todayinmarketplace ayear of subtle...

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YELLOW ****** MONDAY, DECEMBER 29, 2014 ~ VOL. CCLXIV NO. 152 WSJ.com HHHH $3.00 Last week: DJIA 18053.71 À 248.91 1.4% NASDAQ 4806.86 À 0.9% NIKKEI 17818.96 À 1.1% STOXX 600 343.89 À 1.1% 10-YR. TREASURY g 21/32 , yield 2.250% OIL (new)$54.73 g $2.40 EURO $1.2182 YEN 120.36 CONTENTS Ahead of the Tape.. C1 Corporate News B2,3,6 Global Finance............ C3 Heard on the Street C6 Law Journal................. B5 Markets Dashboard C4 Media............................... B4 Moving the Market C2 Opinion.................. A13-15 Sports.............................. B8 U.S. News................. A2-6 Weather Watch ........ B7 World News.......... A8-11 s Copyright 2014 Dow Jones & Company. All Rights Reserved > What’s News i i i World-Wide n Search teams scoured the seas near Indonesia in search of a lost AirAsia flight. Indonesian authorities said the plane is suspected to be on the sea floor. A1 n The disappearance could refocus attention on several longstanding safety issues that have figured into com- mercial-aircraft crashes. A10 n U.S.-led forces formally ended their combat mission in Afghanistan—though some 18,000 troops, many of them American, will remain. A8 n Rescuers hurried to save hundreds of passengers from a ferry that caught fire off the west coast of Greece. A11 n Greece faces a third vote Monday to select a president, as the coalition government needs to muster 12 parliamen- tary votes for its candidate. n About 35,000 Detroit-area homes are delinquent on city taxes, which could lead to foreclosures and auctions. A6 n New York’s police com- missioner began to lay out a strategy for addressing the rift between the city’s police force and its mayor. A3 n Shots were fired at two Florida sheriff’s deputies who were monitoring traffic from a church parking lot. A3 n Despite a mild winter so far, road-salt supplies that were wiped out last winter are still being replenished. A3 n An SEC rule designed to limit conflicts of interest in state contracting has be- come less effective amid the rise of super PACs. A4 i i i R etailers are starting to pare back promotions, increasingly offering their clearance sales only to bar- gain-hunting customers. B1 n “The Interview” made more than $15 million online and $2.8 million in theaters over the weekend, Sony said. The company also revived its PlayStation Network on Sat- urday after it was attacked. B1 n “The Hobbit” topped the box office again as Hollywood ended a weak year. B4 n Some of the biggest pri- vate-equity firms are giving up their claim to certain fees, facing pressure from investors and regulators. A1 n Investors have yanked more than $5 billion this year out of the biggest “liquid- alternative” mutual fund. C1 n Regulators are working to patch a loophole that lets brokers who are barred from securities sell insurance and other financial products. C1 n Japan’s Abe approved a $29.17 billion stimulus pack- age in an attempt to reverse the nation’s recession. A11 n U.S. municipal bonds are expected to continue their rally into next year, having outperformed corporate and government debt in 2014. C2 n Copper prices sit at their lowest level in 4 1 / 2 years as investors aren’t impressed with China’s attempt to stoke its economy. C6 n Audi plans to accelerate spending on new models, technology and production over the next five years. B3 Business & Finance Facing pressure from inves- tors and heightened scrutiny from federal regulators, some of the largest private-equity firms are giving up their claim to fees that generated hundreds of mil- lions of dollars for them over the years. The investment firms usually collect the fees from companies they buy for providing services such as consulting, serving as di- rectors and helping them make their own acquisitions. Instead of keeping some of the money, the buyout firms, in new funds they are raising, will now pass the fees on in full to investors in the funds. The payouts being reim- bursed, known in the industry as transaction and monitoring fees, have provided many