2015 03 16 cmyk na 04 - the wall street...

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YELLOW **** MONDAY, MARCH 16, 2015 ~ VOL. CCLXV NO. 61 WSJ.com HHHH $3.00 Israeli leader says he’s in danger of losing election and pledges to address economic woes Last week: DJIA 17749.31 g 107.47 0.6% NASDAQ 4871.76 g 1.1% NIKKEI 19254.25 À 1.5% STOXX 600 396.61 À 0.6% 10-YR. TREASURY À 1 5/32 , yield 2.110% OIL $44.84 g $4.77 EURO $1.0497 YEN 121.42 | CONTENTS Abreast of the Market C1 Business News...... B2,3 Global Finance............ C3 Heard on the Street C6 Markets Dashboard C4 Media & Marketing B6 Moving the Market C2 Opinion................... A11-13 Sports.......................... B7,8 Technology................... B4 U.S. News................. A2-6 Weather Watch ........ B7 World News............ A7-9 s Copyright 2015 Dow Jones & Company. All Rights Reserved > What’s News Israeli leader Netanyahu pleaded with conservative vot- ers to shore up his campaign, warning he could lose his job in Tuesday’s election. A1 A Medicare panel said a planned overhaul of payments to long-term-care hospitals doesn’t go far enough. A1 Venezuela’s president was given power to rule without legislative approval to com- bat alleged U.S. threats. A7 A 20-year-old man was charged in the shooting of two police officers in Fergu- son, Mo., last week. A3 Clinton has been reaching out to Hispanics as part of an effort to blunt a potential Re- publican election threat. A4 Turkish officials stopped and deported three British teens suspected of seeking to join militants in Syria. A8 Putin said he prepared to put Russian nuclear forces on alert ahead of Crimea’s annexation last year. A7 Ten U.S. clinicians were flown home from Sierra Le- one after aiding a health- care worker with Ebola. A6 Robert Durst, the son of a real estate scion and subject of an HBO documentary, was arrested in a 2000 killing. A3 The U.S. and Iran were set to resume nuclear talks, hop- ing to seal a tentative deal. A8 Texas is about to run out of pentobarbital, its drug of choice for executions. A6 Remarriage is on the rise, with about 17% of Americans married two or more times. A3 C hina is flooding the world with steel exports as domestic use slows, spur- ring calls for tariffs by steel- makers world-wide. A1 Beijing signaled more mea- sures are in the works to re- gain economic momentum and overcome weak demand. A9 GE agreed to sell its Aus- tralia and New Zealand con- sumer-lending business to a KKR-Deutsche Bank investor group for $6.26 billion. B1 The FTC is revising proce- dures for challenging mergers amid growing pressure from congressional Republicans. B1 Bank stocks will continue to be squeezed by low interest rates, tougher regulations and legal bills, analysts and port- folio managers predict. C1 Big hedge funds have profited from the euro’s plunge as their managers bet against the currency. C1 A Bank of Montreal unit is launching a cardless ATM net- work in the U.S. that will let customers withdraw cash with their smartphones. C3 Blackstone agreed to buy Chicago’s Willis Tower for $1.3 billion, a record for a U.S. office tower outside New York. C3 BlackBerry unveiled a high- security tablet as it seeks to expand its base with business and government customers. B4 Boston Scientific won FDA approval for its Watchman stroke-prevention device. B3 Disney’s “Cinderella” led the weekend box office, open- ing to a strong $70.1 million in the U.S. and Canada. B6 Business & Finance World-Wide China’s massive steel-making engine, determined to keep hum- ming as growth cools at home, is flooding the world with exports, spurring steel producers around the globe to seek government protection from falling prices. From the European Union to Korea and India, China’s excess metal supply is upending trade patterns and heating up turf bat- tles among local steelmakers. In the U.S., the world’s sec- ond-biggest steel consumer, a fresh wave of layoffs is fueling appeals for tariffs. U.S. steel pro- ducers such as U.S. Steel Corp. and Nucor Corp. are starting to seek political support for trade action. China’s steel exports rose 63% to 9.2 million tons in Janu- ary from a year earlier, a rise that puts them on pace this year to beat the 