The Wall Street Journal - 09.03.2020

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** MONDAY, MARCH 9, 2020 ~ VOL. CCLXXV NO. 56 WSJ.com HHHH $4.


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The novel coronavirus is lay-
ing bare a central problem for
the global manufacturing in-
dustry: China’s shadow has
grown so long that even indus-
tries that have shifted produc-
tion beyond the country can’t
wriggle free of its grip on sup-
ply networks.
A year and a half ago, a lin-
gerie manufacturer set up a
factory in eastern Bangladesh
as part of a push to move pro-
duction away from China due
to rising labor costs and higher
tariffs from the trade fight with
the U.S. At the plant, 16 experi-

enced Chinese supervisors usu-
ally oversee 500 Bangladeshi
workers attaching bra straps to
cups for brands such as Hanes-
brands Inc.’s Wonderbra.
Half the Chinese staff has
been quarantined back home
for weeks, slowing production.

Musical Hit: Heavy Metal Sounds


From Tiny Metal Boxes
iii

Guitar heroes rely on push-button


devices for waves of music and noise


Electric-guitar players strive
for a trademark sound. Jamie
Stillman has one that is patent
protected.
His patent, US 9,899,013 B1,
isn’t for the licks he’s played
over galloping drums in his
punk band, Party of Helicop-
ters. It is for the electrical engi-
neering recipe that sculpts his
guitar sounds and those of
players around the world.
Mr. Stillman, 43 years old,
and his wife, Julie Robbins,
own and operate EarthQuaker

Devices, one of the top-selling
brands of guitar-effects pedals,
the small metal boxes strung
between electric guitars and
amplifiers like the ones Jimi
Hendrix famously cranked for
Woodstock’s “The Star-Span-
gled Banner.”
Since the ’60s, guitar players
have used the sandwich- and
half-sandwich-size devices to
distort, sustain, reverberate or
create shimmering echoes with
a toe tap. Mr. Stillman never
made it big playing music. But
among musicians, he is a rock
Please turn to page A

BYRYANDEZEMBER

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CONTENTS
Business & Finance B2,
Business News... B3,
Crossword.............. A
Heard on Street..... B
Life & Arts...... A11-
Markets.................. B8,

Opinion.............. A15-
Outlook....................... A
Sports....................... A
Technology................ B
U.S. News............. A2-
Weather................... A
World News....... A9-

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What’s


News


 The number of confirmed
coronavirus cases globally ex-
ceeded 105,000 as infections
spread to new parts of the
U.S., and Italy quarantined
some 17 million people in an
attempt to get a handle on
the epidemic. A1, A6-A
 Trump plans to skip an
annual St. Patrick’s Day
luncheon on Capitol Hill
this week, with the White
House citing tensions with
Pelosi in his decision. A
 Sanders is focusing on
Michigan to reinvigorate his
bid for the Democratic pres-
idential nomination. A
 Harris endorsed ex-ri-
val Biden for president. A
 U.S. Soccer and the
women’s national team
butted heads over pay as a
trial date in their legal
battle approaches. A
 Taiwan’s main opposi-
tion party is rethinking its
longstanding support for
closer ties with China. A
 The trial of four men in
connection with the shoot-
ing down of an airliner
over Ukraine in 2014 is set
to open in a Dutch court. A
 Saudi authorities began
releasing officials and royal
family members questioned
in a security clampdown. A

O


il prices plumbed
their lowest levels in
years after Aramco said it
plans to cut prices, a move
that escalates Saudi Ara-
bia’s clash with Russia. A
 China’s shadow in
global manufacturing has
grown so long that even
industries that have
shifted production beyond
the country can’t escape its
grip on supply networks. A
 Employers are imple-
menting contingency plans to
minimize disruption to busi-
nesses from the coronavirus
while protecting workers. A
 An old metal hook could
help determine whether PG&E
faces criminal charges for
starting the deadliest wild-
fire in California history. B
 Regulators are poised to
order wires relocated inside
Boeing’s 737 MAX, another
potential delay to the jet’s re-
turn to commercial service. B
 The emergence of the
coronavirus has thrown a
wrench into attempts to fore-
cast how the rest of the year
in markets will unfold. B1, B
 Tech firms are pushing
for laws that would restrict
the use of facial-recognition
systems as cities and states
weigh bans or curbs. A

Business&Finance


World-Wide


JOURNAL REPORT
Investing in Funds: 20
Years Later, Lessons
From the Dot-Com
Bust. R1-

The number of confirmed
coronavirus cases globally ex-
ceeded 105,000 on Sunday, as
infections spread to new parts
of the U.S. and Italy quaran-
tined some 17 million people
in an attempt to get a handle
on the epidemic.

