The Wall Street Journal - 13.09.2019

(Wang) #1

** FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 13, 2019 ~ VOL. CCLXXIV NO. 63 WSJ.com HHHH$4.


DJIA27182.45À45.41 0.2% NASDAQ8194.47À0.3% STOXX 600390.48À0.2% 10-YR. TREAS.g 16/32, yield 1.789% OIL$55.09g$0.66 GOLD$1,498.70À$4.30 EURO$1.1063 YEN108.


BYTOMFAIRLESS

ECB Cuts


Key Rate,


Revives


Bond


Program


Central bank tries to
spur flagging Europe
economy, but some
question if it will work

ahead of high-level negotia-
tions in October.
It comes as President Trump
moved on Wednesday to post-
pone until Oct. 15 a tariff in-
crease on about $250 billion in
imports that had been set to hit
on Oct. 1. He called the delay a
goodwill gesture as China
marks the 70th anniversary of
Communist rule on that date.
Chinese negotiators, mean-
while, are making plans to
boost purchases of U.S. agricul-
tural products, give U.S. com-
panies greater access to China’s
market and bolster intellectual-
property protections, people
familiar with their plans said.
China also made public this
week a series of exemptions to
its tariffs on U.S. imports.
PleaseturntopageA

FY1980 ’90 2000 ’

–1.

–1.

–1.

–0.

–0.

–0.

0

$0.25 trillion

U.S.federalbudgetdeficitsandsurpluses,annual

Note: 2019 is year to date. Fiscal year ends Sept. 30.
Source: Congressional Budget Office

2019
–$1.09 trillion

togs have taken over neighbor-
ing weekdays. Ties are turning
tail.
The armed forces were
among the holdouts, but the
last lines of defense are crum-
bling. Never mind beards. The
U.K. army now allows tattoos
on hands and the backs of
necks, a street fashion that can
still raise eyebrows in some of-
fices.
Armed forces, traditional
bastions of male virility, have
wrestled with how much they
need to reflect societies they
protect, such as whether to al-
low gay enlistees or women in
PleaseturntopageA

For the past century, the
U.K.’s Royal Air Force held firm
against a persistent menace to
the British order.
The RAF has now decided to
let beards grow, and many cur-
rent and former military men
are bristling. “It’s about disci-
pline, about high standards,”
said Stewart Hill, a former U.K.
army lieutenant colonel. “Psy-
chologically, you are saying, ‘I
am now shaved, and I am ready
for war.’”
Battles to maintain formal
attire in the workplace have
largely quieted. Casual Friday

BYJAMESMARSON

Armed Forces Sound a Retreat in


The Battle of the Beard
iii

The U.K.’s Royal Air Force is the latest


to surrender to facial fashion


China Seeks to Narrow


Trade Talks With U.S.


China is looking to narrow
the scope of its negotiations
with the U.S. to only trade mat-
ters, seeking to put thornier
national-security issues on a
separate track in a bid to break
deadlocked talks with the U.S.

Chinese officials hope such
an approach would help both
sides resolve some immediate
issues and offer a path out of
the impasse, people familiar
with the plan said.
The move is the latest in a
series of steps officials in
Washington and Beijing are
taking to ease trade tensions

ByLingling Weiand
Chao Dengin Beijing
andJosh Zumbrun
in Washington

When the West Contra Costa Unified
School District in California needed money to
repair and upgrade deteriorating classrooms,
it hired Piper Jaffray Cos. to sell $191 million
of municipal bonds.
As far as school officials knew, the March
2016 sale went off flawlessly, enabling the
district to refinance older debt and tackle
tasks such as removing asbestos and upgrad-
ing science labs.
However, within a day of the initial sale,
the original buyers sold, or “flipped,” $
million of the district’s bonds for a profit of
$306,000, a Wall Street Journal analysis of
trading in the bonds found.
Within 10 trading days, the post-offering
trading had generated $1.24 million of mar-
ket-adjusted profits. Piper Jaffray partici-
pated in some of that trading, buying back