82.1 million tons China exported last year. That number increased 59% from 2013 and was the most steel ever ex- ported by any country this cen- tury. China produces as much steel as the rest of the world com- bined—more than four times the peak U.S. production in the 1970s. But as China’s growth slows, the excess steel that Chi- nese industry doesn’t need is washing up overseas. Steel use in China grew by just 1% in 2014 and growth will slow further to 0.8% in 2015, according to the World Steel Association, as the country’s real-estate sector cools. China’s mills have yet to Please see STEEL page A9 By Biman Mukherji in Hong Kong, John W. Miller in Pittsburgh and Chuin-Wei Yap in Beijing Ire Rises At China Over Glut Of Steel TEL AVIV—Israeli Prime Min- ister Benjamin Netanyahu warned of a “real danger” he would lose his job in Tuesday’s election and pleaded with con- servative voters to shore up his campaign, blaming a foreign conspiracy for boosting his ri- vals’ prospects. In a rare show of vulnerability for a leader who normally proj- ects confidence, Mr. Netanyahu also said Sunday that he could have done a better job listening to Israelis’ complaints about the high cost of living—a leading concern of voters during this year’s campaign. “A left-wing government will come to power—this possibility exists,” Mr. Netanyahu told thou- sands of right-wing demonstra- tors at a rally here Sunday night. He cast himself as the underdog after public-opinion polls last week showed his conservative Likud party trailing a center-left alliance by four seats in the 120- member parliament. “We must close this gap. This gap can be closed.” It is a risky tactic two days before an election that has es- sentially become a referendum on Mr. Netanyahu’s nine-year tenure, the longest of any Israeli prime minister since David Ben- Gurion, a founder of the state. The prime minister’s cam- paign has gone into a frenzy in recent days. He has given a flurry of interviews to Israeli media after largely shunning them for years and urged Israeli voters abroad to return home to cast ballots. Mr. Netanyahu, who is seek- ing a third consecutive term and a fourth overall, has long fo- cused on a security-first agenda. He opposes the terms that have surfaced so far of a nuclear deal between a U.S.-led group of six world powers and Iran. Over the last year, peace talks with Pales- tinians were suspended and Is- rael fought another war with Hamas, the Islamist group that rules Gaza. Nahum Abramovitch, a 70- year-old computer technician, Please see ISRAEL page A8 BY NICHOLAS CASEY AND JOSHUA MITNICK Netanyahu Pleads for Votes A planned overhaul of Medi- care payments to long-term hos- pitals doesn’t go far enough, a congressional advisory panel said, and it called for further changes to discourage timing pa- tients’ discharges to financial in- centives. Long-term-care hospitals get smaller payments for short vis- its, but after patients stay for a certain number of days the pay- ments jump to much larger lump sums. That gives the hospitals “a strong financial incentive to keep patients” until they qualify for higher payments, “and they appear to respond to that incen- tive,” the Medicare Payment Ad- visory Commission, called Med- PAC, said in a report Friday. Medicare’s planned overhaul aims to limit the number of pa- tients qualifying for high long- term-hospital payments. But a Wall Street Journal analysis of Medicare data suggests the new rules wouldn’t have much effect on the incentive to discharge eli- gible patients at particular times. Mark Miller, MedPAC’s execu- tive director, said in an inter- Please see PANEL page A2 By Christopher Weaver, Anna Wilde Mathews and Tom McGinty Medicare Panel Faults Payment Fix as Too Weak Oded Balilty/Associated Press COLOMBO, Sri Lanka—The new government here is racing to carry out an ambitious 100- day plan to overhaul the consti- tution and reinvigorate the econ- omy as it girds for elections likely within the next few months. But on Saturday, Prime Minis- ter Ranil Wickremesinghe took a break from affairs of state—to watch a high-school cricket match. It isn’t just any game. Known as the Battle of the Blues, it has been played annually for 136 years between two of Sri