For personal, non-commercial use only. Do not edit, alter or reproduce. For commercial reproduction or distribution, contact Dow Jones Reprints & Licensing at (800) 843-0008 or www.djreprints.com. * * * * * * Last week: DJIA 35455.80 À 335.72 1.0% MONDAY, AUGUST 30, 2021 ~ VOL. CCLXXVIII NO. 51 NASDAQ 15129.50 À 2.8% STOXX 600 472.34 À 0.8% WSJ.com 10-YR. TREASURY g 16/32 , yield 1.311% OIL $68.74 À $6.60 Business & Finance M Catalent was expected to announce Monday that it has agreed to buy closely held Bettera, a maker of gummy, soft-chew and lozenge forms of vitamins and supplements, for $1 billion. B4 Huarong, China’s top manager of distressed assets, confirmed it had a net loss of roughly $16 billion last year, and warned investors that it fell short of regulatory requirements on financial strength. B9 A brewing economic slowdown is testing China’s will to sustain reductions in steel output ordered by economic officials that had burnished the government’s climate credentials. B9 Private Citizens Rescue Afghans Zach Van Meter, a privateequity investor from Naples, Fla., phoned the government of Somaliland last week, askBy Ben Kesling in Abu Dhabi and Michael M. Phillips in Washington ing if it would host thousands of Afghan refugees. “He just called me out of Investors Signal Cautious Outlook Hurricane Ida made landfall and battered New Orleans and much of southeast Louisiana, knocking out power, downing trees and causing havoc as the region’s most severe storm since Hurricane Katrina exactly 16 years earlier. A1, A4 North Korea appears to have resumed operation of its plutonium-producing reactor at Yongbyon in a move that could enable the country to expand its nuclear weapons arsenal, the United Nations atomic agency said. A9 The European Union is set to recommend halting nonessential travel from the U.S. because of the spread of Covid-19, diplomats said. A9 Israeli planes struck Hamas targets in the Gaza Strip, hours after violent clashes between Palestinian protesters and troops along the border. A8 Died: Ed Asner, 91, actor who played TV’s Lou Grant. A5 Opinion.............. A15-17 Outlook....................... A2 Personal Journal A11-12 Sports....................... A14 U.S. News............. A2-5 Weather................... A14 World News......... A6-9 > Some of the hottest stocks in the U.S. are pointing to an economic cool-down. Utilities and healthcare are among the best-performing groups in the S&P 500 so far this quarter, with gains of 7.8% and 6.6%, respectively, compared with a 4.9% rise in the broad stock index. Big winners include utility NextEra Energy Inc., which is up 14% this quarter, while shares of medical company Danaher Corp. are up 19%. The gains are noteworthy because investors typically pile into those types of stocks when they are expecting the outlook to darken. Visits to the doctor and electricity use are less apt to decline in a pinch than spending on vacations or new furniture. Goldman Sachs this month cut its third-quarter U.S. economic growth forecast to 5.5% from 9%, citing slowing consumer spending in the face of renewed Covid-19 outbreaks. A drop in economic growth from its mid-2021 pace hardly presages a recession, which is the development that often spells the end of stocks’ adPlease turn to page A2 Revenue rises for most of S&P 500........................................ B1 INSIDE SCOTT BARBOUR/EPA/SHUTTERSTOCK The U.S. said it launched a drone strike targeting suspected suicide bombers near the Kabul airport as America’s 20-year war in Afghanistan wound down. The strike was the second such attack following a deadly blast at the airport last week. A1, A6-A8 The remains of 13 service members killed in the suicide bombing in Afghanistan last week arrived at Dover Air Force Base in Delaware, where Biden participated in a transfer ritual and met with families of the fallen troops. A6 s 2021 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved President Biden and first lady Jill Biden as the remains of 13 U.S. troops killed in Kabul arrived at Dover Air Force Base. A6 BY KAREN LANGLEY World-Wide CONTENTS Arts in Review... A13 Business & Finance B2 Business News... B3-4 Crossword.............. A14 Heard on Street... B10 Markets...................... B9 BY VIVIAN SALAMA AND NANCY A. YOUSSEF SPORTS The U.S. Open is missing stars as the tournament begins Monday. A14 BUSINESS & FINANCE At Theranos trial, Holmes may allege abusive relationship in her defense. B1 the blue,” said Bashir Goth, the Washington representative for a region of Somalia seeking independence. Two days later, on Aug. 25, Somaliland’s acting foreign minister signed a tentative accord with charities working with Mr. Van Meter, agreeing to temporarily house as many as 10,000 Afghan evacuees in Berbera, a port on the Gulf of Aden. It was part of an on-thefly effort that Mr. Van Meter said has helped about 5,000 Afghans escape their country in the past two weeks, in one of the most successful known private efforts to extract Afghans. From the Peacock Lounge, a conference room at the Willard InterContinental hotel in Washington, Mr. Van Meter and an ad hoc collection of war veterans, Afghan diplomats, wealthy donors, defense contractors, nonprofit workers and off-duty U.S. officials conducted a global military-style rescue operation. The self-named Commercial Task Force dispatched former commandos to Kabul to retrieve evacuees, said Mr. Van Please turn to page A8 WASHINGTON—The U.S. said it launched a drone strike targeting suspected suicide bombers near the Kabul airport as America’s 20-year war in Afghanistan wound down to its final hours. The drone strike on Sunday was the second such attack following the explosion that killed 13 U.S. service members and more than 200 Afghan civilians at the Hamid Karzai International Airport last week. It came as the U.S. scrambled to have its military and diplomatic personnel out of the country by Tuesday, the deadline previPlease turn to page A6 Americans back withdrawal, lament chaotic exit................ A6 Opposition resists pressure from Taliban............................... A7 New leaders order halt to opium production.................... A7 Hurricane Ida Pummels Louisiana NEW ORLEANS—Hurricane Ida made landfall on Sunday and battered this city and much of southeast Louisiana, knocking out power, downing trees and causing havoc as the By Kris Maher, Rachel Wolfe and Steve Garbarino region’s most severe storm since Hurricane Katrina exactly 16 years earlier. Ida arrived at Port Fourchon, 60 miles south of New Orleans, at midday Sunday as a Category 4 hurricane, the second-highest storm classification. It brought pounding rain, sustained winds of 150 miles an hour and dangerous sea surges. All of New Orleans had lost power by Sunday night, an Entergy spokesman confirmed. Nearly a million customers statewide were without power, according to data from poweroutage.us. Earlier in the day, the Sewerage and Water Board of New Orleans advised people not to run dishwashers or washing machines to minimize wastewater, because sewage pump stations had been knocked out by power outages. The first death from the storm was reported by the As- ERIC GAY/ASSOCIATED PRESS A surge of Covid-19 cases in Malaysia, a littleknown but critical link in the semiconductor supply chain, has opened a new front in the battle to fix manufacturing woes that have rippled across industries during a global shortage of computing chips. B1 YEN 109.85 Drone strike comes before exit deadline, as remains of 13 American troops arrive home SAUL LOEB/AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE/GETTY IMAGES Baxter International is in advanced talks to buy medical-equipment maker Hill-Rom for around $10 billion, according to people familiar with the matter. The talks follow an earlier bid from Baxter that Hill-Rom rebuffed. B1 EURO $1.1797 U.S. Hits Suspected Suicide Bombers In Kabul What’s News ore than three-quarters of the largest U.S. companies reported higher revenue than before Covid-19, according to a Wall Street Journal analysis, indicating that many have adapted to changing business conditions caused by the pandemic. B1 HHHH $4.00 A man passed by part of a roof blown off of a building in the French Quarter of New Orleans Sunday. cension Parish Sheriff’s Office, which said deputies responded Sunday night to reports of a person injured by a fallen tree and arrived to find the victim deceased. Storm trackers said that even after several hours, Ida re- Election Melodrama—Starring Matthew Modine, Fran Drescher i i i Accusations fly fast in Tinseltown’s SAG-AFTRA union showdown BY JOE FLINT porting role as a widow in a Christmas movie that aired The upcoming California last year on the Lifetime cable election has it all. Heated network. rhetoric. Mudslinging. A last“Unfortunately many of our minute celebrity candidate members are more impressed who shakes up the field. by a candidate’s IMDB page This isn’t the gubernatorial than they are by a candidate’s recall. It’s the race to become position on union issues,” says president of powactress Anne-Marie erful Hollywood laJohnson, a supbor union SAG-AFporter of Mr. MoTRA. dine. The contest pits SAG-AFTRA repactor Matthew Moresents 160,000 dine, whose credits performers—ranginclude the Netflix ing from movie hit “Stranger stars to background Things,” against actors and stunt onetime sitcom performers—and star Fran Drescher. both candidates Mr. Modine’s camp have recognizable Vote for me. casts him as unnames in their corderdog to the bigger name, ners, according to public statethough Ms. Drescher is best ments of support. Ms. known for her role in “The Drescher, 63, was endorsed by Nanny,” which aired its final actors including Tom Hanks season in 1999. Her most re- and Rosie O’Donnell. Mr. Mocent acting credit was a supPlease turn to page A10 mained as strong as when it made landfall, though by Sunday evening it was downgraded to a Category 3. Louisiana Gov. John Bel Edwards said this would be one of the strongest storms the state has experienced since at least the 1850s. Twenty-three Louisiana shelters housed about 1,500 people on Sunday, and those numbers were expected to increase as people discover that their homes are no longer habitable, Mr. Edwards said. Please turn to page A4 Pandemic Stokes Exurbs Boom Remote work, lower costs draw newcomers BY CAMERON MCWHIRTER AND PAUL OVERBERG MURFREESBORO, Tenn.— This bucolic town 30 miles southeast of Nashville, Tenn., was once best known for its nearby Civil War battlefield and state college. Now it is one of the fastest-growing places in the country. Surging housing costs and remote work are sending droves of people to live in new, fast-growing exurbs of metropolitan areas in the Southeast where suburban living has long been concentrated closer to the city. Nashville, Charlotte, N.C., Charleston, S.C., and Jacksonville, Fla., are among the places getting the type of outer-ring residential development once found only around the country’s largest cities. In 2020, net migration into a large group of exurban counties rose 37%, according to an analysis of U.S. Postal Service permanent changeof-address data by The Wall Street Journal. Nearly twothirds of the flow came from large cities and their close-in suburbs. Exurban areas, which include 240 counties as defined by the Brookings Institution, grew at almost twice the national rate over the past decade, a shift that began before the pandemic. There are signs it is accelerating this year as Americans prepare for an expected post-pandemic landscape where increased working from home reduces the need to commute. Researchers differ in defining exurbs, but they genPlease turn to page A10 For personal, non-commercial use only. Do not edit, alter or reproduce. For commercial reproduction or distribution, contact Dow Jones Reprints & Licensing at (800) 843-0008 or www.djreprints.com. A2 | Monday, August 30, 2021 THE WALL STREET JOURNAL. U.S. NEWS THE OUTLOOK | By David Harrison Congestion Pricing Picks Up Speed In 2003, London started charging drivers a fee to drive on the city center’s narrow streets. In the years since, studies have documented reduced traffic congestion, better bus service, fewer accidents and an improved overall quality of life. Jonathan Leape, a professor at the London School of Economics, has called the system “a triumph of economics.” The experiment has caught on. New York plans to implement a similar congestion charge south of 60th Street in Manhattan. San Francisco, Los Angeles, Seattle and other U.S. cities are considering it. Economists have been promoting congestion charges for years, said Matthew Turner, an economist at Brown University, especially now that the widespread adoption of transponders and GPS systems has removed some of the technological obstacles. “The technology has gotten better and we’ve gotten more experienced with it, so now it’s a pretty natural thing to do,” Mr. Turner said. Another boost came in the form of a $250 million con- gestion-relief grant program in the infrastructure bill passed by the Senate with bipartisan support and now before the House of Representatives. The legislation specifically says the money can be used to develop congestion-pricing programs like the one now being considered in New York. The money can be used both for studies and for implementation. I f the programs are new, the economic rationale behind them is not. As far back as 1920, British economist Arthur Pigou noted that each driver on a road imposes costs on other drivers. Those costs are borne by all drivers in the form of traffic congestion. The better way, Mr. Pigou argued, is to charge each driver a toll for the burden he or she places on all the other drivers, which economists call “negative externalities.” The toll would have to be high enough that it would discourage many people from driving and hold down congestion. The remaining drivers would then pay the real value of driving in freeflowing traffic. “There’s not a lot of economists’ division on this principle,” said Edward Glaeser, a Harvard University econo- Average taxi speeds in Manhattan’s central business district 10.0 miles per hour 7.5 5.0 2.5 0 2010 '15 '20 Note: The central business district encompasses the area south of 60th Street. Source: New York City Department of Transportation mist. “The basic idea that you get to the right outcomes only if you charge people for the externalities they create, that’s pretty canonical within the profession.” That doesn’t mean it’s easy to put into practice. New York’s plan has attracted vociferous opposition, particularly from New Jersey politicians, many of whose constituents commute to New York City by car. In April, Reps. Josh Gottheimer and Bill Pascrell Jr., both New Jersey Democrats, wrote to Transportation Sec- retary Pete Buttigieg opposing New York’s congestion charge proposal, saying that New Jersey commuters already pay tolls to cross the bridges and tunnels into New York. The fee, they wrote, would “damage the regional economy at a precarious moment.” New York state lawmakers signed off on the city’s congestion charge in 2019 and the federal Department of Transportation recently gave its permission to begin an environmental study of the congestion charge. The city’s public transit agency, which would run the program, estimates the study would take about 16 months, after which it could take almost a year to set up the program. E conomists say congestion charge programs need to be carefully administered to avoid harming lower-income commuters more than higher-income ones. In London, for instance, where lower-income households tend to not have cars, city officials ramped up bus service at the same time as the charge was imposed. “You’re saying to people you have an alternative which we’d like you to use,” said Christina Calderato, head of strategy and planning for London’s transpor- tation agency. “Doing one before the other doesn’t give people much of a choice.” In New York, revenue from the charge would go toward maintaining and expanding the transit system, but it is unclear whether bus and subway service would expand when the charge is put in place. “You want to make sure that the money that’s being paid is going to be going to things that offset the downsides of congestion pricing for the most vulnerable,” Mr. Glaeser said. That’s easier to do in cities with well-developed transit systems. “The situation becomes more difficult in places where everybody drives, rich and poor alike,” he said. “New York is an easier test case for that than, let’s say, Houston.” Another question is how the pandemic will reshape long-term travel patterns. If downtown workers stay home in large numbers, it could hold down congestion levels without resorting to fees. So far, there’s little evidence of that happening. Traffic entering New York City through crossings operated by the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey is back to pre-pandemic levels. ECONOMIC CALENDAR Tuesday: China’s factory activity is forecast to expand at its slowest pace in a year and a half in August after extreme weather and a resurgence of Covid-19 cases weighed on business activity. Economists expect the country’s official purchasing managers index to reflect record rainfall in central China at the end of July— which wreaked havoc on the region’s economy and tangled supply chains—and sporadic virus outbreaks that caused strict lockdowns in some cities. Wednesday: The Institute for Supply Management’s survey of purchasing managers at U.S. factories is expected to show activity expanded at a slower pace in August than in July. The Delta variant of Covid-19 has dented demand for some goods and services, while bottlenecks in global supply chains and trouble finding workers have snarled production. Thursday: The U.S. trade deficit likely narrowed in July as American consumers shifted spending toward in-person services and away from goods. Already, preliminary data for the month showed imports of consumer goods declining as demand softened. Friday: The U.S. unemployment rate is expected to hit the lowest level since the pandemic started in the country, as employers likely added jobs at a solid pace in August. Demand for labor has been strong, though economists caution that a resurgence of Covid-19 cases is an emerging risk for the economic outlook and their forecasts. Fed Grapples With Rates and Maximum Employment BY NICK TIMIRAOS Federal Reserve officials are talking more about how to define a fuzzy concept—maximum employment—that will heavily influence their thinking around how much longer to keep interest rates near zero. Favorable hiring conditions, as seen in record levels of job openings and job quitting, suggest “job seekers should help the economy cover the considerable remaining ground to reach maximum employment,” Fed Chairman Jerome Powell said in a speech Friday at the Kansas City Fed’s annual economic policy symposium. Assessing maximum employment, often described as the unemployment rate consistent with stable inflation, will be a delicate task for the Fed because officials concluded, in retrospect, that they overestimated it during the previous expansion and possibly raised interest rates too soon. Their deliberations figure to be more difficult now because of how the Covid-19 pandemic has upended normal economic activity—for example, by making it harder to determine how many people who left the labor force last year will return. “You still have the same challenge as last decade—in fact, a greater challenge—of determining what maximum employment looks like because of the immense disruption in the labor market,” said Julia Coronado, an economist who participated in Friday’s virtual presentations, where labor market dynamics were a major focus. Fed officials, investors and others will closely parse a Labor Department report to be released this week for details on workforce growth, unemployment and hiring in August, when the fast-spreading Delta variant of the Covid-19 virus cast new uncertainty over the economic outlook. For decades, Fed officials were guided by a model that said inflation would rise as unemployment fell below a certain level, and as unemployment rates approached those estimates, they raised interest rates to pre-empt inflation. At the Fed conference one year ago, Mr. Powell unveiled a new strategy designed to guard against repeating the Fed’s earlier mistake by calling for the central bank to allow unemployment to fall as low as possible so long as prices didn’t rise too far above the Fed’s 2% inflation goal. To reinforce its new approach last year, the Fed laid out three tests that would need to be met before raising rates. CORRECTIONS AMPLIFICATIONS Rep. Adam Kinzinger of Illinois is a Republican. The “Word on the Street” column in Review on Saturday incorrectly identified him as a Democrat. In some editions Saturday, a photo caption with an Afghanistan Crisis article about U.S. military personnel who were killed in Thursday’s Kabul airport attack misspelled Marine Corps Lance Cpl. Kareem Nikoui’s surname as Nikou. Also, in some editions the last name of Regi Stone, who spoke about Marine Lance Cpl. Rylee McCollum, was incorrectly given as Strong in one reference. Notice to readers Wall Street Journal staff members are working remotely during the pandemic. For the foreseeable future, please send reader comments only by email or phone, using the contacts below, not via U.S. Mail. Readers can alert The Wall Street Journal to any errors in news articles by emailing [email protected] or by calling 888-410-2667. 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By web: customercenter.wsj.com; By email: [email protected] By phone: 1-800-JOURNAL (1-800-568-7625) Reprints & licensing: By email: [email protected] By phone: 1-800-843-0008 WSJ back issues and framed pages: wsjshop.com Our newspapers are 100% sourced from sustainably certified mills. GOT A TIP FOR US? SUBMIT IT AT WSJ.COM/TIPS 84% Share of adults 25 to 54 years old who are working or seeking jobs is rebounding but remains below its pre-pandemic level. 83 82 81 80 2002 '05 '10 '15 '20 0 Total Nonfarm Payroll Unemployment Rate 150 million 15 % 145 10 140 5 135 130 2007 0 '10 '15 '20 2007 '10 '15 '20 Note: Seasonally adjusted. Sources: Labor Department via St. Louis Fed (labor force participation rate, payroll); Labor Department (unemployment rate) First, inflation would need to rise to 2%. Second, inflation would need to be expected to run moderately above 2%. Third, the labor market would Investors Signal Caution Continued from Page One vance. But rallies in these socalled defensive sectors can presage broader market retreats, investors said, potentially spelling out a fresh test for a market whose post-pandemic rise has surprised many stock-market bulls. “When those sectors are doing well, as they’re doing now, that tells you that the market is bracing for either a slowdown in the economy or some sort of a correction in the broad market,” said Phil Orlando, chief equity-market strategist at asset manager Federated Hermes. The market has powered to new highs through the pandemic, bolstered by aggressive central-bank interventions, government stimulus and a vigorous earnings recovery. The U.S. economy exceeded its pre-pandemic size in the second quarter of 2021, with S&P 500 companies’ profits rising 92% from a year earlier, according to analyst projections on FactSet. But as the second autumn of the pandemic approaches with no end in sight, questions about the markets’ resilience are coming to the fore. need to approach conditions consistent with maximum employment. Prices surged this summer due to disrupted supply chains, shortages and a rebound in travel, easily satisfying the Fed’s first condition, and officials are increasingly confident that they will achieve the second. Most of them had expected it would take years rather than months to meet the two inflation tests and didn’t expect to be discussing what maximum employment looks like so soon. Mr. Powell said last month the central bank considers a wide range of data in determining what constitutes maximum employment, including unemployment rates between different age groups and workforce participation rates. Several Fed officials, including Fed Vice Chairman Richard Clarida, have said they think the U.S. could reach maximum employment by next year. Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen, a former Fed chair, has a similar forecast. Mr. Powell said earlier this year the economy should be able to return to the unemployment rates that prevailed before the crisis, but he has shied away recently from suggesting that the U.S. can also return to the labor-force participation rates it achieved before the crisis. Several Fed officials have cautioned in recent weeks that it may be difficult to return to pre-pandemic labor market conditions. Dallas Fed President S&P 500 sector performance since the end of June 7.8% Utilities 6.6 Healthcare S&P 500 4.9 Source: FactSet The S&P 500 has advanced 20% this year and set 52 record closes—its highest number of records in a calendar year through the end of August, according to Dow Jones Market Data. Valuations have edged lower this year as earnings soared but remain at historically high levels. And the S&P 500 hasn’t experienced a 5% pullback since October, the longest such respite since a stretch from June 2016 to early February 2018. When the market has declined, investors have seen it as a buying opportunity. “Economic and earnings growth will likely be very good for the third quarter, but less than the second and maybe a little less than was expected,” said Bob Doll, chief investment officer at Crossmark Global Investments, which manages about $5.8 billion. Crossmark in recent months bought shares of utilities and healthcare stocks and trimmed positions in consumer-discretionary and materials companies, he said. The shift to defensive sectors in part reflects a retreat in expectations for economic reopening. Recent surveys suggest the U.S. economic expansion slowed in August as the spread of the Delta variant drove up infections. Hospitalizations for Covid-19 in the U.S. Rallies in so-called defensive sectors can presage broader market retreats. recently surpassed 100,000 for the first time since January. The shift in sentiment has helped propel stocks such as utility American Water Works Co., healthcare operator HCA Healthcare Inc. and grocery chain Kroger Co. to doubledigit percentage gains in July and August. Healthcare stocks have relatively attractive valuations, some investors said. The sec- Robert Kaplan, in a recent interview, said he thinks the U.S. has “lost somewhere between 4 or 4.5 million workers” due to retirements or caregiving. Mr. Kaplan thinks that could lead to more persistent price pressures as midsize and small businesses, in particular, pass along rising wages. A separate group of Fed officials say it is too early to conclude that the pandemic will fundamentally alter the labor market. The current debates are similar to those that followed the 2007-09 recession, in which many economists argued that workers had lost skills and weren’t likely to return to the labor force, said San Francisco Fed President Mary Daly in an interview earlier this month. Those people worried that falling unemployment would cause inflation to rise too much, and said the Fed should raise interest rates to prevent that from happening. Instead, as the labor market tightened, many people rejoined the workforce and inflation remained below 2%. There were “a lot of theories about why…we had reached full employment, even though we know now, in hindsight, that that was completely false,” Ms. Daly said. —Charity L. Scott contributed to this article. tor traded late last week at about 18 times its projected earnings over the next 12 months, compared with about 21 times for the S&P 500, according to FactSet. The utilities group, meanwhile, traded at 20 times projected earnings, a more modest discount to the broad market, but boasts a dividend yield of 3%—more than double that of the S&P 500. The recovery since last year’s market low has been marked by sharp rotations among favored groups of stocks. The energy sector was once hot. Now, it has lost ground this quarter, dropping 9.4% as oil prices retreated. Early in the year, expectations for a powerful economic rebound helped propel value stocks to their largest lead over technology and other growth stocks in two decades. Then, the spread of the Delta variant and lackluster economic data caused some investors to second-guess those wagers, and big tech once again moved to the top of the market. Now, the economy is continuing to grow but at a slower pace than some had anticipated, leading to the move into defensive holdings. “I think the market is going to continue to plow forward,” said Stephanie Lang, chief investment officer at wealth-management firm Homrich Berg. “Investors are going to continue to come in and buy the dip.” For personal, non-commercial use only. Do not edit, alter or reproduce. For commercial reproduction or distribution, contact Dow Jones Reprints & Licensing at (800) 843-0008 or www.djreprints.com. Monday, August 30, 2021 | A3 THE WALL STREET JOURNAL. U.S. NEWS Former Coal Mine Shifts to Lavender A West Virginia firm cultivates the plant as part of state effort to reimagine its economy ASHFORD, W.Va.