2015 03 24 cmyk na 04 - the wall street...

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C M Y K Composite ****** TUESDAY, MARCH 24, 2015 ~ VOL. CCLXV NO. 68 WSJ.com HHHH $3.00 DJIA 18116.04 g 11.61 0.1% NASDAQ 5010.97 g 0.3% NIKKEI 19754.36 À 1.0% STOXX 600 401.24 g 0.7% 10-YR. TREAS. À 5/32 , yield 1.916% OIL (new) $47.45 À $0.88 GOLD $1,188.00 À $3.20 EURO $1.0947 YEN 119.73 | CONTENTS Arts in Review.......... D5 Business News.. B2,3,6 CFO Journal................. B5 Global Finance............ C3 Health & Wellness D2-4 Heard on the Street C10 In the Markets.......... C4 Opinion..................... A9-11 Sports.............................. D6 Technology................... B4 U.S. News................. A2-5 Weather Watch........ B6 World News..... A6-8,12 s Copyright 2015 Dow Jones & Company. All Rights Reserved > What’s News Islamic State militants are skimming tens of mil- lions of dollars a month from Iraqi government employee salaries in occupied areas. A1 GOP Sen. Ted Cruz said he is running for president and called for scrapping the 2010 health law and the IRS. A1 Israel shared information with U.S. lawmakers from spy- ing on Iran nuclear talks in a bid to drain support for a deal. A1 Netanyahu apologized for an election-day remark about Israel’s Arab voters that drew fierce criticism. A8 A lab that collected large sums from Medicare tenta- tively agreed to pay nearly $50 million to settle a civil probe of payments to doctors. A5 U.S. officials pledged to seek billions in support for Afghan security forces, as President Ghani visited. A7 Greece’s premier met with Merkel in Berlin, but appeared to make little tangible progress in defusing tensions. A12 A federal review of police- involved shootings in Phila- delphia found shortcomings in department policies. A5 Cameron ruled out seeking a third term as U.K. prime minister if his Conservative Party remains in power. A12 Six Tunisian police com- manders were fired in the wake of a terror attack last week that left 21 people dead. A6 The Supreme Court de- clined to hear a challenge to Wisconsin’s voter-ID law. A2 U .S. auto production is nearing all-time highs, but American-made cars and trucks are increasingly loaded with imported parts. A1 Banks are shuffling big chunks of their securities port- folios around their balance sheets to shield capital levels from rising interest rates. C1 China offered to forgo veto power at a new development bank, a proposal that helped attract European backers. A7 Existing-home sales in the U.S. rose 1.2% in February from January to a seasonally adjusted rate of 4.88 million. A2 Total will seek up to $15 bil- lion in financing for a Russia project through Chinese banks in local currency and euros. B1 Vivendi is being pressed by a U.S. activist fund to boost shareholder returns and clarify its strategy. B1 Hutchison Whampoa is close to cementing its $15 bil- lion acquisition of U.K. cell- phone operator O2. B2 Ocwen disclosed that it had been threatened with a possible delisting by the New York Stock Exchange. C3 The Nasdaq fell back from its 15-year high, dropping 15.44 points to 5010.97. The Dow eased 11.61 to 18116.04. C4 U.S. regulators said they found shortcomings in the “living wills” of the U.S. units of BNP, HSBC and RBS. C3 The NFL plans to show a game on a national digital platform during the coming sea- son, bypassing national TV. B1 Business & Finance World-Wide Islamic State militants are skimming tens of millions of dol- lars a month from salaries paid to Iraqi government employees in occupied areas such as Mosul, and Baghdad continues to send the cash to maintain local sup- port. The group is using the money to fund operations, U.S. officials say, underlining the delicate bal- ancing act U.S. and Iraqi govern- ments face in what they know is a hearts-and-minds campaign against Islamic State ahead of a military operation to retake Mo- sul, for which U.S. officials are training Iraqi troops. U.S. defense officials say U.S.