Los Angeles Times - 13.11.2019

(Wang) #1

C4 WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 2019 LATIMES.COM/BUSINESS


from 2017, according to the
travel trade group.
But travel industry lead-
ers worry that a security
measure that blocks nearly
4 in 10 U.S. adults from
boarding commercial
flights could derail that
growth.
In hopes of avoiding that
catastrophe, the U.S. Travel
Assn. is pushing airlines to
post direct warnings to trav-
elers about the new require-
ment, including notices to
each flier who tries to book a
flight on or after Oct. 1.
American Airlines,
United Airlines, Delta Air
Lines and Alaska Airlines
have all begun to sell tickets
for flights on or after Oct. 1.
Other carriers, such as Jet-
Blue and Southwest, have
yet to begin booking flights
that far into the future.
But United, Delta and
Alaska don’t include a warn-
ing about the requirement
in their online booking sites.
Representatives for the
three airlines say the
carriers plan to post notices
as the deadline gets closer.
“We will communicate
more with our customers as
we move towards Oct. 1,”
United Airlines spokesman
Charles Hobart said.
Alaska wrote about the
deadline on its blog site and
airline spokesman Ray Lane
said the carrier plans to
spread the word in the fu-
ture. “Our aim is to start do-
ing even more after we get
through the holidays,” he
said.
American, however, has
taken a more proactive ap-
proach, adding warnings
about the new security mea-
sure at several places on its
website, including its book-
ing page.
A link on the booking
page, titled “ID require-
ments are changing” opens
to another page that
explains the Oct. 1 deadline
for the Real ID requirement,
along with another link to a
U.S. Department of Home-
land Security webpage with
more information.
Airlines for America, a
trade group for the coun-
try’s largest carriers, said
airlines are trying to get the
word out about the require-
ment through websites, in-
flight magazines, social me-
dia and videos on their in-
flight entertainment sys-
tems.
“We are committed to
keeping up the momentum
in educating the public to
ensure that the 2.4 million
people who travel every day
will be able to flow through
the system as seamlessly as
possible next October,” the
trade group said in a state-
ment.
Airlines representatives
say the carriers have no way


of determining whether
someone has valid identifi-
cation before it sells him or
her a ticket.
Barnes wants airlines to
do more immediately rather
than waiting until closer to
the kickoff date. “We need to
be talking about it now and
throughout next year,” she
said.
Congress passed the
Real ID act in 2005, based on
the recommendations of the
9/11 Commission, to set a
nationwide standard for
state-issued identification
cards and driver’s licenses.
But the deadline to im-
pose the changes on all 50
states has been postponed
several times over the last
few years.
Forty-seven of the na-
tion’s 50 states are now issu-
ing the enhanced identifica-
tion cards and driver’s li-
censes that comply with the
new standards.
The Real ID cards and li-
cense are identified with a
gold or black star in the top
right corner.
Oregon and Oklahoma
have been given extensions
to comply with the law, and
New Jersey’s ID is under re-
view.
The Department of
Homeland Security issued a
request Nov. 8 to private
firms that do business with

the federal government for
technologies that could
streamline the process for
applying for a Real ID card
or license. The move opens
the way for development of
faster application online
and the potential of carrying
the enhanced identification
on phones.
In California, residents
need to produce several
forms of identification to ob-
tain a Real ID card, includ-
ing utility bills, a birth cer-
tificate, a Social Security
card or tax forms.
The state will continue to
issue traditional driver’s li-
censes or ID cards that can
be renewed by mail, but
those can’t be used to board
a commercial plane starting
O c t .1.
Department of Motor Ve-
hicles officials say they ex-
pect a rush of Californians
trying to obtain the new
identification card and en-
hanced driver’s licenses as
the Oct. 1 deadline ap-
proaches.
“We are telling folks that
they need to think ahead,”
DMV spokesman Jaime
Garza said.
Americans who don’t
have an enhanced ID card or
license should take a look at
the list of the required
documents from the DMV
website and make an ap-

pointment to present them
at a DMV office, he said. A
Real ID application takes
about seven to 10 days to
process.
“Make sure you don’t
leave on a flight Sept. 28 and
can’t come home after Oct. 1
because you don’t have the
proper documents,” Garza
said.
The Transportation Se-
curity Administration,
which for months has been
posting signs about the re-
quirement at airports
across the country, doesn’t
plan to delay the implemen-
tation of the new require-
ments again, TSA spokes-
woman Lorie Dankers said.
“The TSA does not en-
courage people to wait,” she
said. “Waiting is not a good
strategy.”
The worst-case scenario,
said Barnes of the travel
trade group, is that Ameri-
cans ignore the require-
ments until next fall when
more than 80,000 Americans
who don’t have the proper
identification documents
show up at airports across
the country to travel for the
Thanksgiving holiday only
to be turned away.
“Think of all the other
negative impacts, not only
to the airlines but to hotels
and rental car agencies,” she
said.