—Charles Bowman’s hands used to be stained black with coal after work. Now, they smell like lavender. He is one of about 85 employees at Appalachian Botanical, a company that cultivates lavender on a former surface mine. Instead of coal, the company produces essential oils and other scented products and is part of a growing effort in West Virginia to reimagine an economy that is not dependent on coal. Mr. Bowman, 54, said he once made $37.50 an hour as an electrician in an underground mine. Those jobs are mostly gone. Now he makes $11.50 an hour. Despite the pay cut, working on a farm that has doubled its acreage in the past year makes him hopeful. “A year ago I heard nothing about lavender. Now it’s everywhere,” he said, standing on a plateau surrounded by misty ridges. “I think it’s going to get competitive.” Amid coal’s steady decline, efforts are growing to repurpose former mines and lead the way to diversifying the state’s economy, creating jobs and cleaning up the environment, while helping to revive coalfield communities. Other former surface mines in southern West Virginia are being used by a solar-installation company, a company that uses aquaponics technology to produce lettuce and tilapia, and one building cabins for tourists who visit ATV trails. The infrastructure bill in KRISTIAN THACKER FOR THE WALL STREET JOURNAL BY KRIS MAHER Appalachian Botanical cultivates lavender on a former surface mine in Ashford, W.Va., to be used in essential oils and other scented products. Congress currently would authorize $11.3 billion to pay for the reclamation of abandoned mine lands, with a significant portion of that heading to West Virginia. “We could emerge five or 10 years from now with a diversified economy that supports small towns in regions that were supported solely by coal,” said Evan Hansen, a Democratic state lawmaker and president of Downstream Strategies, a West Virginia environmental and economic development consulting firm. An estimated 550 square miles of West Virginia have been strip-mined, and less than 2% of that land has been redeveloped, according to Downstream Strategies. The sites of- fer flat land and typically have roads and access to water but can also be remote. Diversifying an economy once powered by coal—by turning mountains flattened by mining into an economic driver—is a tall order in a region that has been losing population and is still plagued by the opioid epidemic. Boone County, where Appalachian Botanical is located, has lost nearly 15% of its population during the past decade. In 2019, mines in the county employed 775 workers, down from 4,092 workers in 2010, according to the latest available state records. Since 2010, the county’s tax revenue from coal has fallen 94%. County officials are now focused on keeping the courthouse running, said Brett Kuhn, a county commissioner who teaches history at a local high school. The county employs 74 people, half as many as five years ago. Jocelyn Sheppard, 61, president of Appalachian Botanical, said the idea for the company came from a 2017 demonstration project with funding from the Appalachian Regional Commission and other groups to see if lavender would grow on a former mine. Ms. Sheppard joined the project as a grant writer. When the plants flourished she saw the commercial possibilities. She asked the land company involved in the project to identify another mine, and she got support from the coal company that had been reclaiming the new site. Despite having no farming experience, Ms. Sheppard signed a 15-year agricultural lease and launched the company in 2018 with a seven-figure investment from a single investor. When the Boone County Economic Development Corp. kicked in $5,000, she said it was an important sign of local support. She pays royalties to the land company, while the coal company, White Forest Resources, is saving money because it no longer has to plant trees under its obligations with the state to return the site to productive use. Jeff Wilson, president and CEO of the coal company, said he expects the lavender farm to keep expanding. Access to rail and electrical infrastructure could make other projects, including manufacturing, attractive on former mines in the state, he said. Last year, U.S. coal production fell to 535 million tons, the lowest level since 1965. Brandon Dennison, CEO of Coalfield Development Corp., a nonprofit aimed at diversifying the economy in southern West Virginia, said he sees greater acknowledgment in the state that mining won’t return to past levels. “When I started in 2010 nobody was talking about the end of the coal industry,” Mr. Dennison said. “It’s a 180 from that in the past few years.” Crypto Firms’ Bid To Tap Fed System Meets Resistance TARA ROSE WESTON FOR THE WALL STREET JOURNAL BY ANDREW ACKERMAN Juel Burnette, who runs the Sioux Falls branch of 1st Tribal Lending, outside a home on Rosebud Reservation that the lender helped get. Mortgages on Tribal Land Hard to Come By BY BEN EISEN SIOUX FALLS, S.D.—It usually takes a few months to write a mortgage. It once took Juel Burnette four years. Mr. Burnette runs the Sioux Falls branch of 1st Tribal Lending, one of the few firms that specialize in making home loans on Native American reservations. The byzantine process winds through two federal agencies and tribal governments before it even reaches the banking system. Most lenders don’t even attempt it. Mr. Burnette tells aspiring homeowners to buckle up. “We talk through the hurdles with them,” he said. America’s tribal lands, home to more than a million people, are often credit deserts, lacking the access to capital necessary to make homeownership a reality for the Native Americans who desire to live on them. Traditional mortgages in the U.S. are secured by two valuable pieces of collateral: the home itself and the land on which it sits. But in Indian Country, swaths of land are held in trust, preventing lenders from staking a claim if the homeowner stops paying. There is a workaround, but it is complicated. Obtaining the necessary approvals can take years, even for borrowers working with experienced lenders like Mr. Burnette. It is one reason Native Americans are less likely to be homeowners: Some 57% of Native Americans owned homes in 2019, versus 72% of whites, according to the Minneapolis Fed’s Center for Indian Most Renters Are Eager to Buy Indian Country needs tens of billions of dollars of new housing, according to the Center for Indian Country Development. As a result, overcrowding is common and homes are sometimes in poor condition. A recent survey showed most of the renters on tribal land would like to own their own homes. Housing counselors say younger residents are most eager to buy. Country Development. “When it’s easier to violate indigenous people’s rights by building pipelines through our land, by mining uranium on our land, than it is to get a mortgage, you know something is wrong,” said Nick Tilsen, a member of the Oglala Lakota Nation and president of NDN Collective, a nonprofit that does grass-roots organizing and makes grants and loans to indigenous-led organizations. The U.S. financial system has built a well-oiled machine for extending credit to high-earning Americans with conventional finances. The machine sputters when confronted with borrowers on the margins, making it tougher to attain homeownership and its wealthbuilding potential. Still, there is some optimism in Indian Country that change is afoot. Deb Haaland this year The Lakota Federal Credit Union, based on the Pine Ridge Reservation to the west of Rosebud, started making home loans in the past year. The credit union has made four so far, with interest rates ranging from 6% to 8%. Tawney Brunsch, who chartered the credit union through her nonprofit lender, Lakota Funds, hopes that its roughly $6 million in deposits will give it firepower to make more loans. “We’re creating all of our own options because that’s what we have to do,” said Ms. Brunsch, a member of the Oglala Lakota Nation. became the first Native American to lead the U.S. Department of Interior, which oversees the Bureau of Indian Affairs. Marcia Fudge, the secretary of Housing and Urban Development, spoke about mortgage access on reservations during her confirmation hearing. Two senators introduced legislation in June to expand mortgage credit on reservations through the U.S. Department of Agriculture. Getting credit flowing is a tall task. Last year, lenders packaged up and sold less than $900 million of loans through the federal program that supports American Indian home buyers, a tiny fraction of the $4 trillion-plus U.S. mortgage market, according to industry research firm Inside Mortgage Finance. The Section 184 Indian Home Loan Guarantee Program, administered by HUD, was estab- lished in the 1990s to jumpstart the flow of mortgage capital to American Indian communities. “We put significant priority on strengthening the [Section 184] program resources while working across HUD and Ginnie Mae, along with other federal agencies to advance this work,” a HUD spokeswoman said. A Department of Interior spokesman declined to comment. The program allows a loan to be made against land leased from the trust. (It can also be used by American Indians on nontrust land.) Obtaining that ground lease requires permission from both the tribal leadership on the reservation and the Bureau of Indian Affairs. Both parties also must approve the sale of an owner-occupied house on leased land. It took more than a year for T.J. Plenty Chief to get a lease to build a home on North Dakota’s Fort Berthold Reservation. He spent about four months obtaining the various approvals from the Bureau of Indian Affairs and his tribes, the Mandan, Hidatsa and Arikara Nation. But then he learned the lease wasn’t written in a way that would be acceptable for a federal guarantee on his loan from HUD. He had to go back through the approval process again, which finished late last year. Though he is now ready to take on the mortgage from 1st Tribal, the cost of lumber and other materials has risen so much that Mr. Plenty Chief fears he can no longer afford to build. The project is on hold. Cryptocurrency companies want to tap into the Federal Reserve payments systems that traditional banks use to move money around quickly. The banks are pushing back. The companies include Avanti Bank, which aims to provide custody services for institutional investors in cryptocurrencies, and Kraken, a cryptocurrency exchange platform. They say direct access to the Fed’s payment systems would allow them to more quickly and cheaply process orders from customers buying and selling digital assets. Currently they must partner with traditional banks that have accounts with the Fed. Traditional banks say the newer financial firms are supervised relatively lightly and lack the internal controls needed to ensure against money laundering and other illicit activities—concerns that regulators have expressed about the crypto industry more broadly. And they say the firms are riskier because they aren’t insured by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. “It is reasonable to expect that such applicants will pose heightened risks regarding matters of anti-money-laundering, cybersecurity and consumer protection, as well as safety and soundness,” the Bank Policy Institute, which represents large banks, and the Independent Community Bankers of America wrote in a letter to the Fed last month. Avanti and Kraken, which both have “special purpose” bank charters in Wyoming, say they have all the same compliance, controls and supervisory requirements of traditional banks. The only U.S. bank regulator that has a supervisory exam manual for crypto is in Wyoming, they say. If they have their way on access to the Fed’s payment systems, that could encourage more firms to follow their example, introducing more competition for banks. “It has the potential to reduce banks’ traditional role as gatekeepers and toll collectors for payment flows that are likely to grow over time,” said Jonah Crane, a partner at Klaros Group, an advisory and investment firm. Last year, the central bank processed about $900 trillion in payments on its systems. These ranged from small bankto-bank payments such as direct deposits or automatic bill payments to large wire transfers between financial institutions. The struggle over access to the Fed’s payment systems also reflects incumbent banks’ concerns about potential competition from larger tech companies, such as Facebook Inc. and Google parent Alphabet Inc., which don’t face the same level of federal bank regulation. “They have some reason to be paranoid,” said Eugene Ludwig, a former comptroller of the currency, who was responsible for the regulation of large national banks. Caitlin Long, chief executive of Avanti, said granting direct access to the Fed’s payment systems to banks that cater to Traditional banks, newer firms struggle over access to Fed’s payment systems. the digital asset sector should be welcomed because doing so would bring them under the watchful eyes of regulators. “The absence of action to open a direct path has pushed much of the U.S. dollar banking of the digital asset industry into the ‘shadow’ banking system, which means risks cannot be readily monitored,” she wrote in a July comment letter. Kraken describes itself as just as safe as an FDIC-insured bank because it doesn’t lend out depositors’ money and holds 100% of their cash at a correspondent bank or at the Fed, via its correspondent institution. “I agree these banks need to have a bank-grade supervisory and oversight program,” said David Kinitsky, chief executive of Kraken Bank, a wholly owned unit of Kraken. “We do.” For personal, non-commercial use only. Do not edit, alter or reproduce. For commercial reproduction or distribution, contact Dow Jones Reprints & Licensing at (800) 843-0008 or www.djreprints.com. A4 | Monday, August 30, 2021 P W L C 10 11 12 H T G K R F A M 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 O I X X THE WALL STREET JOURNAL. ***** U.S. NEWS BY ROBBIE WHELAN were drawn by sky-high pay and the chance to help hardhit communities like New York City. Others left the profession after long months treating critically ill patients. Fueled by intense demand, and paid for in part with federal emergency funding to hospitals, travel-nurse pay has skyrocketed. In December 2019, average gross weekly wages for a travel nurse were around $1,600 a week, according to data from Vivian Health, a healthcare recruiting company. One year later, average pay was more than $3,500 a week. After declining from a winter peak, pay is rising again as the Delta variant rages through states with lower vaccination rates. Average weekly gross wages for a registered nurse working on a travel contract in the U.S. rose to $2,597 in early August, the highest rates since February, Vivian Health said. High crisis pay is exacerbating a chronic shortage of permanent medical staff across the country, which predates the pandemic and extends to all parts of the healthcare system. Hospital Before the coronavirus pandemic, Ivette Palomeque made $45 an hour on a flexible schedule as a staff intensive-care nurse at Memorial Hermann Health System in Houston. Today, she earns $120 an hour working in an ICU in McAllen, Texas, the latest in a string of “travel nurse” jobs she has held over the past 16 months. The journey has taken her from Miami to New York City and back to Texas. She plans to work high-paid crisis contracts as long as she can. Nursing pay may never be this good again, she said, and persistent understaffing means that working conditions for staff nurses aren’t likely to improve. “Going back to a staff job is just not an option,” said Ms. Palomeque, 45 years old. “Absolutely not.” The pandemic has altered the labor market for nurses and other medical staff. As Covid-19 spread in spring 2020 and filled emergency rooms with sick patients, thousands of hospital staffers Hurricane Ida Slams Louisiana Ivette Palomeque more than doubled her pay when she left her staff position for travel-nurse jobs. permanent reset of wages for all nurses, said April Kapu, president of the American Association of Nurse Practitioners. “This pandemic has highlighted how important nurses are to the workforce, so bringing their pay in alignment with the market is more important than ever,” Ms. Kapu said. Rachel Norton, a registered nurse from Albany, N.Y., took a temporary travel assignment in Denver in mid-2019. When the pandemic hit, the hospital in Denver offered her a $1,000 weekly bonus to extend the assignment, and she accepted. How the 133-mile Greater New Orleans storm-risk reduction system has been fortified since hurricanes Katrina and Rita in 2005 Lake Pontchartrain ST. CHARLES PARISH Since then she has taken crisis assignments in Arizona and California as well, and doesn’t plan to return to the East Coast. “Once nurses are done with a crisis contract, they don’t want to go back to the bedside where they know they’re going to be short-staffed and underpaid,” Ms. Norton said. Some hospitals are offering once unheard-of signing bonuses for nurses who accept longer assignments: $40,000 at Monument Health’s hospital in Rapid City, S.D., $20,000 at Temple University Hospital in Philadelphia, and $10,000 at St. Charles Health in Bend, Ore., according to the hospitals. Allegheny Health Network in Pittsburgh is offering $15,000 bonuses to nurses who sign long-term contracts. Chief Nurse Executive Claire Zangerle said the system and many other hospitals can’t match the pay and benefits, such as vacation time, that some staffing agencies offer. “Most of us are not-forprofit, and these labor costs are not in our budgets,” she said. “We’re desperate for nurses.” —Melanie Evans contributed to this article. Levees Floodwalls Pumping stations Major breaches during Hurricane Katrina Outfall canals Surge barriers A new system allows storm water to leave the city's drainage canals while blocking lake water from entering. Two major projects totaling about $1.5 billion now protect against storm surge from nearby lakes. Seabrook Floodgate Complex Louis Armstrong New Orleans Airport Lake Borgne Surge Barrier Wall JEFFERSON PARISH NEW ORLEANS Mississippi R. Lake Borgne Lower Ninth Ward French Quarter ST. BERNARD PARISH 3 miles 3 km Pumping stations West Closure Complex An $85 million overhaul has improved equipment and increased staffing. The nearly $1 billion facility includes the world’s largest drainage pump system and provides the first line of defense from storm surge entering canals to the city’s south. Levee and floodwall upgrades In addition to widening and raising many of the structures, the Army Corps has installed grass, large rocks and other measures to reduce erosion, a primary cause of levee failure. Source: U.S. Army Corps of Engineers Potential storm surge flooding Expected feet of water through Thursday 3 feet 6 9 Leveed areas MISSISSIPPI LOUISIANA Baton Rouge MARK FELIX/AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE/GETTY IMAGES Continued from Page One “For most of the state, current weather conditions are only the very beginning of what’s to come,” he wrote in a tweet Sunday afternoon. Katrina, which made landfall on Aug. 29, 2005, as a Category 3 hurricane, killed more than 1,800 people and caused more than $100 billion in property damage, largely because of the failure of levees that led to catastrophic flooding. A major concern of Ida was whether a $14.6 billion hurricane risk-reduction system put in place since Katrina would withstand the storm’s surges. Mr. Edwards, a Democrat, said there would be some overtopping of levees but that levee failures weren’t expected. Still, even damage less severe than a full breach could have devastating effects, said Andy Horowitz, an associate professor of history at Tulane University in New Orleans and author of “Katrina: A History, 1915-2015.” “Many people may die from flooding and drown in their homes if the system is overtopped even if the walls don’t fall down,” he said. The hurricane comes as Louisiana hospitals are already burdened with Covid-19 patients. Cases from the highly contagious Delta variant have surged in the state, and officials cautioned that any casualties from the storm would further strain the system. Some residents cited that risk as an additional reason for evacuating. Speaking at the headquarters of the Federal Emergency Management Agency, President Biden also urged residents to take precautions. He said the federal government was working to open dozens of shelters and was prepared to distribute 2.5 million meals and 3 million liters of water. He signed emergency declarations for Louisiana and Mississippi. In New Orleans, with many locals gone when the storm arrived, shops and restaurants in the famed French Quarter were boarded up as wind gusts buffeted the city. The Mississippi River near Jackson Square was roiling. Winds coming from the Gulf reversed the river’s direction, which officials said wasn’t uncommon for a storm of this magnitude. Zach Harrison, 25 years old, a Tulane’s School of Social Work student, said he decided to shelter in place with two friends in Mid-City but now regretted the decision. They cooked 5 pounds of shrimp and listened to Van Morrison until the power went out Sunday afternoon. “I’m worried about the wind blowing the roof off. I’m also worried about extreme flooding,” Mr. Harrison said. “I stayed because of indecisiveness. By the time you realize it’s really, really bad, it’s Sun- leaders expect their labor crunch to persist long after the pandemic has calmed. At Harris Health System in Houston, vacancy across 2,200 bedside nursing positions is about 22%, up from 8% before the pandemic. Harris Health said in mid-August that it would raise pay for all emergency-department and adultICU nurses to $140 an hour until staffing levels stabilize. “The hospital is not going to be able to survive on hiring travel nurses in perpetuity,” said Maureen Padilla, Harris Health’s senior vice president for nursing services. Shortages have created a skills gap at Harris Health, Ms. Padilla said: Inexperienced nurses are helping with more complex care, leading to higher risk of mistakes. Hospitals have reported chronic nurse shortages for several years. The National Institutes of Health estimates that there was a shortage of about one million nurses in the U.S. in 2020. The added pressure from the pandemic and high pay rates for travel nurses could spur a VERÓNICA G. CÁRDENAS FOR THE WALL STREET JOURNAL High Pay for Nurses Fuels Staffing Woes New Orleans Gulf of Mexico A firefighter walks in the rain on a road in Bourg, La., as Hurricane Ida passes through Sunday. Source: NOAA day already.” Ida had intensified early Sunday to a Category 4 hurricane, after crossing the warmest and deepest part of the Gulf of Mexico, the National Weather Service in New Orleans said. The region was expected to see rainfall of as much as 20 inches or more. A surge of 12 feet to 16 feet was expected between Port Fourchon and the mouth of the Mississippi River. Tornadoes were possible from Louisiana to the Florida panhandle. The weather service also issued an extreme wind warning for areas near New Orleans on Sunday. “If you are under a mandatory evacuation…LEAVE NOW!” the weather service in New Orleans warned Saturday evening. “You do not want to play expected to get 10 feet of storm surge, Howard Russell, 65, said he was planning to stay home Sunday, even though his daughter Gabrielle Russell, a 23-year-old nursing student, evacuated from New Orleans to Kingwood, Texas. Ms. Russell said she was worried about her father staying in the house where she grew up because there is a lake beyond their backyard. “We’ll be experiencing quite a few feet of water. You just never know how much rain can build up,” she said. Her father boarded up its front door and planned to watch the news Sunday. He said he had enough gas to run his generator for a week and supplies to last a month. But he was still hoping that the storm would pass and that he would be able to drive to work around with your life, and it is not worth it to stay if you have the means to leave.” Restaurants, bars and other businesses in and around New Orleans had been closed since Saturday afternoon. Many were boarded up and fortified with sandbags as early as Saturday. Even 24-7 dive bars such as Ms. Mae’s and Brothers 3 closed Saturday morning. Only a Walmart, a Winn-Dixie and a few other stores were open Saturday in the city’s uptown neighborhood. Many people in low-lying areas had moved their cars to higher ground. By Saturday night, only a few people strolled down Bourbon Street in the normally packed French Quarter. Austin Lane, 38, who owns a Mexican restaurant called El Cucuy, planned to ride out the storm Sunday just to the north in Carriere, Miss. He drove out of New Orleans on Saturday afternoon with his girlfriend, Meghan Ackerman, 40, their four dogs, two cats and two chickens. Most of his 19 employees also evacuated, some to Houston and one to as far away as Missouri, he said. The couple brought a generator, headlamps, candles, sausage and two crates of water. As the hurricane pounded their shelter, they brought the chickens inside and cracked open a bottle of bourbon. “By no means is it a supersafe destination,” Mr. Lane said. “It’s still in the path of the hurricane. It’s just the best I could do after I got my people out and could lock the place up.” In Houma, La., which was Monday morning. “It’s not my first rodeo,” Dr. Russell said. “My biggest fears are all my shingles coming off my roof.” Ida’s path made it a threat to the vast oil-refining and petrochemical complex along the Gulf Coast, which produces some 4.4 million barrels a day of refining capacity, almost a quarter of the nation’s total. Oil companies in the Gulf of Mexico account for about 17% of U.S. oil production and 5% of natural gas output. As of Sunday, Gulf offshore producers had shut about 96% of their oil production and 94% of gas output, according to the Bureau of Safety and Environmental Enforcement. Before the storm reached the Louisiana coast, oil refiners in the region had also reduced refining capacity. For personal, non-commercial use only. Do not edit, alter or reproduce. For commercial reproduction or distribution, contact Dow Jones Reprints & Licensing at (800) 843-0008 or www.djreprints.com. THE WALL STREET JOURNAL. Monday, August 30, 2021 | A5 OBITUARY CALIFORNIA Ed Asner, Lou Grant On TV, Dies at 91 Caldor Fire Moves Toward Lake Tahoe Ed Asner, the burly and prolific character actor who became a star in middle age as the gruff but lovable newsman Lou Grant, first in the hit comedy “The Mary Tyler Moore Show” and later in the drama “Lou Grant,” died Sunday. He was 91. Mr. Asner’s representative confirmed the actor’s death. Mr. Asner’s official Twitter account included a note from his children: “We are sorry to say