- led strikes have put pressure on Islamic State, hurting its com- mand-and-control operations, but they remain cautious about the near-term prospects of re- taking Mosul and other territory under the group’s firm control. A lack of desirable options has put U.S. officials in an awkward position, forced to choose be- tween the goal of denying funds to Islamic State and the goal of per- suading Sunnis to back the Shiite- led government in Baghdad. The U.S. provides Iraq with hundreds of millions of dollars in assistance each year. It is un- clear whether any of those con- tributions go toward government payrolls. The Iraqi and U.S. govern- ments have mounted a joint campaign to cut off Islamic State’s revenue sources. In debating how to proceed, U.S. officials have weighed a choice with two bad options. If they inter- vene and try to direct the Iraqi government to stop paying certain employees so as to prevent Islamic State from stealing a portion of the money, they could prevent hun- dreds of thousands of innocent Iraqis in Mosul from receiving any pay and potentially trigger a hu- manitarian crisis. But if they don’t intervene, Islamic State could use the revenue to buy weapons and fortify the city against the ex- pected siege by the U.S. and Iraqi militaries this spring. “No decision has been made one way or another as to how the U.S. should engage on [the seized funds],” a senior Obama administration official said. “This is something we are con- cerned about and continue to Please see ISIS page A6 BY DAMIAN PALETTA AND ADAM ENTOUS Militants In Iraq Siphon State Pay THREE RIVERS, Mich.—U.S. auto production is nearing all- time highs on the back of strong domestic demand and steady export increases. But American-made cars and trucks are increasingly loaded with parts imported from Mexico, China and other nations. The U.S. imported a record $138 billion in car parts last year, equivalent to $12,135 of content in every American light vehicle built. That is up from $89 billion, or $10,536 per vehicle, in 2008—the first of two disastrous years for the car business. In 1990, only $31.7 billion in parts were im- ported. The trend casts a cloud over the celebrated comeback of one of the nation’s bedrock indus- tries. As the inflow of low-cost foreign parts accelerates, wages at the entry level are drifting away from the gener- ous compensation packages that made car-factory jobs the Please see AUTO page A2 BY JAMES R. HAGERTY AND JEFF BENNETT Roberts University broke Twin Lakes’ record in January, with 1,011 students, faculty, and staff. The nearly irresistible urge to burst Bubble Wrap from newly arrived packages has morphed into one of the most hotly con- tested mass-participation records certified by Guinness World Re- cords. Since the original record was established in 2013, it has been broken seven times—all by schools, including one from the Australian island of Tasmania. “Bubble Wrap is universal,” said Alex Angert, records man- ager in New York for Guinness, who attributes the trend to the relative simplicity of the task, and the ubiquity of the material. “You just need people and a lot of Bub- Please see BUBBLE page A5 Fame came and went quickly for West Scranton Intermediate School. Last May, more than 700 stu- dents, teachers and staff from the Scranton, Pa., school sat shoul- der-to-shoulder on the gym floor and popped bubbles on Bubble Wrap packaging for two straight minutes, setting a world record for the number of people pop- ping. Less than three weeks later, a school in Elk River, Minn., broke West Scranton’s record with 942 poppers. Organizers rolled out sheets of Bubble Wrap on the school parking lot and instructed participants wearing grade-spe- cific colored T-shirts to stomp on bubbles in addition to snapping them with their fingers. “When they were all lined up in the parking lot it was like a jumping rainbow and the noise was tremendous,” said Tricia Downey, of the Twin Lakes Ele- mentary School’s parent teacher organization who helped organize the event. Alas, all glory is fleeting. Oral BY BOB TITA For Some World Record Holders, The Bubble Bursts Quickly i i i Competition pops up among schools vying for Bubble Wrap title; noise, bragging rights Bubble Wrap Five Centuries Later, the Curtain Comes Down on Richard III Christopher Furlong/Getty Images FINAL ACT: Shakespeare’s tragic English monarch, whose bones were discovered in 2012, rests in Leicester Cathedral before reinterment on Thursday. Wages Drop As Foreign Parts Invade American Cars Israel acquired information from confi- dential