1
YELLOW ****** THURSDAY, MARCH 21, 2013 ~ VOL. CCLXI NO. 66 WSJ.com HHHH $2.00 CONTENTS Business Tech............ B5 Corporate News B2,3,6,7 Global Finance............ C3 Heard on Street ..... C10 In the Markets........... C4 Leisure & Arts............ D5 Markets Dashboard C5 Opinion.................. A13-15 Sports.............................. D6 Style & Travel ........ D1-4 U.S. News................. A2-6 Weather Watch........ B8 World News.... A7-11,16 DJIA 14511.73 À 55.91 0.4% NASDAQ 3254.19 À 0.8% NIKKEI Closed (12468.23) STOXX 600 296.50 À 0.3% 10-YR. TREAS. g 8/32 , yield 1.936% OIL $92.96 À $0.80 GOLD $1,607.50 g $3.80 EURO $1.2936 YEN 96.01 s Copyright 2013 Dow Jones & Company. All Rights Reserved Vital Signs Americans have been stepping up their travel, with real spending on tourism increasing at a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 1.8% in the fourth quarter of 2012, after declining 0.7% during the third. Much of the increase went to hotels and restaurants, fueling hiring in the hospitality industry. Employment in travel and tourism industries rose 0.4% in the fourth quarter. Spending on tourism, quarterly change Source: Commerce Department '09 '10 '11 '12 ’08 ’07 ’06 –15 –10 –5 0 5% > Years of Magical Thinking Conjured Up the Works in This Library i i i From Prestidigitation to Escapology, Manhattan Repository Holds Tricks of Trade NEW YORK—Ricky Smith re- members vividly his first day at work. His new boss told him to keep his bag packed. “I should probably tell you that tomorrow we are flying to Florida,” his boss said. “I am go- ing to shoot David.” “David” was the prominent magician David Blaine and Mr. Smith’s first as- signment was to photograph him do- ing the famous “bullet catch.” His boss was going to pull the trigger. Mr. Smith works at a library full of magic secrets: The Conjuring Arts Research Center, located a few blocks from the Empire State Building. The ar- chive has over 15,000 books, plus manuscripts and letters serving magicians, historians and screenwriters. The documenta- tion is all created by magicians for magicians. The magic library has taken on the sometimes dueling mis- sions of preserving the art and making it more accessible— while being entrusted with mys- teries magicians have guarded for centuries. The center doesn’t allow browsers, but members of the public with specific interests can make appointments to seek out volumes such as “Indian Rope Trick” or “Mnemonica” (for memorizing cards). “It’s extremely difficult for me to tell you the secret of anything,” says Bill Ka- lush, 47 years old, founder of the center. “Real secrets are psycho- logical and deep. To take a sim- Please turn to page A12 BY DEMETRIA GALLEGOS Ask Alexander cards T he Federal Reserve maintained its easy- money policies, but the cen- tral bank is developing a strategy to gradually wind down an $85 billion monthly bond-buying program when the nation’s economy gets onto more solid footing. A4 U.S. stocks climbed as the Fed’s policy stance helped offset worries about the lat- est flare-up in Europe, with the Dow industrials gaining 55.91 points to 14511.73. C4 n Cyprus was left with nar- rowing options to rescue its financial-services sector from collapse as international lend- ers rejected an alternative plan to secure a bailout. A10 n Federal authorities are weighing insider-trading charges against a younger brother of jailed Galleon founder Raj Rajaratnam. C1 n FedEx posted a 31% drop in profit as customers flocked to slower, cheaper delivery options instead of its premium- priced express service. B1 n Blackstone was working on scenarios for a potential bid for all or part of Dell, as the computer maker’s founder tried to sew up his buyout. A1 n Oracle’s growth stalled in its latest quarter, as the firm sold fewer software licenses and its business in server sys- tems continued to shrink. B1 n H-P’s chairman and two out- side directors narrowly survived a re-election challenge, a re- buke reflecting dissatisfaction with the Autonomy deal. B5 n Suntech has been forced into Chinese bankruptcy pro- ceedings, sparking questions about how U.S. investors in the solar-panel maker will fare. B5 n A review of proxy state- ments shows a shift toward pay for performance for CEOs, highlighting the growing role of investors in shaping exec- utive compensation. B1 n Deutsche Bank revised fourth-quarter earnings down- ward, setting aside about $773 million in legal provisions for U.S. mortgage litigation. C1 n Exchange operator CME is considering selling the build- ings that house its energy and grain trading floors in New York and Kansas