that our beloved patriarch passed away this morning peacefully.” The balding Mr. Asner was a journeyman actor in films and TV when he was hired in 1970 to play Lou Grant on “The Mary Tyler Moore Show.” For seven seasons he was the rumpled boss to Ms. Moore’s ebullient Mary Richards at the fictional Minneapolis TV newsroom where both worked. Later, he would play the role for five years on “Lou Grant.” The part brought Mr. Asner three best supporting actor Emmys on “Mary Tyler Moore” and two best actor awards on “Lou Grant.” He also won Emmys for his roles in the miniseries “Rich Man, Poor Man” and “Roots.” He had more than 300 acting credits and remained active throughout his 70s and 80s in a variety of film and TV roles. As Screen Actors Guild president, the liberal Mr. Asner was caught up in a political controversy in 1982 when he spoke out against U.S. involvement with repressive governments in Latin America. Mr. Asner remained politically active for the rest of his life and in 2017 published the book “The Grouchy Historian: An Old-Time Lefty Defends Our Constitution Against Right-Wing Hypocrites and Nutjobs.” —Associated Press Rising temperatures and increasing winds on Sunday added to the challenges faced by firefighters battling blazes across Northern California, including one that continued its march toward the Lake Tahoe resort region. “It is going to be the hottest day so far since the fire began, and unfortunately, probably the driest,” said Isaac Lake, a spokesman for crews battling the two-week-old Caldor Fire. Flames churned through mountains just a few miles southwest of the Tahoe Basin, where thick smoke sent tourists packing at a time when summer vacations would be in full swing. Triple-digit temperatures were possible and the extreme heat was expected to last several days, Mr. Lake said. A redflag warning for critical fire conditions was issued for Monday and Tuesday across the Northern Sierra. Crews working in rugged terrain worked to douse spot fires caused by erratic winds. The blaze that broke out Aug. 14 was 19% contained after burning nearly 245 square miles—an area larger than Chicago. More than 600 structures have been destroyed and at least 18,000 more were under threat. Meanwhile, California’s Dixie Fire, the second-largest in state history at 1,193 square miles, was 48% contained in the SierraCascades region. Nearly 700 homes were among almost 1,300 buildings that have been destroyed since the fire began in early July. —Associated Press EVERETT COLLECTION U.S. WATCH Ed Asner in 1977. He played Lou Grant on two shows and won five of his seven Emmys for the role. OUR NEW KENTUCKY HOME CAPE CANAVERAL SpaceX Launches Shipment to Station A SpaceX shipment of ants, avocados and a human-size robotic arm rocketed toward the International Space Station on Sunday. The delivery—due to arrive Monday—is the company’s 23rd for NASA in just under a decade. A recycled Falcon rocket blasted into the predawn sky from NASA’s Kennedy Space Center. After hoisting the Dragon capsule, the first-stage booster landed upright on SpaceX’s newest ocean platform. The Dragon is carrying more than 4,800 pounds of supplies and experiments, and fresh food including avocados, lemons and even ice cream for the space station’s seven astronauts. The Girl Scouts are sending up ants, brine shrimp and plants as test subjects, while University of Wisconsin-Madison scientists are flying up seeds from mouseear cress, a small flowering weed used in genetic research. —Associated Press PRATT INDUSTRIES announces its new $400M 100% recycled Paper Mill in Kentucky WISCONSIN Man Shot by Police Hopes to Walk Again A Black man who was left paralyzed from the waist down after he was shot by a white police officer in Wisconsin expects to be walking soon, an accomplishment he says is tempered by fears of it happening again. Jacob Blake Jr. was shot seven times by a Kenosha police officer in August 2020. Mr. Blake told CNN he was able to take a few steps during his son’s birthday celebration this past week, which he compared with sliding his legs through a woodchipper. “Yeah, I’m here, and yeah I’m about to be walking, but I really don’t feel like I have survived because it could happen to me again,” Mr. Blake told the network. “I have not survived until something has changed.” Mr. Blake was shot by Kenosha police Officer Rusten Sheskey after he and two other Kenosha officers tried to arrest Blake on an outstanding warrant. A pocketknife fell from Mr. Blake’s pants during a scuffle. He said he picked it up before heading to a vehicle to drive away with two of his children in the back seat. He said he was prepared to surrender once he put the knife in the vehicle. Officer Sheskey, who wasn’t charged, told investigators that he feared for his own safety. The shooting touched off chaotic protests in the Kenosha area, during which time an Illinois teenager allegedly shot and killed two demonstrators and wounded another. —Associated Press Sketch of our State-of-the-Art 450,000-square-foot Paper Mill in Henderson, Kentucky. Thank You Governor Andy Beshear www.prattindustries.com For personal, non-commercial use only. Do not edit, alter or reproduce. For commercial reproduction or distribution, contact Dow Jones Reprints & Licensing at (800) 843-0008 or www.djreprints.com. A6 | Monday, August 30, 2021 * *** THE WALL STREET JOURNAL. THE AFGHANISTAN CRISIS Americans Uneasy on Exit Most back withdrawal after 20 years of war, but split on how much blame Biden deserves By Catherine Lucey in Philadelphia and Joshua Jamerson in St. Marys, Ga. Ms. Garcia, a 49-year-old customer-service manager from South Philadelphia who voted for Mr. Biden, said the president “got stuck with a lot of it” and “did the best with the information he had.” Mr. Montani, 60, a retired financial adviser from Valley Forge who didn’t cast a vote for president in 2020, said Mr. Biden “hasn’t come out and explained or defended or taken responsibility for what appears to be a logistical disaster.” Their comments reflect the mixed feelings of many Americans as they follow what has quickly become the greatest foreign-policy challenge of Mr. Biden’s presidency. Interviews conducted both before and after Thursday’s deadly bombing with more than two dozen Americans in Georgia and Pennsylvania, two states pivotal to Mr. Biden’s election victory, captured broad support for leaving Afghanistan, but more mixed views on the exit itself. Many of the responses fell along party lines. A CBS News/YouGov survey taken Aug. 18-20 found that while 63% of adults backed the decision to withdraw troops from Afghanistan, 70% thought the removal should have been handled better. An ABC News/Ipsos poll BY ALEX LEARY AND NANCY A. YOUSSEF WAKIL KOHSAR/AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE/GETTY IMAGES Daniella Garcia and Robert Montani both think it is past time for U.S. troops to withdraw from Afghanistan. But the two Pennsylvanians diverge on how much blame to put on President Biden for the messy exit. Troops’ Remains Return Home A Taliban fighter stood guard at the site of Thursday’s deadly attack at the Kabul airport. conducted Aug. 27-28, after the bombing, found that 84% of adults believed U.S. troops should stay in Afghanistan until all Americans have been evacuated, and 71% said troops should remain until all Afghans who aided the U.S. have been evacuated. The survey found 59% of adults disapproved of Mr. Biden’s handling of Afghanistan while 38% approved—down from 55% who approved in a late July poll. The Afghanistan exit comes as Mr. Biden’s administration is already battling with rising Covid-19 cases and has drawn criticism of his judgment and leadership from Republicans and some fellow Democrats. Some people said they weren’t following the situation closely, and others made clear that Afghanistan wasn’t their top priority. “I’m not worried about it. I’m trying to get the U.S. going—and out of Covid,” said Jackie Strong of St. Marys, Ga. A retired teacher’s aide, Ms. Strong said Mr. Biden, whom she supports, was “doing the best he can do” in Afghanistan. Since his 2020 campaign, Mr. Biden has pitched himself as an experienced and empathetic leader, seeking to present a steady contrast to the unpredictable policy-making of former President Donald Trump. The deadly Afghanistan exit poses a threat to that image, political operatives in both parties say, and could distract from his priorities: battling a new wave of Covid-19 infections and advancing new spending proposals to address infrastructure and poverty. The president’s advisers argue that leaving Afghanistan is broadly popular, and Democrats maintain that the economy and Covid-19 will be the leading issues in next year’s midterm elections. Democrats hold a narrow majority in the House and control the evenly divided Senate, putting Mr. Biden’s party at risk of losing legislative power in next year’s elections. Mr. Biden spoke from the White House on Thursday to address the suicide bombing at the airport in Kabul that killed 13 Americans and almost 200 Afghans. He again defended his decision to exit, saying it was “time to end a 20-year war.” White House spokesman Andrew Bates said the public agrees “with the president’s decision that it would have been unjust and not in our interest to commit American troops to more intense fighting.” Some Americans interviewed said the president’s handling of Afghanistan hadn’t changed their views on his leadership abilities. “He’s still just an empathetic person,” said Serena Sunflowers, a server and gigeconomy worker in St. Marys, who added that she thought Mr. Biden was showing that he identified with families of troops who hopefully would get to come home. “If my husband was there right now, and just got pulled out, I’d be so happy about it,” said Ms. Sunflowers, a Democrat. Joseph Ferrell, 32, a real-estate agent from Springfield, Pa., who voted for Mr. Trump, said the situation in Afghanistan was “horrible.” “There should be an exit, but you have to come up with a plan,” he said. The remains of 13 service members killed in the suicide bombing in Afghanistan last week arrived at Dover Air Force Base in Delaware on Sunday, in a somber moment that highlighted the human toll of a nearly 20-year war nearing its tumultuous end. President Biden participated in a dignified transfer ritual and met with families of the fallen troops, whose remains were carried off an aircraft in flag-draped transfer cases. The 13 service members were remembered as brave and committed by those who knew them. Mr. Biden on Saturday called them “heroes who made the ultimate sacrifice in service of our highest American ideals and while saving the lives of others.” Joining Mr. Biden was first lady Jill Biden and a large group of officials including Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin; Army Gen. Mark Milley, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff; Gen. David Berger, the Marine Corps commandant; and Secretary of State Antony Blinken. Eleven of the transfers were witnessed by reporters, with the two others conducted in privacy at request of family members. Sobbing was audible to reporters as the families looked on. The president and others walked to the ramp of a C-17 Globemaster that carried the remains and held for a prayer. Mr. Biden, wearing a black mask, held a hand to his heart as “present arms” was called with each transfer case and he occasionally lowered his head and closed his eyes. Troops in military fatigues, wearing white gloves, carried the cases to vans. Some of the family members have been critical of Mr. Biden’s withdrawal plan, which has raised questions from lawmakers in both parties. The president has pushed for a withdrawal by Aug. 31, saying the U.S. shouldn’t risk more loss in a nearly 20-year war. The oldest of the service members killed was 31 and the most common age among them was 20. Some of the Americans killed were infants on Sept. 11, 2001, when al Qaeda operatives hijacked four planes and attacked New York and the Pentagon, killing citizens there as well as in Pennsylvania and leading to the U.S. invasion into Afghan- The 13 fallen service members were remembered as brave and committed. istan a month later. The 13 service members and nearly 200 Afghans were killed Thursday when a suicide bomber detonated himself outside Abbey Gate at Hamid Karzai International Airport, where troops were checking Afghans trying to get a flight out of the country. The bombing was followed by gunfire from suspected militants, and Afghans said some were killed by U.S. military gunfire after the bombing. Another 20 troops and 300 Afghans were injured. It was the deadliest attack on U.S. troops in Afghanistan in a decade and the first U.S. military combat fatalities in Afghanistan since February 2020. Continued from Page One ously agreed upon by the Taliban before they would take control of the airport in Kabul. The drone took aim at a vehicle carrying suspected suicide bombers, the Pentagon said. The U.S. believed it successfully struck the vehicle, but couldn’t say how many bombers were hit. A senior Afghan health official who also worked with the U.S.-backed government said the strike killed five civilians and hit a house. In a statement, U.S. Central Command, which is responsible for military operations in Afghanistan, said it was aware of reports of civilian deaths from the strike and is “still assessing the results of this strike.” The Biden administration said it remained committed to Afghanistan, even as the U.S. presence faded fast amid mounting security concerns. The U.S.’s final exit from Afghanistan raises the prospect that thousands of Afghans who worked alongside U.S. forces, diplomats and humanitarian groups could be left behind. It also compromises the international community’s ability to protect women and girls and certain religious minorities, which are considered particularly vulnerable to persecution by the Taliban regime. On Sunday, President Biden and first lady Jill Biden met with the grieving Gold Star families of the 13 service members lost in a suicide bombing outside the airport last week. Later in the day, at a briefing on Hurricane Ida at FEMA headquarters, Mr. Biden spoke briefly about the deceased and their families. “While we’re praying for the best in Louisiana, let’s keep them in our prayers as well,” said Mr. Biden, a Democrat. He declined to take questions on Afghanistan. Early Saturday, the U.S. conducted airstrikes against ISIS-K, the group that claimed responsibility for Thursday’s attack, killing two people whom the Pentagon described as a planner and a facilitator. Mr. Biden warned on Saturday that another attack was highly likely and said he or- EPA/SHUTTERSTOCK Drones Target Bombers Smoke billowed near Kabul’s Hamid Karzai International Airport Sunday after U.S. drone strikes that targeted suspected suicide bombers ahead of the U.S. deadline to withdraw. dered his military commanders to “take every possible measure to prioritize force protection.” Almost all the remaining U.S. Embassy staffers had already packed up and left Kabul by Sunday, to allow enough time for thousands of U.S. personnel and equipment to be sent home, essentially bringing to an end the potential for further mass evacuations, a U.S. official said. Fewer than half a dozen consular-services people will remain on a temporary basis but their role in evacuating any remaining applicants will be limited, the official said. On Sunday, Secretary of State Antony Blinken all but ruled out a U.S. diplomatic presence in Afghanistan after Tuesday. “That’s not likely to happen,” he said on NBC, adding that the U.S. is committed to helping people leave the country before or after the U.S. withdrawal. In a joint statement on Sunday, the U.S. and nearly 100 countries declared their commitment “to ensuring that our citizens, nationals and residents, employees, Afghans who have worked with us and those who are at risk can continue to travel freely to destinations outside Afghanistan.” “We have received assurances from the Taliban that all foreign nationals and any Afghan citizen with travel authorization from our countries will be allowed to proceed in a safe and orderly manner to points of departure and travel outside the country,” the statement said. President Emmanuel Macron of France said his administration is drafting a plan to create a safe zone in Kabul monitored by the United Nations that would allow evacuations and humanitarian operations to continue after Tuesday’s deadline. France and the U.K. are planning to submit the plan to the United Nations Security Council when it meets on Monday, Mr. Macron said in an interview with the French publication Le Journal du Dimanche. As of Sunday morning, about 2,900 people were evacuated from Kabul over the previous 24-hour period, according to figures released by the White House. Since Aug. 14, the U.S. evacuated and facilitated the evacuation of around 114,400 people, including nearly 5,500 U.S. citizens. About 250 Americans have informed the administration that they are still trying to leave the country as of Sunday, the State Department said. In a new security alert issued early Sunday in Kabul, the State Department advised all U.S. citizens to immediately leave three of the airport’s gates and avoid traveling to the airport, citing a “specific, credible threat.” Hours later, the Pentagon said it launched a new set of attacks. On Saturday, the Pentagon released the names of the 13 Americans—11 Marines, a Navy corpsman and an Army soldier—killed on Thursday in Kabul when a suicide bomb detonated outside the airport gates. Another 20 service members were wounded in the attack that also killed more than 200 Afghans. The attack raised concern about whether the Taliban would work to prevent Afghanistan from once again becoming a haven for extremist groups such as ISIS-K, which in recent years had significantly increased in strength, force size and capabilities by obtaining supplies and recruits through smuggling routes on the Afghanistan-Pakistan border, despite the U.S. presence in the country. Since the fall of Kabul to the Taliban on Aug. 15, which happened faster than the administration or any U.S. intelligence assessments had predicted, the U.S. has been forced to rely on the Taliban to review paperwork, manage crowds and help to handle security around the airport. White House officials said there was no evidence signaling that the Taliban colluded with ISIS-K perpetrators in Thurs- day’s attack, but they remain wary of possible collaboration. “No one here trusts the Taliban. No one here is counting on any words the Taliban offer,” Mr. Biden’s national-security adviser, Jake Sullivan, told CNN on Sunday. “What we are focused on is actions.” Republicans have criticized the Biden administration’s handling of the U.S. pullout. Sen. Mitch McConnell of Kentucky, the chamber’s GOP leader, said on Fox News on Sunday that Afghanistan could be “much worse” than the 1975 fall of Saigon “because after we left Saigon, there weren’t Vietnamese terrorists who were planning on attacking us here at home.” “This is one of the worst foreign-policy decisions in American history,” he said. Mr. Blinken said the U.S. will retain the capacity “to find and to take strikes against terrorists who want to do us harm.” —Gordon Lubold, Alex Leary and Andrew Ackerman contributed to this article. For personal, non-commercial use only. Do not edit, alter or reproduce. For commercial reproduction or distribution, contact Dow Jones Reprints & Licensing at (800) 843-0008 or www.djreprints.com. THE WALL STREET JOURNAL. Monday, August 30, 2021 | A7 * * THE AFGHANISTAN CRISIS Opposition Resists Pressure From Taliban Islamists urge leaders in final outpost to join new government, but militias gird for battle Taliban forces are closing in on the one part of Afghanistan they don’t control: the Panjshir Valley, near the imposing Hindu Kush mountain range north of Kabul. The Islamist group is pressing opposition leaders there to join a new government, threatening a military assault if they don’t. Politicians in Panjshir—who say they are backed by a militia of several thousand men, bolstered by the remnants of the Afghan army, and with military hardware such as helicopters—say they have rebuffed Taliban overtures, which they say fall short of the promises of autonomy they want. On Sunday, Taliban and rebel forces skirmished just outside the valley, a resistance leader said. Families of valley residents said the Taliban also cut telephone and internet connections to the valley. At the same time, talks between the two sides continued, officials in both camps said. “The problem is that they are unwilling to make any concessions. And we’re unwilling to accept any type of political system that isn’t inclusive,” said Ali Nazary, head of foreign affairs for the rebels, who call themselves the National Resistance Front. The standoff is a test of the Taliban’s claim that, after seizing power, they seek an inclusive government that represents all the major groups in Afghanistan. Several key government officials, including Vice President Amrullah Saleh, fled to Panjshir after the Taliban seized Kabul on Aug. 15. Panjshir is home to the country’s Tajik ethnic minority. The Taliban are offering leaders in the valley “a position in the emirate of the Taliban. That’s all they’re offering,” said JALALUDDIN SEKANDAR/ASSOCIATED PRESS BY SAEED SHAH AND EHSANULLAH AMIRI Militia fighters loyal to Ahmad Massoud, son of the late mujahedeen commander Ahmad Shah Massoud, trained Sunday in Panjshir province, northeastern Afghanistan, Ahmad Wali Massoud, a former Afghan ambassador to London. “That will not be good for Afghanistan at all.” Mr. Massoud is also the brother of the late Ahmad Shah Massoud, who commanded a mujahedeen guerrilla force that held out in his native Panjshir against both the Taliban regime of the 1990s and Soviet troops in the 1980s. The guerrilla leader was assassinated by al Qaeda in 2001. Armed resistance in the valley is now being led by Ahmad Massoud, son of Ahmad Shah Massoud. He doesn’t have fighting experience but does have veteran military commanders with him. The Panjshir-based opposition says it is seeking a decentralization of power and a meaningful inclusion of all of Afghanistan’s ethnic groups. The Taliban haven’t announced the form of the country’s new government. The Islamic Emirate that the Taliban proclaimed in 1996, and in whose name they rule now, had a strongly centralized nature. Almost all leadership positions were held by ethnic Pashtuns, Afghanistan’s biggest ethnic group. Relatives and aides of the resistance trying to reach them from outside Panjshir Sunday said they weren’t able to connect because phone and internet links were down. Habibi Samangani, a Taliban spokesman, said he wasn’t aware of the communications cutoff. “The Panjshir Valley today is not only a valley, it’s the center and a safe haven and the capital for all of those that fear [for] their lives, who are fearing Taliban terrorists and trying to get to somewhere to feel safe,” Mr. Saleh told Fox News on Friday. Mr. Saleh, who proclaimed himself a rightful president after President Ashraf Ghani fled the country Aug. 15, is operating separately from the rebels led by Mr. Massoud. The mountains surrounding the Panjshir Valley pose a challenge for would-be invaders. A new road that enters a widened mouth of the valley, however, could make it harder to defend than in the 1980s and 1990s. Unlike that period, Panjshir doesn’t have a supply route to an international border and its rebels lack outside support. Russia’s ambassador in Kabul, Dmitry Zhirnov, said on Saturday that the Taliban could easily conquer Panjshir. “The balance of military forces is such that they could take Panjshir in a day, maybe even in a few hours, but they don’t do this to avoid bloodshed,” Mr. Zhirnov said, according to Russian state news agency TASS. But Mr. Nazary said that while the Taliban appeared dominant, they were actually stretched thin having to secure the whole country, including cities that are much bigger than when the group ruled in the 1990s. He said the Taliban were stronger when they came to power in 1996 than now, while Panjshir was in a weaker position back then but still managed to hold out. “We’re confident that we can resist them,” said Mr. Nazary. “If the Taliban do make any provocative moves, then the resistance is going to spread, it’s not going to stay just in Panjshir.” Seeking Recognition, New Leaders Cash Crunch Looms Amid a Brain Drain Order Halt to Opium Production Taliban leaders, seeking international acceptance after seizing power in Afghanistan, have told farmers to stop cultivating opium poppies, residents of some major poppygrowing areas say. This has caused raw opium prices to soar across the country. Afghanistan’s new Taliban administration faces an economic challenge that could pose a threat to its rule, as leaders struggle to keep the lights on in a state that has been gutted by four decades of war, a fresh exodus of government officials and professionals, and the recent disconnection from the global financial system. By Sune Engel Rasmussen, Zamir Saar and James Marson Heroin use in Kabul. The Taliban are banning cultivation of poppies, the raw material for the narcotic. same could undermine public support for the group and deprive its new administration of an important source of revenue at a time when Afghanistan is cut off from the global financial system and foreign aid. An opium farmer in Kandahar, who attended a recent meeting between villagers and the Taliban, said in a phone interview that farmers were unhappy but would have no choice but to obey if the Taliban move to enforce the prohibition. “We can’t oppose the Taliban’s decision,” he said. “They are the government.” The farmer said the Taliban have told people to grow other crops, such as saffron. “They’ve told us that when we ban poppies, we’ll make sure you have an alternative crop.” With Afghanistan’s rutted roads, poor storage infrastructure and few export outlets, poppies are one of the few cash crops available to local farmers. Saffron—which used to be a key element of U.S. counternarcotics efforts in Afghanistan—is another, but it is nowhere near as lucrative or as easy to sell. “If the Taliban prohibit the cultivation of poppy, people will die from starvation, especially when international aid stops,” a poppy farmer in the Chora district of Uruzgan said in a phone interview. “We still hope they will let us grow poppies. Nothing can compensate for the income we get from growing poppies.” When the Taliban were in power before the 2001 U.S. invasion, they also initially banned opium production, but later punished only the consumption of drugs, not their cultivation and trading. The Taliban did, however, dramatically crack down on opium cultivation in 2000, when they sought international acceptance for their regime. After 2001, the U.S. spent some $9 billion over 20 years trying to prevent Afghanistan from supplying the world with heroin, to no avail. Washington gave up on eradication by 2010, partly because the effort pushed large parts of the rural population to join the Taliban. The U.S. Agency for International Development worked to persuade Afghan farmers to grow saffron, pistachios or pomegranates instead. But export opportunities for those products were scarce. Last year, Afghan farmers grew poppies on land four times the size of what they did in 2002. A new Taliban opium prohibition could win them a degree of gratitude from foreign governments, particularly in Europe, Russia and Iran, the main markets for Afghan heroin. It could also be a political risk for the group. The Taliban would need to contend with potential discontent caused by the country’s economic crisis. With a U.S. freeze on central-bank assets and billions of dollars in foreign aid drying up, the new Taliban authorities in Kabul are hard pressed to stave off economic collapse. Prices of basic commodities like cooking oil have already surged, while imports are growing scarce. When banks in Kabul on Sunday opened for the first time since the