bonds and reselling them.
Newly issued municipal bonds, which are
marketed as long-term investments, aren’t
supposed to trade like that. The post-offering
buying and selling suggests West Contra
Costa’s bonds—sold in what is called a nego-
tiated offering—were initially underpriced.
That means the district will pay more in in-
terest over the life of the bonds than it would
if the bonds had been priced closer to what
subsequent investors paid.
“That’s money being left on the table that
costs taxpayers and rate payers and govern-
ments,” said Patrick Clancy, who recently re-
tired after 30 years as a financial adviser to
local governments issuing bonds. “That’s not
the way it’s supposed to go.”
A Journal analysis of municipal-bond data
found such post-offering trading to be rou-
tine. About $60 billion, or roughly 5%, of
PleaseturntopageA

BYTOMMCGINTY ANDHEATHERGILLERS

TOMORROW


WSJ.


MAGAZINE


kevin
durant

FRANKFURT—The European
Central Bank cut its key inter-
est rate and launched a sweep-
ing package of bond purchases
Thursday that lays the ground-
work for a long period of ultra-
loose monetary policy, jolting
European financial markets and
triggering an immediate re-
sponse from President Trump.
The ECB’s pre-emptive
move was aimed at insulating
the eurozone’s wobbling econ-
omy from a global slowdown
and trade tensions. It is the
ECB’s largest dose of monetary
stimulus in 3½ years and a
bold finale for departing Presi-
dent Mario Draghi, who looks
to be committing his successor
to negative interest rates and
an open-ended bond-buying
program, possibly for years.
But the move triggered op-
position from a handful of ECB
officials, according to people
familiar with the matter, while
leaving key practical questions
unanswered. Primarily: How
long can the ECB keep pur-
chasing bonds without signifi-
cantly enlarging the pool of as-
sets it can buy? Some analysts
estimated it might be less than
PleaseturntopageA

Former Vice President Joe Bi-
den and Sens. Elizabeth Warren
and Bernie Sanders clashed
sharply over the role of govern-
ment in the nation’s health-care
system as the three faced off for
the first time in the third Demo-
cratic presidential debate.
The candidates largely agreed
on what they see as the most im-
portant issues facing the coun-
try—a lack of universal health
care, income inequality, the
threat of climate change and the
prevalence of mass shootings—
but they diverged on how to ad-
dress them. Mr. Biden, who has
been atop the polls, drew fire
from several of the candidates,
but they saved the sharpest
words for President Trump over

ideological fault lines in the
Democratic field on the issue.
Mr. Biden pitched his candidacy
as building on Mr. Obama’s work,
while Ms. Warren and Mr. Sand-
ers embraced the former presi-
dent but cast Mr. Biden’s ap-
proach as too timid.
Mr. Biden lobbed broadsides
at Mr. Sanders over his Medi-
care-for-All plan. The proposal,
which Ms. Warren has endorsed,
would move every American
onto a government-run health
insurance plan regardless of
whether they have insurance
through their employer.
“I think the Obamacare
worked,” Mr. Biden said, as he
cast Mr. Sanders’s proposal as
taking too long to implement

while many people don’t have
health care currently. Mr. Biden
has favored a public-option ap-
proach in which a government-
operated program would com-
pete with private insurers.
Mr. Biden also went after Mr.
Sanders and Ms. Warren over
their calls to increase taxes to
pay for their ambitious health-
care proposal.
“It’s not a bad idea, if you like
it. I don’t like it,” Mr. Biden said.
But Ms. Warren of Massachu-
setts defended her position as
the next iteration of Mr. Obama’s
Affordable Care Act.
“We all owe a huge debt to
President Obama, who funda-
mentally transformed health care
PleaseturntopageA

his rhetoric and trade policies.
The debate, while heated at
times, appeared to do little to
change the state of play, as Mr.
Biden, though halting in some of
his responses, largely weathered
the attacks. Ms. Warren and Mr.
Sanders remained united in ad-
vocating policies that would fun-
damentally alter the U.S. govern-
ment and economy.
While the candidates praised
former President Obama’s pas-
sage of the Affordable Care Act,
Thursday’s debate exposed the

