The Wall.St Journal 21Feb2020

(Grace) #1

** FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 21, 2020 ~ VOL. CCLXXV NO. 42 WSJ.com HHHH$4.


DJIA29219.98g128.05 0.4% NASDAQ9750.96g0.7% STOXX 600430.19g0.9% 10-YR. TREAS.À13/32, yield 1.524% OIL$53.78À$0.49 GOLD$1,616.60À$9.10 EURO$1.0785 YEN112.


Amro Akoush and his family fled
their home in northwest Syria with no
time to pack a bag and no ride to es-
cape the machine-gun fire and falling
bombs. Mr. Akoush carried only a son
and daughter, one in each arm.
The family walked along darkened
streets to the outskirts of Atarib and
hid in an olive grove, waiting for a
friend to ferry them away from the bar-
rage. “It took about 40 minutes,” Mr.
Akoush said of their escape on foot,
“but it felt like a year.”

BYRAJAABDULRAHIM

Source: FactSet

Apple

BerkshireHathaway

S&P

Share-priceandindexperformance,pastyear

100





0

25

50

75

%

March June Sept. Jan.
2019 ’

Inside the U.S. Quarantine:


A Hankering for Home Comforts
iii

As worry recedes among evacuees,


boredom sets in; hot sauce, slippers


David Huang couldn’t be
more grateful to be back in the
United States, after landing a
seat on an evacuation flight out
of Wuhan, China, during the
coronavirus lockdown.
But the 30-year-old postal
worker from Seattle wasn’t ex-
pecting the two-week quaran-
tine that followed to be an al-
cohol-free zone. “I have to
drink red wine every day, at
least one glass a day,” he said.
Red wine was one item U.S.
government officials hadn’t
stocked up on for Mr. Huang’s

federally mandated sojourn at
Travis Air Force Base, about 50
miles northeast of San Fran-
cisco. He befriended a worker
at the site, who slipped him
four miniature bottles of vodka
hidden in latex gloves. He sa-
vored it over four nights.
The U.S. has quarantined
hundreds of Americans return-
PleaseturntopageA

ByStephanie Yangin
San Diego andShan Li
in Fairfield, Calif.

The Akoush family and nearly a mil-
lion others have been on the run, trying
to escape Syria’s monthslong military as-
sault on the country’s last rebel strong-
hold. The offensive aims to defeat the
remnants of armed opposition to the re-
gime of President Bashar al-Assad. So
far, it has yielded the largest displace-
ment of people in Syria’s 9-year civil war.
Families in northwestern Syria are
trapped between the advancing Syrian
military—backed by Russian airstrikes
and pro-Iranian militias—and Turkey.
The border is closed to refugees, se-
cured by walls, trenches and guards

who have shot people trying to cross
without permission.
The military advance, which has
forced the flight of some 900,000 peo-
ple, is shaping up to be “the biggest hu-
manitarian horror story of the 21st cen-
tury,” said Mark Lowcock, the United
Nations emergency relief coordinator.
Mr. Assad’s vow to retake every inch
of Syria is now focused on Idlib, a
province the size of Delaware, and sur-
rounding rebel-held areas—a stretch of
northwest Syria where the remaining
opposition forces are concentrated.
PleaseturntopageA

Buffett Bets Big on Apple
Berkshire Hathaway Inc. has amassed a $78.5 billion stake
in Apple Inc., but the Omaha, Neb., conglomerate’s stock has
still been outperformed by the S&P 500. B