City. C1 n American Realty Capital said it made an unsolicited offer to buy Cole Credit Prop- erty Trust III, a so-called non- traded REIT, for $5.7 billion. C3 n BP declined to submit bids for new oil-drilling leases in the Gulf of Mexico amid a sus- pension from receiving new U.S. government contracts. B3 n Intertrust Technologies, a pioneer in digital copy- right protection, sued Apple, alleging the company infringed 15 Intertrust patents. B2 n NBC has committed to eventually turning over “The Tonight Show,” which is now hosted by Jay Leno, to youn- ger comic Jimmy Fallon. B1 n The U.S. will pull forces from an Afghan district. The American-led coalition said it would begin withdraw- ing special-operations forces from a district in Wardak prov- ince, meeting a demand by Karzai and removing an irri- tant to diplomacy. The compro- mise came after Karzai accused the U.S. of lacking respect for Afghan sovereignty and col- luding with the Taliban. A8 Other stumbling blocks re- main as Afghanistan and the U.S. negotiate the Amer- ican military presence. n World powers rushed to probe unconfirmed reports of a chemical-weapon attack in Aleppo on Tuesday, which raised fears inside Syria and abroad that the civil war there is poised to escalate. A9 n The Senate passed a bill to keep the government oper- ating through September, a bi- partisan compromise likely to pass the House and avoid re- cent budget brinkmanship. A4 n The U.K.’s Osborne un- veiled lower growth forecasts and said government borrow- ing would exceed plans. A11 n Obama and Netanyahu sought to showcase a mended relationship, with the new warmth extending to closer public agreement on Iran. A7 n The Obama administration is moving to shift control of the CIA’s lethal drone pro- gram to the military, a move redefining the campaign tar- geting suspected terrorists. A1 n Treasury Secretary Lew finished two days of meetings with officials in China that underlined the importance of cybersecurity on the U.S.- China economic agenda. A16 n Turkish government and party offices were hit by bomb attacks, marking what could be an effort to derail peace talks with the Kurds. A9 n Researchers reported ev- idence that using gene ther- apy to manipulate the im- mune system is emerging as a promising new strategy in the fight against cancer. A2 n Five ex-officials of Bell, Calif., were convicted on cor- ruption charges related to an overpayment scandal. A6 n A medical group said it supports same-sex marriage, saying marriage improves the health and well-being of children of gay couples. A5 n Colorado’s governor signed curbs on firearms into law, angering gun-rights advo- cates while raising the hopes of gun-control backers. A3 n French police searched IMF chief Lagarde’s home as part of a probe related to her days as France’s finance minister. A11 n Australia’s prime minister called a leadership vote as her party faces the prospect of defeat later this year. A9 n Japan’s Tepco is investi- gating whether a rat caused a nuclear-power plant blackout. Business & Finance World-Wide Follow the news all day at WSJ.com F. Martin Ramin for The WSJ, Styling by Anne Cardenas (2) TODAY IN PERSONAL JOURNAL Makeup Speeds Up SPORTS Sportscasters’ Tricks to Avoid the Bleep What’s News– i i i i i i WASHINGTON—The White House is working to shift control of the Central Intelligence Agency’s lethal drone program to the military, U.S. officials say, a move that redefines the widely contested campaign that targets suspected terrorists. The new directive is intended to shift the covert drone program to one that is subject to interna- tional laws of war and under- taken with the consent of host governments. The draft document reflects a growing consensus within the Obama administration that the long-term future of the program lies with the military, where U.S. officials say it will be on firmer legal footing and be more trans- parent. The drone program has drawn fire from both Democrats and Republicans who say it is se- cretive and unpredictable. Even under military control, however, the campaign is likely to remain relatively secretive, current and former officials said. The shift remains controver- sial on Capitol Hill, within the CIA and in some military circles among people who think the pro- gram is more effective under the agency’s control. One senior defense official warned that putting the program under military control could im- pose operational limitations. Hu- man rights groups consider a shift in authority inadequate and want it to meet the demands of international law. The political liabilities of the CIA program have grown in