Lanka’s oldest and toniest all-boys schools, Royal College and S. Thomas’ College. The three-day match is among the most important so- cial events for mem- bers of the Colombo elite, who gather in grandstands and tents festooned with bunting to party, schmooze and watch cricket. “It’s like an annual pilgrim- age. You come to meet your old friends,” said Dilshan Jayasuriya, a lawyer who graduated from S. Thomas’ in 1994. Luckily play ends on a Saturday, he said, since “it takes one full day to recover.” About 30,000 peo- ple turned out to watch, according to organizers. Alumni, known as Old Royal- ists and Old Thomi- ans, flew in from around the world. This year the cele- brations also had political over- tones, because the prime minister and a dozen other cabinet minis- ters and deputy ministers are Please see CRICKET page A10 BY GORDON FAIRCLOUGH March Madness? Sri Lankans Crazy for High-School Cricket i i i Capital grinds to a halt as country’s elite turn out for annual match Cricket bats and ball Right-wing Israeli demonstrators at a rally in Tel Aviv on Sunday where Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, seen on the screen, appealed for votes. UPLAND, Calif.—From the time he was a young man com- ing of age in the 1970s, Mike Massey could have served as a poster child for his generation, the baby boomers. He grew his hair long to the dismay of his father, surfed, played in rock bands and says he regularly got high on marijuana and cocaine. The wild times receded as he grew older. In his 30s, he stopped using drugs altogether, rose into executive positions with the plumbers and pipe fit- ters union, bought a house in this Los Angeles suburb and started a family. But at age 50, Mr. Massey injured his knee running. He took Vicodin for the pain but soon started using pills heavily, mixing the opioids with alcohol, he said. “It reminded me of getting high and getting loaded,” said Mr. Massey, now 58 years old, who went into recovery and stopped using drugs and alcohol in 2013. “Your mind never forgets that.” Today, the story of this balding, middle-aged executive continues to reflect that of his generation. Older adults are abusing drugs, getting arrested for drug offenses and dying from drug overdoses at increasingly higher rates. These surges have come as the 76 million baby boomers, born between 1946 and 1964, reach late middle age. Facing the pains and losses connected to aging, boomers, who as youths used drugs at the high- est rates of any generation, are once again—or still—turning to drugs. The trend has U.S. health of- ficials worried. The sharp in- crease in overdose deaths among older adults in particu- lar is “very concerning,” said Wilson Compton, deputy director for the federal government’s National Institute on Drug Abuse. The rate of death by accidental drug over- Please see DRUGS page A10 BY ZUSHA ELINSON AGING BABY BOOMERS HOLD ON TO DRUG HABITS Counterculture generation, now middle aged, falls into addiction THE WALL STREET JOURNAL. Note: Methodology changed in 2002, resulting in a higher response rate. Source: Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration 8 0 2 4 6 % 1980 ’90 2000 ’10 Boomers are ages 49–67 in 2013 First baby boomers enter category in 1996 Boomers are ages 32–50 Still Turning On Percentage of people age 50 and older reporting any illicit drug use in the past year March Mania As the NCAA announces the tournament bracket, Jason Gay braces for the madness. SPORTS | B7-8 How to Say ‘No’ To Retirement ENCORE | R1 Getty Images Hurry! It’s almost April 15th. TD Ameritrade, Inc., member FINRA/SIPC. TD Ameritrade is a trademark jointly owned by TD Ameritrade IP Company, Inc. and The Toronto-Dominion Bank. © 2015 TD Ameritrade IP Company, Inc. All rights reserved. Used with permission. Call 877-tdameritrade or visit tdameritrade.com/ira Open and fund a TD Ameritrade IRA today for your full potential 2014 tax benefits. It only takes 15 minutes to open an IRA, and our retirement consultants are here to give you step-by-step help if you want it. Friends with potential tax benefits. C M Y K Composite Composite MAGENTA CYAN BLACK P2JW075000-4-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 P2JW075000-4-A00100-1--------XA

