2020 06 13 cmyk na 04 - newseum · 2020_06_13_cmyk_na_04 author: worklanp created date: 6/13/2020...

1
***** THURSDAY, AUGUST 13, 2020 ~ VOL. CCLXXVI NO. 37 WSJ.com HHHH $4.00 DJIA 27976.84 À 289.93 1.0% NASDAQ 11012.24 À 2.1% STOXX 600 374.88 À 1.1% 10-YR. TREAS. g 4/32 , yield 0.669% OIL $42.67 À $1.06 GOLD $1,934.90 À $2.30 EURO $1.1786 YEN 106.89 Beijing Sharpens Focus on Domestic Economy Amid global downturn, frayed ties with U.S., Xi prioritizes shift away from foreign markets Video Calls Are Good for Laundry, Too i i i Multitaskers use work meetings to get chores done BY SHAN LI At the start of the coronavi- rus lockdown, Miguel Arias showed up to every Zoom call in a suit and tie—giving his undivided attention to virtual meetings as city council presi- dent of Fresno, Calif. Fast forward into summer, and not only is the formal wardrobe gone, but Mr. Arias said he has taken to plowing through laundry, cooking and other items on his to-do list while on video calls with his staff. Most of the time, the camera is on. “Between 30 Zoom calls a day, something’s gotta give,” said Mr. Arias, 42. More than five months into the pandemic, people are Please turn to page A8 apolis. But many of the cuts are cosmetic, temporary or rep- resent a relatively small part of budgets. In the case of Minneapolis, they may not stick. A Minnesota state commission has delayed a city council plan to put a proposal to disband the po- lice department on the No- vember ballot. On Monday, Seattle’s city council approved about a $3 million cut to police spend- ing for the remaining budget year, around 1% of the an- nual police budget but far less than the 50% target some on the city council have proposed. Police Chief Carmen Best, the first Black woman to hold the post and who opposed sharp spending cuts, announced her retire- Please turn to page A8 Cities across America are weighing whether to reduce or redirect spending on po- lice. Some, with backing from mayors and city coun- cils, are already undertaking efforts to do so, as protest- ers in their streets call for “defunding.” They’re quickly learning that police budgets, built up over generations with broad public support, are difficult to dismantle. Elected officials in New York, Seattle, Los Angeles and Minneapolis, among other places, have approved plans to reduce police bud- gets in response to the na- tionwide protests following the killing of George Floyd in police custody in Minne- BY HEATHER GILLERS AND ANDREA FULLER Sumner Redstone turned his family’s movie-theater business into a sprawling entertainment empire, which he assembled through a mix of savvy investing, creative litigation and all-around ruthlessness. B1 INSIDE U.S. stocks climbed Wednes- day, extending a steady August rally that has pushed the S&P 500 to the cusp of its first re- cord close since the coronavi- rus pandemic brought the economy to a halt. The benchmark U.S. stock index has risen in all but one trading session this month, buoyed by the prospect of de- clining coronavirus cases at a time the federal government and central banks are still sup- porting the economy. The S&P 500 opened mod- estly higher and flirted with re- cord levels for much of the day, finally eclipsing February’s closing high in the final hour of the session. But the index couldn’t hold on, ending just shy of the record and setting its second-highest close in history. “There’s optimism right now about an environment where the virus situation gets better, but we still have a ton of stimulus in the system,” said Ilya Feygin, a managing director at broker-dealer Wal- lachBeth Capital. The S&P 500 ended the day up 46.66 points, or 1.4%, at 3380.35, drawing within 0.2% of the Feb. 19 high. It is up 3.3% in August and 4.6% in 2020. The Dow Jones Industrial Average climbed 289.93 points, or 1%, to 27976.84, and the Nasdaq Composite Index advanced 229.42 points, or 2.1%, to 11012.24, snapping a three-session losing streak. Shares of semiconductor companies and beaten-down energy stocks led the way. Ad- vanced Micro Devices surged 7.5%, while ConocoPhillips gained 4.9% and Apple rose 3.3%, edging closer to a $2 trillion market value. Please turn to page A6 BY BEN EISEN AND SAM GOLDFARB For decades, Chinese leaders embraced foreign investment and exports to power China’s economy. Now, with the world in recession and U.S.-China tensions deepening, President Xi Jinping is laying out a major initiative to accelerate China’s shift toward more reliance on its domestic economy. The new policy is gaining urgency as Chinese companies, including Huawei Technologies Co. and ByteDance Ltd., face increasing resistance in foreign markets, Chinese officials said. In speeches to senior gov- ernment officials since May, Mr. Xi has trotted out the new strategy, translated as “domes- tic circulation,” prioritizing do- mestic consumption, markets and companies as China’s main growth drivers. Investments and technologies from overseas, though still desirable, would play more of a supporting role. The concept remains vague in detail, and the notion of empowering Chinese consum- ers in particular has been around for some time. As with many top-level slo- gans in China, Mr. Xi’s new de- velopment model is meant to guide policy makers and local leaders and result in meaning- ful changes. The goal is to make China far less dependent on foreign firms, technology and markets, though doing so won’t be easy, especially when Please turn to page A6 BY LINGLING WEI campaign, Ms. Harris managed to impress a Wall Street set that tends to be fiscally con- servative and socially liberal. With Ms. Harris as Mr. Biden’s running mate, they see a