U.S. briefings, informants and dip- lomatic contacts in Europe, the officials said. The espionage didn’t upset the White House as much as Israel’s sharing of in- side information with U.S. lawmakers and others to drain support from a high-stakes deal intended to limit Iran’s nuclear pro- gram, current and former officials said. “It is one thing for the U.S. and Israel to spy on each other. It is another thing for Israel to steal U.S. secrets and play them back to U.S. legislators to undermine U.S. diplomacy,” said a senior U.S. official briefed on the matter. The U.S. and Israel, longtime allies who routinely swap information on security threats, sometimes operate behind the scenes like spy-versus-spy rivals. The White House has largely tolerated Israeli snooping on U.S. policy makers—a posture Israel takes when the tables are turned. The White House discovered the opera- tion, in fact, when U.S. intelligence agen- Please see SPY page A8 Soon after the U.S. and other major powers entered negotiations last year to curtail Iran’s nuclear program, senior White House officials learned Israel was spying on the closed-door talks. The spying operation was part of a broader campaign by Israeli Prime Minis- ter Benjamin Netanyahu’s government to penetrate the negotiations and then help build a case against the emerging terms of the deal, current and former U.S. offi- cials said. In addition to eavesdropping, BY ADAM ENTOUS Inside Netanyahu apologizes over remarks............. A8 LYNCHBURG, Va.—Sen. Ted Cruz on Monday began his cam- paign for the White House with a call to abolish the 2010 health law and the Internal Revenue Service, an appeal for greater school choice and a proposition to his party: that Republicans can win the White House only if they nominate a forceful conser- vative like himself. The Texan, who became the ISRAEL SPIED ON IRAN TALKS Ally’s snooping upset White House because information was used to lobby Congress to try to sink a deal tional level rather than by pre- senting a list of accomplish- ments or political victories. “Today, roughly half of born- again Christians aren’t voting,” Mr. Cruz said at Liberty Univer- sity, a school founded by the late evangelist Jerry Falwell Sr. “They’re staying home. Imagine instead millions of people of faith all across America coming Please see CRUZ page A4 a higher percentage of the elec- torate than Republicans in the last two presidential elections, they argue the GOP needs to ap- peal to more than its base. The first-term senator built a national profile as the leader of a confrontational faction of con- servative lawmakers whose tac- tics helped lead to the 2013 fed- eral government shutdown. He cast himself Monday as the GOP’s version of President Ba- rack Obama: a fresh figure who would engage voters on an emo- first major candidate of either party to enter the 2016 race, laid out an argument here that Repub- licans have failed in presidential elections because their nominees were insufficiently conservative, leaving evangelical Christians and others on the political right to sit out the vote and hand victory to the Democrats. But other Republicans, still haunted by Mitt Romney’s un- successful 2012 campaign, raised questions about Mr. Cruz’s anal- ysis. With Democrats making up BY REID J. EPSTEIN AND REBECCA BALLHAUS GOP Race Opens to the Right Gerald F. Seib: National security moves up 2016 agenda ............ A4 BUSINESS & TECH. | B1 Louisville Slugger Finds a New Owner Glove maker Wilson Sporting Goods buys the famed baseball-bat brand, which has languished under family ownership. PERSONAL JOURNAL | D1 Why Couples Fight Spouses often have different memories of the same event; it starts with the way each person perceives things in the first place. Getty Images Wealth management asset management asset servicing Wealth management misconception #1: thinking it’s all about wealth. Your financial future is about more than wealth. It’s your passions, family, giving back to the community. Our Life Driven Wealth Management approach can guide you as your priorities evolve. To learn more, call 866-803-5857or visit northerntrust.com/one Advertisement Composite YELLOW MAGENTA CYAN BLACK P2JW083000-6-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 P2JW083000-6-A00100-1--------XA