ByChad Day,Eliza
Collins
andEmily Glazer

Top 2020 Democratic Rivals


Spar on Health Care in Debate


Budget Gap Widens to $1 Trillion
The U.S. budget gap passed the $1 trillion mark in the first 11
months of the fiscal year, the first time year-to-date deficits
have topped that amount in seven years. A

Wall Street Flips Bonds,


Towns and Schools Pay Price


Data analysis suggests new municipal issues often are underpriced


Stimulus Salvos
 Germans snub plea to
boost spending................... A
 Bank’s move highlights
divergence in growth....... A
 Heard on the Street:
Running out of options... B

CONTENTS
Banking & Finance... B
Business News B3,5-
Crossword............... A
Heard on Street. B
Life & Arts....... A10-
Mansion............. M1-

Markets..................... B
Opinion.............. A13-
Sports........................ A
Technology............... B
U.S. News............. A2-
Weather................... A
World News....... A6-

s2019 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.
All Rights Reserved

>

What’s


News


Biden, Warren andSand-
ers clashed sharply over the
role of government in the
nation’s health-care system
as the three faced off for the
first time in the third Demo-
cratic presidential debate.A
China is lookingto narrow
the scope of its negotiations
with the U.S. to only trade
matters, seeking to put thorn-
ier national-security issues
on a separate track in a bid
to break deadlocked talks.A
U.S. business groupsare
intensifying efforts to win
passage of the administra-
tion’s trade agreement with
Canada and Mexico.A
A House panelformalized
procedures for its investiga-
tion into whether to recom-
mend articles of impeach-
ment against Trump.A
The administration said
oil drilling in part of Alaska’s
Arctic National Wildlife Ref-
uge would have a negligible
environmental impact.A
The EPA rescindedan
Obama-era policy that ex-
panded oversight and the
threat of steep fines for pol-
luting smaller waterways.A
The administrationturned
over a key piece of informa-
tion to lawyers for 9/11 vic-
tims’ families who are suing
the Saudi government.A
Russian authorities
raided the homes and of-
fices of political opposition
activists across the country
in a coordinated strike.A
A preliminary reporton
the deadly diving boat fire
off California’s coast said
the entire crew was asleep
when the blaze began.A

T


he ECB cutits key in-
terest rate and launched
a sweeping package of
bond purchases that lays
the groundwork for a long
period of ultraloose mone-
tary policy, jolting European
financial markets.A1, A
U.S. stocks roseafter
the ECB unveiled its stimulus
efforts and U.S.-China trade
tensions showed signs of eas-
ing. The Dow gained 0.2%.B
WeWork’s parenthas
chosen to list on Nasdaq and
plans sweeping governance
changes as the firm speeds
up preparations for its IPO.B
Juul is debatinginternally
whether to embrace or push
back on part of the adminis-
tration’s plan to pull most e-
cigarettes from the market.B
OxyContin maker Purdue
canceled plans earlier this
year to launch a foundation
to fund opioid-addiction
treatment and research.B
A coalitionof state attor-
neys general is zeroing in on
Google’s dominant presence
in the digital-ad market, ac-
cording to a civil subpoena.B
Federal regulatorshave
ordered Google to assure
employees they are allowed
to speak out on political
and workplace issues.B
Global investment bankers
launched the underwriting
process for the initial pub-
lic offering of Saudi oil com-
pany Aramco in Dubai.B
OPEC andits oil-produc-
ing allies put off talk of fur-
ther output reductions.B
A high-ranking UAWoffi-
cial was charged with embez-
zlement of union money, as a
corruption probe into the
union gains momentum.B

Business&Finance


World-Wide


Sen. Bernie Sanders, former Vice President Joe Biden and Sen. Elizabeth Warren were among the 10 Democratic presidential hopefuls
facing off Thursday night in the party’s third primary debate at Texas Southern University in Houston.

WIN MCNAMEE/GETTY IMAGES
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