Taliban takeover, customers lined up before dawn to withdraw cash, but said they were told that they could only take out $200 a week per customer. The central bank has also ordered Afghan banks to limit withdrawals from automated-teller machines outside the country to $150 a day, a branch manager of a private bank in the capital said. The Taliban last week appointed Haji Mohammad Idris, who is said to have no formal financial training but has acted in senior financial positions in the movement, as the new governor of the central bank. The former central bank chief, Ajmal Ahmady, fled when the Taliban rolled into Kabul on Aug. 15. Mr. Ahmady said the Taliban can access only 0.1% to 0.2% of the cen- AAMIR QURESHI/AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE/GETTY IMAGES PAULA BRONSTEIN FOR THE WALL STREET JOURNAL In recent days, Taliban representatives began telling gatherings of villagers in the southern province of Kandahar, one of the main opiumproducing regions, that the crop—a crucial part of the local economy—would now be banned. This followed a statement by Taliban spokesman Zabiullah Mujahid at an Aug. 18 news conference in Kabul that the country’s new rulers won’t permit the drug trade. Mr. Mujahid at the time didn’t offer details of how the Islamist group intends to enforce the ban. Local farmers in Kandahar, Uruzgan and Helman provinces said raw opium prices have tripled, from about $70 to about $200 per kilogram, due to uncertainty about future production. In the northern city of Mazar-e-Sharif, the opium price has doubled, residents there said. Raw opium is processed into heroin. The Taliban have long been one of the narcotics industry’s top beneficiaries, using taxation of the drug business to finance their 20-year insurgency, Western governments say. Afghanistan accounts for some 80% of the world’s illicit opiates exports, and the poppy-planting season starts in about a month. Two decades of U.S. attempts to curb Afghanistan’s drug business have failed, partly due to the huge political cost of alienating Afghan farmers who depend on the poppy crops for their livelihoods. Taliban attempts to do the By Sune Engel Rasmussen, Jalaluddin Nazari and Nancy A. Youssef tral bank’s reserves of $9 billion, as most of the bank’s assets are held in the U.S. About 75% of the previous government’s expenses were footed by international partners, chiefly the U.S. The World Bank and the International Monetary Fund suspended operations in Afghanistan after the Taliban toppled the republic on Aug. 15. Prices for food staples and fuel have soared. Since taking power, the Taliban have sought to persuade technocrats and officials to stay in their positions. Some, including the mayor of Kabul, remained in their jobs. But many public servants appear reluctant to return to work. Public servants account for a large share of the 110,000 people flown out of Afghanistan over the past two weeks. “The whole system collapsed and many government employees fled to other countries,” said Qasem, an employee of the ministry of commerce and industry in the northern city of Mazar-eSharif who asked to be quoted by his first name only. “Out of 15 or 20 employees in each department, I see two or three of them present at work. I personally go to work and sign the attendance sheet and leave because there is no work to do and, more importantly, I don’t feel secure in terms of my life and my financial situation,” he said. Account holders gathered outside a closed Kabul bank on Saturday. For personal, non-commercial use only. Do not edit, alter or reproduce. For commercial reproduction or distribution, contact Dow Jones Reprints & Licensing at (800) 843-0008 or www.djreprints.com. A8 | Monday, August 30, 2021 * *** THE WALL STREET JOURNAL. THE AFGHANISTAN CRISIS Continued from Page One Meter, president of New Standard Holdings, a private equity company, and others affiliated with the group. It made a deal with the United Arab Emirates that allowed an airlift to carry Afghans from Kabul’s Hamid Karzai International Airport to temporary shelter in Abu Dhabi where many of the 5,000 evacuees await permission to travel. The group is talking with officials from Albania, Ukraine and other countries, hoping to find them places to settle. With the U.S. withdrawal facing a deadline Tuesday after 20 years of war, private citizens said they volunteered time and money in the ambitious civilian effort to help patch up an American evacuation they see as inadequate. Jim Linder, a retired major general, former commander of special-operations units in Afghanistan and part of Mr. Van Meter’s group, said former Afghan comrades who felt abandoned by the U.S. government appealed to him for help. “This is not who we are as a people,” he said. He is president of Tenax Aerospace, a Madison, Miss., company that provides governments with special-mission reconnaissance and other aircraft, and his connections helped the group charter planes for rescue flights. On a white board in the Washington hotel’s Peacock Lounge, the group listed airport entry points. Toward the end of last week, someone A group of private citizens conducted a global military-style rescue operation. wrote “CLOSED” next to all but one. An Islamic State suicide attack killed 13 U.S. troops Thursday, as well as nearly 200 Afghans crowding around the airport. Early Sunday, the group focused on evacuating people via land routes or helicopter, and finding places to resettle the Afghans already out of the country, Mr. Van Meter said. The Defense Department declined to comment on the group and other private rescue operations. The U.S. government said that since Aug. 14 it has airlifted or helped in evacuating some 114,400 people from Afghanistan. That includes American citizens, green cardholders and Afghans whose service to the fallen Kabul government or the U.S.-led ELIZABETH FRANTZ FOR THE WALL STREET JOURNAL (2) Citizens Join in Rescue Afghanistan’s deputy ambassador to the U.S., Abdul Hadi Nejrabi, left, and Alex Cornell du Houx, center, at the Willard Hotel in Washington, working on rescue plans. war effort leaves them vulnerable to Taliban retribution. Against the clock Mr. Van Meter was in Washington staying at the Willard Hotel for business and decided on Aug. 22 to rent the hotel’s Peacock Lounge, a small carpeted conference room with a few tables and TVs. “I put it on my American Express and told my wife it’s what we needed to do,” he said. He said he was spurred to action by a business associate, who was a former U.S. Army commando. Sean, the commando, contacted Mr. Van Meter two weeks ago and said he knew of 3,500 children, many of them orphans, stranded in Kabul. He needed help getting them out. Mr. Van Meter knew next to nothing about military operations, he said, but he had business and personal ties to the United Arab Emirates. He reached a senior Emirati diplomat and introduced him to Sean. “Time is absolutely of the essence,” Sean wrote the diplomat in an Aug. 14 email viewed by The Wall Street Journal. “We are working against the clock and a closing window of opportunity.” The diplomat passed on his government’s tentative approval “to begin accepting some of the evacuees” and referred Sean to an Emirati general, according to email communications between the men. Sean flew to Abu Dhabi to meet with the general. The general agreed to provide a C-17 military transport plane, an aircrew and a platoon of soldiers for a trial run into Kabul. The Emirati general couldn't be reached for comment. The U.A.E. agreed to provide the evacuees temporary shelter, but they had to first reach the Kabul airport and board the transport plane. Sean was banking on a small network of former commandos in Kabul to help the operation run smoothly—including picking up evacuees and escorting them to the airport. On Aug. 20, Sean changed out of a blue blazer into military-style gear for the flight to Kabul. He and another special operations veteran carried body armor, bottles of Excedrin and a sack of 5-Hour Energy drinks. They went for a briefing at the Emirati Armed Forces Officers Club & Hotel, a military-only facility in Abu Dhabi. A sign in the room read “Fars al-Sham,” which translates to “Knights of the Levant,” the U.A.E.’s code name for the rescue operation. Emirati officers told Sean and his companion that the promised C-17, which could hold around 180 people, had been fitted with separate toilets and medical teams for men and women returning on the three-hour flight from Kabul. “We want to use minimum force, no bullets.” one of the Emirati officers said. Once the plane arrived in Kabul, Sean and his colleague had 45 minutes to find and board the evacuees, a group of Afghans they had previously identified as being in danger from the Taliban. Sean had contacted the evacuees about the plan through Afghan sources outside the airport and U.S. military contacts inside. When the plane landed, the Afghans were waiting at the airport. The plane lifted off with nearly two dozen evacuees, far short of the plane’s capacity. But the trip proved the system worked. The Emirati general authorized more rescue flights, said Sean, who remained in Kabul for nearly a week to coordinate operations. He said the U.S. military gave him access to a hanger and a ramp that became known as the Commercial Task Force ramp. He was given a call sign to use for arriving flights so military airtraffic controllers could distinguish the group’s planes. The group has since pulled its team from Kabul. The U.A.E. government wouldn’t comment on the operation. It said that as of Thursday, the country had played a role in evacuating 36,500 people from Afghanistan. By Friday, it said it was hosting 8,500 evacuees but didn’t specify if the tally included those from Mr. Van Meter’s group. Escape route Last week, volunteers took shifts at the hotel’s Peacock Lounge, fielding requests for help and working their contacts to get Afghans and Americans into the Kabul airport and out of Afghanistan. One volunteer, Barakat Rahmati, was the No. 2 official at the Afghan embassy in Qatar. He was on a trip to Washington when Kabul fell and his government ceased to exist. Mr. Rahmati was trying to help 322 Afghan commandos, elite troops trained by U.S. Special Forces, who had managed to escape to Abu Dhabi, he said. The soldiers had tossed their identification papers to elude Taliban militants. The former official was trying to issue them new documents so they could travel to countries that would let them settle. Alex Cornell du Houx, who served in the Marine Corps in Iraq, was trying to maneuver a convoy of female judges past the Taliban checkpoints surrounding the airport. As of Sunday morning in Kabul, he hadn’t gotten word. After Thursday’s suicide bombing, the volunteers watched the grisly videos, while trying to figure out how to get their last evacuees out of the country. “Do we know where the orphans are yet?” Mr. Van Meter shouted to the volunteers. They didn’t. The children and their chaperones—some 300 in total—had managed to get onto the grounds of the Kabul airport earlier in the week but were turned back. As far as Mr. Van Meter knew, they had last been seen 400 yards from the gate where the suicide attacks later took place. The volunteers later learned the children were back at a safe house. As of Saturday, they still hadn’t made it back into the airport, Mr. Van Meter said. Brian Kinsella, a former Army captain who worked in relief operations after the 2010 Haiti earthquake, was in charge of condensing hundreds of pleas and referrals into lists topped by U.S. citizens, green cardholders and high-risk Afghans. His phone filled with photos of families and passports and Google maps showing where people were hiding. On Friday, Mr. Kinsella talked to an American citizen who was booked on a plane with her 11-year-old, but she decided not to go without other family members who didn’t have U.S. paperwork. During one call with the woman this week, Mr. Kinsella could hear gunfire. “We’re trying to help,” he said. “We can’t in some cases.” With the last routes out of Afghanistan apparently closing, the volunteers are looking mostly to where they can find homes for those who have escaped. One group is working on the plan to set up and manage a shelter for the Afghans in Somaliland. “We’re not giving up,” said Emily King, a former Pentagon adviser who has been using her Albanian contacts to secure a haven. “We’ll keep pivoting to find a way.” At 3 a.m. Sunday, the last of the group left the Peacock Lounge for good and moved their work elsewhere. —Justin Scheck contributed to this article. WORLD WATCH YEMEN A missile and drone attack on a key military base in Yemen’s south on Sunday killed at least 30 troops, a Yemeni military spokesman said. It was one of the deadliest attacks in the civil war in recent years. Mohammed al-Naqib, spokesman for Yemen’s southern forces, said the attack on AlAnad Air Base in the province of Lahj wounded at least 65 people. He said the toll could rise since rescue teams were still clearing the site. Yemeni officials reported at least three explosions at the base, which is held by the internationally recognized government. No one claimed responsibility for the attack. Yemen has been embroiled in a civil war since 2014, when Houthi rebels swept across much of the north and seized the capital, San’a, forcing the internationally recognized government into exile. The Saudi-led coalition entered the war the following year on the side of the government. A ballistic missile landed in the base’s training area, where dozens of troops were doing morning exercises, officials said. The officials blamed the Houthis for the attack on the base, once the site of U.S. intelligence operations against al Qaeda’s powerful Yemeni affiliate. —Associated Press MORTEN RASCH/ASSOCIATED PRESS Missile, Drone Attack On Air Base Kills 30 A view of a recently discovered island believed to be the northernmost point of land on Earth. GAZA STRIP Israeli Warplanes Strike Hamas Targets Israeli planes struck Hamas targets in the Gaza Strip on Sunday, hours after violent clashes between Palestinian protesters and troops along the border. The Israeli military said that planes bombed a Hamas militant facility in the Gaza Strip in response to the launching of incendiary balloons into southern Israel and violent protests staged for a second consecutive week. Israeli Prime Minister Naftali Bennett spoke to reporters in Washington before he boarded a flight to Israel, wrapping up a state visit that culminated with a meeting with President Biden. “We will operate in Gaza according to our interests,” he said. On Saturday, hundreds of Hamas-backed activists staged a nighttime protest along the Israeli border, throwing explosives toward Israeli forces who responded with live fire. Gaza health officials said three people were injured by Israeli fire. Additional protests are planned through the week. Organizers said the protests are meant to increase pressure on Israel to lift its blockade of the Palestinian territory. —Associated Press GREENLAND Researchers Discover Northernmost Island A team of Arctic researchers from Denmark say they accidentally discovered what they believe is the world’s northernmost island located off Greenland’s coast. The scientists from the University of Copenhagen initially thought they had arrived at Oodaaq, an island discovered by a Danish survey team in 1978, to collect samples during an expedition that was conducted in July. They wound up on an undiscovered island further north. “We were convinced that the island we were standing on was Oodaaq, which until then was registered as the world’s northernmost island,” said expedition leader Morten Rasch of the university’s department of geosciences and natural resource management. “But when I posted photos of the island and its coordinates on social media, a number of American island hunters went crazy and said that it couldn’t be true,” he said. “Island hunters” are adventurers whose hobby is to search for unknown islands. The yet-to-be-named island is 780 meters, or about 850 yards, north of Oodaaq, an island off Cape Morris Jesup, the northernmost point of Greenland and one of the most northerly points of land on Earth. The tiny island, apparently discovered as a result of shifting pack ice, is about 30 by 60 meters, or about 100 by 200 feet, in size and rises to about three to four meters, or 10 to 13 feet, above sea level, the university said. The research team doesn’t consider the discovery to be a result of climate change. The island consists primarily of small mounds of silt and gravel, according to Mr. Rasch. He said it may be the result of a major storm that, with the help of the sea, gradually pushed material from the seabed together until an island formed. The island isn’t expected to exist a long time, researchers say. —Associated Press HAITI U.S. Airlifts Aid To Quake Victims U.S. military aircraft are ferrying food, tarps and other material into southern Haiti amid a shift in the international relief effort to focus on helping people in the areas hardest hit by the recent earthquake to make it through the hurricane season. Aircraft flying out of the capital, Port-au-Prince, arrived throughout the day Saturday in the mostly rural, mountainous southern peninsula that was the epicenter of the Aug. 14 earthquake. In Jeremie, people waved and cheered as a Marine Corps unit from North Carolina descended in a tilt-rotor Osprey with pallets of rice, tarps and other supplies. Most of the supplies, however, were not destined for Jeremie. They were for distribution to remote mountain communities where landslides destroyed homes and the plots of the subsistence farmers in the area, said Patrick Tiné of Haiti Bible Mission, one of several groups coordinating the delivery of aid. At the request of the Haitian government, getting as much help to such people as fast as possible is now the focus of the $32 million U.S. relief effort, said Tim Callahan, a disaster response leader for the Agency for International Development. The magnitude-7.2 earthquake killed more than 2,200 people. —Associated Press For personal, non-commercial use only. Do not edit, alter or reproduce. For commercial reproduction or distribution, contact Dow Jones Reprints & Licensing at (800) 843-0008 or www.djreprints.com. THE WALL STREET JOURNAL. Monday, August 30, 2021 | A9 * * WORLD NEWS Seeks Pyongyang Restarts Reactor, U.N. Says EU To Block BY MICHAEL R. GORDON AND LAURENCE NORMAN Some U.S. Travelers BY LAURENCE NORMAN The IAEA said signs the Yongbyon reactor is operational coincide with indications a nearby lab is being used to isolate plutonium. Trump’s 2019 meeting with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un in Hanoi, the North Korean side offered to shut its Yongbyon complex, encompassing the reactor and other facilities, in return for major sanctions relief. The Trump administration rejected that offer as insufficient. “The recent inactivity of key facilities at Yongbyon seems related to Kim Jong Un’s offer at the Hanoi summit to shut down Yongbyon,” said Robert Einhorn, a former senior State Department official who negotiated with North Korea. “Resumed operations at the reactor and reprocessing facility may be an indication that he sees little prospect of a nuclear deal.” In June, IAEA Director-General Rafael Grossi said the agency was seeing indications of possible reprocessing work to separate plutonium from spent nuclear fuel. However, at the time there was no indication that the reactor plant at Yongbyon was operating. In January, North Korea’s leader laid out a plan to modernize its nuclear technology, including developing miniaturized nuclear weapons and nuclear-powered submarines. Mr. Kim is encountering growing troubles at home, acknowledging food shortages over the summer for the country, which faces tight international sanctions and closed its borders last year to stymie the spread of coronavirus. The Biden administration’s North Korean envoy said last Monday, during a trip to South Korea, that he was ready to meet North Korean counterparts at any time. ly with North Korea has been a less-urgent matter for Mr. Biden than seeking a way to revive the Iran nuclear deal, dealing with the fallout over leaving Afghanistan and continuing arms-control discussions with Russia. “The activities at Yongbyon show that North Korea’s nuclear-weapons program can’t be ignored and needs to be a higher priority for the Biden administration,” said Joel Wit, a former State Department official, now a fellow at the Stimson Center, a think tank. Siegfried Hecker, former director of the Los Alamos National Laboratory and an expert on North Korea’s nuclear program, has estimated that the country may have 20 to 60 nuclear weapons using plutonium and highly enriched uranium. During then-President co Fo m rp m er er s ci on al a l us , e on Crown Center for Middle East Studies at Brandeis University. “While North Korea already has a significant stockpile of nuclear weapons, this suggests it is moving to expand its current arsenal,” added Mr. Samore, a former National Security Council expert on weapons of mass destruction. The Biden administration has said it is set to engage in talks with Pyongyang over its nuclear-weapons program, but North Korea hasn’t taken Washington up on its offer. In explaining its approach, the White House has said it is pursuing a calibrated strategy that would attempt to steer a middle course between former President Donald Trump’s toplevel summitry and the Obama administration’s patient stance. Former officials have said, however, that pursuing talks OFFERS EVENTS INSIGHTS no n- EXPERIENCES The European Union is set to recommend halting nonessential travel from the U.S. because of the spread of Covid-19, diplomats said on Sunday. European officials have been considering the move for much of the past month, with the average U.S. infection rate now above that of the EU. The Slovenian presidency of the EU recommended removing the U.S. and five other countries from a list of nations allowed nonessential travel. A final decision is due Monday. Two diplomats said they weren’t aware of any objections so far. The EU travel list, which is reviewed every two weeks, isn’t binding on member states, but it has generally set the pattern over the past few months for who can visit the bloc. Some countries may decide to keep permitting U.S. tourists if they can prove they have been vaccinated. Pressure to remove the U.S. from the travel list has also increased because Washington has maintained a ban on European nonessential travel to the U.S. In early August, European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen said the EU wouldn’t allow the lack of reciprocity to “drag on for weeks.” German Chancellor Angela Merkel also raised the issue during her visit to Washington last month. A number of EU countries were eager to keep doors open during the summer tourist season to bring in revenue that has become all the more vital in the economic recession triggered by the pandemic. The EU decision in June to allow U.S. travelers to visit was one of a number of actions in Washington and Europe to reset relations after tensions under the Trump administration. . MAXAR TECHNOLOGIES/ASSOCIATED PRESS North Korea appears to have resumed operation of its plutonium-producing reactor at Yongbyon in a move that could enable the reclusive country to expand its nuclearweapons arsenal, the United Nations atomic agency said. The development, disclosed in the agency’s annual report on North Korea’s nuclear activities, adds a new challenge to President Biden’s foreign-policy agenda, alongside the dangerous U.S. withdrawal from Afghanistan and stalemated talks on restoring the 2015 deal on Iran’s nuclear program. “Since early July, there have been indications, including the discharge of cooling water, consistent with the operation of the reactor,” said the report by the International Atomic Energy Agency. The Yongbyon reactor appeared to have been inactive from December 2018 until the beginning of July 2021, the report noted. It added that signs that the reactor is now being operated coincide with indications that North Korea is also using a nearby laboratory to separate plutonium from spent fuel previously removed from the reactor. The agency, whose inspectors were kicked out of North Korea in 2009, described the twin developments as “deeply troubling” and a clear violation of United Nations Security Council resolutions. A senior Biden administration official said the U.S. agrees that the disclosure is troubling. “This report underscores the urgent need for dialogue and diplomacy so we can achieve the complete denuclearization of the Korean Peninsula,” the official said. The North Korean Mission to the United Nations didn’t respond to a request for comment. “It appears to indicate North Korea has resumed producing plutonium for its nuclear-weapons program,” said Gary Samore, director of the ©2021 Dow Jones & Co., Inc. All rights reserved. 