re- cent years. This month, conserva- tive and liberal lawmakers held up the nomination of CIA Direc- tor John Brennan over this issue, a drive that culminated in a nearly 13-hour filibuster by Sen. Rand Paul (R., Ky.), who de- manded and received an adminis- tration statement that it would not launch drone strikes on Americans within the U.S. The administration shift on drones was outlined in recent weeks as a draft presidential di- rective, which provides formal guidance to federal agencies. The directive, once finalized, will set out a general framework for the shift to the military, providing a “clear marker” of where the drone program is heading with- out setting out hard deadlines, a senior U.S. official said. Top administration officials have agreed to the change in principle, but final approval of the directive awaits the presi- dent’s nod, U.S. officials said. The draft directive, details of Please turn to page A8 By Siobhan Gorman, Adam Entous and Julian E. Barnes U.S. to Shift Drone Command Mounting Criticism Sparks Push to Move Lethal Program to Military From CIA Chief executives typically like to boast about their companies, but as a Friday deadline for rival bids to buy his firm approaches, Michael Dell finds himself in the opposite position. Mr. Dell needs to persuade Dell Inc. investors that the prospects for the company he founded in his dorm room in 1984 and has been running for the past six years are anything but rosy if he is to suc- ceed with his plan to take the com- puter maker private. Friday marks the end of a 45- day window to flush out alterna- tive offers to the $24.4 billion buy- out deal that Mr. Dell and private- equity firm Silver Lake Partners reached last month. The $13.65-a- share offer has sparked derision from some shareholders who be- lieve the price undervalues the Round Rock, Texas, company. No alternative bid has been of- fered, but late Wednesday Black- stone Group LP was working on a few scenarios for a potential bid that would see the private-equity giant team with a partner to buy all or part of the computer maker, according to people familiar with the matter. Absent a rival offer, Dell has said it would schedule a share- holder vote on the proposed buy- out in June or early July. That sets up months of debate over two differing outlooks on Dell—including Mr. Dell’s unusual position of having to talk down his company’s prospects in order to get shareholders to accept the cur- rent offer. Some of that position is ex- pected to be set out in a public fil- Please turn to the next page BY SHIRA OVIDE AND SHARON TERLEP Dell Walks Fine Line In Pitch For Buyout TOKYO—Japan’s new central bank governor, Haruhiko Kuroda, begins work Thursday on a feat no one before has managed: re- versing nearly two decades of falling prices to lift wages and profits in the world’s third larg- est economy. Mr. Kuroda’s predecessor, Masaaki Shirakawa, is among those who say it can’t be done, at least not with the tools at hand. Using central-bank poli- cies to boost stagnant prices is like “punching air,” Mr. Shi- rakawa told parliament on Fri- day. But backed by recently elected Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, the new central-bank gov- ernor has declared a mission to reach the bank’s target of 2% in- flation “as soon as humanly pos- sible.” Mr. Kuroda, 68 years old, is expected to begin buying tril- lions of yen more in bonds, along with other moves that echo strategies of the U.S. Fed- eral Reserve and several other central banks. The stakes for Japan—and the world—are high. Since 1998, Japan’s consumer prices have dropped to 1992 levels. Wages are down 7%. Urban property prices are down 51%. Tax reve- Please turn to page A12 BY PHRED DVORAK AND ELEANOR WARNOCK Stagnant Japan Rolls Dice On New Era of Easy Money On Trip to Israel, an Effort to See Eye-to-Eye WARMER MEETING: President Obama and Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who have clashed in the past, sought to showcase a mended relationship as Mr. Obama arrived for his first visit to Israel as president. A7 Kobi Gideon/Press Pool Fed Stays Course Bernanke: More bond buys..... A4 Heard on the Street.................. C10 Reuters Copyright © 2012, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. oracle.com/exadata or call 1.800.ORACLE.1 5 of the 5 Top Banks Run Exadata Fast Reliable Secure C M Y K Composite Composite MAGENTA CYAN BLACK P2JW080000-6-A00100-107FFB7078F CL,CX,DL,DM,DX,EE,EU,FL,HO,KC,MW,NE,NY,PH,PN,RM,SA,SC,SL,SW,TU,WB,WE BG,BM,BP,CH,CK,CP,CT,DN,DR,FW,HL,HW,KS,LA,LG,LK,MI,ML,NM,PI,PV,TD,TS,UT,WO P2JW080000-6-A00100-107FFB7078F