non- controversial partner—closely aligned with him on issues they care most about—and an asset with big donors. About half a dozen leaders in business and finance said they expect Ms. Harris, if elected, to be a moderate voice committed to rebuilding an economy upended by the coronavirus pandemic. They expect her to take some swings at Wall Street; as Cali- fornia attorney general, she helped take big banks to task for their role in the foreclo- sure crisis and she has pro- posed taxing financial transac- tions to pay for a health-care overhaul. But they aren’t con- cerned that that would dra- matically affect their business. “I think she is a reasonable, rational person who has worked in the system,” said Bill Daley, Wells Fargo & Co.’s head of public affairs and a former chief of staff to Presi- dent Obama. “Is she a progres- sive? Yes. Is she someone who wants to burn the building down? No. I think she wants to strengthen the building.” Mr. Biden and Ms. Harris made their public debut as running mates Wednesday at a school gymnasium in Wil- mington, Del., with Mr. Biden praising the 55-year-old Cali- fornian as “a proven fighter Please turn to page A5 When Joe Biden announced Sen. Kamala Harris of Califor- nia as his vice-presidential pick, he pointed to her tough- on-banks record. Much of Wall Street cheered anyway. The warm welcome in in- terviews reflects some relief that in choosing Ms. Harris, Mr. Biden has—for now at least—fended off the more progressive wing of the Demo- cratic Party that has called for tougher financial regulation. During her own presidential BY EMILY GLAZER AND LIZ HOFFMAN Harris Draws Plaudits From Wall Street as Biden’s Pick Former Vice President Joe Biden and Sen. Kamala Harris made their first appearance as running mates Wednesday. CAROLYN KASTER/ASSOCIATED PRESS Media Mogul Redstone Dies at 97 S&P 500’s Rise Puts It Just Short Of Precrisis Record Taiwan seeks to deepen trade ties with U.S.............................. A7 Biden-Harris ticket makes public debut................................ A5 Running mates differed on some policy stances .............. A5 Senator has financial, other ties to Silicon Valley.............. A5 CHARLEY GALLAY/GETTY IMAGES THE MIDDLE SEAT Passengers struggle with airlines and travel agencies for refunds on canceled flights. A9 JASON GAY Fans, players and coaches are up in arms, but college football isn’t a bubble. A12 NATI HARNIK/ASSOCIATED PRESS VICTOR LERENA/EPA/SHUTTERSTOCK Police Budgets Pose Barriers to Cutting Cities that try ‘defunding’ find costs fixed, broad voter support for law enforcement CONTENTS Arts in Review.... A11 Business News.. B3,5 Capital Account.... A2 Crossword .............. A12 Heard on Street.. B11 Markets ................... B10 Opinion.............. A13-15 Personal Journal A9-10 Sports........................ A12 Technology............... B4 U.S. News............. A2-6 Weather................... A12 World News...... A7,16 s 2020 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved > What’s News The choice of Harris as Biden’s running mate drew plaudits in interviews with leaders in business and fi- nance, who said they ex- pect her to be a moderate voice committed to re- building the economy if the ticket is elected. They expect her to take some swings at Wall Street. A1, A5 A standoff between Dem- ocrats and Republicans over another coronavirus-relief bill showed no signs of abating, as talks threatened to stall until next month. A3 The federal deficit more than tripled in the first 10 months of the fiscal year, as spending to combat the coronavirus continued to outpace tax collection. A2 The U.S. reported more than 46,000 new coronavi- rus cases, its lowest new daily tally since Aug. 3. A4 The U.S. is readying sanc- tions against some promi- nent Lebanese figures in a bid to weaken Hezbollah’s influence after last week’s deadly blast in Beirut. A16 Taiwan’s president said she wants to begin talks on a free-trade agreement with the U.S. A7 U.S. agriculture officials said they are working with China to determine who is sending mysterious seed packages to U.S. residents. A3 A businessman whose tip led the government to un- ravel the college-admissions scam was sentenced to prison in a separate case. A3 Died: Sumner Redstone, 97, built a media empire. B1 C hina’s Xi is laying out a major initiative to accel- erate the country’s shift to- ward more reliance on its do- mestic economy, as the world remains in recession and ten- sions with the U.S. deepen. A1 A steady rally in stocks has pushed the S&P 500 to the cusp of its first record close since the pandemic brought the economy to a halt. A1 Fannie and Freddie said they would impose a new fee to insulate themselves from losses on refinanced mortgages they guarantee. A2 Goldman is bidding to replace Capital One as GM’s credit-card issuer. Barclays is also in the running. B1 Lyft reported a dramatic drop in riders and revenue for the second quarter. B1 The SEC and FBI are examining investments sold by the online plat- form YieldStreet. B1 Cisco said it would adjust investment plans and pursue deep cost cuts amid shifting customer priorities. B4 Simon and Brookfield have teamed up and are in advanced talks to buy J.C. Penney’s retail operations. B3 U.S. consumer prices rose in July, a sign of firm- ing inflation as demand for goods rebounded. A2 The U.K. economy shrank 20.4% in the second quarter, taking the worst hit from the coronavirus in Europe. A7 Tencent played down threats from potential U.S. curbs on its WeChat app as the Chinese firm posted bet- ter-than-expected results. B4 Business & Finance World-Wide P2JW226000-5-A00100-17FFFF5178F