Real ID deadline is coming in 2020


ONEof three types of identification will be required of fliers. Above, TSA workers check people at New York’s LaGuardia Airport in 2016.

Seth Wenig Associated Press

[Real ID,from C1]


Stocks on Wall Street
closed nearly flat Tuesday
after an early rally lost mo-
mentum toward the end of
the day.
The Nasdaq composite
index still finished with its
second record high in three
days, while the Dow Jones
industrial average ended at
the same all-time high it set
a day earlier.
The Standard & Poor’s
500 crossed above the 3,100
level for the first time, plac-
ing the index on track for its
own milestone finish, but the
gains didn’t hold. Still, the
benchmark index re-
bounded nearly all the way
back from its Monday loss.
“There was some excite-
ment on breaking 3,100,” said
JJ Kinahan, chief market
strategist at TD Ameri-
trade. “But we’ve had such
an amazing two weeks that
without any blockbuster
news, it was going to be diffi-
cult for us to continue
higher.”
President Trump gave an
update Tuesday on trade ne-
gotiations with China, say-
ing both sides are close to a
“Phase 1” deal. The markets
didn’t react much to his re-
marks.
The S&P 500 rose 4.83
points, or 0.2%, to 3,091.84.
The index, which is near the
record high it set Friday, has
notched gains the last five
weeks.
The Dow closed un-
changed at 27,691.49 points.
The Nasdaq rose 21.81
points, or 0.3%, to 8,486.09, a
record. The Russell 2000 in-
dex of smaller companies
inched up 0.35 of a point, or
less than 0.1%, to 1,595.12.
The market’s momen-
tum has been mostly up-
ward for more than five
weeks as worries about the
U.S.-China trade war have
eased, among other factors.
The rising confidence in
markets has meant fewer
buyers piling into the safety
of gold, which dropped
Tuesday to its lowest price in
more than three months.
Treasury yields fell
slightly after trading re-
sumed after Monday’s holi-
day in observance of Veter-
ans Day. The yield on the 10-

year Treasury note slipped
to 1.92% from 1.93%. It was
below 1.50% in early Septem-
ber and has been rallying
with confidence in the econ-
omy’s strength.
Reports have shown that
the job market is still grow-
ing, which should help
households keep spending
at a strong clip. Such spend-
ing makes up the bulk of the
economy, and the expecta-
tion is that it can more than
make up for the weakness in
manufacturing that the
trade war is causing.
“That’s the next thing we
look for,” Kinahan said, not-
ing that Black Friday, tradi-
tionally one of the busiest
shopping days of the year, is
only a couple of weeks away.
“Expectations are really
high for spending. So, does
the consumer live up to it?”
Healthcare, technology
and communication serv-
ices stocks led the gainers
Tuesday, outweighing losses
in energy companies and
elsewhere.
Disney rose 1.3% on the
day that its streaming video
service, Disney+, launched.
The service had some tech-
nical difficulties in the morn-
ing, an indication that de-
mand may have been higher
than expected.
Rockwell Automation
jumped 10.5% — one of the
biggest gains in the S&P 500
— after the company re-
ported earnings that were
better than expected.
Advance Auto Parts
skidded 7.5% after cutting its
full-year estimates for sales
and income.
Across the S&P 500, com-
panies are on track to report
a 2.4% drop in third-quarter
earnings per share com-
pared with a year earlier.
That’s not as bad as the 4%
decline analysts initially ex-
pected, according to Fact-
Set. About 90% of the com-
panies in the S&P 500 have
reported their results so far.
It’s a busy week for econo-
mic data. The U.S. Labor
Department will give up-
dates on consumer and
wholesale inflation. Econo-
mists expect a government
report to show that retail
sales returned to growth in
October.
Gold fell $3.40 to $1,451.10
an ounce.