private-eq- uity firms with a steady income stream augmenting their share of investment gains on deals, which remain the key source of profits from their buyout funds. Private-equity firms buy compa- nies using a combination of cash raised from investors and bor- rowed money with the aim of improving the companies’ value and selling for a profit a few years down the line. Buyout firms often receive transaction fees from a company after completing a takeover and for other deal activities, and monitoring fees for consulting and other work while holding the investment. The turnabout by managers including Blackstone Group LP, KKR & Co. and TPG represents a significant concession in the face Please turn to the next page BY MIKE SPECTOR AND MARK MAREMONT Fees Get Leaner On Private Equity JAKARTA, Indonesia—Search teams scoured waters off Indo- nesia’s coast Monday after an AirAsia jetliner with 162 people on board vanished in a thicket of storm clouds the day before, kin- dling much of the same fear as the disappearance of Malaysia’s Flight 370 only months earlier. The plane, which had been bound for Singapore, lost con- tact with air-traffic control less than an hour after takeoff from Surabaya, Indonesia, early Sun- day shortly after requesting to climb to a higher altitude to avoid bad weather, officials said. Indonesia’s search authority on Monday said its preliminary assessment was that the plane is “at the bottom of the sea,” though it expanded the search area to include waters farther north and some land over the is- land of Borneo. Officials said they hadn’t de- tected any signal from the air- craft’s emergency locator trans- mitters. Ships and aircraft were de- ployed from across Southeast Asia to hunt for the plane after it disappeared. But as night fell more than 10 hours later, no trace had been found. The search resumed at dawn Mon- day. As distraught family members of passengers gathered at air- ports in Surabaya and Singapore to await any information about loved ones, the scenes of an- guish were reminiscent of those Please turn to page A10 BY IMADE SENTANA AND GAURAV RAGHUVANSHI Missing Jet Rekindles Fears Hunt for Vanished AirAsia Plane Resumes After a Day of Search Yields No Trace European Pressphoto Agency Clinton in Uphill Fight For White, Rural Vote DEVALLS BLUFF, Ark.—White, working-class voters in eastern Arkansas for years backed Dem- ocratic candidates, among them Bill Clinton and outgoing Gov. Mike Beebe, but have moved sharply toward Republicans in recent elections. Now, as the 2016 election takes shape, some of Hillary Clinton’s allies are trumpeting her potential as a presidential candidate to bring these voters back to the Democratic Party and to run competitively in a handful of states, including Ar- kansas, that have spurned Presi- dent Barack Obama. But even here, where Mrs. Clinton was the state’s first lady, many voters say they view her with the same leeriness they do Mr. Obama and other national Democrats. That points to a sig- nificant question should Mrs. Clinton run: whether enough such voters can separate her from the national party many have grown to dislike. “I’m mad at the Democratic Party, and I don’t see Hillary changing that,” said Eddie Ciganek, a 61-year-old farmer who serves on Prairie County’s governing board and who has voted Democrat at times. “Her thinking isn’t going to be very far off from President Obama’s thinking, and I don’t think they’re moving the country in the right direction.” Occasional Democratic voter Johnny Watkins, 64, wearing a light-blue work shirt after finish- ing his shift at the county land- fill, said of Mrs. Clinton: “I don’t think she has any concerns about us.” Working-class voters have Please turn to page A4 BY BETH REINHARD The European Union has a rep- utation for being an institutional maze. It doesn’t help that its buildings often turn out to be ac- tual labyrinths, stranding lawmak- ers, lobbyists and journalists on their way to meetings—and sometimes to their own offices. “I get lost all the time,” says Fabio De Masi, a mem- ber of the Euro- pean Parliament representing Ger- many’s