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Page 1: 2015 03 16 cmyk NA 04 - The Wall Street Journalonline.wsj.com/public/resources/documents/pageone0316.pdfYELL OW **** MONDAY,MARCH 16,2015~VOL. CCLXV NO.61 WSJ.com HHHH $3.00 Israelileadersays

YELLOW

* * * * MONDAY, MARCH 16, 2015 ~ VOL. CCLXV NO. 61 WSJ.com HHHH $3 .00

Israeli leader says he’sin danger of losingelection and pledges toaddress economic woes

Lastweek: DJIA 17749.31 g 107.47 0.6% NASDAQ 4871.76 g 1.1% NIKKEI 19254.25 À 1.5% STOXX600 396.61 À 0.6% 10-YR. TREASURY À 1 5/32 , yield 2.110% OIL $44.84 g $4.77 EURO $1.0497 YEN 121.42

|

CONTENTSAbreast of the Market C1Business News...... B2,3Global Finance............ C3Heard on the Street C6Markets Dashboard C4Media & Marketing B6

Moving the Market C2Opinion................... A11-13Sports.......................... B7,8Technology................... B4U.S. News................. A2-6Weather Watch........ B7World News............ A7-9

s Copyright 2015 Dow Jones & Company.All Rights Reserved

>

What’sNews

Israeli leader Netanyahupleaded with conservative vot-ers to shore up his campaign,warning he could lose his jobin Tuesday’s election. A1AMedicare panel said aplanned overhaul of paymentsto long-term-care hospitalsdoesn’t go far enough. A1 Venezuela’s president wasgiven power to rule withoutlegislative approval to com-bat alleged U.S. threats. A7 A 20-year-old man wascharged in the shooting oftwo police officers in Fergu-son, Mo., last week. A3 Clinton has been reachingout to Hispanics as part of aneffort to blunt a potential Re-publican election threat. A4 Turkish officials stoppedand deported three Britishteens suspected of seekingto join militants in Syria. A8 Putin said he prepared toput Russian nuclear forceson alert ahead of Crimea’sannexation last year. A7 Ten U.S. clinicians wereflown home from Sierra Le-one after aiding a health-care worker with Ebola. A6 Robert Durst, the son of areal estate scion and subjectof an HBO documentary, wasarrested in a 2000 killing. A3 The U.S. and Iranwere setto resume nuclear talks, hop-ing to seal a tentative deal. A8 Texas is about to run outof pentobarbital, its drug ofchoice for executions. A6Remarriage is on the rise,with about 17% of Americansmarried two or more times. A3

China is flooding theworld with steel exports

as domestic use slows, spur-ring calls for tariffs by steel-makers world-wide. A1 Beijing signaledmore mea-sures are in the works to re-gain economic momentum andovercome weak demand. A9 GE agreed to sell its Aus-tralia and New Zealand con-sumer-lending business to aKKR-Deutsche Bank investorgroup for $6.26 billion. B1 The FTC is revising proce-dures for challenging mergersamid growing pressure fromcongressional Republicans. B1 Bank stocks will continueto be squeezed by low interestrates, tougher regulations andlegal bills, analysts and port-folio managers predict. C1 Big hedge funds haveprofited from the euro’splunge as their managers betagainst the currency. C1 A Bank of Montreal unit islaunching a cardless ATM net-work in the U.S. that will letcustomers withdraw cashwith their smartphones. C3Blackstone agreed to buyChicago’sWillis Tower for $1.3billion, a record for a U.S. officetower outside New York. C3BlackBerry unveiled a high-security tablet as it seeks toexpand its base with businessand government customers. B4 Boston Scientific won FDAapproval for its Watchmanstroke-prevention device. B3 Disney’s “Cinderella” ledthe weekend box office, open-ing to a strong $70.1 millionin the U.S. and Canada. B6

Business&Finance

World-Wide

China’s massive steel-makingengine, determined to keep hum-ming as growth cools at home, isflooding the world with exports,spurring steel producers aroundthe globe to seek governmentprotection from falling prices.

From the European Union toKorea and India, China’s excessmetal supply is upending tradepatterns and heating up turf bat-tles among local steelmakers.

In the U.S., the world’s sec-ond-biggest steel consumer, afresh wave of layoffs is fuelingappeals for tariffs. U.S. steel pro-ducers such as U.S. Steel Corp.and Nucor Corp. are starting toseek political support for tradeaction.

China’s steel exports rose63% to 9.2 million tons in Janu-ary from a year earlier, a risethat puts them on pace this yearto beat the 82.1 million tonsChina exported last year. Thatnumber increased 59% from 2013and was the most steel ever ex-ported by any country this cen-tury.