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Page 1: 2020 06 13 cmyk NA 04 - Newseum · 2020_06_13_cmyk_NA_04 Author: worklanp Created Date: 6/13/2020 2:52:36 AM

* * * * * THURSDAY, AUGUST 13, 2020 ~ VOL. CCLXXVI NO. 37 WSJ.com HHHH $4 .00

DJIA 27976.84 À 289.93 1.0% NASDAQ 11012.24 À 2.1% STOXX600 374.88 À 1.1% 10-YR. TREAS. g 4/32 , yield 0.669% OIL $42.67 À $1.06 GOLD $1,934.90 À $2.30 EURO $1.1786 YEN 106.89

BeijingSharpensFocus onDomesticEconomyAmid global downturn,frayed ties with U.S., Xiprioritizes shift awayfrom foreign markets

Video CallsAre Good forLaundry, Too

i i i

Multitaskers usework meetings toget chores done

BY SHAN LI

At the start of the coronavi-rus lockdown, Miguel Ariasshowed up to every Zoom callin a suit and tie—giving hisundivided attention to virtualmeetings as city council presi-dent of Fresno, Calif.

Fast forward into summer,and not only is the formalwardrobe gone, but Mr. Ariassaid he has taken to plowingthrough laundry, cooking andother items on his to-do listwhile on video calls with hisstaff. Most of the time, thecamera is on.

“Between 30 Zoom calls aday, something’s gotta give,”said Mr. Arias, 42.

More than five months intothe pandemic, people are

PleaseturntopageA8

apolis.But many of the cuts are

cosmetic, temporary or rep-resent a relatively small partof budgets. In the case ofMinneapolis, they may notstick. A Minnesota statecommission has delayed acity council plan to put aproposal to disband the po-lice department on the No-vember ballot.

On Monday, Seattle’s citycouncil approved about a $3million cut to police spend-ing for the remaining budgetyear, around 1% of the an-nual police budget but farless than the 50% targetsome on the city councilhave proposed. Police ChiefCarmen Best, the first Blackwoman to hold the post andwho opposed sharp spendingcuts, announced her retire-

PleaseturntopageA8

Cities across America areweighing whether to reduceor redirect spending on po-lice. Some, with backingfrom mayors and city coun-cils, are already undertakingefforts to do so, as protest-ers in their streets call for“defunding.”

They’re quickly learningthat police budgets, built upover generations with broadpublic support, are difficultto dismantle.