2013 03 21 cmyk NA 04 - The Wall Street Journalonline.wsj.com/public/resources/documents/pageone... · 2018. 8. 27. · bomb attacks,marking what could be an effort to derail peacetalks

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    * * * * * * THURSDAY, MARCH 21, 2013 ~ VOL. CCLXI NO. 66 WSJ.com HHHH $2 .00

    CONTENTSBusiness Tech. ........... B5Corporate News B2,3,6,7Global Finance............ C3Heard on Street..... C10In the Markets........... C4Leisure & Arts............ D5

    Markets Dashboard C5Opinion.................. A13-15Sports.............................. D6Style & Travel........ D1-4U.S. News................. A2-6Weather Watch........ B8World News.... A7-11,16

    DJIA 14511.73 À 55.91 0.4% NASDAQ 3254.19 À 0.8% NIKKEI Closed (12468.23) STOXX600 296.50 À 0.3% 10-YR. TREAS. g 8/32 , yield 1.936% OIL $92.96 À $0.80 GOLD $1,607.50 g $3.80 EURO $1.2936 YEN 96.01

    s Copyright 2013 Dow Jones & Company. All Rights Reserved

    Vital Signs Americans have beenstepping up their travel,with real spending ontourism increasing at aseasonally adjusted annualrate of 1.8% in the fourthquarter of 2012, afterdeclining 0.7% during thethird. Much of the increasewent to hotels andrestaurants, fueling hiring inthe hospitality industry.Employment in travel andtourism industries rose 0.4%in the fourth quarter.

    Spending on tourism,quarterly change

    Source: Commerce Department

    '09 '10 '11 '12’08’07’06–15

    –10

    –5

    0

    5%

    >

    Years of Magical ThinkingConjured Up theWorks in This Library

    i i i

    From Prestidigitation to Escapology,Manhattan Repository Holds Tricks of Trade

    NEW YORK—Ricky Smith re-members vividly his first day atwork. His new boss told him tokeep his bag packed.

    “I should probably tell youthat tomorrow we are flying toFlorida,” his boss said. “I am go-ing to shoot David.”

    “David” was theprominent magicianDavid Blaine andMr. Smith’s first as-signment was tophotograph him do-ing the famous“bullet catch.” Hisboss was going topull the trigger.

    Mr. Smith worksat a library full ofmagic secrets: TheConjuring Arts Research Center,located a few blocks from theEmpire State Building. The ar-chive has over 15,000 books, plusmanuscripts and letters servingmagicians, historians and

    screenwriters. The documenta-tion is all created by magiciansfor magicians.

    The magic library has takenon the sometimes dueling mis-sions of preserving the art andmaking it more accessible—while being entrusted with mys-teries magicians have guarded

    for centuries.The center

    doesn’t allowbrowsers, butmembers of thepublic with specificinterests can makeappointments toseek out volumessuch as “IndianRope Trick” or“Mnemonica” (formemorizing cards).

    “It’s extremelydifficult for me to tell you thesecret of anything,” says Bill Ka-lush, 47 years old, founder of thecenter. “Real secrets are psycho-logical and deep. To take a sim-

    PleaseturntopageA12

    BY DEMETRIA GALLEGOS

    Ask Alexander cards

    The Federal Reservemaintained its easy-money policies, but the cen-tral bank is developing astrategy to gradually winddown an $85 billion monthlybond-buying program whenthe nation’s economy getsonto more solid footing. A4 U.S. stocks climbed as theFed’s policy stance helpedoffset worries about the lat-est flare-up in Europe, withthe Dow industrials gaining55.91 points to 14511.73. C4n Cyprus was left with nar-rowing options to rescue itsfinancial-services sector fromcollapse as international lend-ers rejected an alternativeplan to secure a bailout. A10n Federal authorities areweighing insider-tradingcharges against a youngerbrother of jailed Galleonfounder Raj Rajaratnam. C1n FedEx posted a 31% dropin profit as customers flockedto slower, cheaper deliveryoptions instead of its premium-priced express service. B1nBlackstonewasworking onscenarios for a potential bidfor all or part of Dell, as thecomputer maker’s foundertried to sew up his buyout. A1n Oracle’s growth stalled inits latest quarter, as the firmsold fewer software licensesand its business in server sys-tems continued to shrink. B1nH-P’s chairman and two out-side directors narrowly surviveda re-election challenge, a re-buke reflecting dissatisfactionwith the Autonomy deal. B5n Suntech has been forcedinto Chinese bankruptcy pro-ceedings, sparking questionsabout how U.S. investors in thesolar-panel maker will fare. B5n A review of proxy state-ments shows a shift towardpay for performance for CEOs,highlighting the growing roleof investors in shaping exec-utive compensation. B1n Deutsche Bank revisedfourth-quarter earnings down-ward, setting aside about$773 million in legal provisionsfor U.S. mortgage litigation. C1n Exchange operator CME isconsidering selling the build-ings that house its energyand grain trading floors inNew York and Kansas City. C1n American Realty Capitalsaid it made an unsolicitedoffer to buy Cole Credit Prop-erty Trust III, a so-called non-traded REIT, for $5.7 billion. C3n BP declined to submit bidsfor new oil-drilling leases inthe Gulf of Mexico amid a sus-pension from receiving newU.S. government contracts. B3n Intertrust Technologies,a pioneer in digital copy-right protection, sued Apple,alleging the company infringed15 Intertrust patents. B2n NBC has committed toeventually turning over “TheTonight Show,” which is nowhosted by Jay Leno, to youn-ger comic Jimmy Fallon. B1