China produces as much steelas the rest of the world com-bined—more than four times thepeak U.S. production in the1970s. But as China’s growthslows, the excess steel that Chi-nese industry doesn’t need iswashing up overseas.

Steel use in China grew by just1% in 2014 and growth will slowfurther to 0.8% in 2015, accordingto the World Steel Association, asthe country’s real-estate sectorcools. China’s mills have yet to

Please see STEEL page A9

By BimanMukherji inHong Kong, JohnW.

Miller in Pittsburgh andChuin-Wei Yap in Beijing

Ire RisesAt ChinaOver GlutOf Steel

TEL AVIV—Israeli Prime Min-ister Benjamin Netanyahuwarned of a “real danger” hewould lose his job in Tuesday’selection and pleaded with con-servative voters to shore up hiscampaign, blaming a foreignconspiracy for boosting his ri-

vals’ prospects.In a rare show of vulnerability

for a leader who normally proj-ects confidence, Mr. Netanyahualso said Sunday that he couldhave done a better job listeningto Israelis’ complaints about thehigh cost of living—a leadingconcern of voters during thisyear’s campaign.

“A left-wing government willcome to power—this possibilityexists,” Mr. Netanyahu told thou-sands of right-wing demonstra-tors at a rally here Sunday night.He cast himself as the underdogafter public-opinion polls lastweek showed his conservative

Likud party trailing a center-leftalliance by four seats in the 120-member parliament. “We mustclose this gap. This gap can beclosed.”

It is a risky tactic two daysbefore an election that has es-sentially become a referendumon Mr. Netanyahu’s nine-yeartenure, the longest of any Israeliprime minister since David Ben-Gurion, a founder of the state.

The prime minister’s cam-paign has gone into a frenzy inrecent days. He has given aflurry of interviews to Israelimedia after largely shunningthem for years and urged Israeli

voters abroad to return home tocast ballots.

Mr. Netanyahu, who is seek-ing a third consecutive term anda fourth overall, has long fo-cused on a security-first agenda.He opposes the terms that havesurfaced so far of a nuclear dealbetween a U.S.-led group of sixworld powers and Iran. Over thelast year, peace talks with Pales-tinians were suspended and Is-rael fought another war withHamas, the Islamist group thatrules Gaza.

Nahum Abramovitch, a 70-year-old computer technician,

Please see ISRAEL page A8

BY NICHOLAS CASEYAND JOSHUA MITNICK

Netanyahu Pleads for Votes

A planned overhaul of Medi-care payments to long-term hos-pitals doesn’t go far enough, acongressional advisory panelsaid, and it called for furtherchanges to discourage timing pa-tients’ discharges to financial in-centives.

Long-term-care hospitals getsmaller payments for short vis-its, but after patients stay for acertain number of days the pay-ments jump to much larger lumpsums.

That gives the hospitals “a

strong financial incentive tokeep patients” until they qualifyfor higher payments, “and theyappear to respond to that incen-tive,” the Medicare Payment Ad-visory Commission, called Med-PAC, said in a report Friday.

Medicare’s planned overhaulaims to limit the number of pa-tients qualifying for high long-term-hospital payments. But aWall Street Journal analysis ofMedicare data suggests the newrules wouldn’t have much effecton the incentive to discharge eli-gible patients at particulartimes.

Mark Miller, MedPAC’s execu-tive director, said in an inter-

Please see PANEL page A2

By ChristopherWeaver,AnnaWilde Mathewsand TomMcGinty

Medicare Panel FaultsPaymentFix asTooWeak

OdedBa

lilty/A

ssociatedPress

COLOMBO, Sri Lanka—Thenew government here is racingto carry out an ambitious 100-day plan to overhaul the consti-tution and reinvigorate the econ-omy as it girds for electionslikely within the next fewmonths.

But on Saturday, Prime Minis-ter Ranil Wickremesinghe took abreak from affairs of state—towatch a high-school cricketmatch.

It isn’t just any game. Knownas the Battle of the Blues, it hasbeen played annually for 136years between two of Sri Lanka’s

oldest and toniestall-boys schools,Royal College and S.Thomas’ College.

