The Wall Street Journal - 09.03.2020

(Nandana) #1

A2| Monday, March 9, 2020 THE WALL STREET JOURNAL.


A Style & Fashion article
about new fashion trends that
appeared in Off Duty on Satur-
day transposed the captions
for two photos of elbow-length
gloves. The gloves from The
Row were shown in the top
photo, and the gloves from
Fendi were shown in the photo
underneath it.

Cauliflower is rich in pro-
tein compared with some
other vegetables, but has far
less protein than meat. The
headline on a Business & Fi-
nance article on Thursday
about the growing popularity
of cauliflower incorrectly de-
scribed it as “protein-packed.”

CORRECTIONS


AMPLIFICATIONS


Readers can alert The Wall Street
Journal to any errors in news articles
by emailing [email protected] or
by calling 888-410-2667.

U.S. WATCH


ALABAMA

Legislators Weigh
Lifting Yoga Ban

Alabama lawmakers might lift
a decades-old ban on yoga in
public schools, but the bill would
keep the greeting “namaste” on
the forbidden list.
The bill by Rep. Jeremy Gray,
a Democratic legislator from
Opelika, is on the proposed de-
bate agenda Tuesday in the Ala-
bama House of Representatives.
The measure says local
school systems can decide if
they want to teach yoga, poses
and stretches. However, the
moves and exercises taught to
students must have exclusively
English names, according to the
legislation.
The bill would also prohibit
the use of chanting, mantras and
teaching the greeting “namaste.”
The Alabama Board of Educa-
tion in 1993 voted to prohibit
yoga, hypnosis and meditation in
public-school classrooms.
—Associated Press

U.S. Soccer didn’t address
workplace conditions.
“There is no compromising
on equal pay,” Ms. Levinson
wrote. “Equal is Equal.”
The two sides attempted
mediation in August but ended
the talks without a deal. Last
month, both sides filed mo-
tions with the court to end the
case through summary judg-
ment, with an expert hired by
the women writing that back-
pay damages for the class-ac-
tion suit would be nearly $
million as of the trial date.
“As we have in the past,
U.S. Soccer will continue to be
a tireless advocate for the ex-
pansion of women’s soccer at
home and abroad,” Mr. Cord-
eiro wrote. “This will require a
concerted effort by all parties
to increase investment, com-
petitions and prize money.”

majority of players on the team
who are on contract,” and that
it offered only to match men’s
pay rates that were set in 2011
and currently under renegotia-
tion by the men’s players. She
said the federation made no
commitment to match the
men’s new deal going forward.
U.S. Soccer’s offer “included
the smallest number of games
possible, designed to leave out
all tournaments, including the
She Believes Cup being held
right now,” and included noth-
ing for the World Cup, Ms.
Levinson said. She added that

to meet “on the premise that
our proposal does not include
U.S. Soccer agreeing to make
up the difference in future
prize money awarded by FIFA
for the Men’s and Women’s
World Cups.”
First-place prize money for
winning the 2019 Women’s
World Cup was $4 million. The
prize for winning the 2018
men’s World Cup was $38 mil-
lion.
Molly Levinson, a spokes-
woman for the players, said
U.S. Soccer didn’t offer equal
pay “even for friendlies for the

referees at all levels of soccer.
“Last month, we offered the
WNT Players Association mul-
tiple contract options, which
we strongly believe address
the team’s goals as they have
been presented to us by the
players and their representa-
tives,” Mr. Cordeiro wrote. “In
particular, we have offered to
provide identical compensa-
tion to our women’s and men’s
players for all matches con-
trolled by U.S. Soccer.”
Mr. Cordeiro said in his let-
ter that the WNT Players As-
sociation repeatedly declined

