THE WALL STREET JOURNAL. ** Monday, February 24, 2020 |B9
THE TICKER|Market events coming this week
Monday
Earnings expected*
Estimate/YearAgo($)
Guardant Health
(0.30)/(0.30)
HP Inc. 0.54/0.52
Intuit 1.03/1.00
Keysight Technologies
1.08/0.93
Oneok 0.77/0.70
Palo Alto Networks
1.12/1.51
Tuesday
Consumer confidence
Jan., previous 131.6
Feb., expected 132.3
Earnings expected*
Estimate/YearAgo($)
Ameren 0.31/0.28
American Tower
1.02/0.62
CoStar Group 2.62/2.81
Home Depot 2.11/2.25
Public Storage2.01/3.04
salesforce.com0.56/0.70
Wednesday
Short-selling reports
Ratio,daysof trading volume of
currentposition
NYSE 4.2
Nasdaq 3.7
EIA status report
Previouschangein stocks in
millionsof barrels
Crude oil up 0.4
Gasoline down 2.0
Distillates down 0.6
Mort. bankers indexes
Purch., previous down 3%
Refinan., prev. down 8%
New-home sales
Dec., previous 694,000
Jan., expected 710,000
Earnings expected*
Estimate/YearAgo($)
Booking Holdings
22.03/22.49
Crown Castle 0.48/0.44
Lowe’s Cos. 0.91/0.80
Marriott 1.47/1.44
Public Service Enterprise
Group 0.62/0.56
TJX Cos. 0.77/0.68
Thursday
Durable-goods orders
Dec., previous up 2.4%
Jan., expected down 1.5%
EIA report: natural gas
Previouschangein stocks in
billionsof cubic feet
down 151
GDP Deflator
4th qtr. adv. est. up 1.4%
4th qtr. sec. est. up 1.4%
Gross domestic product
Percentagechange,annualrate
4th qtr. adv. est. up 2.1%
4th qtr. sec. est. up 2.1%
Initial jobless claims
Previous 210,000
Expected 215,000
Earnings expected*
Estimate/YearAgo($)
Autodesk 0.89/0.46
EOG Resources1.16/1.24
Keurig Dr Pepper
0.35/0.30
Occidental Petroleum
(0.16)/1.22
Sempra Energy1.45/1.56
Workday 0.40/0.41
Friday
Chicago PMI
Jan., previous 42.9
Feb., expected 46.0
Personal spending
Dec., previous up 0.3%
Jan., expected up 0.2%
Personal income
Dec., previous up 0.2%
Jan., expected up 0.3%
U.Mich. consumer index
Feb., prelim. 100.9
Feb., final 100.7
Earnings expected*
Estimate/YearAgo($)
AES 0.33/0.36
Foot Locker 1.59/1.56
Vistra Energy 0.54/0.97
Wayfair (2.63)/(1.12)
* FACTSET ESTIMATES EARNINGS-PER-SHARE ESTIMATES DON’T INCLUDE EXTRAORDINARY ITEMS (LOSSES IN PARENTHESES) ADJUSTED FOR
Home Depot, seen here, and home-improvement rival Lowe’s Cos. post quarterly results this week. STOCK SPLIT NOTE: FORECASTS ARE FROM DOW JONES WEEKLY SURVEY OF ECONOMISTS
STEVEN SENNE/ASSOCIATED PRESS
MARKETS
Reportedamountstolen
through‘emailcompromise’
wire-fraudschemes
Source: Federal Bureau of Investigation
$2.0
0
0.5
1.0
1.5
billion
2015 ’16 ’17 ’18 ’19
message his assistant.
“Carol...please wire
$150,000,” the hackers wrote
Mr. Krasovec’s assistant from
his email account, the execu-
tive said. It was around 11:30
p.m. in Shanghai, where Mr.
Krasovec had landed hours
earlier and was fast asleep, he
said.