Left party. A few weeks after he was elected in May, Mr. De Masi lost his way in the Parliament’s head- quarters in Strasbourg, where del- egates spend a week every month. The building’s confusing layout, which from the top looks like a sliced-up mushroom with a glass- and-steel Tower of Babel stuck in the middle, has been known to re- duce visitors and employees to tears. “I was about to start crying, because you have a hundred ap- pointments,” says Mr. De Masi, re- calling how he had to call his as- sistants and describe the color of the walls and shape of the corri- dors in the hope that they could figure out where he was. “It was like I was five and got lost at the swim- ming pool,” says the 34-year-old, admitting that he still isn’t sure whether his Strasbourg office is on the third or the fifth floor. Conceived by French architec- ture firm Architecture-Studio and completed in 1999, the building features overlaying hanging bridges and two spiral staircases wrapped into each other. The disorienting effect proba- bly wasn’t an accident. “Our Please turn to page A12 BY GABRIELE STEINHAUSER AND FRANCES ROBINSON A Visit to the European Parliament Leaves Many Amazed and Confused i i i Disorienting Layout at Buildings Makes Politicians Late, Near Tears; Floor 5½ European Parliament sign An Afghan Combat Mission Ends Reuters Relatives at the airport in Surabaya, Indonesia, on Monday awaited news of an AirAsia plane that vanished Sunday on a flight to Singapore. STILL VIGILANT: A U.S. soldier stands at an Afghan army guard post Sunday, even as a U.S.-led coalition formally ended its combat mission. U.S. troops will still have a limited role in counterterrorism fighting. A8 TODAY IN MARKETPLACE A Year of Subtle Selling SPORTS Jason Gay on 2014’s Highs and Lows Ellen DeGeneres/Associated Press INDONESIA SINGAPORE CHINA AUSTRALIA AirAsia flight lost contact at 6:18 a.m.* Scheduled route Surabaya *Local time Sources: AirAsia Indonesia; Flightradar24 The Wall Street Journal 500 miles Since leaving Somalia in the 1990s, Musa Haji Mohamed Ganjab has been a landlord and entrepreneur and served as a representative of the Somali government, which the U.S. is back- ing to fight the jihadist group al-Shabaab. He also has ordered that arms intended for Somalia’s government be delivered instead to an al-Shabaab commander, a confidential United Nations report alleges. This is just one of the discussions, the re- port says, that Mr. Ganjab has had about ille- gally arming groups in Somalia, including the government. The report shows the complexity of the struggle against extremism in Somalia, a coun- SHELL GAME Murky Arms Traffic Plagues Somalia try that is a U.S. national-security concern be- cause of its local al Qaeda-linked group. Al- Shabaab recently launched two attacks just across the border in Kenya in which it slaugh- tered all non-Muslims, including killing 36 at a quarry-worker camp early this month and more than two dozen in an attack on a bus in November. On Christmas Day, it attacked an African Union base in Mogadishu, killing three soldiers. President Barack Obama has cited Amer- ica’s antiterrorism approach in Somalia as an example of how to battle Islamic State in Iraq and Syria, a strategy combining U.S. air power with supporting local ground forces. The confi- dential U.N. report—now in the hands of the Security Council, and reviewed by The Wall Street Journal—shows how murky relation- ships among politicians, clans and militia lead- ers can complicate the effort. For example, South African security officials were involved in some of the discussions Mr. Ganjab had about arming Somali factions, according to Please turn to page A12 By Justin Scheck, Margaret Coker and Joe Lauria Top terror suspect is arrested in Somalia.... A12 AirAsia Flight 8501 Budget airline transformed travel in region.................. A10 The safety record of the Airbus A320 ....................... A10 For the latest news, go to WSJ.com C M Y K Composite Composite MAGENTA CYAN BLACK P2JW363000-6-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 P2JW363000-6-A00100-1--------XA