Iran Faces


Blacklisting


In New Hit


To Economy


Retail Icon


Casts Off


Victoria’s


Secret


For more than five decades,
Les Wexner brought fashion to
the masses through mall
stores across America, but the
82-year-old billionaire’s deci-
sion to part ways with Victo-
ria’s Secret is an admission
that he couldn’t revive the
troubled lingerie brand he had
built on shopping centers and
sex appeal.
L Brands Inc., Mr. Wexner’s
company, agreed on Thursday
to sell a controlling stake in
the apparel chain to private-eq-
uity firm Sycamore Partners
for $525 million, and he agreed
to step down as chairman and
chief executive. The Wall Street
Journal had first reported on
the moves.
The deal leaves the shrink-
ing Victoria’s Secret business
as a separate private company
with a $1.1 billion valuation.
That is a fraction of the $
billion value investors give Lu-
lulemon Athletica Inc., a fast-
growing apparel brand with
half the annual sales.
In an internal memo to L
Brands staff, Mr. Wexner
shared news of the deal and his
departure. “I think about the
endless possibilities ahead for
this company. And I’ve thought
about where I fit in the pic-
ture,” he wrote in the email. “I
have decided that now is the
PleaseturntopageA

BYKHADEEJASAFDAR

Morgan Stanley is buying
E*Trade Financial Corp. in a
$13 billion deal that will re-
shape the storied investment
bank and firmly stake its fu-
ture on managing money for
regular people.
The all-stock takeover, an-
nounced Thursday, will com-
bine a Wall Street firm in the
late innings of a decadelong
turnaround with a discount

BYLIZHOFFMAN

Stone Gets More Than Three Years


WASHINGTON—President
Trump’s longtime confidant
Roger Stone was sentenced to
three years and four months
in prison on Thursday for ly-
ing to Congress and witness
tampering, after a tumultuous
two weeks in which Mr. Trump
denounced the handling of the
case and the government trial
lawyers withdrew.
At a 2½-hour hearing in a
filled-to-capacity courtroom,
U.S. District Judge Amy Ber-
man Jackson repeatedly criti-
cized Mr. Stone, saying that he
had shown “flagrant disre-
spect” for Congress and the
court, and dismissed claims
that he was being prosecuted
for his politics.
“The problem is that noth-
ing about this case was a joke.
It wasn’t funny. It wasn’t a
stunt and it wasn’t a prank,”
Judge Jackson said.
Hours after the sentencing,
Mr. Trump criticized Mr.
Stone’s conviction as unfair
and repeated his call for the
exoneration of his former po-
litical adviser, who has asked
for a new trial based on the al-
leged bias of a juror in his
case. “I want the process to
play out,” Mr. Trump said in
comments in Las Vegas.
While Mr. Trump suggested
he wouldn’t immediately inter-
vene in Mr. Stone’s case, he
left the door open to exercising
his presidential power to par-
don or commute Mr. Stone’s
PleaseturntopageA

BYARUNAVISWANATHA
ANDBYRONTAU

4.6% on Thursday. Critics
question the strategy behind
buying a brokerage where cus-
tomers aren’t willing to pay
commissions on trades.
E*Trade shares closed up al-
most 22%.
E*Trade’s future has been
uncertain since November,
when its two main competi-
tors, Charles Schwab Corp.
and TD Ameritrade Holding
Corp., announced their own
merger. Weeks earlier, Schwab
had cut the trading fees it
charges customers to zero.
The move sent E*Trade shares
PleaseturntopageA

broker built on the backs of
dot-com day traders.
It is the biggest takeover by
a giant U.S. bank since the
2008 crisis.
E*Trade brings five million
retail customers, $360 billion
in assets and an online bank
with cheap deposits that Mor-
gan Stanley can funnel into
loans. Its CEO, Michael Pizzi,
is coming along to run the e-
brokerage business, which will
keep its brand, its handful of
retail storefronts and its buzzy
and well-funded ad campaigns,
Morgan Stanley Chief Execu-
tive James Gorman said.
The deal will dilute Morgan
Stanley’s existing sharehold-
ers, who sent the shares down

Morgan Stanley to Buy E*Trade


Bank pays $13 billion
for the e-broker,
doubling down on
wealth management

Sources: Morgan Stanley (revenue); FactSet (performance)

ShareofMorganStanley
revenues,bybusiness

50%

Share-priceperformance,
pastyear

MorganStanley

E*Trade

Trading

Investmentbanking

Wealthandasset
management

2005 ’10 ’15 ’

40







0

20

%

2019 ’ 20

A Million Syrians Flee Assad’s March


Desperate throngs are trapped between the military’s advance and Turkey’s walled-off border


Roger Stone leaves after his sentencing hearing at the Federal District Court in Washington.