Elected officials in NewYork, Seattle, Los Angelesand Minneapolis, amongother places, have approvedplans to reduce police bud-gets in response to the na-tionwide protests followingthe killing of George Floydin police custody in Minne-

BY HEATHER GILLERSAND ANDREA FULLER

Sumner Redstoneturned his family’smovie-theaterbusiness into asprawlingentertainmentempire, whichhe assembledthrough a mix ofsavvy investing,creative litigationand all-aroundruthlessness. B1

INSIDE

U.S. stocks climbed Wednes-day, extending a steady Augustrally that has pushed the S&P500 to the cusp of its first re-cord close since the coronavi-rus pandemic brought theeconomy to a halt.

The benchmark U.S. stockindex has risen in all but onetrading session this month,buoyed by the prospect of de-clining coronavirus cases at atime the federal governmentand central banks are still sup-porting the economy.

The S&P 500 opened mod-estly higher and flirted with re-cord levels for much of the day,finally eclipsing February’sclosing high in the final hour ofthe session. But the indexcouldn’t hold on, ending justshy of the record and setting itssecond-highest close in history.

“There’s optimism right

now about an environmentwhere the virus situation getsbetter, but we still have a tonof stimulus in the system,”said Ilya Feygin, a managingdirector at broker-dealer Wal-lachBeth Capital.

The S&P 500 ended the dayup 46.66 points, or 1.4%, at3380.35, drawing within 0.2%of the Feb. 19 high. It is up 3.3%in August and 4.6% in 2020.

The Dow Jones IndustrialAverage climbed 289.93points, or 1%, to 27976.84, andthe Nasdaq Composite Indexadvanced 229.42 points, or2.1%, to 11012.24, snapping athree-session losing streak.

Shares of semiconductorcompanies and beaten-downenergy stocks led the way. Ad-vanced Micro Devices surged7.5%, while ConocoPhillipsgained 4.9% and Apple rose3.3%, edging closer to a $2trillion market value.

PleaseturntopageA6

BY BEN EISENAND SAM GOLDFARB

For decades, Chinese leadersembraced foreign investmentand exports to power China’seconomy. Now, with the worldin recession and U.S.-Chinatensions deepening, PresidentXi Jinping is laying out a majorinitiative to accelerate China’sshift toward more reliance onits domestic economy.

The new policy is gainingurgency as Chinese companies,including Huawei TechnologiesCo. and ByteDance Ltd., faceincreasing resistance in foreignmarkets, Chinese officials said.

In speeches to senior gov-ernment officials since May, Mr.Xi has trotted out the newstrategy, translated as “domes-tic circulation,” prioritizing do-mestic consumption, marketsand companies as China’s maingrowth drivers. Investmentsand technologies from overseas,though still desirable, wouldplay more of a supporting role.

The concept remains vaguein detail, and the notion ofempowering Chinese consum-ers in particular has beenaround for some time.

As with many top-level slo-gans in China, Mr. Xi’s new de-velopment model is meant toguide policy makers and localleaders and result in meaning-ful changes. The goal is tomake China far less dependenton foreign firms, technologyand markets, though doing sowon’t be easy, especially when

PleaseturntopageA6

BY LINGLING WEI

campaign, Ms. Harris managedto impress a Wall Street setthat tends to be fiscally con-servative and socially liberal.With Ms. Harris as Mr. Biden’srunning mate, they see a non-controversial partner—closelyaligned with him on issuesthey care most about—and anasset with big donors.

About half a dozen leadersin business and finance saidthey expect Ms. Harris, ifelected, to be a moderatevoice committed to rebuildingan economy upended by thecoronavirus pandemic. Theyexpect her to take some

swings at Wall Street; as Cali-fornia attorney general, shehelped take big banks to taskfor their role in the foreclo-sure crisis and she has pro-posed taxing financial transac-tions to pay for a health-careoverhaul. But they aren’t con-cerned that that would dra-matically affect their business.

“I think she is a reasonable,rational person who hasworked in the system,” saidBill Daley, Wells Fargo & Co.’shead of public affairs and aformer chief of staff to Presi-dent Obama. “Is she a progres-sive? Yes. Is she someone who

wants to burn the buildingdown? No. I think she wants tostrengthen the building.”

Mr. Biden and Ms. Harrismade their public debut asrunning mates Wednesday ata school gymnasium in Wil-mington, Del., with Mr. Bidenpraising the 55-year-old Cali-fornian as “a proven fighter

PleaseturntopageA5

When Joe Biden announcedSen. Kamala Harris of Califor-nia as his vice-presidentialpick, he pointed to her tough-on-banks record. Much of WallStreet cheered anyway.