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  • YELLOW

    * * * * * * MONDAY, DECEMBER 29, 2014 ~ VOL. CCLXIV NO. 152 WSJ.com HHHH $3 .00

    Lastweek: DJIA 18053.71 À 248.91 1.4% NASDAQ 4806.86 À 0.9% NIKKEI 17818.96 À 1.1% STOXX600 343.89 À 1.1% 10-YR. TREASURY g 21/32 , yield 2.250% OIL (new)$54.73 g $2.40 EURO $1.2182 YEN 120.36

    CONTENTSAhead of the Tape.. C1Corporate News B2,3,6Global Finance............ C3Heard on the Street C6Law Journal................. B5Markets Dashboard C4

    Media............................... B4Moving the Market C2Opinion.................. A13-15Sports.............................. B8U.S. News................. A2-6Weather Watch........ B7World News.......... A8-11

    s Copyright 2014 Dow Jones & Company.All Rights Reserved

    >

    What’sNews

    i i i

    World-Widen Search teams scouredthe seas near Indonesiain search of a lost AirAsiaflight. Indonesian authoritiessaid the plane is suspectedto be on the sea floor. A1n The disappearance couldrefocus attention on severallongstanding safety issuesthat have figured into com-mercial-aircraft crashes. A10n U.S.-led forces formallyended their combat missionin Afghanistan—though some18,000 troops, many of themAmerican, will remain. A8n Rescuers hurried to savehundreds of passengers froma ferry that caught fire offthe west coast of Greece. A11n Greece faces a third voteMonday to select a president,as the coalition governmentneeds to muster 12 parliamen-tary votes for its candidate.n About 35,000 Detroit-areahomes are delinquent on citytaxes, which could lead toforeclosures and auctions. A6n New York’s police com-missioner began to lay out astrategy for addressing therift between the city’s policeforce and its mayor. A3n Shots were fired at twoFlorida sheriff’s deputieswho were monitoring trafficfrom a church parking lot. A3n Despite a mild winter sofar, road-salt supplies thatwere wiped out last winterare still being replenished. A3n An SEC rule designed tolimit conflicts of interest instate contracting has be-come less effective amid therise of super PACs. A4

    i i i

    Retailers are starting topare back promotions,increasingly offering theirclearance sales only to bar-gain-hunting customers. B1n “The Interview”mademore than $15 million onlineand $2.8 million in theatersover the weekend, Sony said.The company also revived itsPlayStation Network on Sat-urday after it was attacked. B1n “The Hobbit” topped thebox office again as Hollywoodended a weak year. B4n Some of the biggest pri-vate-equity firms are givingup their claim to certainfees, facing pressure frominvestors and regulators. A1n Investors have yankedmore than $5 billion this yearout of the biggest “liquid-alternative” mutual fund. C1n Regulators are workingto patch a loophole that letsbrokers who are barred fromsecurities sell insurance andother financial products. C1n Japan’s Abe approved a$29.17 billion stimulus pack-age in an attempt to reversethe nation’s recession. A11n U.S. municipal bonds areexpected to continue theirrally into next year, havingoutperformed corporate andgovernment debt in 2014. C2n Copper prices sit at theirlowest level in 41/2 years asinvestors aren’t impressedwith China’s attempt tostoke its economy. C6n Audi plans to acceleratespending on new models,technology and productionover the next five years. B3

    Business&Finance

    Facing pressure from inves-tors and heightened scrutinyfrom federal regulators, some ofthe largest private-equity firmsare giving up their claim to feesthat generated hundreds of mil-lions of dollars for them overthe years.

    The investment firms usuallycollect the fees from companiesthey buy for providing servicessuch as consulting, serving as di-rectors and helping them maketheir own acquisitions. Insteadof keeping some of the money,the buyout firms, in new fundsthey are raising, will now passthe fees on in full to investors inthe funds.

    The payouts being reim-bursed, known in the industry astransaction and monitoring fees,have provided many private-eq-uity firms with a steady incomestream augmenting their shareof investment gains on deals,which remain the key source ofprofits from their buyout funds.Private-equity firms buy compa-nies using a combination of cashraised from investors and bor-rowed money with the aim ofimproving the companies’ valueand selling for a profit a fewyears down the line.

    Buyout firms often receivetransaction fees from a companyafter completing a takeover andfor other deal activities, andmonitoring fees for consultingand other work while holdingthe investment.