6DJ8543 Claim Your Complimentary Audiobook Choose your complimentary audiobook from WSJ+ Book Club’s monthly selection. This month’s must-listen titles include a helpful guide on thriving in our fast-paced world, the memoir of Katherine Johnson and her remarkable work at NASA, a finely paced thriller of power, privilege and revenge, and an enthralling story set amid the landscape of the American Southwest. Plus, enjoy 35% off all print titles.. WSJ MEMBER EXCLUSIVE REDEEM NOW AT WSJPLUS.COM/AUDIOBOOK For personal, non-commercial use only. Do not edit, alter or reproduce. For commercial reproduction or distribution, contact Dow Jones Reprints & Licensing at (800) 843-0008 or www.djreprints.com. A10 | Monday, August 30, 2021 * **** THE WALL STREET JOURNAL. FROM PAGE ONE Above, Denise and Spencer Carter unpack their new home in Murfreesboro, Tenn. Below, Arkan Muhammed with his employees and his son. n- she was abducted by aliens as a child. In a written response to questions, Ms. Drescher stood by her 5G concerns. “It behooves us to question why we get sick and how to boost our immune systems,” she wrote. Regarding extraterrestrials, she wrote, “I won’t dignify the alien question with an answer. I’m surprised at you!” As qualifications, Ms. Drescher cites her experience as founder of the nonprofit Cancer Schmancer and describes herself as an actionoriented outsider. “I want our more famous members, more ‘glamorous’ if you will, to be more directly involved and excited by the union, to integrate their expertise and compassion for common goals,” she wrote. As she put it in a campaign video: “I’m a celebrity that goes to the mat over and over again for the greater good.” The latest controversy is an August interview of Ms. Fisher by a Los Angeles television station. Current SAG leadership determined it violated campaign rules because the opposing camp didn’t receive equal time (the interviewer said on-air that Ms. Drescher’s side was welcome to appear). In an Aug. 26 email to union members, Ms. Drescher wrote, in reference to the interview, that Mr. Modine and his ticket “think it’s okay to violate the law and that the rules don’t apply to them.” Mr. Modine responded the same evening during a virtual town hall that he was “ashamed of Fran Drescher.” Her email was “slanderous and hateful and hurtful, not just to myself in my life, but to my career,” Mr. Modine wrote. The race isn’t polled, and it’s unclear who is favored. Voting began earlier this month and a winner will be announced on September 2. In 2019, only 21% of eligible members voted, according to union data. Behind the sniping are some serious issues. SAG-AFTRA was formed after the 2012 merger between the Screen Actors Guild and the American Federation of Television and Radio Artists. The organization negotiates with several factions of the entertainment industry, including the Alliance of Motion Pictures and Television Producers, which makes deals on behalf of studios, networks and streaming services. Mr. Modine, who is making his second run for union president, wants to overhaul the organization. He says it has become too soft, particularly in regard with new forms of media, with the industry that employs most of its members. Mr. Modine says the union was wrong to accept a deal that lowered payments to members for television reruns by $70 million over the next three years. “You don’t give away things you own unless they are going to give you something that is better,” Mr. Modine says. The next administration will also have to contend with a recent restructuring of the union’s healthcare plan. Some 12,000 members—mostly senior citizens—lost coverage, leading to lawsuits alleging age discrimination. The union says the changes were driven by pandemic-related budget cuts. While the acrimony between the two presidential tickets is thick, some candidates lower down on the ballot treat the contest with less gravity. “Curb Your Enthusiasm” co-star Jeff Garlin, running for vice president of the Los Angeles union chapter, lists his official candidate statement as: “A vote for me is a vote for Jeff Garlin.” . away from their lifelong home in suburban Chicago, unhappy about property taxes and weather. Last year they moved with their two toddlers to a subdivision in Murfreesboro after spending only a few days in the area. Ms. O’Meara works from home in accounting. Real-estate company Zillow Group Inc. recently declared the Nashville metro area the No. 1 U.S. location for these types of workers, known as “digital nomads.” Stephen O’Meara works in the automotive industry and knew he would quickly find a job. As they worked with a realestate agent, “she would send me listings and we’d see these houses and they would be gone in a day,” said Ms. O’Meara, 43. “If we had waited another six months, we might not have been able to afford it.” she added. “People are going all over where it’s warmer and cheaper.” Denise Carter, 50, a real-estate agent from a suburb of Sacramento, Calif., and her husband, a general contractor, wanted to move away from ly hammed, 37, who grew up in Nashville. The Kurdish-American owner of two cellphone stores recently moved his family from the city to a subdivision in Rutherford County because he wanted better schools and less traffic and crime. South Carolina’s Berkeley County saw its population grow 29% in 10 years. “We wish we had done this a long time ago,” he said. Throughout the county, there are help-wanted signs at retail businesses, factories and transportation operations. The county unemployment rate for June was 4.5%, compared with the national rate of 5.9% for the same month. Companies expanding in the area include German auto supplier Mahle AG, which said last summer that its filter systems facility in Murfreesboro would add at least 300 jobs. VALERIE MACON/AFP/GETTY IMAGES Hollywood Stages New Melodrama Continued from Page One dine, 62, boasts backing from Whoopi Goldberg and Diane Keaton, as well as former “The Nanny” co-stars Charles Shaughnessy and Madeline Zima. The Baldwins are split; Alec favors Ms. Drescher, while younger brother Billy is behind Mr. Modine. The candidates are vying to succeed Gabrielle Carteris, who played brainy high school newspaper editor Andrea on the 1990s hit “Beverly Hills 90210.” Ms. Carteris, who has led the organization since 2016, urged Ms. Drescher to run, according to the latter. The post has a storied history—Ronald Reagan got his start in politics as SAG president. After qualifying for the race last month in the final hours before eligibility ended, Ms. Drescher immediately stole the spotlight. Two days later, Vanity Fair published an article headlined, “Fran Drescher Amazon.com Inc., which is building a hub in downtown Nashville for retail operations and plans to hire as many as 5,000 people, said last summer it was opening a sorting center and delivery station in La Vergne in northern Rutherford County. Educational institutions are tailoring programs to industry needs. Middle Tennessee State University in Murfreesboro had around 12,000 students about two decades ago. Today it has 21,000, many earning degrees in areas such as aerospace, specialized engineering, healthcare and construction management. The school is building a new center to house its concrete and construction management program, which averages at least seven job offers per graduate, according to a university spokesman. Interstate 24 through Murfreesboro is often backed up on weekday afternoons. Cleared land and construction machinery are common sights in Rutherford County. New arrivals Nicole O’Meara and her husband talked for years about moving California’s high prices and taxes for years and decided to take a trip to Tennessee, which doesn’t have a state income tax. Her father told her one of her ancestors was a Union soldier wounded in a Civil War battle just outside Murfreesboro. The Carters drove through in February and bought the first home they saw, a large old historic house, for about $1.3 million. They plan to fix it up and rent it out until they can move in with their three children, Ms. Carter said. “It seems like this is where we belong.” Homes, particularly those in the $300,000 to $400,000 range, are in such demand the county planning department has a monthslong backlog for building-related permits. County planning director Doug Demosi says he needs more staff to handle the workload. The county school system, with 47,500 students, opened a new $70 million high school in a growing part of the county three years ago and it is already at capacity, said Bill Spurlock, director of county schools. Mariah Phillips, 44, moved with her husband to Murfreesboro in 2006. Their home was near a trailhead, and their five children grew up playing in fields and forests. Now land is getting rezoned for development. She ran unsuccessfully for Congress in 2018 in part on a platform of preserving green space. Some homeowners, tired of the growing traffic and other issues, are weighing the same solution that brought them to Rutherford County: Moving away. Ms. Phillips said friends are talking a lot about the next county to the south. “A lot of people are considering Bedford County, because of the affordability of the homes,” she said. co Fo m rp m er er s ci on al a l us , e on later cut down the tree. Mr. Sanders estimated the tree was centuries old. Green space “is being destroyed,” he said. South Carolina’s Lancaster County, over the state line from Charlotte, grew 25% in the past decade. More than half of commuters traveled a half an hour or more to work in 2019, up from around a third in 2010, according to the U.S. Census. Florida’s Nassau County near Jacksonville, which grew 23% during the past decade, has seen a surge in traffic citations, according to the Florida Department of Highway Safety and Motor Vehicles. U.S. population growth slowed sharply in the past decade, and even some exurbs faded as more millennials opted for city living. However, exurban counties in the Southeast grew 15%, twice the U.S. rate. Rutherford County, Tenn., where Murfreesboro is the county seat, grew even faster. Its population reached 341,000 just before the pandemic, up 30% from 2010. The county had a net gain in 2020 over 2019 of more than 2,600 households, the largest in the 13-county Nashville region, a Journal analysis of Postal Service permanent change-of-address data found. The Nashville metro area’s core, Davidson County, lost more than 10,000 households during the same period. Rising housing costs in Nashville, caused in part by an influx of wealthy out-of-towners, have pushed many longtime residents to look for lessexpensive homes away from the city. The average housing budget for families moving to Nashville is nearly $720,000, or 48% higher than that of local buyers, according to a recent study by brokerage Redfin Corp. “I wanted a better life for my kids,” said Arkan Mu- no Continued from Page One erally include the fast-growing outer fringes of large metro areas where single-family homes mix with farms and many workers have traditionally commuted a significant distance to the core of the metro area. An analysis of building-permit data by the National Association of Home Builders found that for the year ended in March, exurban counties outside large metro areas saw construction of single-family homes rise 20% from the year-earlier period. That was more than twice the rate for core counties in those metro areas. “Clearly, it will transform the South,” Susan Wachter, a professor of real estate at the Wharton School at the University of Pennsylvania, said of exurban growth. The region is benefiting from lower costs that are drawing tech companies and other businesses looking for cheaper locations. Those underlying drivers make this boom in exurban living different from one that started during the early 2000s, when exurbs were concentrated in California, the priciest pockets of the Northeast and a handful of other top metro areas. The U.S. population is growing more slowly than it was two decades ago, and cities are likely to feel the loss of residents more acutely as stores and employers follow transplants to the fringe. In the Southeast, the influx to exurban areas is driving up real-estate prices, crowding schools, worsening traffic and straining government services. It is sparking debates over whether to raise taxes, increase regulations and protect green spaces. South Carolina’s Berkeley County, about 30 miles northeast of downtown Charleston, saw its population grow 29% during the past decade as the once-rural area began absorbing tens of thousands of completed and planned housing units. Berkeley County officials predict the county’s population, currently 230,000, will reach at least 350,000 over the next two decades. There are signs the growth is making the area wealthier. The percentage of the county’s population living below the poverty line was 11.9% in 2019, down from 14.5% five years earlier, according to the U.S. Census Bureau. Sammy Sanders, 60, a developer and former construction-site manager, fought with Berkeley County officials for years over their plans to cut down a large live oak tree on a state-owned right of way next to his property as part of a road expansion. Last year he started camping in the tree during the day to keep the county from removing it, and by February, he was spending days and nights there. He came down briefly that month, and law officers blocked him from going back up. Workers WILLIAM DESHAZER FOR THE WALL STREET JOURNAL (2) Pandemic Swells U.S. Exurbs Matthew Modine’s credits include Netflix’s hit ’Stranger Things.’ Will Run to Form a More Perfect and Glamorous Union.” The article asked, referring to Ms. Drescher and her running mate, actor Anthony Rapp: “Why are they running to lead SAG and not the White House?” Those opposed to Ms. Drescher’s candidacy point to the ticket’s lack of experience with the union. “They have never been in the [SAG-AFTRA] building,” says actress Joely Fisher, running to be secretary-treasurer under Mr. Modine. Ms. Drescher has also been on the defensive for public remarks suggesting that 5G wireless service causes cancer and spreads Covid-19, and that For personal, non-commercial use only. Do not edit, alter or reproduce. For commercial reproduction or distribution, contact Dow Jones Reprints & Licensing at (800) 843-0008 or www.djreprints.com. PERSONAL JOURNAL. © 2021 Dow Jones & Company. All Rights Reserved. THE WALL STREET JOURNAL. Monday, August 30, 2021 | A11 Young Workers Quit Jobs to Plot New Paths With hiring on rise, some opt to take a breather AT WORK KRITHIKA VARAGUR just being friendly, not staring at a computer screen.” Ms. Raden is using her free hours to complete a graduate certificate in education policy and hopes eventually to transition into hey launched careers in public education. She notes she the years after the probably wouldn’t have been able 2007-09 recession and to afford such a break in her lessonly recently hit their flush 20s. But for now, she has stride in earning power. enough savings to cover her rent, Now some young profesand bartending covers her other sionals are quitting their jobs with expenses. “I think I can hang on to no Plan B. this structure for a couple more With several years in the workmonths,” she says. “I’m trying to force and some savings in the plan a little less.” bank, they are taking a breather to U.S. workers are quitting their learn new skills, network and dejobs at some of the highest rates velop their creative potential bein years, a sign of great appetite fore locking into another career for change and confidence in betpath. These workers, now in their ter prospects down the line. The late 20s and early 30s, are both share of people leaving jobs chastened by pandemic-era reached 2.7% in June, acburnout and optimistic cording to the Labor Deabout a rebounding partment, just shy of job market. While April’s 2.8% rate, the many of their highest level since peers are jumping the government immediately to began tracking better-paying or quit rates two demore well-suited cades ago. jobs, they are leanA Prudential Fiing into an early nancial survey of career break instead. 2,000 American Tessa Raden, 33, workers in the spring was so burned out by refound that millennials— mote work that in July those between the ages she quit what she had of 25 and 40—were considered her antsier than other dream job—progenerations to gram director at make a change: the Dramatists More than a third Guild Foundaof that demotion—with no set graphic said they backup plan. She planned to look for goofed off for a coua new job post-panple of weeks, then demic, compared with picked up a bartending about a quarter of job, about five evening workers overall. shifts a week, at BrookSome of these workEvelyn Danciger and land’s Finest Bar & ers don’t want to jump Andrew Hibschman Kitchen in her Washinginto another role until resigned from jobs ton, D.C., neighborhood. to pursue new goals. they find one more “I was just so tired aligned with their longof pushing, and I had term career goals. totally lost my passion,” says Ms. “Earlier this year I was hoping Raden, who has a master’s degree to switch jobs and scrolling through in arts management. On paper, her tons of postings, but I eventually job overseeing programming and realized the only way I could make supporting writers was everything a successful career transition was she had worked toward in her to quit,” says 33-year-old Andrew adult life. But the pandemic elimiHibschman, who was a program nated live performances, a part of lead and assistant professor at La her job she loved, and she found it Salle University in Philadelphia unhard to focus and stay motivated til he quit this month. “I didn’t have sitting at home on her computer. the time or energy to devote myself “I love that I don’t have to take to the search the way I wanted to,” my work home with me,” she says he says. of her new lifestyle. “And I love He started out mainly teaching that the majority of my job now is English and, over the course of the Feeling burned out by remote work, Tessa Raden recently quit her dream job at an arts organization and now is bartending in Washington, D.C., with time to study for an advanced degree and garden at home. decade, became more involved in admissions and other academicsupport programs. But his longerterm goal is to work in education technology or learning development. To that end, he spends two to three hours a day taking online classes to brush up on topics such as diversity-and-inclusion programming, and at least another hour a day on networking and the job search. “This is the first time since I was 14 that I don’t have a job, which is somewhat terrifying,” Mr. Hibschman says. “But I do feel optimistic because there are so many jobs out there.” Getting married in May has eased the transition. In addition to lending emotional support, his husband also is working to get him onto his health-insurance plan. Figuring out health insurance can be one of the thorniest issues for those leaving a full-time job with benefits. Most options leave a lot to be desired, says Laura Briggs, a coach for freelance workers based in Springfield, Ill. Many join a partner’s plan if that’s in the cards, she says, and another option is a high-deductible plan with relatively low premiums that covers worst-case scenarios like surgeries and accidents. Another short-term option is to use Cobra, a federal law that permits workers who leave their jobs to temporarily continue a former employer’s health benefits, though that can be expensive. Ms. Briggs also suggests that those planning to leave a job with benefits meet with a financial adviser. “You should be proactive about figuring out how much you can and should set aside every month, especially if you no longer have employer-matching contributions to your retirement plan,” she says. Evelyn Danciger, 27, says she is relying on several years of savings and looking into Cobra options as she makes a transition to full-time writing. She resigned in July from the Sid Lee creative agency, where she was a senior manager. She had dreamed of becoming a writer since she was in third grade, she says, but fell into marketing in 2016 after graduating from Loyola Marymount University in Los Angeles, where she majored in screenwriting. As she took on bigger projects at the firm, the time she usually set aside to write slowly disappeared. The heavier workload left her “stress-crying” and feeling intense burnout. “I wasn’t doing anything creative, and my job had turned into mostly client management,” she says. Now that her days are free, she can write more, plus do more inperson networking in Los Angeles, where she lives. “I’m so excited to call up my industry contacts and go out for lunch and coffee again,” she says. “I don’t have to cram it all into a weekend now.” Surviving the ‘Obligation Vacation’ BY ANNE MARIE CHAKER GETTY IMAGES F or many families, summer vacation 2021 was anything but relaxing. As travel picked up again, extended families reunited. Grandparents hugged grandchildren, adult siblings caught up in person, and long-separated cousins played together on beaches and in playgrounds. For families coming together again after more than 18 months of the pandemic, though, those reunions are often emotionally heightened events. Call it the obligation vacation: relatives reuniting while emotionally depleted. Aging parents are eager for adult children to help with overdue homeimprovement tasks. An aunt wants to see the baby. Siblings recall old rivalries. It isn’t a relaxing break— and lately it’s been happening as the Delta variant gains footing. Travel has picked up: So far in August, nearly two million passengers have passed through Transportation Security Administration checkpoints each day on average— more than twice the rate a year earlier, but still below 2019 levels. Often, those trips mean a family visit. Some 63% of U.S. adults say they visited family this summer, according to an online survey of more than 2,700 respondents by Pittsburgh consumer-research firm CivicScience. Of those, 54% say it has been one to two years since they last saw their relatives. Linda Hall says that when her daughter, 35-year-old Allison Hanlon, came off the plane at Los Angeles International Airport last month with her husband and two sons, she felt elated. “We could FROM TOP: FARRAH SKEIKY FOR THE WALL STREET JOURNAL; EVELYN DANCIGER; REDFIELD PHOTOGRAPHY T Summer vacation 2021 brought more stress than relaxation for some, as travel picked up and families reunited. have been a Kleenex commercial,” the 67-year-old Ms. Hall says. Ms. Hanlon, a stay-at-home mom in Silver Spring, Md., had envisioned a relaxing vacation, she says, but after a few days the pressure to see extended family—while getting her children settled into a new environment and three-hour time difference—proved overwhelming. Ms. Hanlon recalls ending up in tears one afternoon at the beach with her mom, husband Matt Hanlon, and her two boys. She says she was torn between getting baby Dylan home for his nap but also wanting to see other family members who were arriving later, all while making sure Mr. Hanlon, an IT program manager, felt like he wasn’t being pulled away. “I was trying to please everyone except myself,” she says. Not having seen those family members for so long because of Covid-19 heightened the feeling of obligation. “I haven’t had to deal with that family dynamic in so long, and I’m also exhausted,” she says. (“She has that stress because she is such a great, loving person,” says Ms. Hanlon’s mother, Ms. Hall.) Therapists say we are out of practice in the art of social negotiation, diplomacy and even sharing space. Reuniting can already be emotional and sometimes difficult. “Family dynamics don’t really change,” says Pauline Wallin, a psy- chologist in Camp Hill, Pa., who specializes in family relations. “But in the past two years, we’ve changed. We’ve been through a lot.” Reuniting can initially feel like time never passed. “We assume other people are where they left off, but the stress of the last two years has magnified people’s difficulties with coping,” she says. Families’ desire to reunite has never been greater. An affiliate of Dallas-based Campbell Travel that specializes in family celebrations reports that sales in July 2021 rose to $82,000 compared with zero in July 2020 and $12,000 in July 2019. Hilary Martin, a 51-year-old publicrelations consultant in Tucson, Ariz., says her visit to her mother and stepfather, Nancy and Rick Barrett, both retired and in their 70s, felt like a series of home-repair projects at their home in Harding Township, N.J. “When I showed up in May for the first time in 18 months, there were all these herculean tasks on the todo list,” she says. Ms. Martin, along with her brother Glenn, a 49-year-old software developer, moved heavy furniture up a hill, power washed the dock and changed light bulbs in hardto-reach heights. It wasn’t relaxing, she says, though they shared laughs. “It was ridiculous,” she says. “A long barrage of tasks that can be overwhelming to people in their 70s.” Mr. Barrett, 77, a retired banker, says of the visit: “It’s hard to get good help, particularly free help.” Christopher Lopez, a 49-year-old Navy veteran in Palm Desert, Calif., says events of the past two years exacerbated divisions in his family over politics and Covid-19. He found that a trip last month to mend fences didn’t go as planned. “I don’t think tensions have cooled,” he says. “They’ve only gotten worse with all the politics and the feelings of isolation.” The visit was supposed to last for a week, but he left on the second day. He says he felt a loss of allegiance from his sister, Susan La Gioia. She says she didn’t feel she could take sides. “I see the political part, the people that are afraid of Covid and those who don’t believe in it,” says Ms. La Gioia, a 45-year-old nurse. “And I have to remain neutral.” She also didn’t want her 11-year-old daughter to witness disagreements. Mr. Lopez is taking some time out. “I’m not talking to anybody,” he says. “I still love them, but I have to love them from a distance for a while.” For personal, non-commercial use only. Do not edit, alter or reproduce. For commercial reproduction or distribution, contact Dow Jones Reprints & Licensing at (800) 843-0008 or www.djreprints.com. THE WALL STREET JOURNAL. A12 | Monday, August 30, 2021 PERSONAL JOURNAL. Distance Yourself BONDS ELIZABETH BERNSTEIN Sometimes we become so entrenched in a stressful situation, we lose sight of anything else. Language can help us see the bigger picture. This is called linguistic distancing. Dr. Kross recommends talking to yourself as another person would, addressing yourself in the third person to create distance. (“Elizabeth, you’re going through a hard time, but you’re going to be OK.”) This lets you give yourself the advice you would give a friend. “We make wiser judgments when we think about others’ circumstances rather than our own,” Dr. Kross says. Reconnect With Values Dr. Walser suggests this quick exercise: Close your eyes and think of a sweet memory. Picture it clearly: the sights and sounds, the people who were there. Then ask yourself what was meaningful for you in that event. And give it a name. (When Dr. Walser walked me through this exercise, I pictured swimming with my 10-yearold niece recently and quickly realized “connection” was the value.) Now take inspiration from the value you recognized and take action right away. (I called my niece and had a fun chat.) Try a Sunset Mode of Mind How to Deal With Stress In Your Life: Embrace It What strategies can help us focus on acceptance? Here’s advice from the experts: Slow Down Too often, we careen from one task to the next. This can create chronic stress that keeps our body’s fight-or-flight response activated. Pause when you finish a task to take three big breaths. Focus your attention on the present. This calms your physiological stress response. And it helps clear out the mental noise. “The point of slowing down is to introduce patience into your experience,” says Robyn D. Walser, an assistant clinical professor in psychology at the University of California, Berkeley, who teaches ACT to students and other therapists. “And patience gives you a choice. It allows you to be more deliberate and intentional.” Create a Mantra Research shows that thinking of a word or phrase that affirms our values and silently repeating it leads to a widespread reduction in activity across the brain, primarily in the area responsible for self- Handcrafted Beauty AN ESSENTIAL STYLE FOR EVERY WARDROBE, GLOWING IN 18KT GOLD 599 $ FREE SHIPPING Our glorious 7" 18kt gold wheat-link bracelet is a must-have for your jewelry collection. In a classic V-pattern, the meticulously handmade links sit flush against the wrist, allowing a gleaming shine to emanate from every angle. A rich look that will elevate any outfit. Available in 8" $679 Ross-Simons Item #879364 To receive this special offer, use offer code: WHEAT7 1.800.556.7376 or visit ross-simons.com/wheat scan here to visit judgment and rumination. “When the brain is spiraling or deluding itself, a mantra gives it something else to focus on,” says Brad Stulberg, an executive coach in Asheville, N.C., and author of “The Practice of Groundedness.” Mr. Stulberg suggests you pick a mantra that reminds you to slow down and accept what’s going on without trying to fix it or push your feelings away. For instance: “This is what’s happening. I might as well do the best I can.” Dr. Walser suggests: “Be here now.” And you already know what my Uncle Sidney would say. Hawaii Travelers Weigh Their Plans BY ALLISON POHLE H I first learned of this tip from psychologist Steven C. Hayes, the codeveloper of ACT and the author of “A Liberated Mind: How to Pivot Toward What Matters.” It’s one of my all-time favorite pieces of advice. When we witness a beautiful sunset, we typically feel joy, awe, a sense of calm or peace. Yet even as we experience these lovely things, we know that a sunset is also bittersweet. It’s fleeting. It will never happen exactly the same way again. A sunset mode is a mind-set that allows us to take all of life’s emotions in, just as we would a sunset. I’ve been practicing it a lot lately, as I spend time with my father, who had a devastating stroke a few years ago. It’s heartbreaking to me that he isn’t well. But he is here. He still has his sense of humor. And we have a relationship, even if it is much different. “There is beauty and sadness in life,” says Dr. Hayes, a psychology professor at the University of Nevada, Reno. “A sunset mode allows you to show up to the whole of it.” refund on a rental car. The couple also list their Denver home on Airbnb when they go on vacation and hesitate to cancel those bookings. They plan to keep monitoring the situation. “We want to do the right thing, and with the governor speaking up, it does add a new layer to this dynamic,” Mr. Shannon says. Travel agents say they have been inundated with questions from would-be vacationers. Bruce Fisher, owner of Hawaii Aloha Travel in Ho- Covid-19 cases are among nonresident travelers, with most infections attributed to community spread. Brooks Baehr, a pandemicresponse administrative