SOUTH DAKOTA

Oglala Sioux to Vote
On Pot Legalization

Members of the Oglala Sioux
Tribe will vote this week on le-
galizing medical and recreational
marijuana on South Dakota’s
Pine Ridge Reservation in an ini-
tiative that many hope will bring
economic development to one of
the most impoverished areas in
the country.
Neither South Dakota nor
nearby Wyoming and Nebraska
have legalized marijuana, and
tribal leaders think pot could
rake in millions of dollars. If the
measure is approved, the Oglala
Sioux Tribe would become the
only Native American tribe to
set up a cannabis market in a
state where it is otherwise
illegal.
Scott James, the Oglala Sioux
Tribe’s attorney general, said
state laws still apply to people
who aren’t members of the tribe,
even if they are on tribal land.
LEADING THE PACK: The first group of male runners sped past the Walt Disney Concert Hall in the L.A. Marathon on Sunday. —Associated Press

MARK RALSTON/AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE/GETTY IMAGES


The U.S. Soccer Federation
said it has offered the World
Cup-champion women’s na-
tional team equal pay with the
men’s team in matches that it
controls, as a spring trial date
in their legal battle approaches.
But the federation said the
women—who are suing for
equal pay—won’t meet with it
because the proposal doesn’t
include an award of the same
World Cup prize money that
the men’s tournament offers,
according to a letter tweeted
Saturday by the federation’s
president. The federation
doesn’t set prize money for
the World Cups, which are
staged by FIFA.
Carlos Cordeiro, president
of the U.S. Soccer Federation,
posted the letter on the eve of
the first anniversary of the
women’s players filing a pay-
discrimination suit against the
federation.
The women are suing U.S.
Soccer for gender discrimina-
tion. The case is set for a May
5 trial in a federal court in
California.
In his letter, Mr. Cordeiro
wrote that it wouldn’t be “rea-
sonable or fiscally sound” for
the federation to make up the
current $34 million gap in
World Cup prize money. Doing
so, he said, would impair U.S.
Soccer’s mission of supporting
its other national teams, mil-
lions of players, coaches and

BYRACHELBACHMAN

U.S. Soccer, Women’s Team Butt Heads Over Pay


A scene from 2019 Women’s World Cup in France, where the U.S. team beat the Netherlands to win it all.

JEAN-PAUL PELISSIER/REUTERS

Orders for flat-rolled steel
from some mills in China are
down 50% from a year ago,
S&P Global Platts said. Some
Chinese steel mills and alu-
minum smelters have cut
back production this month
in the face of lower demand.
But analysts expect the re-
ductions to be short-lived.
As more workers in China
return to their jobs in the
coming weeks as quarantines
are lifted, plant managers
will be under pressure to
ratchet up production and
sell the output offshore.

U


.S. imports of steel
and aluminum from
China have fallen sig-
nificantly in recent years.
Steel imports from China
sank 22% last year from the
year before to about 544,
tons, according to the Cen-
sus Bureau and the American

Iron and Steel Institute.
Overall, steel imports last
year fell by 17%.
Tariffs have made many
types of metal made in China
uncompetitive in the U.S. But
China’s large steel-and-alu-
minum output drives up sup-
ply and weighs on prices
around the world. Excess
metal in China could create
more competition for U.S.
steel exports or enter the
U.S. indirectly as imports
from Canada and Mexico.
“Our concern is that
China’s metal would flow
into Canada and Mexico and
then be purchased at low
prices,” said Charlie
Straface, a North American
business unit president for
Norway’s Norsk Hydro ASA.
The benchmark London
Metal Exchange price for
aluminum is down 10% from
a year ago at $1,687 per met-

ric ton. Spot-market prices
for hot-rolled sheet steel
vary by market from about
$587 a ton in the U.S. to
$451 per metric ton in Asia.
The U.S. spot-market price
has mostly fallen since top-
ping $900 a ton in July 2018,
three months after the
Trump administration added
tariffs on foreign steel.
Aluminum inventories in
China increased by 62% to
1.4 million metric tons since
the start of February, accord-
ing to market consulting
firm CRU Group. Inventories
of finished steel at mills in
China were 45% higher in
late February than the same
time a year ago, according to
the China Iron & Steel Asso-
ciation trade group.
Analysts expect those in-
ventories to rise as alumi-
num marooned along high-
ways or at smelters as the