Index
Dow industrials
S&P 500
Nasdaq composite
S&P 400
Russell 2000
EuroStoxx 50
Nikkei(Japan)
Hang Seng(Hong Kong)

Close

Daily
change

Daily % YTD %

27,691.49 — — +18.71
3,091.84 +4.83 +0.16 +23.34
8,486.09 +21.81 +0.26 +27.89
1,990.99 -3.47 -0.17 +19.72
1,595.12 +0.35 +0.02 +18.28
3,350.65 +14.00 +0.42 +21.40
23,520.01 +188.17 +0.81 +17.51
27,065.28 +138.73 +0.52 +4.83

Major stock indexes


change change

Associated Press

MARKET ROUNDUP

S&P 500 tops


3,100 mark, but


gains don’t hold


associated press

are aimed at more affluent
buyers.
Only seven of the approx-
imately 45 new electrics that
are planned for introduction
between now and 2023 will
cost less than $40,000 before
options are added on, ac-
cording to EVAdoption.
More than 30 of the new
models will be priced above
$60,000, and a few will top
$200,000.
Changes in incentives
probably won’t influence
sales of high-priced vehicles
being introduced by brands
such as Porsche. The
Porsche Taycan electric
sports sedan, soon to hit
showrooms, starts at
$150,000. Porsche spokes-
man Calvin Kim said buyers
of six-figure vehicles are
drawn more by a luxury
brand than clean-car incen-
tives.
But pricing could get
tricky for cars that come in
near $60,000 before options.
The upcoming Volvo XC40
all-electric compact SUV is
expected to sell in the mid-
$50,000 range.
Assemblyman Phil Ting
(D-San Francisco), who has
been a vocal advocate of
electric-car rebates in the
Legislature, said reducing
the rebate from $2,500 may
“dampen the excitement for
clean cars,” especially be-
cause Tesla and General
Motors are losing their fed-
eral tax credits.
Customers get a $7,500
federal tax credit for new all-
electric vehicles, but that
credit winds down gradually
to zero as car manufacturers
sell more vehicles, and it dis-
appears completely once
sales volume hits 200,000 ve-
hicles.


The credit for a new Tesla
has dwindled to $1,875 and
will disappear in January.
General Motors, which sells
the Chevy Bolt, will see its
$1,875 rebate reduced to zero
March 31.
Ting believes that re-
bates should be increased
overall, not decreased. He
said that people with lower
incomes tend to buy used
cars, and that the state
should bolster used-car pro-
grams such as Clean Cars 4
All and Clean Vehicle Assist-
ance Program instead of cut-
ting rebates in the Clean Ve-
hicle Rebate Project, which
is primarily for new cars.
Ting said he would put
further restrictions on plug-
in hybrids in order to free up
resources for bigger rebates
on electric vehicles.

“Why are we rebating
technology that’s in the past
at the expense of encourag-
ing completely clean vehi-
cles?” Ting said.
Dan Edmunds, director
of vehicle evaluations at au-
tomobile information site
Edmunds, agreed that in-
creased restrictions on low-
range plug-in hybrids were
overdue. He said the market
is full of plug-in hybrids with
ranges of 20 miles when in
electric mode, which he
doesn’t think makes them
viable vehicles.
“The idea should be to
have enough range that they
can be an electric car for
your commute to work and a
gasoline engine for your
longer trips on the weekend,
but they aren’t configured
with the range to do that,”

Edmunds said. “I’m not
sorry to see those go,
frankly.”
Edmunds said more af-
fordable electric vehicles are
hitting the market. Hyundai
sells the all-electric Ioniq for
about $32,000 before incen-
tives, and a $30,000 electric
Mini Cooper is coming soon.
That should give buyers
more options, he said. He
said rebates will encourage
those who have never owned
an electric car to make the
switch.
“I think focusing our ef-
forts on first-time buyers at
a more entry-level price
point isn’t a bad thing,” Ed-
munds said.

Times staff writer Russ
Mitchell contributed to this
report.

Electric car rebates reined in


[Cars, from C1]


CALIFORNIA’Srebate program as of Dec. 3 will no longer apply to vehicles that
cost more than $60,000 nor those with an all-electric range of less than 35 miles.

Justin SullivanGetty Images
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