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Page 1: 2015 03 24 cmyk NA 04 - The Wall Street Journalonline.wsj.com/public/resources/documents/pageone0324.pdfparty to enter the 2016 race,laid out an argument herethat Repub-licans have

CM Y K Composite

* * * * * * TUESDAY, MARCH 24, 2015 ~ VOL. CCLXV NO. 68 WSJ.com HHHH $3 .00

DJIA 18116.04 g 11.61 0.1% NASDAQ 5010.97 g 0.3% NIKKEI 19754.36 À 1.0% STOXX600 401.24 g 0.7% 10-YR. TREAS. À 5/32 , yield 1.916% OIL (new) $47.45 À $0.88 GOLD $1,188.00 À $3.20 EURO $1.0947 YEN 119.73

|

CONTENTSArts in Review.......... D5Business News.. B2,3,6CFO Journal................. B5Global Finance............ C3Health & Wellness D2-4Heard on the Street C10

In the Markets.......... C4Opinion..................... A9-11Sports.............................. D6Technology................... B4U.S. News................. A2-5Weather Watch........ B6World News..... A6-8,12

s Copyright 2015 Dow Jones & Company.All Rights Reserved

>

What’sNews

Islamic State militantsare skimming tens of mil-lions of dollars a month fromIraqi government employeesalaries in occupied areas. A1 GOP Sen. Ted Cruz saidhe is running for president andcalled for scrapping the 2010health law and the IRS. A1 Israel shared informationwith U.S. lawmakers from spy-ing on Iran nuclear talks in a bidto drain support for a deal. A1 Netanyahu apologized foran election-day remarkabout Israel’s Arab votersthat drew fierce criticism. A8 A lab that collected largesums fromMedicare tenta-tively agreed to pay nearly $50million to settle a civil probeof payments to doctors. A5 U.S. officials pledged toseek billions in support forAfghan security forces, asPresident Ghani visited. A7 Greece’s premier met withMerkel in Berlin, but appearedto make little tangible progressin defusing tensions. A12A federal review of police-involved shootings in Phila-delphia found shortcomingsin department policies. A5 Cameron ruled out seekinga third term as U.K. primeminister if his ConservativeParty remains in power. A12 Six Tunisian police com-manders were fired in the wakeof a terror attack last weekthat left 21 people dead. A6 The Supreme Court de-clined to hear a challenge toWisconsin’s voter-ID law. A2

U .S. auto production isnearing all-time highs,

but American-made cars andtrucks are increasinglyloaded with imported parts. A1 Banks are shuffling bigchunks of their securities port-folios around their balancesheets to shield capital levelsfrom rising interest rates. C1 China offered to forgo vetopower at a new developmentbank, a proposal that helpedattract European backers. A7 Existing-home sales in theU.S. rose 1.2% in Februaryfrom January to a seasonallyadjusted rate of 4.88million.A2Total will seek up to $15 bil-lion in financing for a Russiaproject through Chinese banksin local currency and euros. B1 Vivendi is being pressedby a U.S. activist fund toboost shareholder returnsand clarify its strategy. B1 Hutchison Whampoa isclose to cementing its $15 bil-lion acquisition of U.K. cell-phone operator O2. B2 Ocwen disclosed that ithad been threatened with apossible delisting by theNew York Stock Exchange. C3 The Nasdaq fell back fromits 15-year high, dropping15.44 points to 5010.97. TheDow eased 11.61 to 18116.04. C4 U.S. regulators said theyfound shortcomings in the“living wills” of the U.S. unitsof BNP, HSBC and RBS. C3 The NFL plans to show agame on a national digitalplatformduring the coming sea-son, bypassing national TV. B1

Business&Finance

World-Wide

Islamic State militants areskimming tens of millions of dol-lars a month from salaries paid toIraqi government employees inoccupied areas such as Mosul,and Baghdad continues to sendthe cash to maintain local sup-port.

The group is using the moneyto fund operations, U.S. officialssay, underlining the delicate bal-ancing act U.S. and Iraqi govern-ments face in what they know isa hearts-and-minds campaignagainst Islamic State ahead of amilitary operation to retake Mo-sul, for which U.S. officials aretraining Iraqi troops.

U.S. defense officials say U.S.-led strikes have put pressure onIslamic State, hurting its com-mand-and-control operations,but they remain cautious aboutthe near-term prospects of re-taking Mosul and other territoryunder the group’s firm control.