Unlike cruder scams that
might ask for money in broken
English, the note sounded just
like him. An attachment with
transfer instructions showed
intimate knowledge of his ac-
counts, he said.
The assistant asked
PlainsCapital Bank to wire the
money. The Dallas-based com-
munity bank had courted Mr.
Krasovec’s business for
months, he said, after poach-
ing his longtime banker at
Wells Fargo & Co.
PlainsCapital called his as-
sistant to confirm the request,
then made the transfer. The
bank declined to comment.
Meanwhile, in China, Mr.
Krasovec powered through 14-
hour workdays unaware any-
thing was amiss. The chain
has grown quickly there after
switching to a local menu that
includes seafood toppings.
Three days after the first
transfer, at 10:26 p.m. local
time, intruders asked Mr. Kra-
sovec’s assistant to wire an
additional $300,000, according
to Mr. Krasovec. The hackers
had changed Mr. Krasovec’s
email settings so their corre-
spondence was quickly de-
leted, according to Kyle Camp,
a technology consultant who
examined the hack for Mr.
Krasovec.
A few days later, Mr. Kras-
ovec flew home to Austin.
Catching up in their offices
overlooking Lady Bird Lake,
his assistant mentioned she
“took care of the wires.”
“What wires?” he recalls
saying.
When she explained, he
said he began to feel “abso-
lutely sick.”
He frantically called his
banker at PlainsCapital Bank,
who said there was nothing
the bank could do. Mr. Kras-
ovec said the bank then
stopped returning his calls.
He is now suing PlainsCapi-
tal, saying he shouldn’t have
to repay the stolen money be-
cause the bank failed to put
proper antifraud controls in
place.
PlainsCapital Bank said in a
court filing that the loss was
“undoubtedly the fault of [Mr.
Krasovec’s] own failure to im-
plement appropriate internal
controls to prevent his com-
pany and its employees from
falling victim to a third-party
scam.” The bank said in filings
that Mr. Krasovec must repay
the money with interest.
The case is continuing in
the Texas court system.
Under decades-old con-
sumer-protection laws, con-
sumers are often entitled to
refunds of unauthorized
charges. But that generally
doesn’t apply to wire transfers
requested after a customer
was tricked by hackers, ac-
cording to the American Bank-
ers Association.
Sometimes, consumers who
catch the fraudulent wires can
halt them by immediately call-
ing their bank, said Don Vilfer,
an investigator who works on
these cases. But that isn’t cer-
tain: One law firm calledBank
of AmericaCorp. about an
hour after a fraudulent re-
quest, but still lost $500,000,
according to court documents.
A Bank of America spokesman
said the bank called the law
firm to confirm the wire be-
fore sending it.
Some banks try to prevent
fraud by calling customers to
confirm large wire transfers.
Mr. Krasovec said PlainsCapi-
tal Bank should have called
him, not just his assistant. The
bank declined to comment be-
yond its court filings.
Mr. Krasovec has put in
place tougher passwords and
two-factor authentication, said
Mr. Camp, the technology con-
sultant. Legal costs have
added $300,000 to his al-
ready-sizable loss, and he is
concerned about his reputa-
tion.
“It makes me look like a
dummy,” he said of the fraud.
to the American Bankers Asso-
ciation. But community banks,
with much smaller technology
budgets to build their de-
fenses, are also vulnerable.
The Federal Bureau of In-
vestigation received reports of
nearly $1.8 billion in losses
from this type of scam in 2019,
up from about $1.3 billion the
prior year. The agency esti-
mates total losses world-wide,
which include those not re-
ported to the agency, were $26
billion between June 2016 and
July 2019. The transfers pri-
marily go to banks in Hong
Kong and mainland China,
where chances of recovering
the money are slim, the
agency said.
Victims include “the elderly,
college students, nonprofits,
religious organizations, celeb-
rities, CEOs of companies,” FBI
supervisory special agent
Zacharia Baldwin said in an
interview. “It could be any-
body.”