U.S. NEWS


T


he world was already
awash in excess steel
and aluminum. The
new coronavirus epidemic is
deepening the pool.
China is the world’s top
producer and consumer of
steel and aluminum. With
factories closed and the
movement of people and
freight restricted to slow the
spread of the new coronavi-
rus, China’s demand for
those metals has plummeted.
But many of the country’s
steel mills and aluminum
smelters have continued to
operate because stopping
and starting equipment han-
dling molten metal is expen-
sive and risky. Millions of
tons of steel and aluminum
produced during what is now
the worst manufacturing
slump on record in China
have created a surplus of
metal that will take months
to shrink, even if the epi-
demic is contained and de-
mand recovers later this
year in China and beyond.
As a result, the global
stockpile of steel and alumi-
num threatens to push down
prices and put new pressure
on producers in the U.S.,
Western Europe and else-
where. Many of those com-
panies were already strug-
gling to earn a profit on
steel and aluminum because
of lower prices and weaken-
ing demand from manufac-
turers.
“We could see China
swamp the entire world with
steel,” said Scott Barrett, di-
rector of domestic trading for
ProTrade Steel Co., an Ohio-
based scrap-steel broker.

epidemic crested is routed
into China’s aluminum distri-
bution warehouses.
“The supply is going to
get bigger, fast,” said Greg
Wittbecker, senior aluminum
analyst for CRU.
With demand inside China
still in the doldrums, steel-
makers have an incentive to
export. Platts said large
shipments of construction-
reinforcing bar from China
recently turned up in Singa-
pore and Hong Kong and
said Chinese sheet steel is
being offered at discounted
prices in Vietnam.

T


he world’s ability to
absorb such shipments
from China is strained
by weakening industrial ac-
tivity and the spread of cor-
onavirus in other countries.
The epidemic has taken hold
in some of China’s biggest
trading partners, including
South Korea and Japan.
Scrap-steel prices have
rallied in the U.S. amid rising
demand from overseas mar-
kets in what steel-industry
analysts are likening to a
calm before the storm. With
steel and scrap still stuck at
Chinese ports and in ware-
houses, countries including
the U.S. have stepped into
the void ahead of the ex-
pected tsunami of metal from
China. Mr. Barrett said he is
advising clients to sell scrap
or steel quickly, rather than
hold out for better prices.
“Liquidate, don’t specu-
late,” he said. “Short-term,
it’s not a bad market, but I
don’t know how long that
lasts.”

THE OUTLOOK|By Bob Tita


China’s Metal Glut Headed to Market


InventoriesofsteelandaluminuminChinaarerising,pushingdownmetalpricesinternationally
andinChina.
Aluminum
inventories in China

China domestic prices
on common steel

Daily cash prices
for aluminum

Sources: CRU Group (aluminum inventory); S&P Global Platts (prices)

¥4,200 per metric ton

3,

3,

3,

3,

4,

2019 2020

Hotrolled
coilsteel

Construction
rebar

1.

0.

0.

1.

1.

1.

million metric tons

2019 2020 2019

1,

1,

1,

1,

1,

2020

$1,900 per metric ton

The week will offer insights
on how the U.S. and global
economies are faring in the face
of the coronavirus outbreak.

Monday
China releases consumer-
and producer-price data for Feb-
ruary. China’s inflation likely re-
mained strong but may have
eased from an eight-year high
in January, as the coronavi-
rus epidemic hurt demand and
supply.
Economists project the con-
sumer-price index climbed 5.1%
in February from a year earlier,
compared with January’s 5.4%
rise. Soft demand likely drove
producer prices back to defla-
tion territory.
The producer-price index ,a
gauge of factory-gate prices,
likely dropped 0.3% in February
on year, following a 0.1% uptick
in January, an economist poll
shows.
Economists expect Beijing to
hold off any aggressive easing
measures for now and focus on
resuming production.
Germany releases industrial
production data for January.

Wednesday
The U.S. Labor Department
releases consumer-price data
for February. Economists esti-
mate that overall prices were
flat while core prices rose mod-
estly.

Friday
The University of Michigan
releases a preliminary report on
consumer sentiment for March.
Sentiment has remained high
but may have declined because
of stock-market turmoil and
worries over the novel coronavi-
rus outbreak.
Germany releases consumer-
price data for February.

ECONOMIC


CALENDAR


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