ERIK S. LESSER/EPA/SHUTTERSTOCK

 Heard on the Street: Deal
doesn’t carry a discount... B

 Connections drive Trump’s
clemency moves....................... A

A global terror-finance
watchdog agency is set to
blacklist Iran, broadening a U.S.
effort to isolate Tehran finan-
cially and potentially straining
the already sanctions-battered
Iranian economy.

Iran’s blacklisting by the
Paris-based Financial Action
Task Force is expected to take
place Friday and comes after
European governments decided
to join the U.S., according to
American and allied officials.
The task force’s decision will
place financial transactions
with Iran under additional
scrutiny and escalate the pres-
sure on the dwindling number
of banks and businesses still
dealing with the Islamic Re-
public to cut their ties.
The blacklisting marks a
step forward in the U.S. cam-
paign to use sanctions to com-
pel the Iranian government to
end its support for terrorist
groups and eliminate its nu-
clear weapons program. Most
Western banks have already
severed links with Tehran in re-
sponse to the U.S. sanctions,
PleaseturntopageA

ByBenoit Fauconin
London andIan Talley
in Washington

 Iran to hold parliamentary
elections amid tensions....... A

CONTENTS
Banking & Finance B
Business News.. B3,
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-

s2020 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.
All Rights Reserved

>

What’s


News


Roger Stone wassen-
tenced to three years and
four months in prison, af-
ter a tumultuous two weeks
in which Trump denounced
the handling of the case
and the government trial
lawyers withdrew.A
The presidentlashed
out at the acting director of
national intelligence earlier
this month after learning
that an official had briefed a
House panel about Russia’s
apparent preference for
Trump in the 2020 election.A
A global terror-finance
watchdog agency is set to
blacklist Iran, broadening
an effort by the U.S. to iso-
late Tehran financially.A
Iran’s leadership is
pushing for a high turnout in
parliamentary elections.A
The killingof nine people
by a gunman in Germany
added fuel to a tense debate
over the rise of far-right ex-
tremism in that country.A
Japanese officialsde-
fended their handling of
cruise-ship virus victims af-
ter the first two passenger
deaths were reported.A
The U.S. and Britain
joined Georgia in blaming
Russia for a large-scale cy-
berattack on the Caucasus
country in October.A
The Trumpadministra-
tion plans to allow 45,
additional seasonal guest
workers to return to the
U.S. this summer.A
The IHS saysit can’t dis-
close a report that identifies
officials responsible for mis-
handling a doctor who abused
Native American boys.A

M


organ Stanley isbuying
discount broker E*Trade
in a $13 billion deal that will
reshape the investment bank
and tie its future to managing
money for regular people.A
Wexner’s decisionto
part ways with Victoria’s
Secret is anadmission that
the L Brands chief couldn’t
revive the lingerie brand.A
Sprint and T-Mobilehave
agreed on new terms for their
merger, as the firms race to
close the deal after over-
coming a court challenge.B
Ultimate Softwareand
Kronos are merging in a
deal that will create a big
new player in workplace-
software products.B
Apple now accountsfor
about 14% of the market cap-
italization of Buffett’s Berk-
shire, more than any other
single stock in its portfolio.B
ByteDance is lookingto
capitalize on the success of its
TikTok video app by launch-
ing new apps and expanding
into other businesses.B
New Mexico suedGoogle,
alleging that the search giant
knowingly spies on students
and their families through its
Google Education platform.B
U.S. stocks declined,
with the Dow and S&P 500
both losing 0.4% and the
Nasdaq retreating 0.7%.B
The foundersof hedge-
fund firm Senator Invest-
ment Group are splitting up
after 12 years together.B
Goldman and JPMorgan
agreed to back a new low-
cost stock exchange that
aims to challenge the
NYSE and Nasdaq.B

Business&Finance


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