the No. 2 inHamas’s military wing, the Qas-sam Brigades, and there weremany casualties.

Hamas said the house was hitseven times with warning rock-ets then blasted with a missile

PleaseturntopageA7

By JoshuaMitnick in TelAviv,Tamer El-Ghobashyin Jerusalem andNicholas

Casey in Gaza City

Egypt Tries to Broker Mideast TruceNo Agreement Yet on Proposed Cease-Fire; Rockets From Gaza and Israeli Airstrikes Continue

WASHINGTON—As the seedsof the financial crisis were be-ing sown, a Citigroup Inc.trader sent an internal emailwarning about the poor qualityof mortgages the bank waspackaging into securities andselling to investors.

“We should start praying,”the trader wrote in the email.

On Monday, the bank agreedto pay $7 billion, including a $4billion civil penalty to the Jus-tice Department, $500 millionto the Federal Deposit Insur-ance Corp. and several statesand $2.5 billion earmarked for“consumer relief,” to settle theU.S. government’s allegations itknowingly sold shoddy mort-

gages ahead of the crisis.The settlement doesn’t ab-

solve Citigroup or its employ-ees of facing any possiblecriminal charges, AttorneyGeneral Eric Holder said. Hedeclined to say whether thegovernment was pursuingcriminal charges.

Citigroup, in a statement offacts, admitted to repeatedlybrushing aside warnings fromboth inside and outside thebank that many of the loans ithad packaged had serious prob-lems and concealing that infor-mation from investors.

Mr. Holder said the bank soldmortgage-backed securities

PleaseturntopageA12

BY ANDREW GROSSMANAND CHRISTINA REXRODE

Citi to Pay $7 BillionTo Settle Loan Probe

Salvaged From the Sea, Headed to the Scrapheap

AlessandroBianchi/Re

uters

At a recent meeting of the Os-ceola County, Fla., board of com-missioners, many attendeesbowed their heads in silence asthey listened to an invocationdelivered by an atheist.

“Habit, I guess,” says DavidWilliamson of Central FloridaFreethought Community, who, inlieu of calling on the almighty,invoked the spirit of goodwillduring his roughly one-minutespeech.

Mr. Williamson, the first non-believer invited to perform thecounty ritual, is among a handfulof atheists around the countrywho have given or are scheduledto give invocations before local-government meetings. Thespeeches have championed self-government, the human condi-

tion, intellectual openness andminority viewpoints.

At the same time, severaltown boards that had done awaywith prayers that include refer-ences to specific faiths are try-ing to revive them.

The groundswell is a reactionto a U.S. Supreme Court ruling in

May that sanctioned prayers be-fore meetings of the town boardin Greece, N.Y. The court rejectedarguments that the overwhelm-ingly Christian prayers gavepreference to one faith and vio-lated the First Amendment,which prohibits the governmentfrom establishing an official reli-gion.

The decision was a blow tononbeliever activists, but it alsocreated an opportunity. JusticeAnthony Kennedy, who wrotethe 5-4 ruling, emphasized theimportance of inclusion, holdingthe town to a policy that permits“a minister or layperson of anypersuasion, including an athe-ist,” to give the invocation.

And so on June 16, Mr. Wil-liamson, who lives outside Or-lando, found himself for the first

PleaseturntopageA12

BY JOE PALAZZOLO

Supreme Court Ruling Gives Atheists a Prayeri i i

Nonbelievers’ Public Invocations Praised; Next Up, Pastafarians

RUSTING HULK: Crews began refloating the Costa Concordia Monday at the Italian island where it ran aground in 2012, preparing it to be scrapped.

DJIA 17055.42 À 111.61 0.7% NASDAQ 4440.42 À 0.6% NIKKEI 15296.82 À 0.9% STOXX600 339.79 À 0.9% 10-YR. TREAS. g 8/32 , yield 2.548% OIL $100.91 À $0.08 GOLD $1,306.30 g $30.70 EURO $1.3619 YEN 101.54

TODAY IN PERSONAL JOURNAL

The Meanest StingersPLUS Make Up After a Fight

CONTENTSCFO Journal..................B4Corp. News................B2-3Global Finance.............C3Health...........................D1-4Heard on Street..........C8In the Markets.............C4