Hackers can break into a
target’s email by trying out
passwords made public in pre-
vious data breaches. They also
may use phishing schemes like
those used against political
campaigns and in corporate
espionage.
The hackers then comman-
deer an account and imper-
sonate the victim, asking as-
sistants or colleagues to
initiate a wire transfer.
Mr. Krasovec, 76 years old,
isn’t sure how his email was
compromised. He said he be-
lieves the fraudsters, once in-
side his servers, tracked his
travel plans and waited until
he was out of the office to
Continued from page B1
Hackers
Push Wire
Scams
safety stocks typically doing
their best when money manag-
ers feel most skittish about
economic prospects.
The S&P 500 tech sector is
up 8.2% for the year, while
utilities have risen 8.3%. Both
groups have significantly out-
performed the broader index,
which has climbed 3.3% in
2020.
“It’s a really polarized mar-
ket,” said Art Hogan, chief
market strategist at National
Holdings.
Even as the S&P 500 hangs
within a few percentage points
of its record high, “we have all
of this money plowing into
harbors of safety,” he said.
Money managers and ana-
lysts had begun the year rela-
tively optimistic about the
global economy.
Risky assets like stocks had
even been relatively resilient
through some spurts of selling
related to the coronavirus epi-
demic, with analysts attribut-
ing the calm to investors’ faith
that the disease would be con-
tained and that central banks
would deploy enough stimulus
to help offset a temporary
pullback in growth.
In recent days, that confi-
dence has shown signs of fal-
tering—with defensive parts
of the stock market, as well as
the price of other havens like
gold and U.S. Treasurys racing
higher.
The yield on the 30-year
U.S. Treasury slipped to a re-
cord Friday. Yields fall as bond
prices rise.
Gold, meanwhile, jumped
1.7%, ending at its highest
level since February 2013.
Analysts have attributed
the moves to fears that the
coronavirus epidemic will dis-
rupt consumer spending, man-
ufacturing and supply chains
around the world more than
investors had expected.
Many firms’ initial esti-
mates of the epidemic’s im-
pact on growth had assumed
that the disease would be con-
tained within the first couple
of months of the year. But in
recent weeks, reports have
shown the number of cases
continuing to jump around the
world, and multinationals like
AppleInc. have warned that
their sales would take a hit be-
cause of a pullback in con-
sumer spending.
With that kind of dim out-
look, investors might typically
retreat from risky assets over-
all. But faith that U.S. multina-
tionals—particularly big tech
companies—are resilient
enough to withstand a tempo-
rary slowdown in global
growth has helped keep those
shares higher.
Even with Friday’s pullback,
NetflixInc. is up 17% for the
year.AlphabetInc. has risen
11%, whileMicrosoftCorp. is
up 13%.
It is difficult to imagine the
disconnect being sustainable
for long, Mr. Hogan said.
“Are we really pricing in re-
cession fears? Or are people
just so nervous they’ll pay for
anything with yield?” he said.
Risky investments have ral-
lied this year. So have safe
ones.
The tug of war across fi-
nancial markets shows just
how divided the outlook
among investors is as they
struggle to assess the eco-
nomic toll of the growing cor-
onavirus epidemic.
Within the stock market,
the two best-performing sec-
tors in the S&P 500 in 2020
have been technology and util-
ities. That is notable because
the two groups often move in
opposite directions—with
technology stocks rallying
when investors feel confident
in taking on riskier invest-
ments, and utilities and other
BYAKANEOTANI
Tech, Utility Stocks Both Rally in Polarized Market
Frank Krasovec lost $450,000 in a wire-transfer scam.
BRENT HUMPHREYS FOR THE WALL STREET JOURNAL
from a loss of $25.4 billion, or
$15,467 a share, the year be-
fore. Berkshire’s earnings were
mostly boosted by unrealized
investment gains, while its re-
sults a year ago were dragged
down by an unexpected write-
down at Kraft Heinz Co.