The three-daymatch is among themost important so-cial events for mem-bers of the Colomboelite, who gather ingrandstands andtents festooned withbunting to party,schmooze and watchcricket.

“It’s like an annual pilgrim-age. You come to meet your oldfriends,” said Dilshan Jayasuriya,a lawyer who graduated from S.

Thomas’ in 1994.Luckily play ends ona Saturday, he said,since “it takes onefull day to recover.”

About 30,000 peo-ple turned out towatch, according toorganizers. Alumni,known as Old Royal-ists and Old Thomi-ans, flew in fromaround the world.

This year the cele-brations also had political over-tones, because the prime ministerand a dozen other cabinet minis-ters and deputy ministers are

Please see CRICKET page A10

BY GORDON FAIRCLOUGH

MarchMadness? Sri Lankans Crazy for High-School Cricketi i i

Capital grinds to a halt as country’s elite turn out for annual match

Cricket bats and ball

Right-wing Israeli demonstrators at a rally in Tel Aviv on Sunday where Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, seen on the screen, appealed for votes.

UPLAND, Calif.—From thetime he was a young man com-ing of age in the 1970s, MikeMassey could have served as aposter child for his generation,the baby boomers. He grew hishair long to the dismay of hisfather, surfed, played in rockbands and says he regularly gothigh on marijuana and cocaine.

The wild times receded as hegrew older. In his 30s, hestopped using drugs altogether,rose into executive positionswith the plumbers and pipe fit-ters union, bought a house inthis Los Angeles suburb andstarted a family. But at age 50,Mr. Massey injured his kneerunning. He took Vicodin for thepain but soon started using pillsheavily, mixing the opioids with alcohol, he said.

“It reminded me of getting high and gettingloaded,” said Mr. Massey, now 58 years old,who went into recovery and stopped usingdrugs and alcohol in 2013. “Your mind never

forgets that.”Today, the story of this

balding, middle-aged executivecontinues to reflect that of hisgeneration.

Older adults are abusingdrugs, getting arrested for drugoffenses and dying from drugoverdoses at increasingly higherrates. These surges have comeas the 76 million baby boomers,born between 1946 and 1964,reach late middle age. Facingthe pains and losses connectedto aging, boomers, who asyouths used drugs at the high-est rates of any generation, areonce again—or still—turning todrugs.

The trend has U.S. health of-ficials worried. The sharp in-crease in overdose deathsamong older adults in particu-

lar is “very concerning,” said Wilson Compton,deputy director for the federal government’sNational Institute on Drug Abuse.

The rate of death by accidental drug over-Please see DRUGS page A10

BY ZUSHA ELINSON

AGING BABY BOOMERSHOLD ON TO DRUG HABITSCounterculture generation, now middle aged, falls into addiction

THEWALL STREET JOURNAL.

Note: Methodology changed in 2002, resulting ina higher response rate.

Source: Substance Abuse and Mental HealthServices Administration

8

0

2

4

6

%

1980 ’90 2000 ’10

Boomers areages 49–67in 2013First baby

boomers entercategory in 1996Boomers areages 32–50

Still Turning OnPercentage of people age 50 andolder reporting any illicit drug usein the past year

March ManiaAs the NCAA announces the tournamentbracket, Jason Gay braces for the madness.SPORTS | B7-8

How to Say ‘No’To Retirement

ENCORE | R1

Getty

Images

Hurry! It’s almost April 15th.

TD Ameritrade, Inc., member FINRA/SIPC. TD Ameritrade is a trademark jointlyowned by TD Ameritrade IP Company, Inc. and The Toronto-Dominion Bank.© 2015 TD Ameritrade IP Company, Inc. All rights reserved. Used with permission.

Call 877-tdameritrade orvisit tdameritrade.com/ira

Open and fund a TD Ameritrade IRA today for your full potential2014 tax benefits. It only takes 15 minutes to open an IRA, andour retirement consultants are here to give you step-by-stephelp if you want it.

Friends withpotential taxbenefits.

CM Y K CompositeCompositeMAGENTA CYAN BLACK

P2JW075000-4-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

P2JW075000-4-A00100-1--------XA