    The turnabout by managersincluding Blackstone Group LP,KKR & Co. and TPG represents asignificant concession in the face

    Pleaseturntothenextpage

    BY MIKE SPECTORAND MARK MAREMONT

    Fees GetLeanerOnPrivateEquity

    JAKARTA, Indonesia—Searchteams scoured waters off Indo-nesia’s coast Monday after anAirAsia jetliner with 162 peopleon board vanished in a thicket ofstorm clouds the day before, kin-dling much of the same fear asthe disappearance of Malaysia’sFlight 370 only months earlier.

    The plane, which had beenbound for Singapore, lost con-tact with air-traffic control lessthan an hour after takeoff fromSurabaya, Indonesia, early Sun-day shortly after requesting toclimb to a higher altitude to

    avoid bad weather, officials said.Indonesia’s search authority

    on Monday said its preliminaryassessment was that the plane is“at the bottom of the sea,”though it expanded the searcharea to include waters farthernorth and some land over the is-land of Borneo.

    Officials said they hadn’t de-tected any signal from the air-craft’s emergency locator trans-mitters.

    Ships and aircraft were de-ployed from across SoutheastAsia to hunt for the plane afterit disappeared. But as night fellmore than 10 hours later, notrace had been found. The

    search resumed at dawn Mon-day.

    As distraught family membersof passengers gathered at air-ports in Surabaya and Singaporeto await any information aboutloved ones, the scenes of an-guish were reminiscent of those

    PleaseturntopageA10

    BY I MADE SENTANAAND GAURAV RAGHUVANSHI

    Missing Jet Rekindles FearsHunt for Vanished AirAsia Plane Resumes After a Day of Search Yields No Trace

    European

    Presspho

    toAgency

    Clinton inUphill FightFor White,Rural Vote

    DEVALLS BLUFF, Ark.—White,working-class voters in easternArkansas for years backed Dem-ocratic candidates, among themBill Clinton and outgoing Gov.Mike Beebe, but have movedsharply toward Republicans inrecent elections.

    Now, as the 2016 electiontakes shape, some of HillaryClinton’s allies are trumpetingher potential as a presidentialcandidate to bring these votersback to the Democratic Partyand to run competitively in ahandful of states, including Ar-kansas, that have spurned Presi-dent Barack Obama.

    But even here, where Mrs.Clinton was the state’s first lady,many voters say they view herwith the same leeriness they doMr. Obama and other nationalDemocrats. That points to a sig-nificant question should Mrs.Clinton run: whether enoughsuch voters can separate herfrom the national party manyhave grown to dislike.

    “I’m mad at the DemocraticParty, and I don’t see Hillarychanging that,” said EddieCiganek, a 61-year-old farmerwho serves on Prairie County’sgoverning board and who hasvoted Democrat at times. “Herthinking isn’t going to be veryfar off from President Obama’sthinking, and I don’t thinkthey’re moving the country inthe right direction.”

    Occasional Democratic voterJohnny Watkins, 64, wearing alight-blue work shirt after finish-ing his shift at the county land-fill, said of Mrs. Clinton: “I don’tthink she has any concernsabout us.”

    Working-class voters havePleaseturntopageA4

    BY BETH REINHARD

    The European Union has a rep-utation for being an institutionalmaze. It doesn’t help that itsbuildings often turn out to be ac-tual labyrinths, stranding lawmak-ers, lobbyists and journalists ontheir way tomeetings—andsometimes totheir own offices.“I get lost all thetime,” says FabioDe Masi, a mem-ber of the Euro-pean Parliamentrepresenting Ger-many’s Left party.

    A few weeks after he waselected in May, Mr. De Masi losthis way in the Parliament’s head-quarters in Strasbourg, where del-egates spend a week every month.

    The building’s confusing layout,which from the top looks like asliced-up mushroom with a glass-and-steel Tower of Babel stuck inthe middle, has been known to re-

    duce visitors and employees totears.