    n The U.S. will pull forcesfrom an Afghan district.The American-led coalitionsaid it would begin withdraw-ing special-operations forcesfrom a district inWardak prov-ince, meeting a demand byKarzai and removing an irri-tant to diplomacy. The compro-mise came after Karzai accusedthe U.S. of lacking respect forAfghan sovereignty and col-luding with the Taliban. A8Other stumbling blocks re-main as Afghanistan andthe U.S. negotiate the Amer-ican military presence.nWorld powers rushed toprobe unconfirmed reports ofa chemical-weapon attack inAleppo on Tuesday, whichraised fears inside Syria andabroad that the civil warthere is poised to escalate. A9n The Senate passed a billto keep the government oper-ating through September, a bi-partisan compromise likely topass the House and avoid re-cent budget brinkmanship. A4n The U.K.’s Osborne un-veiled lower growth forecastsand said government borrow-ing would exceed plans. A11n Obama and Netanyahusought to showcase a mendedrelationship, with the newwarmth extending to closerpublic agreement on Iran. A7n The Obama administrationis moving to shift control ofthe CIA’s lethal drone pro-gram to the military, a moveredefining the campaign tar-geting suspected terrorists. A1n Treasury Secretary Lewfinished two days of meetingswith officials in China thatunderlined the importance ofcybersecurity on the U.S.-China economic agenda. A16n Turkish government andparty offices were hit bybomb attacks, marking whatcould be an effort to derailpeace talks with the Kurds. A9n Researchers reported ev-idence that using gene ther-apy to manipulate the im-mune system is emerging asa promising new strategy inthe fight against cancer. A2n Five ex-officials of Bell,Calif., were convicted on cor-ruption charges related to anoverpayment scandal. A6n A medical group said itsupports same-sex marriage,saying marriage improvesthe health and well-being ofchildren of gay couples. A5n Colorado’s governor signedcurbs on firearms into law,angering gun-rights advo-cates while raising the hopesof gun-control backers. A3n French police searched IMFchief Lagarde’s home as part ofa probe related to her days asFrance’s finance minister. A11n Australia’s prime ministercalled a leadership vote asher party faces the prospectof defeat later this year. A9n Japan’s Tepco is investi-gating whether a rat caused anuclear-power plant blackout.

    Business&Finance World-Wide

    Follow the news all day at WSJ.com

    F.MartinRa

    minforT

    heWSJ,S

    tylin

    gby

    Ann

    eCa

    rdenas

    (2)

    TODAY IN PERSONAL JOURNAL

    Makeup Speeds UpSPORTS Sportscasters’ Tricks to Avoid the Bleep

    What’s News–i i i i i i

    WASHINGTON—The WhiteHouse is working to shift controlof the Central IntelligenceAgency’s lethal drone program tothe military, U.S. officials say, amove that redefines the widelycontested campaign that targetssuspected terrorists.

    The new directive is intendedto shift the covert drone programto one that is subject to interna-tional laws of war and under-taken with the consent of hostgovernments.

    The draft document reflects a

    growing consensus within theObama administration that thelong-term future of the programlies with the military, where U.S.officials say it will be on firmerlegal footing and be more trans-parent. The drone program hasdrawn fire from both Democratsand Republicans who say it is se-cretive and unpredictable.

    Even under military control,however, the campaign is likelyto remain relatively secretive,current and former officials said.

    The shift remains controver-sial on Capitol Hill, within theCIA and in some military circlesamong people who think the pro-gram is more effective under theagency’s control.

    One senior defense officialwarned that putting the programunder military control could im-pose operational limitations. Hu-man rights groups consider ashift in authority inadequate andwant it to meet the demands ofinternational law.