The warm welcome in in-terviews reflects some reliefthat in choosing Ms. Harris,Mr. Biden has—for now atleast—fended off the moreprogressive wing of the Demo-cratic Party that has called fortougher financial regulation.

During her own presidential

BY EMILY GLAZERAND LIZ HOFFMAN

Harris Draws Plaudits FromWall Street as Biden’s Pick

Former Vice President Joe Biden and Sen. Kamala Harris made their first appearance as running mates Wednesday.

CARO

LYNKA

STER

/ASS

OCIAT

EDPR

ESS

MediaMogulRedstoneDies at 97

S&P 500’s RisePuts It Just ShortOf Precrisis Record

Taiwan seeks to deepen tradeties with U.S. ............................. A7

Biden-Harris ticket makespublic debut................................ A5

Running mates differed onsome policy stances.............. A5

Senator has financial, otherties to Silicon Valley.............. A5

CHARL

EYGALLAY

/GET

TYIM

AGES

THEMIDDLE SEATPassengers strugglewith airlines and travelagencies for refundson canceled flights. A9

JASON GAYFans, players and

coaches are up in arms,but college footballisn’t a bubble. A12

NAT

IHARN

IK/A

SSOCIAT

EDPR

ESS

VICTO

RLE

RENA/EPA

/SHUTT

ERST

OCK

Police Budgets PoseBarriers to CuttingCities that try ‘defunding’ find costs fixed,broad voter support for law enforcement

CONTENTSArts in Review.... A11Business News.. B3,5Capital Account.... A2Crossword.............. A12Heard on Street.. B11Markets................... B10

Opinion.............. A13-15Personal Journal A9-10Sports........................ A12Technology............... B4U.S. News............. A2-6Weather................... A12World News...... A7,16

s 2020 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.All Rights Reserved

>

What’sNews

The choice of Harris asBiden’s running mate drewplaudits in interviews withleaders in business and fi-nance, who said they ex-pect her to be a moderatevoice committed to re-building the economy ifthe ticket is elected. Theyexpect her to take someswings at Wall Street. A1, A5 A standoff between Dem-ocrats and Republicans overanother coronavirus-reliefbill showed no signs ofabating, as talks threatenedto stall until next month. A3 The federal deficit morethan tripled in the first 10months of the fiscal year,as spending to combat thecoronavirus continued tooutpace tax collection. A2 The U.S. reported morethan 46,000 new coronavi-rus cases, its lowest newdaily tally since Aug. 3. A4The U.S. is readying sanc-tions against some promi-nent Lebanese figures in abid to weaken Hezbollah’sinfluence after last week’sdeadly blast in Beirut. A16 Taiwan’s presidentsaid she wants to begintalks on a free-tradeagreement with the U.S. A7U.S. agriculture officialssaid they are working withChina to determine who issending mysterious seedpackages to U.S. residents.A3A businessmanwhose tipled the government to un-ravel the college-admissionsscam was sentenced toprison in a separate case. A3 Died: Sumner Redstone,97, built a media empire. B1

China’s Xi is laying out amajor initiative to accel-

erate the country’s shift to-wardmore reliance on its do-mestic economy, as theworldremains in recession and ten-sionswith the U.S. deepen.A1A steady rally in stocks haspushed the S&P 500 to thecusp of its first record closesince the pandemic broughtthe economy to a halt. A1 Fannie and Freddie saidthey would impose a new feeto insulate themselvesfrom losses on refinancedmortgages they guarantee.A2 Goldman is bidding toreplace Capital One as GM’scredit-card issuer. Barclaysis also in the running. B1 Lyft reported a dramaticdrop in riders and revenuefor the second quarter. B1 The SEC and FBI areexamining investmentssold by the online plat-form YieldStreet. B1 Cisco said it would adjustinvestment plans and pursuedeep cost cuts amid shiftingcustomer priorities. B4 Simon and Brookfieldhave teamed up and are inadvanced talks to buy J.C.Penney’s retail operations. B3 U.S. consumer pricesrose in July, a sign of firm-ing inflation as demandfor goods rebounded. A2 The U.K. economy shrank20.4% in the second quarter,taking the worst hit from thecoronavirus in Europe. A7 Tencent played downthreats from potential U.S.curbs on its WeChat app asthe Chinese firm posted bet-ter-than-expected results. B4

Business&Finance

World-Wide

P2JW226000-5-A00100-17FFFF5178F