    “I was about to start crying,because you have a hundred ap-pointments,” says Mr. De Masi, re-calling how he had to call his as-sistants and describe the color ofthe walls and shape of the corri-dors in the hope that they could

    figure out wherehe was.

    “It was like Iwas five and gotlost at the swim-ming pool,” saysthe 34-year-old,admitting that hestill isn’t surewhether his

    Strasbourg office is on the thirdor the fifth floor.

    Conceived by French architec-ture firm Architecture-Studio andcompleted in 1999, the buildingfeatures overlaying hangingbridges and two spiral staircaseswrapped into each other.

    The disorienting effect proba-bly wasn’t an accident. “Our

    PleaseturntopageA12

    BY GABRIELE STEINHAUSERAND FRANCES ROBINSON

    A Visit to the European ParliamentLeaves Many Amazed and Confused

    i i i

    Disorienting Layout at Buildings MakesPoliticians Late, Near Tears; Floor 5½

    European Parliament sign

    An Afghan Combat Mission Ends

    Reuters

    Relatives at the airport in Surabaya, Indonesia, on Monday awaited news of an AirAsia plane that vanished Sunday on a flight to Singapore.

    STILL VIGILANT: A U.S. soldier stands at an Afghan army guard postSunday, even as a U.S.-led coalition formally ended its combat mission.U.S. troops will still have a limited role in counterterrorism fighting. A8

    TODAY IN MARKETPLACE

    A Year of Subtle SellingSPORTS Jason Gay on 2014’s Highs and Lows

    EllenDeG

    eneres/A

    ssociatedPress

    I N D O N E S I A

    S INGAPORE

    CH I N A

    AUST RA L I A

    AirAsia flightlost contactat 6:18 a.m.*

    Scheduled route

    Surabaya*Local time

    Sources: AirAsia Indonesia;Flightradar24

    The Wall Street Journal

    500 miles

    Since leaving Somalia in the 1990s, MusaHaji Mohamed Ganjab has been a landlord andentrepreneur and served as a representative ofthe Somali government, which the U.S. is back-ing to fight the jihadist group al-Shabaab.

    He also has ordered that arms intended forSomalia’s government be delivered instead toan al-Shabaab commander, a confidentialUnited Nations report alleges.

    This is just one of the discussions, the re-port says, that Mr. Ganjab has had about ille-gally arming groups in Somalia, including thegovernment.

    The report shows the complexity of thestruggle against extremism in Somalia, a coun-

    SHELL GAME

    Murky Arms Traffic Plagues Somalia

    try that is a U.S. national-security concern be-cause of its local al Qaeda-linked group. Al-Shabaab recently launched two attacks justacross the border in Kenya in which it slaugh-tered all non-Muslims, including killing 36 ata quarry-worker camp early this month andmore than two dozen in an attack on a bus inNovember. On Christmas Day, it attacked anAfrican Union base in Mogadishu, killing threesoldiers.

    President Barack Obama has cited Amer-

    ica’s antiterrorism approach in Somalia as anexample of how to battle Islamic State in Iraqand Syria, a strategy combining U.S. air powerwith supporting local ground forces. The confi-dential U.N. report—now in the hands of theSecurity Council, and reviewed by The WallStreet Journal—shows how murky relation-ships among politicians, clans and militia lead-ers can complicate the effort. For example,South African security officials were involvedin some of the discussions Mr. Ganjab hadabout arming Somali factions, according to

    PleaseturntopageA12

    By Justin Scheck,Margaret Cokerand Joe Lauria

    Top terror suspect is arrested in Somalia.... A12

    AirAsia Flight 8501 Budget airline transformed

    travel in region.................. A10 The safety record of the

    Airbus A320....................... A10 For the latest news, go to

    WSJ.com

    CM Y K CompositeCompositeMAGENTA CYAN BLACK

    P2JW363000-6-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

    P2JW363000-6-A00100-1--------XA