    The political liabilities of theCIA program have grown in re-cent years. This month, conserva-tive and liberal lawmakers heldup the nomination of CIA Direc-tor John Brennan over this issue,a drive that culminated in anearly 13-hour filibuster by Sen.Rand Paul (R., Ky.), who de-manded and received an adminis-tration statement that it wouldnot launch drone strikes on

    Americans within the U.S.The administration shift on

    drones was outlined in recentweeks as a draft presidential di-rective, which provides formalguidance to federal agencies. Thedirective, once finalized, will setout a general framework for theshift to the military, providing a“clear marker” of where thedrone program is heading with-out setting out hard deadlines, asenior U.S. official said.

    Top administration officialshave agreed to the change inprinciple, but final approval ofthe directive awaits the presi-dent’s nod, U.S. officials said.

    The draft directive, details ofPleaseturntopageA8

    By Siobhan Gorman,Adam Entous

    and Julian E. Barnes

    U.S. to ShiftDroneCommandMounting Criticism Sparks Push to Move Lethal Program to Military From CIA

    Chief executives typically like toboast about their companies, butas a Friday deadline for rival bidsto buy his firm approaches,Michael Dell finds himself in theopposite position.

    Mr. Dell needs to persuade DellInc. investors that the prospectsfor the company he founded in hisdorm room in 1984 and has beenrunning for the past six years areanything but rosy if he is to suc-ceed with his plan to take the com-puter maker private.

    Friday marks the end of a 45-day window to flush out alterna-tive offers to the $24.4 billion buy-out deal that Mr. Dell and private-equity firm Silver Lake Partnersreached last month. The $13.65-a-share offer has sparked derisionfrom some shareholders who be-lieve the price undervalues theRound Rock, Texas, company.

    No alternative bid has been of-fered, but late Wednesday Black-stone Group LP was working on afew scenarios for a potential bidthat would see the private-equitygiant team with a partner to buyall or part of the computer maker,according to people familiar withthe matter.

    Absent a rival offer, Dell hassaid it would schedule a share-holder vote on the proposed buy-out in June or early July.

    That sets up months of debateover two differing outlooks onDell—including Mr. Dell’s unusualposition of having to talk down hiscompany’s prospects in order toget shareholders to accept the cur-rent offer.

    Some of that position is ex-pected to be set out in a public fil-

    Pleaseturntothenextpage

    BY SHIRA OVIDEAND SHARON TERLEP

    Dell WalksFine LineIn PitchFor Buyout

    TOKYO—Japan’s new centralbank governor, Haruhiko Kuroda,begins work Thursday on a featno one before has managed: re-versing nearly two decades offalling prices to lift wages andprofits in the world’s third larg-est economy.

    Mr. Kuroda’s predecessor,Masaaki Shirakawa, is amongthose who say it can’t be done,at least not with the tools athand. Using central-bank poli-cies to boost stagnant prices islike “punching air,” Mr. Shi-rakawa told parliament on Fri-day.

    But backed by recentlyelected Prime Minister ShinzoAbe, the new central-bank gov-ernor has declared a mission toreach the bank’s target of 2% in-flation “as soon as humanly pos-sible.” Mr. Kuroda, 68 years old,is expected to begin buying tril-lions of yen more in bonds,along with other moves thatecho strategies of the U.S. Fed-eral Reserve and several othercentral banks.

    The stakes for Japan—andthe world—are high. Since 1998,Japan’s consumer prices havedropped to 1992 levels. Wagesare down 7%. Urban propertyprices are down 51%. Tax reve-

    PleaseturntopageA12

    BY PHRED DVORAKAND ELEANOR WARNOCK

    Stagnant Japan Rolls DiceOn New Era of Easy Money

    On Trip to Israel, an Effort to See Eye-to-Eye

    WARMER MEETING: President Obama and Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who have clashed in the past,sought to showcase a mended relationship as Mr. Obama arrived for his first visit to Israel as president. A7

    Kobi

    Gideon/PressPo

    ol

    Fed Stays Course

    Bernanke: More bond buys..... A4

    Heard on the Street.................. C10

    Reuters

    Copyright © 2012, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.

    oracle.com/exadataor call 1.800.ORACLE.1

    5of the 5TopBanks Run

    ExadataFastReliableSecure

    CM Y K CompositeCompositeMAGENTA CYAN BLACK

    P2JW080000-6-A00100-107FFB7078F CL,CX,DL,DM,DX,EE,EU,FL,HO,KC,MW,NE,NY,PH,PN,RM,SA,SC,SL,SW,TU,WB,WEBG,BM,BP,CH,CK,CP,CT,DN,DR,FW,HL,HW,KS,LA,LG,LK,MI,ML,NM,PI,PV,TD,TS,UT,WO

    P2JW080000-6-A00100-107FFB7078F