A lack of desirable options hasput U.S. officials in an awkwardposition, forced to choose be-tween the goal of denying funds toIslamic State and the goal of per-suading Sunnis to back the Shiite-led government in Baghdad.

The U.S. provides Iraq withhundreds of millions of dollars inassistance each year. It is un-clear whether any of those con-tributions go toward governmentpayrolls.

The Iraqi and U.S. govern-ments have mounted a jointcampaign to cut off IslamicState’s revenue sources.

In debating how to proceed,U.S. officials haveweighed a choicewith two bad options. If they inter-vene and try to direct the Iraqigovernment to stop paying certainemployees so as to prevent IslamicState from stealing a portion of themoney, they could prevent hun-dreds of thousands of innocentIraqis inMosul from receiving anypay and potentially trigger a hu-manitarian crisis. But if they don’tintervene, Islamic State could usethe revenue to buy weapons andfortify the city against the ex-pected siege by the U.S. and Iraqimilitaries this spring.

“No decision has been madeone way or another as to howthe U.S. should engage on [theseized funds],” a senior Obamaadministration official said.“This is something we are con-cerned about and continue to

Please see ISIS page A6

BY DAMIAN PALETTAAND ADAM ENTOUS

MilitantsIn IraqSiphonState Pay

THREE RIVERS, Mich.—U.S.auto production is nearing all-time highs on the back ofstrong domestic demand andsteady export increases. ButAmerican-made cars and trucksare increasingly loaded withparts imported from Mexico,China and other nations.

The U.S. imported a record$138 billion in car parts lastyear, equivalent to $12,135 ofcontent in every Americanlight vehicle built. That is upfrom $89 billion, or $10,536per vehicle, in 2008—the firstof two disastrous years for thecar business. In 1990, only$31.7 billion in parts were im-ported.

The trend casts a cloud overthe celebrated comeback of oneof the nation’s bedrock indus-tries. As the inflow of low-costforeign parts accelerates,wages at the entry level aredrifting away from the gener-ous compensation packagesthat made car-factory jobs the

Please see AUTO page A2

BY JAMES R. HAGERTYAND JEFF BENNETT

Roberts University broke TwinLakes’ record in January, with1,011 students, faculty, and staff.

The nearly irresistible urge toburst Bubble Wrap from newlyarrived packages has morphedinto one of the most hotly con-tested mass-participation recordscertified by Guinness World Re-cords. Since the original recordwas established in 2013, it hasbeen broken seven times—all byschools, including one from theAustralian island of Tasmania.

“Bubble Wrap is universal,”said Alex Angert, records man-ager in New York for Guinness,who attributes the trend to therelative simplicity of the task, andthe ubiquity of the material. “Youjust need people and a lot of Bub-

Please see BUBBLE page A5

Fame came and went quicklyfor West Scranton IntermediateSchool.

Last May, more than 700 stu-dents, teachers and staff from theScranton, Pa., school sat shoul-der-to-shoulder on the gym floorand popped bubbles on BubbleWrap packaging for two straightminutes, setting a world recordfor the number of people pop-ping.

Less than three weeks later, aschool in Elk River, Minn., brokeWest Scranton’s record with 942poppers. Organizers rolled outsheets of Bubble Wrap on theschool parking lot and instructedparticipants wearing grade-spe-cific colored T-shirts to stomp onbubbles in addition to snappingthem with their fingers.

“When they were all lined upin the parking lot it was like ajumping rainbow and the noisewas tremendous,” said TriciaDowney, of the Twin Lakes Ele-mentary School’s parent teacherorganization who helped organizethe event.

Alas, all glory is fleeting. Oral

BY BOB TITA

For Some World Record Holders,The Bubble Bursts Quickly

i i i

Competition pops up among schools vyingfor Bubble Wrap title; noise, bragging rights

Bubble Wrap

Five Centuries Later, the Curtain Comes Down on Richard III

Chris

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etty

Images

FINAL ACT: Shakespeare’s tragic English monarch, whose bones were discovered in 2012, rests in Leicester Cathedral before reinterment on Thursday.