assistant for the health department, says there are more nonresident travel-related cases than the data reflect. That is because some travelers—even those with symptoms—don’t get tested for Covid-19, out of fear of being put into quarantine, he says. In October Hawaii required U.S. travelers to present a awaii’s governor last week made a blunt plea to tourists: Stay away from the islands now and visit later. That leaves would-be travelers reconsidering their vacations as Covid-19 cases rise. Many are also contending with nonrefundable bookings, which can make canceling harder to stomach. Gov. David Ige said “now is not the time to visit the islands,” as hospitals are reaching capacity and intensivecare units are filling up. He asked travelers to curtail trips voluntarily through the end of October. After shutting down to tourists earlier in the pandemic, Hawaii has had a surge in visitors this summer as many airlines added nonstop routes there. The recent rebound has nearly matched Hawaii’s governor has asked tourists to stay away for now. record levels in 2019, when more than 10 million people traveled to the state. nolulu, has seen a small num- negative test taken within 72 ber of cancellations at his After eloping during the hours of departure to bypass agency since the governor’s pandemic, Eric Shannon, a a mandatory quarantine. In announcement. But he hasn’t project manager for an enearly July, the state said fully noticed a mass rush to call ergy company, and his wife vaccinated travelers from the off trips just yet. waited to book their honeyU.S. and its territories didn’t “It all depends on what moon until Covid-19 condineed to show a negative test, additional restrictions are tions seemed to be improvand those who are unvaccigoing to come ing. The pair, nated could bypass the 10down,” he says. who are fully day quarantine by submitting “If they decide vaccinated, took a negative test taken within ‘It felt wrong to to close advantage of a 72 hours of departure. beaches and Southwest Airgo,’ says Jessie Jessie Daley and her husparks, that’s go- band, who live in the Denver lines flash sale Daley, who ing to be even in June and area, were scheduled to debooked a twocanceled a trip. more of a part for Hawaii on Saturday. game-changer.” week trip to HaMs. Daley had been watchEarlier in Auwaii for miding the rising Covid-19 cases gust, the state September. and grew concerned about limited indoor capacity in bars, traveling with their 1-year-old Mr. Shannon was monitoring rising Covid-19 cases in the restaurants and gyms to 50%. daughter. Then came headlines Starting last week, all large state and had looked into posfrom Gov. Ige’s news confergatherings on Oahu were limsible refunds even before the ence. “That was our point ited to 10 people indoors and governor’s news conference. where we were like, ‘Oh, we 25 people outdoors. He estimates that if they canshould not go,’” Ms. Daley says. Many vacationers and celed, they would lose about The family doesn’t plan to travel agents point to data $3,500, which includes the reschedule the trip anytime from the Hawaii Department costs of a nonrefundable soon. “It felt wrong to go, and of Health that show about 1% our biggest concern is our Airbnb in Maui, some preof the recent positive booked activities and a partial daughter’s safety,” she says. KENT NISHIMURA/LOS ANGELES TIMES/GETTY IMAGES ILLUSTRATION BY CAROLE HÉNAFF M y Uncle Sidney, a retired U.S. Navy physician and Vietnam veteran, has a military phrase he uses as advice for what to do when life is lousy: Embrace the Suck. He’s dispensed this colorful guidance to me in several stressful situations—when I’ve been anxious on deadline, dealing with a difficult family member, and, most recently, struggling through the pandemic. “The point is, when you’re stuck, surrounded or suffering, you need to assess where you are, learn to live with it, and try to advance,’’ Uncle Sidney says. Pretty good advice for our times. We’re still dealing with the whiplash of uncertainty and the emotions it provokes: frustration, anxiety, anger and fear. To help us through, psychologists recommend an approach similar to Uncle Sidney’s, which they call acceptance. They define it as the ability to see reality clearly and embrace all our emotions, both pleasant and unpleasant. It’s a focus of a widely used and studied therapeutic approach called Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT), which a large body of research shows helps people feel less anxious and depressed and more resilient and hopeful. When we practice acceptance— and believe me, it does take practice—we don’t suppress our difficult emotions or bury them in a front of forced positivity. We don’t attempt to control the situation by trying to fix the unfixable. And we don’t fall down a rabbit hole of despair. Instead, we deal clearheadedly with our situation, and we remember that even in life’s toughest moments there is often some good, even if it’s simply a lesson to be learned. “Acceptance is the opposite of getting stuck,” says Ethan Kross, an experimental psychologist and neuroscientist at the University of Michigan and author of “Chatter: The Voice in Our Head, Why it Matters, and How to Harness It.” For personal, non-commercial use only. Do not edit, alter or reproduce. For commercial reproduction or distribution, contact Dow Jones Reprints & Licensing at (800) 843-0008 or www.djreprints.com. THE WALL STREET JOURNAL. ESTATE OF ROY LICHTENSTEIN/PARRISH ART MUSEUM (5) ARTS IN REVIEW Monday, August 30, 2021 | A13 ART REVIEW Clockwise from top: Roy Lichtenstein’s “The Cannon” (1948), “Untitled” (c. 1955) and ”Bugs Bunny” (c. 1958) Before Lichtenstein’s Career Popped BY RICHARD B. WOODWARD W Watermill, N.Y. hen scholars examine a famous artist’s early work, the temptation is to search for portents—to find in classroom studies any nascent motifs that point to future prowess and foretell mastery as inevitable. One of the refreshing aspects of “Roy Lichtenstein: History in the Making, 1948-1960” at the Parrish Art Museum is that the curators haven’t surrounded this period with an aura of destiny. One walks through the three rooms and sees the artist testing out a bewildering variety of styles and subjects without ever settling on one. Not until 1960, when he was in his late 30s, did he discover the formula—figures lifted from American comic books, outlined in black, filled in with bright primary colors and abstracted by Ben-day dots—that became a defining signature of Pop Art. Until then, as the show succinctly documents, Lichtenstein roamed blithely through the annals of art and illustration. He painted tank-like figures that recall the Surrealism of Max Ernst and the eccentric classicism of John Graham (“The Diver,” c. 1948-49). He made tapered sculptures in wood and metal that invoke African and Northwest American Indian art (“King,” c. 1951). He satirized U.S. history painting (“Washington Crossing the Delaware,” c. 1951) by flattening the heroic figures of Emanuel Leutze’s panoramic canvas in the manner of Picasso’s “Three Musicians.” Elements of his later style are visible but not yet synthesized. Images of cartoon animals from about 1958—installed in a section of the show titled “Glimmers of Pop”— lack the flat-toned audacity of his post-1960 paintings. A brush-andink drawing of a reclining Bugs Bunny renders his buck-toothed head as if he were a hallucination or perhaps one of De Kooning’s “Woman” paintings. Two drawings of Mickey Mouse are more disturbing than droll. Several of these works were in the 1994 and 2012 traveling retrospectives. But many more of the approximately 90 paintings, drawings, sculptures, watercolors and prints have not been seen before. Elizabeth Finch, chief curator at the Colby College Museum of Art, and Marshall N. Price, chief curator of modern and contemporary art at the Nasher Museum of Art at Duke University, are the co-organizers of the show and editors of the superb catalog. The exhibition will travel to both places, as well as to the Columbus Museum of Art in Ohio; it has been ably installed here by Alicia G. Longwell, chief curator at the Parrish. Lichtenstein (1923-1997) was a well-trained artist. Born in New York, he studied art at Ohio State University where—after three years in the U.S. Army during and after World War II—he then resumed his studies and earned a master of fine arts degree in 1949. He often credited a teacher there, Hoyt L. Sherman, as an influence on his entire career. The 1950s were less fulfilling. He worked as a draftsman for a window decorator in Cleveland and taught art in upstate New York and in New Jersey. The upbeat, impish side of Lichtenstein was irrepressible, however, and pervades the show. Exposed to Modernism in New York and during his military service in Europe, he used the Cubism of Picasso and the whimsy of Miró to parody whatever caught his fancy, from French classical painting to the Charge of the Light Brigade. The absence of anything religious, mystical, risqué or polemical is also striking. There are no pure landscapes or nudes. Figures are set in the American West and Midwest rather than Lichtenstein’s birthplace in the urbanized East. There are no city scenes, although the social realist painter Reginald Marsh was one of his teachers during his New York youth. Lichtenstein demonstrated more curiosity about engineering than spiritualism. A series from the mid-’50s depicts in a Cubist fashion the gears and levers of various machines: “Shaper Feed Mechanism,” “Motion Picture Projector,” “Device With Crank,” “Ratchet and Pawl Mechanism.” A woodblock print titled “The Heavier-Than-Air Machine” (1953) may have Ohio associations. Columbus isn’t far from Dayton, where the Wright brothers had their headquarters. Lichtenstein’s Abstract Expressionist phase (mid-’50s) was brief and devoid of angst. His apparently unique technique for applying multiple stripes of color simultaneously with a rag did not result in great paintings, but it did, as the curators note, presage his later brushstroke sculptures, one of which stands in front of the Parrish. After his emergence as a Pop Art star, Lichtenstein told an interviewer in 1963: “I have always had this interest in a purely American mythological subject matter.” The sentiment is confirmed here by a drawing from the early ’40s of Paul Bunyan cutting down a tree, as well as by the cowboys and Indians who appeared regularly during the ’50s when he was mocking 19th-century Western painters such as Alfred Jacob Miller. Not that Lichtenstein ever seemed less than optimistic about his country or himself. Despite the diverse and sometimes incongruous art on display here, everything in the show exudes a buoyant confidence, as if this most light-hearted of the Pop artists suspected that one day he would become what he became. Roy Lichtenstein: History in the Making, 1948-1960 The Parrish Art Museum, through Oct. 24 Mr. Woodward is an arts writer in New York “Mechanism, Cross Section” (c. 1954), left, and “Self-Portrait at an Easel” (c. 1951–52), above For personal, non-commercial use only. Do not edit, alter or reproduce. For commercial reproduction or distribution, contact Dow Jones Reprints & Licensing at (800) 843-0008 or www.djreprints.com. A14 | Monday, August 30, 2021 THE WALL STREET JOURNAL. SPORTS U.S. Open Is Missing Some Big Stars Serena Williams, Rafael Nadal and Roger Federer won’t be playing, while Novak Djokovic seeks to complete a Grand Slam The announcements came one by one, like a list of ailments from a middle-aged rec league. Balky knee. Long-term foot pain. A hamstring tear that just won’t heal. Only these belonged to three of the greatest tennis players of all time, Roger Federer, Rafael Nadal, and Serena Williams. All three of them withdrew from the U.S. Open in the space of two weeks. And with their exits came a sobering realization for the sport: when the tournament begins on Monday, the U.S. Open will be the first Slam held without at least one of them this century. The end of an era is coming. “We all miss them. We’d all love them to play forever,” said men’s world No. 4 Alexander Zverev. “At some point they will have to retire.” It’s the hard truth that tennis fans have been doing their best to ignore for nearly a decade. But it’s already impossible to miss the legend-shaped holes in the men’s and women’s draws in New York. That trio alone represents more than a third of all major tournament wins since 2000. So in the grand scheme of tennis history, this could go down as the Slam that turned the page on the RogerRafa-Serena epoch of tennis. Especially if a certain Novak Djokovic does what most people expect him to and wins the whole thing. Not only would he complete the first men’s calendar-year Slam since Rod Laver in 1969—something neither Federer or Nadal has ever managed. He would also claim an unprecedented 21st major men’s title, taking the lead in the three-player race for history for the first time in his career. Should Djokovic pull it off, it’s very possible that neither Federer or Nadal will ever catch him. Djokovic is still at the height of powers. Federer, who hasn’t won a major since the 2018 Australian Open, has no horizon for returning to the game. And Nadal’s best shot of adding to his tally comes just once a year at the French Open. “My participation here, without Rafa and Roger participating, I feel it,” Djokovic said of his status as a prohibitive favorite in Queens. “I know there’s a lot of people who are going to be watching my matches and expecting me to do well and fight for a Slam.” While he trains his sights on No. 21, the people he shared the stage with for so long are asking themselves big questions not just about whether they can win anymore Slams, but about whether they can play at a high level at all. A decision on retirement now feels like it could come at any moment, particularly for Federer and CHARLES SYKES/ASSOCIATED PRESS BY JOSHUA ROBINSON Serena Williams, Rafael Nadal and Roger Federer appeared together during Arthur Ashe Kids’ Day at the 2013 U.S. Open. All three stars will miss this year’s event. How and when to call it a career is trickier in tennis than in most sports. years. They felt that it was more important to manage their appearances and pick their spots carefully, because they could no longer take the pounding of four Slams on three surfaces. But if their results have proven anything, it’s that the surgical approach, which Weather pains early tournaments, he still moves at 34 as if he’s made of rubber and grinds down opponents like no one else. Djokovic’s field of would-be challengers in Flushing includes three men ranked in the world’s top five—No. 2 Daniil Medvedev, No. 3 Stefanos Tsitsipas, and No. 4 Alexander Zverev. But while they give him a run for his money at lesser tournaments on the circuit, none of them has ever beaten him in the majors’ best-of-five format. Keeping pace with Djokovic at all is hard enough. Doing it for four or five hours is near impossible. Djokovic has only lost one five-setter in the past three years. “I really wish for me to maybe one day be at that level of consistency and be able to dominate Grand Slams at such a level,” Tsitsipas said. “I think he has learned throughout the years how to preserve his best strengths and kind of expose them at the right moment, at the right time.” The WSJ Daily Crossword | Edited by Mike Shenk Shown are today’s noon positions of weather systems and precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day. <0 Edmonton Vancouver 60s costs them rhythm and match fitness, is no way to build a season. “I can understand that Roger, Rafa and Serena, myself are not that young anymore,” Djokovic said. “The new generation obviously can play probably more tournaments in a season. The bodies can sustain that effort and that beating in a way. We have to be, I guess, a little bit more selective.” Djokovic was being generous. There is nothing selective about his calendar: he has missed just one Slam since 2005. And this season, he squeezed in the Olympic singles tournament halfway around the world in Japan, where he decided it might be a good idea to tack on the mixed doubles as well. (He left without an Olympic medal.) As much as his unparalleled defense and his superhuman grit, Djokovic’s place in the record books will be down to his body’s apparent unbreakability. Though he often complains of aches and turn into absences and absences snowball into rankings slides, because players are no longer amassing points on the circuit. When they return, they are seeded lower and face better opponents early in tournaments. Williams, Nadal, and Federer have accepted that fate in recent Williams, who will both be 40 by the end of September. Both have said that they will see out their recoveries, yet neither has offered any kind of timeline. For Federer, who is undergoing a third knee surgery in the space of 18 months, even the 2022 Australian Open is likely off the table. Williams, meanwhile, is approaching five years since she last won a Grand Slam and 18 months since she last won a tournament of any kind. The possibility that she will one day match Margaret Court’s record of 24 majors now seems remote. “We’ve done everything we could,” Williams’ coach Patrick Moratoglou said. “It is heartbreaking, but this is the only possible decision.” How and when to call it quits is trickier in tennis than in most sports. The simple nature of the tennis tour means that a decline can be drawn out and painful. Injuries 0s Calgaryy Winnipeg Seattle 70s 60s Portland 80s Helena 70s Boise 70s 70s 90s Albanyy 70s Cheyenne Sacramento San Francisco Denver Colorado Springs Las Vegas 100s 100s 70s Los Angeles Phoenix San Diego Omaha Tucson Santa Fe Albuquerque Oklahoma City Ft. 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Atlanta Birmingham Jackson Mobile 60s Philadelphia 70s New Orleans 80s Cleveland Indianapolis Pittsburgh Memphis 50s Boston Hartford New York Buffalo Springfield Charleston Topeka 80s Kansas St. Louis Louisville Wichita City Nashville 80s El Paso Milwaukee Detroit Des Moines Chicago 40s Augusta Toronto Mpls./St. Paul Salt Lake City 30s Ottawa Pierre Sioux Falls Reno 20s Montreal Bismarck Billings Eugene 10s 32 “That’s right” 63 Fashion 34 Assimilate again 64 Snug home 14 15 16 Down 35 Uttered 17 18 19 36 You could wait 1 Scattered for it 20 21 22 23 2 Baghdad natives 37 Fill with passion 3 Interstellar cloud 24 25 26 38 “Walden” writer 4 “Downton 27 28 29 30 Abbey” daughter 40 Makes waves in, at the salon 5 Carry 31 32 33 41 Bed and 6 Autumn mo. 34 35 36 37 breakfast 7 Note from the 42 Helping for 38 39 boss really hungry 8 Honeydew kin 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 diners 9 Branching horn 43 Chobani product 48 49 50 51 10 Keebler’s Ernie, 45 Zero, e.g. 52 53 54 emphatically 11 Looked all right 55 56 57 58 46 Some native 12 Creator of Tigger Alaskans 59 60 61 and Piglet 47 Pathetic group 13 Lacking the 62 63 64 49 “I can hardly requisite skill wait!” 18 Like three men of 51 Welles of R&B | By Andrea Carla Michaels & nursery rhyme “Citizen Kane” Kevin Christian 22 Inventor Whitney 54 Brazilian soccer 25 Depend (on) Across 24 “My Ántonia” 44 Hoppy beer, for great writer Cather short 26 Pester, like a 1 Pride and envy, 56 “The Grand puppy for two 25 1983 Billy Idol 45 Singer Lil ___ X Budapest Hotel” song 29 Bullfight shout director 5 Puccini opera 48 Sherwood Forest Anderson 27 U.S. intelligence outlaw 31 Guy of “Diners, 10 Birthright seller org. Drive-Ins and in the Old 58 La Paz’s nation: 50 Greenbacks Dives” Testament Abbr. 28 Little piggy 52 Taxing org. 14 Card over a deuce 30 Princess who 53 Near, poetically Previous Puzzle’s Solution helped Theseus 15 Indian, for J AM B B A D A T N B C 54 Modified escape the AWO L I MO N I T C I A example for another C A P O P A J A M A P A N S Labyrinth 16 Make like a O R E O O N O S T A G E platform, as B E R MU D A S O R T S 31 To the furthest Pisa tower an app B P S R O E O P S extent H OM E S G R A S S S K I T 17 Early pregnancy 55 Siamese sound A V E R P A I L S A R E A 33 “The Raven” exam J U D G E S R O B S C A R Y 57 Beatles album writer I M S K I N D I A 19 U.S. disaster D E S I G N E R J E N S that included 34 Marbled cut response org. U S E R S R O C A L O T “Norwegian S I L K B A N A N A WW I I 38 Golf ball support 20 Horse-related S A M Y A P P E D E A S E Wood” R M S A R EWE A Y E S 39 John, Paul or 21 Like rams and 59 Trim The contest answer is PHANTOM THREAD. Each George (but not roosters 60 Bib dribbles of the theme answers is an item of clothing Ringo) 23 1997 Smith/ missing a letter: PAJAMA PAN(T)S, BERMUDA 61 Aware of Jones movie, for 40 Philanthropist’s S(H)ORTS, GRASS SKI(R)T, JUDGE’S ROB(E), short benevolence 62 Deli sandwiches DESIGNER JE(A)NS and SILK BAN(D)ANA. The 1 missing letters suggest a “phantom THREAD” running through the answers. For personal, non-commercial use only. Do not edit, alter or reproduce. For commercial reproduction or distribution, contact Dow Jones Reprints & Licensing at (800) 843-0008 or www.djreprints.com. THE WALL STREET JOURNAL. OPINION A Lesson From a Howler Monkey I miss travel, though I definitely don’t miss airports. But slow security lines and overINSIDE priced paVIEW ninis will be By Andy worth it Kessler again soon, because great life lessons emerge in the oddest places. Way back, my family took a trip to Costa Rica. They have beaches, volcanoes, rafting, ziplines, horseback riding, hikes, hanging bridges. What’s not to like? Early in the trip, my wife and I, along with our four sons, stayed at an “eco-hotel.” The rooms had little cardboard placards bragging about how much water and carbon they didn’t use, and there were plenty of vegan choices at the buffet breakfast, next to the eggs and bacon. I asked the front desk what “eco-hotel” meant and was told that it was just branding to get Americans and Germans to stay there— they weren’t doing anything different than before they adopted the moniker. On our first morning, our guide, Alberto, picked us up in his van and unloaded us at some important rainforest, grabbing a tripod-mounted Swarovski spotting scope. He marched us maybe 50 yards in, stopped to set up the scope, and launched into a long-winded description of the very rare and elusive three-wattled bellbird, a favorite of birdwatchers because of its clanging metallic voice. He stared into the telescope, spun it around, huffing and puffing and searching so long that I began to suspect the bellbird was extinct. The rest of us were bored to tears. After 20 minutes, my eldest started flicking something at No. 2. Yes, sometimes it is just easier to number them. He didn’t like having things flicked at him, but his older brother was bigger, so he started poking at No. 3, who started screaming, “Don’t touch me because I don’t like being touched.” Then No. 3 started picking on our youngest, pushing in the back of his knees so he couldn’t stay standing up. Alberto kept droning on about mating habits and migratory patterns. As my youngest kept getting bullied, he started sobbing to my wife. This went on for a while until she turned to me and told me to do something about it. I didn’t think she was actually paying attention to Alberto or even interested in the mythical three-wattled bellbird. None of us were. She just wanted the bickering to stop. So what did I do? I reprimanded my eldest for starting the chain reaction. It didn’t matter; within minutes the flicking, touching, sobbing and “do something about this” pleading continued. Ah, the circle of dominance and submission. Alberto finally found the dumb bird, and we all looked in the field scope at some fuzzy white-and-brown thing that sounded like the banging exhaust pipes of a Ford Pinto. I quietly sidled up to Alberto and suggested we move on. We walked another 50 yards and stopped so Alberto could point out a tree When my four sons act out, I ask if they remember a violent rainforest episode. with roots that doubled as a nesting ground for some rodent or carpenter ants or something. I can’t quite remember, because I was too busy thinking ill thoughts about Alberto to listen. We heard rustling above us. And then screeching. Way up in the canopy there seemed to be some sort of tussle. All the flicking, poking and sobbing immediately stopped as we all looked up to check out a tribe of Howler monkeys having their own family issues. It became clear that two of them weren’t getting along. We watched through the maze of branches 40 to 50 feet up as one of the monkeys, the alpha male, picked up another monkey and threw him to the forest floor. We watched in stunned silence as this nonalpha male—I won’t insult my son in calling him No. 2— fell and tried to slow his fall by grabbing for branches or anything to slow his descent. He landed not 10 feet from us with a thud that shook the ground. He got up, looked at us, probably in embarrassment, and hobbled off. We all looked at each other with a “Did we just see that?” kind of amazement. Even Alberto’s jaw dropped, and he eventually said, “I’ve never seen anything like that in my life.” Another family came strolling over, and one asked, “Did you guys see the three-wattled bellbird like we just did? It was so cool.” We all just sort of chuckled, nodded and moved on for the rest of our rainforest sightseeing. Life lessons galore. Any time our sons start squabbling, which happens constantly, I only have to ask if they remember that time in the Costa Rican rainforest and boom, it stops. Maybe the fond family travel memories end the conflict. Or maybe my sons are too busy considering our species’ evolution from primal toxic masculinity. More likely they think I’m threatening to throw them from the high branches of tall trees. Hey, whatever works. Write to [email protected]. Dollars for Duds in Latin America Nicaraguan dictator Daniel Ortega is jailing, killing and disappearing his AMERICAS political opponents. He By Mary has taken Anastasia control of the O’Grady Supreme Court and the electoral council and has gagged the press by making it a crime to report “false news.” As he “runs” for a fourth term in November, his most serious rivals are under arrest. Mr. Ortega’s Nicaragua is a police state. For advocates of peace and freedom, this makes him persona non grata. At the International Monetary Fund, he’s a valued member. So too are the governments of socialist, deadbeat Argentina and of El Salvador, which every day slips further into arbitrary, authoritarian rule. These are some of the bad actors in the Western Hemisphere who received more “special drawing rights” from the IMF on Aug. 23 as part of a new $650 billion general allocation. They don’t play by the rules of the international community, but suddenly hundreds of millions of dollars at rock-bottom rates are falling into their coffers. SDRs are created out of thin air but can be converted, on demand, into hard currency. If a member wants dollars, the U.S. is obliged to provide them by borrowing in the capital markets. Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen, who led the charge for this new round of SDRs, claims the transaction is costfree assistance to the needy. But if that is true, why limit the issuance? In fact, the conversion of SDRs to dollars is a subsidized, perpetual loan. For poor countries the subsidy is above 90% of the loan value. Each of the 190 members has received a new allotment of SDRs, according to its quota in the fund, no matter the nation’s commitment to minority rights, institutions or the rule of law. This implies another cost, borne by the poor, whom Ms. Yellen and her friends at the IMF say they are trying to help. The oppressors will get a windfall, no questions asked. Cuba isn’t a member of the IMF, and Venezuela can’t access its SDRs because the government is not recognized by a simple majority of voting shares held by members. But Nicaragua has been credited with 249 million SDRs, equivalent to nearly $354 million at the current exchange rate of one SDR to $1.42. El Salvador’s take is 275 million SDRs valued at $390 million. Argentina received nearly 3.1 billion SDRs, worth about $4.4 billion. The payola to the corrupt Mr. Ortega, who owns and runs the country as Anastasio Somoza did in the 1970s, is a scandal. It’s a slap in the face to a nation that needs international support as it bravely confronts a regime that guns down dissidents in the streets. The case for the SDRs as a means to help the poor is equally weak in Argentina. The country owes the IMF some $46 billion with low prospects to repay. The two sides have been negotiating what would be effectively a debt rescheduling for months, but have made no progress. The problem is the socialist government’s economic model of populist spending, high taxes, capital controls and inflation running above 50% annually. Argentina can no longer access capital markets A new round of IMF assistance rewards bad policy and criminal governments. and investment has plummeted. As measured by the JPMorgan Emerging Markets Bond Index, country risk is a sky-high 1,500-plus basis points. To stay current with the fund, Argentina must make two payments of principal and interest, totaling about $4.5 billion, before the end of the year. That’s where Ms. Yellen’s contribution to the poor is going. It will allow the government to get through midterm elections in November without a crisis and without making the reforms necessary to recover growth. “A clear example of a counter productive effect of an unconditional SDR allocation,” Argentine economist Pablo Guidotti tweeted in July. Without an agreement and without access to the capital markets by next year, Argentina’s only option will be to fall into arrears as it must make payments to the IMF of $19 billion in both 2022 and 2023. El Salvador’s President Nayib Bukele intimidates entrepreneurs and judges who don’t share his politics. When his country’s Congress wouldn’t rubber-stamp his agenda last year, he brought armed soldiers into the chamber and sat in the speaker’s chair. Starting Sep. 7 El Salvador will adopt bitcoin as a legal currency. But this is not currency competition. As monetary scholar George Selgin explained in June on the Cato Institute’s Alt-M website, the new law “compels” merchants to accept it as payment. IMF managing director Kristalina Georgieva has criticized the law, noting that bitcoin is a “volatile asset” that will make planning at all economic levels difficult. In June ratings agency Fitch said the new law increases “risks, including the potential of violating international antimoney laundering and terrorist financing standards.” Last week, Mr. Bukele’s handpicked Supreme Court rejected a U.S. request for the extradition of a gang member. There’s a reason the Salvadoran economy is sputtering, and it isn’t entirely the fault of Covid-19. There was a time when large multilateral handouts were conditioned on attempts at good governance. Those days are gone. Write to O’[email protected]. Keep the ‘Pineapple Express’ Rolling By Bing West And Paul Wolfowitz A n emotional President Biden pledged Thursday to evacuate American citizens from Afghanistan as well as the Afghans who had supported our hastily abandoned mission. “We will not be deterred by terrorists. . . . We will rescue the Americans who are there. We will get our Afghan allies out, and . . . continue to execute this mission with courage and honor.” Unfortunately the president’s self-imposed Aug. 31 deadline means that many of the people to whom he made that promise will still be trapped in Afghanistan after evacuation flights end. To keep at least part of his promise, the president needs to authorize clandestine exfiltrations by declaring to the relevant congressional committees that continuing the evacuation is in the national interest. Such a declaration, commonly called a “finding,” is delivered to the congressional committees with oversight of covert operations. It would create and formally authorize a clandestine program, bringing with it resources, manpower, money and congressional buy-in, so that the Central Intelligence Agency and others can achieve the declared objective of evacuating Americans and Afghan allies. How to rescue more Afghans after Biden’s deadline expires. Weeks before the president’s public promise, scores if not hundreds of U.S. veterans volunteered to rescue their countrymen trapped in Afghanistan as well as those Afghans who fought with and for us. Frustrated “that our own government didn’t do this,” one of the volunteers told ABC News, “we did what we should do, as Americans.” Gripping accounts are emerging of the so-called Pineapple Express, a remarkable testament to the values and courage of the men and women who make up our volunteer military and the civilians who support them. ABC reported that as of Aug. 26, the effort had saved more than 500 at-risk Afghans by getting them inside the Kabul airport. That required the escapees to make their way at night— sometimes through sewers and often along dangerous streets—to get to their appropriate entry point at the airport. Hundreds of people, many in the U.S., constructed routes in real time using the Global Positioning System and guided those in Kabul with secure communications on Signal. Former Green Beret Capt. Zac Lois, the “engineer” for this clandestine railroad, consciously modeled his tactics for evading the Taliban on those employed by the American heroine Harriet Tubman. Today’s remarkable volunteers are determined to get out “just one more” right up to the last minute of the last day. A “finding” could help them do that and more. It would also guard against the administration pulling the plug on those left behind once public anger wanes. Despite the heroic volunteer efforts, there are likely to be people who will still need help to escape, weeks and months from now. The president needs to do more to keep his word. Mr. West, a former assistant defense secretary and combat Marine, has written four books about the Afghanistan war. Mr. Wolfowitz, a former deputy defense secretary (2001-05), is a senior fellow at the American Enterprise Institute and a member of the advisory board of No One Left Behind, a nonprofit that assists Afghans who used to work for the U.S. military. Monday, August 30, 2021 | A15 BOOKSHELF | By Naomi Schaefer Riley Back to School, Back to Screens Baby, Unplugged By Sophie Brickman (HarperOne, 326 pages, $27.99) A s children return to school this fall, their parents’ attitudes toward technology may well shift. The 18 months of the pandemic and lockdown have revealed both the astonishing ability of computers to connect us and their troubling inability to teach children, especially younger ones, much of anything. For many older children— even if they were indeed able to learn something on Zoom—the substitution of screens for in-person socializing seems to have led to mental-health problems. Journalist Sophie Brickman was on the verge of completing her examination of technology’s effects on children and childrearing when the pandemic hit. Fortunately, the unusual circumstances didn’t shake her from her well-researched and unvarnished conclusions. As the months stretched on in self-quarantine, she writes in “Baby, Unplugged,” she found herself grateful for “researchers who’ve hammered home that for young children, particularly the preschool set, free play and imagination and even boredom are the best activities to fill the day.” Ms. Brickman acknowledges that working parents—really, most parents—must occasionally make use of screens. But she doesn’t allow herself (the book’s subtitle is “One Mother’s Search for Balance, Reason, and Sanity in the Digital Age”) or any of her parent-readers to give up on the task of setting screen limits simply because they are stuck in an apartment or house all day with small, needy children. Early in her narrative, Ms. Brickman describes herself as the Luddite in her own marriage. Her husband is perpetually bringing home new gadgets. Little wonder that a man who judges the previous night’s sleep based on messages from his wristwatch has no problem with using technology to monitor and entertain the children. But Ms. Brickman begins to wonder why she suddenly finds herself eager to measure her newborn’s weight, feeding habits and sleep schedule with a slew of apps and devices. Maybe there’s some evolutionary drive to gather information, she thinks, but she is disturbed to see how obsessive she has become: She wants to know, for instance, whether her left breast or right breast produces more milk. There is merchandise on offer for people who are thinking in this way, she notes: changing tables that measure a baby’s weight with each new diaper, “smart socks” that keep track of a baby’s vital signs when he is asleep. Ms. Brickman concludes that, far from aiding in the rearing of a child, such products will only serve to make parents crazy. Ms. Brickman offers reports from pediatricians who explain that if a child really needed such a precise level of monitoring, he would probably be in a hospital. She draws a similarly skeptical conclusion about the many other products that parents can now choose from, products that, quite apart from monitoring and measuring, will supposedly make their children happier and healthier. Each is designed in ways that, it is claimed, will improve a baby’s habits or make life easier for parents—from the Wi-Fi-enabled FormulaPro, which can be programmed by a smartphone to prepare bottles, to a $1,300 smart bassinet, “which adjusts its rocking and white noise to soothe fussy babies.” One psychologist, adding some perspective on the wide array of products, tells Ms. Brickman: “Appreciate that good enough is almost always good enough.” Are educational apps really going to improve a child’s academic skills or, with their busy images and graphics, are they closer to a videogame? The questions that most parents fret over, though, are the ones that involve giving children screens, and here Ms. Brickman has truly done her homework. She tries to discern whether educational apps are really going to improve a child’s academic skills or whether, in their busy graphics and flashing images, they’re no different from Mario Bros. or any other videogame entertainment. Even well-meaning designers of educational apps, she notes, seem caught between wanting to keep the attention of children with endless clicking opportunities and giving them a chance to explore fairly simple and quiet worlds. Sandra Boynton, the author of the bestselling board book “Moo, Baa, La La La!”—showing animals and describing the sounds they make—tells Ms. Brickman that she has mixed feelings about the way her work has been turned into e-books with buttons and features everywhere. She fears that computer devices “shanghai a young child’s brain. . . . It’s not normal for a young child to be undistractible.” Reading physical books to children, Ms. Brickman concludes, is not just an exercise in nostalgia. She quotes an expert saying that “it’s probably the only unhurried time during the day.” Still, Ms. Brickman concedes that it is not at all easy these days to ensure that children have this unhurried time, and the natural range of emotions that children experience—including frustration, excitement and boredom—has always been taxing to parents. Thus it is hard to resist the temptation to just give kids a screen whenever things seem to be going south. Ms. Brickman advises parents to understand that the “friction” of parenting is beneficial to both adult and child. “Embrace the middle-of-the-night wake-ups,” she writes, “the tantrums, the fourteen minutes it takes to choose a sock, and you’ll become the kind of parent who really knows your child.” Like many other recent books on child-rearing, “Baby, Unplugged” offers passages in which we are told that things would be better if we all lived in Scandinavia. According to Ms. Brickman, the political solutions to the stress of parenting include, among much else, longer mandatory parental leave and universal day care. When experts tell her that educational television is actually meant for children to watch with a parent, she notes that it is easier to accomplish this task in a socialist society. Such political commentary feels dropped in, and it is the least researched element of the advice and analysis she provides. One can’t help thinking that, if raising children well means (as she suggests) embracing the parent-child friction of everyday life, then handing young children off to professional caretakers for much of the day might be self-defeating. Ms. Riley, a senior fellow at the American Enterprise Institute, is the author of “Be the Parent, Please: Stop Banning Seesaws and Start Banning Snapchat.” For personal, non-commercial use only. Do not edit, alter or reproduce. For commercial reproduction or distribution, contact Dow Jones Reprints & Licensing at (800) 843-0008 or www.djreprints.com. THE WALL STREET JOURNAL. A16 | Monday, August 30, 2021 OPINION T REVIEW & OUTLOOK LETTERS TO THE EDITOR Powell Takes a Victory Lap President Biden Failed U.S. Troops in Kabul The chairman also had a rosy view of inflahe verdict may be out on Jerome Powell as a central banker, but the Federal Re- tion even as it soars above the Fed’s 2% target serve chairman is a first-rate politician. and has been stickier than the central bank’s legion of economists preHis much-awaited (virtual) The Fed chairman says dicted. Mr. Powell couldn’t, speech at the Jackson Hole and didn’t, deny that fact. monetary conference on Frieverything the White But he dismissed the fastday offered a sunny view of House wants to hear. est runup in prices in years the economic horizon and an as “so far largely the product extended apologia for the of a relatively narrow group Fed’s performance on his watch. You might think he’s running for office of goods and services that have been directly . . . oh, wait, he is hoping for a second four-year affected by the pandemic and the reopening term as chairman, and President Biden will of the economy.” In other words, don’t blame the Fed. make his decision soon. Mr. Powell argued that all of this price unThe main headline from the speech is that on present course the Fed will begin to taper pleasantness will soon pass as supply conits extraordinary monthly bond purchases this straints ease. He didn’t mention that the burst year. But in case anyone thought this means of inflation so far this year has swamped wage monetary tightening, Mr. Powell quickly noted gains for seven months in a row, that the White that the Fed isn’t about to shrink its balance House last week raised its estimate for inflation sheet, now up to $8.3 trillion, or raise interest in the fourth quarter to 4.8% above a year earlier, and that the New York Fed’s July survey rates for a very long time. The message is that the Fed will remain su- of consumer inflation expectations for the next per-accommodative, even as nominal GDP year was 4.8%. Well anchored? Mr. Powell offered the usual concern about could grow 10% this year. Investors, who love the Fed’s support for asset prices, bid up stocks the struggles of “lower-wage workers,” but we on the news. This won’t hurt Mr. Powell’s re- wish he or someone at the Fed would acknowledge the central bank’s contribution to income nomination chances at the White House. Mr. Powell justified the Fed’s continued and inequality. The Fed's quantitative-easing bond historic policy ease on grounds that while the purchases are intended to lift asset prices, outlook for the job market is excellent, the la- which helps the relatively well off who own asbor market recovery has been uneven. But then sets, while renewed inflation robs low- and it always is after a recession. Mr. Powell’s case middle-income workers of real wage gains. The is that the 5.4% unemployment rate “under- resulting increase in inequality then becomes another political excuse for higher taxes and states the amount of labor market slack.” He could be right, though one reason for any more income redistribution. The good news for Mr. Powell is that Presislack is that the government welfare and jobless benefits that Mr. Powell cheered on earlier dent Biden will have to make his decision on this year are paying people more not to work reappointment before we know if the chairman than if they take a job. No mention of that in is right that inflation isn’t a problem. Meantime, he gives a great campaign speech. his remarks. P The Best of America resident Biden and his wife paid their re- den’s Afghan withdrawal turned to chaos. Lance Cpl. Rylee McCollum, of Jackson, spects Sunday at Dover Air Force Base in Delaware to the 13 Americans who Wyo., was “bound and determined” to join the Marines, said Cheyenne Mcdied at Kabul airport last The 13 men and women Collum, one of his three older week, and well they should. according to the JourWe are learning more about who died in Kabul were sisters, nal. “He knew it from the time these young men and woman, on a rescue mission. he was 4.” and their deaths are all the McCollum signed his enmore painful because they listment papers on his 18th were sent on a selfless rescue birthday at Summit Innovations School, in mission. They range in age from 20 to 31, represent a Jackson, where he had been on the wrestling mix of ethnic groups, and hail from the middle- team. He deployed to Jordan in April after getclass, patriotic families who always bear the ting married, and his wife Gigi is expecting a worst burden of war. Their family members say baby in weeks. Marine Cpl. Hunter Lopez, of Indio, Calif., most of them joined the military out of individual purpose and national pride. They are the volun- was the son of two Riverside County Sheriff’s teers who follow orders and man the ramparts Department employees. He had shared with his mother a photo of himself and a young Afghan no matter the risk or ill-advised war plan. Nicole Gee, recently promoted to Marine boy. “My son called me and told me that the Sergeant, was from Sacramento and married to photo of him and the little boy, he scooped up a fellow Marine, Jarod Gee. Only days before the boy and carried him on his shoulders for her death she posted on Instagram a now fa- five miles to safety. He told me, ‘mama we are mous photo of herself cradling a young Afghan so resourceful. We hot-wired a car and got back baby. “I love my job,” she wrote. She was 23 to base to be safe,’” his mother, Alicia Lopez, told CNN on Saturday. He was 22. years old. Every death in war is heartbreaking, and esLance Cpl. Jared Schmitz, 20, always wanted to be Marine. His “entire world was pecially when the mission that killed them the US Marine Corps,” his father Mark didn’t have to happen the way it did. But their Schmitz wrote, according to CNN. “Ever since service is also reassuring for showing that milhe committed himself to the Marines in high lions of young Americans are still willing to sacschool, he wanted to join. He showed a level rifice to defend their country and its principles. of dedication that I haven’t seen.” Schmitz, of We’ll wager that they didn’t wait in the locker Wentzville, Mo., had been posted to Jordan room when the national anthem was played. and was among those sent to Kabul as Mr. Bi- They represent the best of America. P The ‘Clean Power Plan’ Returns Now Democrats plan to conscript utilities inolitical attention on Bernie Sanders’s spending plan is focused on the $3.5 tril- stead. But make no mistake: Their plan would lion cost, and understandably so. It’s un- require the two dozen or so GOP-led states that don't have renewable manprecedented. But more imporThe Democratic budget dates to adopt them. It would tant are the enormous policy force states to premachanges that will be buried in bill will be loaded with also turely shut down fossil-fuel the fine print and that the memajor policy changes. plants that provide reliable dia will barely notice. baseload power and stick their One example emerged last citizens with the costs. week as Senate Majority Democrats claim the plan gives utilities flexiLeader Chuck Schumer told Democrats that the bill will include a “Clean Electricity Payment bility since hydropower, nuclear and carbon Program.” He said this will “put our country on capture would count toward renewable quotas. the path to meet President Biden’s climate But they know new hydropower dams, nuclear change goals of 80 percent clean electricity and plants and carbon capture aren’t currently fea50 percent economy-wide carbon emission re- sible. See Southern Company’s Vogtle nuclear facilities in Georgia and its Kemper carbon-capduction by 2030.” This is a national renewable-energy mandate ture fossil fuel plant. Democrats also say government payments to on the sly. Utilities would have to buy or generate a certain amount of renewable energy each utilities will offset the cost of renewables. “To year. Those that don’t meet their quotas would protect electricity customers, performance paybe fined while those that exceed targets would ments (coupled with clean electricity tax credits receive payments from the feds that they must for generators) shift the cost of this once-in-aspend on increasing renewable energy or reduc- generation transition to the more progressive federal tax base,” a plan fact sheet says. ing electricity prices. Translation: Democrats will raise taxes to fiAn honest national renewables mandate would run afoul of budget reconciliation rules. nance the new green grid and then give some But the liberal outfit ThirdWay says the Clean companies tax credits for investing in renewElectricity Payment Program “is a purely bud- able energy. Coerce with mandates and taxes getary proposal (involving only spending and and subsidize politically favored behavior. The more utilities rely on renewables, the revenue) as opposed to a regulatory approach” and “the enforcement mechanism is simply pay- more backup power they need from fossil fuels ments and fees.” Therefore it can dodge a Sen- to keep the grid stable. To prevent rolling blackouts this summer, California has approved five ate filibuster. The idea resembles the Obama Environmen- new natural-gas plants and hefty payments to tal Protection Agency’s Clean Power Plan, which businesses to run on their fossil-fuel backup required states to reduce CO2 grid emissions generators when electricity supply is tight. Dow Inc. CEO Jim Fitterling warned last by shutting down coal plants and using more renewables. The Supreme Court blocked the week that the Democrats’ plan could raise enEPA rule in 2016 after states argued it violated ergy costs, especially for manufacturers, and the Clean Air Act and unconstitutionally con- render the grid less reliable. He’s right, and all Americans will pay. scripted them. “The Kabul Airport Massacre” (Review & Outlook, Aug. 27) is a tragedy resulting from incompetence. “The buck stops with me,” President Biden read from the teleprompter at his press conference, and then he promptly blamed everyone else for his mistakes. He blamed former President Trump for making a deal with the Taliban that resulted in no U.S. casualties for 18 months. Mr. Biden didn’t explain why he chose not to overturn such a bad deal while overturning so many of his predecessor’s other initiatives. Mr. Biden blamed his generals for recommending that we abandon Bagram Air Base in favor of the insecure Kabul airport. If that’s true, then the generals responsible should be fired immediately. He blamed U.S. citizens stranded in Afghanistan for not wanting to leave. It might be safer for them to stay rather than risk getting killed on the way to the airport. He blames ISIS for the killings and threatens to track down and kill its members, but he trusts the Taliban to act as TSA agents providing safe passage to the airport. Maybe he forgot that Islamic terrorists, no matter how they are labeled, are committed to killing Americans. Ultimately, voters are to blame for electing this president. America deserves better. ROGER ALEXANDER Miramar Beach, Fla. Those Marines died proudly doing their duty—serving America and saving American lives. It’s what we do. Every Marine signs up to serve our country. We know we risk death and injury every time we go into harm’s way. Yet, we go—semper fidelis. It’s an honor. It’s a privilege. We race to the sound of gunfire. We go to serve America and we go to save Americans, wherever they may be. All we ask is for good, supportive leadership. Well, our nation’s top leadership—from the president to his entire national-security team—failed those Marines. The leaders’ bungling led our Marines (and soldiers and airmen) to be placed in a most difficult tactical environment, which they didn’t deserve. LT. COL. MARK CHANDLER, USMC (RET.) Coastal Carolina University Myrtle Beach, S.C. Medicare Advantage Shows the Path Forward In “The Danger of Expanding Medicare” (op-ed, Aug. 26), former Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal could have added that shifting seniors from traditional, fee-for-service Medicare to Medicare Advantage managed care generates substantial healthcare cost reductions. The fiscal savings spill over into traditional Medicare and even into the nonelderly, commercially insured market. Harvard’s Katherine Baicker, Michael Chernew and Jacob Robbins have showed that as penetration of Medicare Advantage increases in different counties, hospital costs and length-of-stays decline not only for seniors enrolled in Medicare managed care plans, but also for beneficiaries still on the traditional program. For every 10% increase in the uptake of Medicare Advantage, inpatient spending among fee-for-service Medicare seniors falls by 5% to 10%. Similar findings are also observed among commercially-insured people under 65 in regions with rapid diffusion of Medicare Advantage. Why is this the case? Medicare Advantage plans receive a fixed lumpsum from the government for each senior they enroll. They then pass along that incentive to doctors and hospitals, encouraging them to deliver efficient, coordinated care. Since healthcare providers typically treat all three beneficiary groups—traditional Medicare, Medicare Advantage and other privately insured patients— any changes in treatment and practice patterns fostered by Medicare Advantage spread to the care delivered to all patients. Promoting competition and managed care in the Medicare program is the appropriate prescription for curbing healthcare cost growth. NATHAN PUNWANI, M.D. Cedars-Sinai Medical Center Los Angeles Arguing Won’t Resolve the Vaccine Argument In his op-ed “A Better Way to Encourage Vaccination” (Aug. 23), Dr. Richard Menger describes a powerful shift in perspective that draws on 40 years of studies showing that arguing with someone is not an effective way to build motivation. The more you oppose someone, the more she will dig in to her position. Developed at the University of California, San Francisco Center for Excellence in Primary Care, the Hear Technique is a simple way to respectfully engage with people who are skeptical or have strong emotions about the vaccine. “Hear” is an acronym that stands for: hear, express appreciation, ask about pros and cons, and respond. Hear. Use an open-ended question to invite the person to share more about her perspective. Or use reflective listening to show the person that she has been heard. Express appreciation. It is a gift when someone shares her reasoning for not following your recommendation. Showing gratitude lets the person know that you respect her and will engage in nonjudgmental conversation. The Taliban and the Second Amendment: Anachronisms? Regarding Anthony Gill’s op-ed “Economists Explain the Taliban” (Aug. 26): A few weeks ago (although it seems like years), President Biden mocked Second Amendment supporters who maintain that the right to bear arms is necessary to mitigate government overreach. Mr. Biden remarked that anyone resisting the government would need jets and nuclear weapons—otherwise, he implied, they were doomed to fail in the face of a hypothetical government onslaught. But history has taught us over and over again that a determined foe can outlast a technologically superior force through sheer human will, and often with terror. The Viet Cong, Mujahedeen and Taliban are only the more recent examples. Mr. Gill’s article is a reminder that we often underestimate people we don’t understand, with immense consequences. It is easy to denigrate and lampoon the Taliban as a ragtag anachronism. But that anachronism just beat the world’s leading superpower. RICK MILLER Wallingford, Pa. Letters intended for publication should be emailed to [email protected]. Please include your city, state and telephone number. All letters are subject to editing, and unpublished letters cannot be acknowledged. Ask about pros and cons. Most people have arguments on each side of the question. Understanding personal motivations can open doors to more discussion. Respond. Share new information to address any concerns the person has brought up and validate or build on the reasons she would like to be vaccinated. If a person agrees to hear new information about the vaccine, that is a win. You now have an opportunity to share accurate information that can be used in a decision-making process. ALICIA DIGIAMMARINO San Francisco Pursuing Values at the Cost Of Our Shareholder Value In an Aug. 24 letter to the editor (“Stakeholder Capitalism Is Slowly Advancing”), Ira M. Millstein states that “stakeholder values, such as wages, working conditions, the environment” and inequality are slowly being advanced by consumers as well as institutional investors, the Laurence Finks and BlackRocks of the world. In his final paragraph, Mr. Millstein refers to the “mounting public and institutional pressures to begin to address these problems, perhaps at some sacrifice of immediate shareholder value” (emphasis added). Well, as a fairly small individual investor who risks his own money— unlike some Wall Street managers— I’m glad to know that my shareholder value will be sacrificed in favor of Prof. Millstein’s personal values. OSCAR M. SCHIFF Houston Pepper ... And Salt THE WALL STREET JOURNAL “Now that we’ve rounded up enough investors, we can start buying some cattle.” For personal, non-commercial use only. Do not edit, alter or reproduce. For commercial reproduction or distribution, contact Dow Jones Reprints & Licensing at (800) 843-0008 or www.djreprints.com. THE WALL STREET JOURNAL. Monday, August 30, 2021 | A17 OPINION How the Census Misleads on Race T he most common reaction to the release of the 2020 census was summed up in the headline “Census Data show the number of white people fell.” The data show the number of whites declining by 8.6%. This observation was often coupled with a political projection: that while gerrymandering could benefit Republicans in 2022, the political future belongs to the Democratic Party, which commands large majorities among minorities. But these conclusions about race and politics rely on misleading census results. Contrary to Democratic hopes and right-wing anxieties, America’s white population didn’t shrink much between 2010 and 2020 and might actually have grown. A new ‘diversity index’ and a subtle change in a question have resulted in an undercount of whites. “Races” are defined not by biology but by cultural convention. As late as the early 20th century, many Anglo-Americans didn’t identify Southern or Eastern Europeans as “white.” In 1918, 33-year-old Harry S. Truman, while visiting New York City, wrote his cousin: “This town has 8,000,000 people. 