Leisure & Arts.............D5Marketplace..................B6Opinion....................A13-15Sports................................D6U.S. News...................A2-4Weather Watch..........B6World News...........A6-12

s Copyright 2014 Dow Jones & Company.All Rights Reserved

>

What’sNews

i i i

World-Widen Egypt proposed a cease-firebetween Israel and Hamas andinvited both sides to Cairo fortalks. Israeli officials will dis-cuss the plan early Tuesday. A1nHezbollah has started re-cruiting fighters in Syria andbringing in fresh forces toshore up the Assad regime. A6n The U.N. Security Councilvoted unanimously to deliveraid to Syria without the ap-proval of Damascus. A6n California is set to imposemandatory water restrictionsfor the first time amid one ofthe state’s worst droughts. A2n Iran has signaled for thefirst time that it is willing toaccept modest reductions innuclear enrichment. A7nUkraine said a rocket prob-ably fired from Russia downeda Ukrainian military cargoplane close to the border. A8n Bergdahl is returning toregular duty at a base in Texasafter five years as a Talibancaptive, the Army said. A4n Combating cybercrimewillbe a priority, the new head ofthe Justice Department’scriminal division said. A3nThe head of theWorld Cup’shospitality provider, accusedof supplying tickets to scalp-ers, turned himself in. A7nChina’s territorial claimscould lead to war, majorities inmany Asian nations fear. A11n The U.N. said it is tempo-rarily withdrawing its stafffrom Libya amid clashes. A7n Died: Nadine Gordimer,90, South African novelistand apartheid opponent. A8

i i i

Citigroup agreed to pay$7 billion to settle gov-

ernment allegations it know-ingly sold shoddy mortgagesahead of the financial crisis. A1The Dow climbed 111.61points to 17055.42, helped by abetter-than-expected earningsreport from Citigroup. C1nAbbVie neared a deal forIreland’s Shire andMylanagreed to buy Abbott’s foreigngenerics unit as the U.S. drugfirms seek to cut their taxes. A1n Strains persist at Pimco be-tween founder Gross and topexecutives as clients continueto leave the bond fund. A1n China’s big banks haltedan experimental program thathelped people transfer largesums of money abroad. C1nAIG’s incoming chiefwill geta small pay boost but standsto earn much more if the in-surer continues to recover. C1n The NBA is seeking to dou-ble the TV-rights fees it re-ceives from ESPN majorityowner Disney and Turner. B1nMerck’s effort to revive itsZilmax cattle-feed additive isstalling amid resistance frombig beef processors. B1n Pilot agreed to pay $92 mil-lion to settle a probe over al-leged fuel-rebate skimming. B6nThe EPA proposed that automakers be required to roadtest their mileage claims. B1n Fox is combining its broad-cast unit and TV studio underthe same leadership team. B5n The Justice Department isprobing possible price coordi-nation by music publishers. B2

Business&Finance

Sgt. Bergdahl Returns to Duty

NEW POST: After being held prisoner by the Taliban for five years, ArmySgt. Bowe Bergdahl, shown in an undated photo, has been assigned toadministrative duty in Texas, following a ‘reintegration process.’ A4

U.S.A

rmy/Re

uters

NEWPORT BEACH, Calif.—In early June, beforehundreds of employees at Pacific Investment Man-agement Co.’s new 21-story headquarters here, ChiefExecutive Douglas Hodge spoke effusively about BillGross’s enduring passion for investing.

“Forty-three years ago, he founded Pimco with avision and a fire in his belly, and we are living thatvision today,” Mr. Hodge said, with the 70-year-oldMr. Gross, the firm’s chief investment officer, stand-ing beside him. “We all owe so much. Thank you.”

Employees gave Mr. Gross a standing ovation. Thetwo executives shook hands, almost hugging, accord-ing to people in attendance. It was a show of warmthat the bond giant known for its high-pressure envi-ronment and a display of unity amid a closelywatched leadership transition.

Behind the scenes, however, strains persist more

than six months after the abrupt January resignationof Pimco’s previous CEO, Mohamed El-Erian, accord-ing to people familiar with the matter.

About three months ago, a group of Pimco seniorexecutives became so concerned about Mr. Gross’sdealings with the media that they warned him tostop making public comments they viewed as divi-sive, according to people familiar with the matter.Mr. Gross, the face of a firm that manages $1.97 tril-lion and its star investor, has threatened to quit morethan once since Mr. El-Erian’s March departure, in-cluding after that warning, the people say.

A key reason for the tension: Clients continue toleave Pimco and, in particular, Mr. Gross’s fund. HisTotal Return fund, the world’s largest bond fund, saw$4.5 billion of net investor outflows in June—its 14thconsecutive month of defections—despite outpacingtwo-thirds of it rivals in the second quarter, accord-

PleaseturntopageA12

BY GREGORY ZUCKERMAN AND KIRSTEN GRIND

INSIDE PIMCO

ABond Giant and Its FounderStruggle to Heal Strains

Gauging the U.S. revenue hit... A2 Heard: AbbVie opens wallet... C8

Citi earnings help lift stocks... C1 Heard: The bank’s paradox...... C8

CM Y K CompositeCompositeMAGENTA CYAN BLACK

P2JW196000-6-A00100-1--------XA CL,CN,CX,DL,DM,DX,EE,EU,FL,HO,KC,MW,NC,NE,NY,PH,PN,RM,SA,SC,SL,SW,TU,WB,WEBG,BM,BP,CC,CH,CK,CP,CT,DN,DR,FW,HL,HW,KS,LA,LG,LK,MI,ML,NM,PA,PI,PV,TD,TS,UT,WO

P2JW196000-6-A00100-1--------XA