Wages DropAs ForeignParts InvadeAmericanCars

Israel acquired information from confi-dential U.S. briefings, informants and dip-lomatic contacts in Europe, the officialssaid.

The espionage didn’t upset the WhiteHouse as much as Israel’s sharing of in-side information with U.S. lawmakers andothers to drain support from a high-stakesdeal intended to limit Iran’s nuclear pro-gram, current and former officials said.

“It is one thing for the U.S. and Israelto spy on each other. It is another thingfor Israel to steal U.S. secrets and playthem back to U.S. legislators to undermine

U.S. diplomacy,” said a senior U.S. officialbriefed on the matter.

The U.S. and Israel, longtime allies whoroutinely swap information on securitythreats, sometimes operate behind thescenes like spy-versus-spy rivals. TheWhite House has largely tolerated Israelisnooping on U.S. policy makers—a postureIsrael takes when the tables are turned.

The White House discovered the opera-tion, in fact, when U.S. intelligence agen-

Please see SPY page A8

Soon after the U.S. and other majorpowers entered negotiations last year tocurtail Iran’s nuclear program, seniorWhite House officials learned Israel wasspying on the closed-door talks.

The spying operation was part of abroader campaign by Israeli Prime Minis-ter Benjamin Netanyahu’s government topenetrate the negotiations and then helpbuild a case against the emerging termsof the deal, current and former U.S. offi-cials said. In addition to eavesdropping,

BY ADAM ENTOUS

Inside Netanyahu apologizes over remarks............. A8

LYNCHBURG, Va.—Sen. TedCruz on Monday began his cam-paign for the White House witha call to abolish the 2010 healthlaw and the Internal RevenueService, an appeal for greaterschool choice and a propositionto his party: that Republicanscan win the White House only ifthey nominate a forceful conser-vative like himself.

The Texan, who became the

ISRAEL SPIED ON IRAN TALKSAlly’s snooping upset White House because information was used to lobby Congress to try to sink a deal

tional level rather than by pre-senting a list of accomplish-ments or political victories.

“Today, roughly half of born-again Christians aren’t voting,”Mr. Cruz said at Liberty Univer-sity, a school founded by the lateevangelist Jerry Falwell Sr.“They’re staying home. Imagineinstead millions of people offaith all across America coming

Please see CRUZ page A4

a higher percentage of the elec-torate than Republicans in thelast two presidential elections,they argue the GOP needs to ap-peal to more than its base.

The first-term senator built anational profile as the leader ofa confrontational faction of con-servative lawmakers whose tac-tics helped lead to the 2013 fed-eral government shutdown. Hecast himself Monday as theGOP’s version of President Ba-rack Obama: a fresh figure whowould engage voters on an emo-

first major candidate of eitherparty to enter the 2016 race, laidout an argument here that Repub-licans have failed in presidentialelections because their nomineeswere insufficiently conservative,leaving evangelical Christians andothers on the political right to sitout the vote and hand victory tothe Democrats.

But other Republicans, stillhaunted by Mitt Romney’s un-successful 2012 campaign, raisedquestions about Mr. Cruz’s anal-ysis. With Democrats making up

BY REID J. EPSTEINAND REBECCA BALLHAUS

GOPRaceOpens to theRight

Gerald F. Seib: National securitymoves up 2016 agenda............ A4

BUSINESS & TECH. | B1

Louisville Slugger Finds a New Owner

Glove maker Wilson Sporting Goods buys the famed baseball-bat brand,which has languished under family ownership.

PERSONAL JOURNAL | D1

Why CouplesFight

Spouses often have differentmemories of the same event; itstarts with the way each personperceives things in the first place.G

etty

Images

Wealth managementasset management

asset servicing

Wealth management misconception #1:thinking it’s all about wealth.Your financial future is about more than wealth. It’s your passions, family, giving back tothe community. Our Life Driven Wealth Management approach can guide you as yourpriorities evolve. To learn more, call 866-803-5857or visit northerntrust.com/one

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