Connecticut, Missouri,
Washington, D.C., and Ver-
mont disclosed their first
cases over the weekend. The
virus is now in well over half
of U.S. states, with about 540
cases and a total of 21 deaths,
according to data compiled by
Johns Hopkins University as of
Sunday afternoon.
The majority of deaths have
occurred in Washington state,
where the outbreak has cen-
tered at an elder-care facility
associated with 16 deaths.

coast of San Francisco for days.
Nearly 1,000 passengers
who are California residents
will complete the mandatory
quarantine at Travis Air Force
Base and Miramar Naval Air
Station, and residents of other
states will complete the man-
datory quarantine at Joint
Base San Antonio Lackland in
Texas or Dobbins Air Force
Base in Georgia, the Depart-
ment of Health and Human
Services said on Sunday.
Across the country, New

York state officials said the
number of people infected
with coronavirus rose to 105,
up from 89 on Saturday.
At least eight states have
declared states of emergen-
cies, granting governors addi-
tional powers to combat the
spread: New York, California,
Florida, Kentucky, Maryland,
Utah, Washington, and Oregon,
which declared it on Sunday.
“We have been expecting for
some time that a Connecticut
Please turn to page A

Thousands of passengers
aboard the Grand Princess
cruise ship are scheduled to
dock in the Port of Oakland in
California on Monday, amid an
outbreak on board. At least 21
people, including 19 crew mem-
bers, tested positive for the dis-
ease. The roughly 3,500 passen-
gers and crew remained off the

By Talal Ansari ,
Chun Han Wong
and Erin Ailworth

Global Effort to Contain Virus Widens


Well over half of U.S.
states have confirmed
cases; Italy quarantines
some 17 million people

Affluent Americans who marry are more
likely to pool six-figure incomes, buy homes
and watch their assets grow. Among people
ages 25 to 34, the median wealth of married
couples is four times that of couples who
live together but aren’t married, according
to research by the Federal Reserve Bank of
St. Louis. The divide reflects another facet of
the nation’s income gap.
More couples are deciding to live together
instead of marrying, and strained finances
are a top reason many cite. A survey last
year by the nonpartisan Pew Research Cen-
ter found that among those who live with a
Please turn to page A

Middle-class Americans are forsaking
marriage amid financial insecurity, effec-
tively making the institution more of a lux-
ury good enjoyed by prosperous Americans.
The middle three-fifths of U.S. earners
have experienced the sharpest declines in
marriage rates over the past four decades
compared with people at the bottom of the
income ladder and those at the top, accord-
ing to a Wall Street Journal analysis of cen-
sus data from 1980 to 2018, the most recent
available. These households earned from
$25,000 to $125,000 in 2018.

BYJANETADAMY ANDPAULOVERBERG

Shipments of bra cups and
straps are delayed, and the fac-
tory is stocking up on knitting
needles, anticipating short-
ages. They all depend on sup-
pliers in China.
“We’re already facing de-
lays,” said Ramiz Khalid-Islam,
the executive director of the
Onus Group, which co-owns the
factory with China-focused P.H.
Garment Manufacturing Co.
“It’s just going to keep getting
worse if China cannot deliver us
materials on time.”
Tech and consumer electron-
ics, industries nurtured in China
on huge state incentives, have
been hardest hit by the stalled
production lines, supply-chain

consultants say. Autos and
pharmaceuticals are more mod-
erately exposed, while older in-
dustries like apparel, where ca-
pacity already has begun to
leave China, have lower risk—
yet producers dependent on
Chinese materials and expertise
such as the Bangladesh lingerie
factory haven’t been spared.
A persistent epidemic would
compound price pressures and
weigh on corporate profit as
manufacturers refocus their re-
sources on searching for substi-
tutes in the supply chain.
China became the world’s
largest exporter in 2009. It ac-
counted for one-third of global
Please turn to page A

BYJONEMONT
ANDCHUIN-WEIYAP

Supply Crunch Ripples Past China


Oil prices plumbed their
lowest levels in years after
Saudi Arabia’s state oil giant
said it plans to cut prices, a
move that escalates the king-
dom’s clash with Russia and
threatens to unleash a torrent
of crude into well-supplied en-
ergy markets.
Oil fell sharply to fresh mul-
tiyear lows when futures trad-
ing opened Sunday evening in
New York, with U.S. crude fu-
tures sliding 31% to a $28.56 a
barrel. Brent crude, the global
gauge of prices, fell 29% to
$32.28 a barrel on the heels of
a big drop on Friday, which was
its worst day since the financial
crisis more than a decade ago.
Analysts cautioned that the
moves late Sunday were likely
to shift due to thin trading vol-
umes and notoriously volatile
crude prices. If they held, they
would mark some of the big-
gest one-day swings ever.
The Saudis’ move also ex-
tended the global stock-market
selloff early Monday overseas
and lifted prices of U.S. Trea-
surys and reduced the yield on
the benchmark Treasury note
to below 0.5%, its lowest level
Please turn to page A

BYBENOITFAUCON
ANDSUMMERSAID

Oil Sinks


As Saudis,


Russia


Clash


Marriage Is Becoming More


Like a Luxury Good in U.S.


Affluent Americans still say ‘I do.’ More in the middle class, amid
financial insecurity, are forsaking the institution and its benefits

Note: As of 9:30 p.m. Sunday
Source: FactSet

Brentcrude-oilfutures

$

30

40

50

60

abarrel

Jan. Feb. March

On Alert
 Businesses plan for
disruptions........................ A
 Holes emerge in Italy’s
lockdown............................ A
 U.S. blocks several
Princess cruise ships..... A
 Mixed technical signals
feed stock volatility....... B

 Saudis release royal
detainees...................................... A

In Bow to Epidemic Fears, Pope Delivers Virtual Prayer at the Vatican


AT A DISTANCE: Cautious over the spread of the coronavirus, Pope Francis led the weekly Sunday Angelus prayer with livestreaming
shown on a giant screen in St. Peter’s Square at the Vatican. The Italian government has asked people to avoid large gatherings.

RICCARDO ANTIMIANI/SHUTTERSTOCK
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