Berkshire posted operating
earnings of $4.4 billion, down
from $5.7 billion a year earlier,
due to lower results in insur-
ance underwriting and some
of Berkshire’s smaller operat-
ing businesses. Operating
earnings exclude some invest-
ment results, and Mr. Buffett
has said they more reflect
Berkshire’s performance than
net earnings, which can fluctu-
ate widely due to unrealized
investment gains or losses.
Berkshire’s Class A shares
closed Friday at $343,499, up
1.1% for the year. In contrast,
the S&P 500 is up 3.3% this
year.
Cathy Seifert, equity ana-
lyst at CFRA Research, said
she thought Mr. Buffett should
have addressed Berkshire’s re-
sults compared with the index
more directly.
“It’s easy to say you’re not
concerned about short-term
performance,” she said. But
“this short-term underperfor-
mance could turn into a lon-
ger-term underperformance.”
Mr. Buffett also used his
letter to discuss corporate
boards, which he said are of-
ten ill-equipped to oversee
companies and incentivized
not to challenge executives.
Noting that he has served as a
director for 21 public compa-
nies over the past 62 years,
Mr. Buffett complained that
board members are often too
reliant on their board-related
income to truly function as in-
dependent overseers.
He also said many board
members aren’t experts in fi-
nance or investing.
“Almost all of the directors
I have met over the years have
been decent, likable and intel-
ligent,” Mr. Buffett said. “Nev-
ertheless, many of these good
souls are people whom I would
never have chosen to handle
money or business matters. It
simply was not their game.”
Berkshire runs a large in-
surance operation as well as
railroads, utilities, industrial
manufacturers and retailers.
Its holdings include recogniz-
able names like Dairy Queen,
Duracell, Fruit of the Loom,
Geico and See’s Candies.
Berkshire’s insurance busi-
ness sits at the core of its
moneymaking machine. Insur-
ance brings in billions of dol-
lars of “float,” upfront premi-
ums customers pay and that
Berkshire invests for its own
gain.
Berkshire also holds large
stock investments, including in
AppleInc. andWells Fargo&
Co.
Continued from page B1
Berkshire
Trails
S&P 500
Finance chiefs are shelling
out more than they expected
in wages as job candidates
press for higher salaries amid
a tight labor market.
Fifty-four percent of U.S.
employees and managers said
they tried to negotiate higher
pay with their last employ-
ment offer, a survey released
by staffing firm Robert Half
International Inc. said. That is
slightly down from 55% last
year but up from 39% in 2018,
according to the study, which
surveyed 2,800 employees and
2,800 senior managers.
Chief financial officers are
learning it can take a long
time to fill job openings with
candidates with the right ex-
perience at the right cost and
in many cases end up increas-
ing the compensation they ini-
tially offered, said Steve Saah,
executive director for Robert
Half’s finance and accounting
division.
“It may take them a while
to come to the realization
they need to pony up,” Mr.
Saah said in an interview.
Mr. Saah expects the pro-
portion of job candidates ask-
ing for higher pay to rise as
they leverage the continuing
strength of the U.S. job mar-
ket. The unemployment rate
was 3.6% in January, near a
50-year low.
Many executives have cited
rising wages on earnings calls
in recent weeks.
Sunstone Hotel Investors
Inc., for example, found that
cost pressures, in part be-
cause of wages and benefits,
drove down hotel profits de-
spite hotel revenue being
stronger than anticipated,
John Arabia, chief executive
of the Irvine, Calif., real-estate
investment trust, said on an
earnings call.
Chief risk officers counted
attracting and retaining talent
among the top emerging risks
in 2020, according to a survey
released in December by
North Carolina State Univer-
sity’s Enterprise Risk Manage-
ment Initiative and consulting
firm Protiviti Inc.
BYMARKMAURER
Finance Chiefs Pay More Than Expected in Salaries
‘Your company is
100% prepared for
our departure,’
Warren Buffett said.