7,500,000 of ’em are of Israelish extraction. (400,000 wops and the rest are white people.)” After World War II, Jews and Italians became identified as “white.” Something similar seems to be happening to many Americans of Hispanic and Asian origin. About 3 in 10 Hispanics and Asians intermarry, usually to a white spouse. According to a 2016 study by economists Brian Duncan and Stephen J. Trejo, 35% of third-generation Hispanics of mixed parentage no longer identify as Hispanic; and 55% of thirdgeneration Asian-Americans of mixed parentage no longer identify as Asian. A 2017 Pew report found that among Americans of Hispanic origin who don’t identify themselves as Hispanic, 59% said that they were seen by others as white. The racial identity of Hispanics is especially confusing because the census asks about “Hispanic, Latino or Spanish origin” separately from race. In the 2010 census, 53% of those who said they were of Hispanic origin checked off only “white,” a 58% increase in numbers from 2000. That rise in white Hispanics helped account for the increase in the number of whites from the prior census. But in the 2020 census, a mere 20.3% of Hispanics checked off only “white,” contributing to the 8.6% decline in the total number of people identifying only as white. That dramatic change probably stemmed not from a shift in social consciousness or demographics, but from a subtle change in the 2020 question about race. In 2010 the census asked respondents to check off whether they were white, black or African-American, American Indian or Alaska Native, various varieties of Asian or Pacific Islander, and “some other race.” They may check off as many race boxes as are applicable. But in 2020 the census asked respondents who checked off “white” to specify their nationality: “Print, for example, German, Irish, Italian, Lebanese, Egyptian, etc.” No Spanish-speaking nationality was listed. That likely created the impression that Hispanic was another race, notwithstanding the previous question’s disclaimer that “Hispanic origins are not races.” interest and values. If later-generation Hispanics and Asian-Americans still vote Democratic, it probably won’t be out of ethnic identification. There was some evidence of that in the 2016 and 2020 elections, in rising support among these groups for Donald Trump and other Republicans. By contrast, many AfricanAmericans, whose ancestors were forcibly brought here, haven’t followed the path of European immigrants. Black Americans are less likely to intermarry than Asians or Hispanics, and when they do, their children are likely to identify as African-American. According to a 2015 Pew survey, mixedrace African-Americans are more likely than other groups to complain of racial discrimination. More telling, in a 2018 study, Mr. Alba and sociologists Brenden Beck and Duygu Basaran Sahin found that while Asians and Hispanics who intermarry are likely to enjoy a significantly higher standard of living than unmixed Hispanic and Asian couples, African-Americans who marry whites have a standard of living only very slightly higher than unmixed African-American couples. “The distinctiveness of black ancestry among mixed whites reveal the continuing power of anti-black racism in the United States,” Mr. Alba writes. That sorry fact is obscured by the census’s diversity indexes and by the use of terms like “people of color” or “nonwhite,” which suggest a commonality between African-Americans living in poverty in Chicago’s South Side and the Indian-American CEOs of Microsoft and Alphabet. The census may help with reapportionment and redistricting, but it doesn’t paint an accurate picture of America and its politics. DAVID KLEIN By John B. Judis Thus, many Hispanics who would have checked off white alone in 2010 may have checked “white” and “some other race” in 2020. The number of Hispanics checking two or more boxes increased by 567% from 2010 and make up about two-thirds of those who checked both boxes. Seventy-one percent of the population checked white in 2020, either alone or with one or more other boxes—an increase of 1.9% from 2010. It is very possible that if the census hadn’t changed the race question in 2020, the number of “whites” might not have declined at all or declined only slightly. The number certainly wouldn’t have fallen 8.6%. Over time, social mobility and intermarriage will likely further weaken the distinction between Americans identified as white and those with Asian and Hispanic ancestry. As sociologist Richard Alba has argued, census projections that the U.S. will become a “majority minority” nation by 2045 are likely to prove false. To confuse matters more, the census introduced in 2020 a “diversity index” that filtered out Hispanics who considered themselves “white” by creating a quasiracial category of 57.8% “non-Hispanic whites.” This was the percentage most commentators reported as “whites.” It eliminated the 20.3% of people of Hispanic origin who still checked off only “white.” The authors of the census appear determined to fuel nativist fears that whites are being “replaced” and liberal hopes of a growing minority-based Democratic majority. As for politics, Democrats may become the majority party, but not through demographics alone. Like earlier first- and second-generation Americans, many Hispanics and Asians initially found a home in the Democratic Party, but later (like the Irish or Poles) have begun making their political choices based on class, Mr. Judis is author of “The Politics of Our Time: Populism, Nationalism, Socialism.” Beefed-Up Sanctions Could Limit the Damage in Afghanistan By Matthew Zweig And Richard Goldberg ‘O ur only vital national interest in Afghanistan,” President Biden said two weeks ago, “remains today what it has always been: preventing a terrorist attack on American homeland.” To prevent such an attack, Mr. Biden and Congress should swiftly work to deprive the Taliban and their al Qaeda allies of the resources required for attacks on the U.S. homeland. While the Taliban have been subject to American terrorism sanctions for years, the group’s newfound control of Afghanistan’s government institutions and domestic resources will significantly increase its wealth and influence. If the new Taliban government’s central bank, ministries and agencies are not explicitly subjected to U.S. sanctions, the Taliban will be better able to use that money as it wishes. According to a 2020 United Nations Security Council report, before their takeover of Afghanistan, the Taliban operated a sophisticated financial network that generated between $300 million and $1.5 billion a year, primarily from illicit mining, narcotics production and trafficking, and taxation in areas they controlled. All these sources of income are likely to grow enormously as the Taliban consolidate control of nearly the entire country. Al Qaeda remains intricately tied to the Taliban, so the new regime’s resources will be available to committed international terrorists. The U.S. military is now warning that al Qaeda’s operational capabilities are rapidly increasing. This should come as no surprise given that one of the Taliban’s deputy emirs, Sirajuddin Haqqani, is a longstanding al Qaeda ally and the head of the Haqqani network, an American-designated terrorist organization. U.S. laws and regulations governing money laundering and illicit finance have come a long way since 9/11. Congress and successive administrations have developed sophisticated financial sanctions targeting terror-sponsoring regimes like Iran, Syria and North Korea. Washington should apply what it has learned to isolate the Taliban government and its terrorist allies. Declaring the new Afghan government a state sponsor of terrorism would impose restrictive measures on trade and allow Americans harmed by Taliban-aided terrorists to pursue legal action against the regime. The State Department should The Taliban’s control of the government will significantly increase their wealth and influence. also designate the Taliban a Foreign Terrorist Organization. While the Taliban is currently subject to financial sanctions under Treasury Department counterterrorism authorities, an FTO designation would further chill any interaction with Taliban-affiliated entities and expose anyone providing them support to extraterritorial criminal prosecution and civil liability. President Biden should impose sanctions on Taliban officials, narcotics traffickers and mining operations—particularly rare earth metals. The Treasury Department should work to expand the guidelines and recommendations of the Financial Action Task Force—the international standard-setter for anti-money-laundering measures—to warn the global banking community further about the risks of terror and drug finance in a Taliban-controlled Afghanistan. And the State Department should assure Congress it can prevent the Taliban from diverting U.S. taxpayerfunded humanitarian aid before such assistance continues. The Biden administration should also not back down on the important steps it has already taken to cut off Taliban financing. It should continue its freeze on Afghan Central Bank assets in the U.S.—more than $7 billion including $1.2 billion in gold reserves—and rebuff any request to repatriate them to the Taliban. The administration should also continue to object to the disbursement of multilateral funds to Afghanistan, including through the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank. As part of the IMF response to the Covid-19-induced economic crisis, Afghanistan was supposed to receive hundreds of millions of dollars this month—a transfer now on hold, presumably based on objections from Washington or European member governments. The IMF should never allow the Taliban to access any funds or financing. Nor should the World Bank, which last week suspended more than $2 billion in Afghanistan project funding. These are all steps Mr. Biden and his administration have the power to execute quickly. If they demur, Congress can force them to act by legislation. Twenty years after 9/11, the Taliban and their al Qaeda allies have retaken control of most of Afghanistan, putting themselves in a position to launch another attack. Targeting the Taliban’s financial networks is a critical first step to preventing one. Mr. Zweig is a senior fellow and Mr. Goldberg a senior adviser at the Foundation for Defense of Democracies. You Are Living in the Golden Age of Stupidity By Lance Morrow ‘S tupidity,” Jean Cocteau remarked, “is always amazing, no matter how used to it you become.” We live in a golden age of stupidity. It is everywhere. President Biden’s conduct of the withdrawal from Afghanistan will be remembered as a defining stupidity of our time—one of many. The refusal of tens of millions of people to be vaccinated against the novel coronavirus will be analyzed as a textbook case of stupidity en masse. Stupid is as stupid does, or, in the case of vaccination, as it doesn’t do. Stupidity and irresponsibility are evil twins. The slow-motion zombies’ assault on the Capitol on Jan. 6 was a fittingly stupid finale to the Trump years, which offered dueling stupidities: Buy one, get one free. The political parties became locked in a four-year drama of hysteria and mutually demeaning abuse. Every buffoonery of the president and his people was answered by an idiocy from the other side, which in its own style was just as sinister and just as clownish. Cable news provided the Greek chorus. American government and politics became cartoons. The Democrats, all unknowing, played Wile E. Coyote to Mr. Trump’s Road Runner. Twice, the Democrats’ Acme Impeachment Committee rigged up the big bomb (heh heh), lit the fuse and held its ears. Both times, the Road Runner sped away. Beep beep! “Trump is crazy!” “Trump is Hitler!” “Trump is a Russian agent!” “Bob Mueller has the goods!” Beep beep! Stupidity has been in the air for quite some time. And alas, Mr. PUBLISHED SINCE 1889 BY DOW JONES & COMPANY Rupert Murdoch Executive Chairman, News Corp Robert Thomson Chief Executive Officer, News Corp Matt Murray Editor in Chief Almar Latour Chief Executive Officer and Publisher Neal Lipschutz Karen Miller Pensiero Deputy Editor in Chief Managing Editor Jason Anders, Chief News Editor Thorold Barker, Europe; Elena Cherney, Coverage; Andrew Dowell, Asia; Anthony Galloway, Video & Audio; Brent Jones, Culture, Training & Outreach; Alex Martin, Print & Writing; Michael W. Miller, Features & Weekend; Emma Moody, Standards; Shazna Nessa, Visuals; Matthew Rose, Enterprise; Michael Siconolfi, Investigations Paul A. Gigot Editor of the Editorial Page Daniel Henninger, Deputy Editor, Editorial Page; Gerard Baker, Editor at Large DOW JONES MANAGEMENT: Daniel Bernard, Chief Experience Officer; Mae M. Cheng, SVP, Barron’s Group; David Cho, Barron’s Editor in Chief; Jason P. Conti, General Counsel, Chief Compliance Officer; Frank Filippo, EVP, Business Information & Services; Robert Hayes, Chief Business Officer, New Ventures; Aaron Kissel, EVP & General Manager, WSJ; Josh Stinchcomb, EVP & Chief Revenue Officer, WSJ | Barron’s Group; Christina Van Tassell, Chief Financial Officer; Suzi Watford, EVP, Consumer & Chief Marketing Officer EDITORIAL AND CORPORATE HEADQUARTERS: 1211 Avenue of the Americas, New York, N.Y., 10036 Telephone 1-800-DOWJONES Trump isn’t going away soon; neither are Jerrold Nadler, Adam Schiff or Mazie Hirono—each a paragon of the phenomenon. Stupidity is one of life’s big mysteries, like evil, like love, an ineffable thing. You cannot exactly define it, but you know it when you see it, as Justice Potter Stewart said of pornography. It takes many forms. Stupidity is entitled to no moral standing whatever, and yet it sits in a place of honor at the tables of the mighty; it blows in their ears and whispers promises. Stupidity reappears as a perennial theme of literature and history: King Lear breaking up his kingdom in the first act, or the entirety of World War I, from Sarajevo to Versailles. In her 1984 book, “The March of Folly,” Barbara Tuchman examined four grand stupidities: the Trojans’ decision to accept the Greeks’ big wooden horse and move it inside the walls of the city (an illustrative myth), the Renaissance popes’ failure to deal with the complaints of Martin Luther and others that led to the Reformation, England’s boneheaded policies under George III that lost it the American colonies, and the Americans’ mishandled intervention in Vietnam. I have always thought that the 1960s, besides being the gaudiest and noisiest and most entertaining decade, was one of the stupidest, with its stupid war and stupid ideas (morons smoking banana peels about summed it up). The grown-ups had made a stupid mess in Vietnam; the young swarmed onstage, too numerous for their own good, and, being on the whole vastly inexperienced in the business of life, made stupid messes of their own. The counterculture became the culture. A lot of the music was great. Today many baby boomers are starry-eyed about the days of their youth. The ’60s set forth a paradox: It’s possible for a decade to be filled with tragedy and ideals, and at the same time to be essentially stupid. The convergence of many seemingly unrelated elements has produced an explosion of brainlessness. In that thought, one approaches the core of the mystery. Most of the tragedies of that time, in fact, were stupid: the war, the murders of John and Robert Kennedy, to name three essentially meaningless phenomena that have, in time, passed over into what Thucydides called “the country of myth.” Is it possible that stupidity—far from being a shallow, comic thing—is at the heart of historic tragedy? I’ve been working on a Unified Field Theory of Stupidity. My hypothesis: Stupidity dominates in our time because of the convergence of many seemingly unrelated elements that—mixed together at one moment, in one cultural beaker—have produced a fatal explosion of brainlessness. What are those ingredients? You will have your own list, of course. My nominees will seem eccentric at first. The subversion of manners and authority (two great casualties of the 1960s) prepared the way for the death of privacy, which would eventually be ensured by the stupendously intrusive capabilities of Big Tech in the 21st century. Manners (and in a different way, authority) depend on respect for the privacy of others, as well as one’s own. Manners depend on reticence, even mystery. When those ingrained regulations, those protections of the individual mind, are gone, then you may open the floodgates to (among many other things) pornography, which is a massively lucrative assault on individual dignity and collective decorum—an assault on the manners of a society and, if you will forgive my saying so, on the divinity of the individual. The death of manners and privacy, I argue, are profoundly political facts that, combined with other facts, lead, eventually, to an entire civilization of stupidity. It’s a short ride from stupidity to madness. Soon people aren’t quite people anymore; they are cartoons and categories. And “identities.” The media grow feral. Genitals became weirdly public issues; the sexes subdivide into 100 genders. Ideologues extract sunbeams from cucumbers. They engage in what amounts to an Oedipal rebellion against reality itself. At the Tower of Babel, the Lord— whatever his reasons—confounded the languages of the peoples of the world. I suspect he has found he can achieve the same effect by making everyone stupid. Mr. Morrow is a senior fellow at the Ethics and Public Policy Center. His latest book is “God and Mammon: Chronicles of American Money.” For personal, non-commercial use only. Do not edit, alter or reproduce. For commercial reproduction or distribution, contact Dow Jones Reprints & Licensing at (800) 843-0008 or www.djreprints.com. A18 | Monday, August 30, 2021 THE WALL STREET JOURNAL. For personal, non-commercial use only. Do not edit, alter or reproduce. For commercial reproduction or distribution, contact Dow Jones Reprints & Licensing at (800) 843-0008 or www.djreprints.com. PHARMACEUTICALS: CATALENT EXPANDS VITAMINS BUSINESS B4 BUSINESS & FINANCE © 2021 Dow Jones & Company. All Rights Reserved. Last Week: S&P 4509.37 À 1.52% THE WALL STREET JOURNAL. * * ** S&P FIN À 3.47% S&P IT À 1.43% DJ TRANS À 2.41% Monday, August 30, 2021 | B1 WSJ $ IDX g 0.93% LIBOR 3M 0.120 NIKKEI 27641.14 À 2.32% See more at WSJ.com/Markets Revenue Rises at Most of S&P 500 Baxter Nears BY KYLE KIM Second-quarter revenues compared with pre-pandemic levels Continued growth Roughly a third of the S&P 500 index have seen steady or rapid growth during the pandemic. Semiconductor, retail and pharmaceutical companies fared the best compared with other sectors. Companies in biotech saw some of the largest revenue percentage growth in pharmaceuticals, biotechnology and life sciences. Moderna Inc. had the largest revenue increase among the entire S&P 500. The company’s revenue increased 33,187% from the second quarter of 2019 to 2021—a figure too large to include in our charts. Regeneron Pharmaceuticals Inc.’s revenue jumped 165.7% in the second quarter Please turn to page B8 2019 TO 2020 PERCENTAGE CHANGE –150 300 –100 –50 0% Caesars Entertainment BOUNCED BACK 50 100 150 CONTINUED GROWTH 200 More than three-quarters of the S&P 500 have reported higher revenue than in 2019, but a fifth remain below those levels. Etsy Regeneron Pharmaceuticals Advanced Micro Devices 150 100 Pioneer Natural Resources Tesla Amazon.com Truist Financial Electronic Arts Diamondback Energy 50 Goldman Sachs Twitter CarMax Take-Two Interactive Activision Blizzard Lowe's 0% Disney Citigroup Biogen Ford –50 American Airlines Delta Air Lines United Airlines Las Vegas Sands SLOWER TO RECOVER Live Nation –100 Norwegian Cruise Line $10 Billion Purchase BY CARA LOMBARDO AND DANA CIMILLUCA 250 2019 TO 2021 PERCENTAGE CHANGE More than three-quarters of the largest U.S. companies reported higher revenue than before Covid-19, according to a Wall Street Journal analysis, indicating that many have adapted to changing business conditions caused by the coronavirus pandemic. Among the companies in the S&P 500, 213 have reported revenue for the calendar year’s second quarter above 2019 levels after a drop in 2020. Another 153 have had second-quarter revenue in each of the past two years that exceeded 2019. Meanwhile, 101 companies remain below their 2019 figures, and 10 saw a drop this year after a rise last year. The numbers are based on a Journal analysis of FactSet data for the 477 S&P 500 companies that have reported results for the second quarter through Friday. UP THEN DOWN Carnival Note: Moderna is excluded. Its second-quarter revenue percentage change since 2019 was 407.3% in 2020 and 33,187% in 2021. Source: FactSet Kyle Kim/THE WALL STREET JOURNAL Baxter International Inc. is in advanced talks to buy medical-equipment maker Hill-Rom Holdings Inc. for around $10 billion, according to people familiar with the matter. A deal that values Hill-Rom at around $150 a share could be reached by midweek, assuming the talks don’t fall apart, the people said. The talks follow an earlier bid from Baxter valued at $144 a share that Hill-Rom rebuffed. Hill-Rom shares jumped in late July on news of that bid and have remained elevated, closing Friday at $132.90. HillRom has a market capitalization of nearly $9 billion. Baxter’s is around $37 billion. Chicago-based Hill-Rom, founded in 1915, makes medical gear such as hospital beds and patient-monitoring devices. Baxter is a medical-technology company based in Deerfield, Ill., that focuses on areas Please turn to page B2 GM Recall Of Bolt Clouds EV Push BY MIKE COLIAS BEN FOLDY AND Theranos’s Holmes Might Allege Abuse BY SARA RANDAZZO AND CHRISTOPHER WEAVER Theranos Inc. founder Elizabeth Holmes could argue at her coming criminal fraud trial that she was in a decadelong abusive relationship with former Theranos President Ramesh “Sunny” Balwani that left her under his control during the period in which the government alleges the two blood-testing executives committed a massive fraud, newly revealed court records show. Ms. Holmes says the abuse by her former business and romantic partner was psychological, emotional and sexual, according to the documents. Ms. Holmes accused Mr. Balwani of controlling what she ate, when she slept and how she dressed, throwing sharp objects at her and monitoring her text messages and emails, among other things, according to one of the filings. Mr. Balwani “unequivocally denies that he engaged in any abuse at any time,” according to one of the newly unsealed filings. His lawyer, Jeffrey Coopersmith, argued this week that the filings should remain under seal so that Mr. Balwani’s trial, scheduled for early next year, can be fair. Mr. Coopersmith didn’t respond to a request for comment after the filings became public. The revelations, days before her trial is set to begin, shed light for the first time on how Ms. Holmes’s lawyers might mount a mental-health defense as well as on a judge’s decision to separate the trials of Ms. Holmes and Mr. Balwani, who were jointly charged with wire fraud and conspiracy to commit wire fraud in June 2018. Both have pleaded not guilty. Attorneys for Ms. Holmes didn’t respond to a request for comment Ms. Holmes isn’t bound to pursue the mentalhealth defense and can change her defense strategy at any point in the trial. The newly released documents were filed in court under seal between late 2019 and mid-2020. They became public after U.S. District Judge Edward Davila ruled last week in favor of a legal challenge by Dow Jones & Co., the publisher of The Wall Street Journal. Jury selection begins Tuesday in Ms. Holmes’s trial in San Jose, Calif., where prosecutors will seek to prove she misled investors and patients about the nature of Theranos’s blood-testing technology. The once-hot Silicon Valley startup claimed to be able to test for a range of health conditions using just a few drops of blood from a finger prick. Please turn to page B4 Andrew Krupowicz was relieved last month to end the lease on his 2019 Chevrolet Bolt electric car, which had been recalled for the risk of a battery fire. He replaced it with a new, larger Bolt model that wasn’t subject to the safety callback. “I thought, ‘Great, I’m out of the woods,’” he said. But two weeks later, General Motors Co. expanded its recall to include every Bolt it has built, including his own vehicle. The chartered accountant from Toronto is keeping the car but adding a networked fire alarm in case it catches fire. Please turn to page B2 Covid-19 in Malaysia Concerts Change as Pandemic Lingers Imperils Chip Output BY FELIZ SOLOMON SINGAPORE—A surge of Covid-19 cases in Malaysia, a little-known but critical link in the semiconductor supply chain, has opened a new front in the battle to fix manufacturing woes that have rippled across industries during a global shortage of computing chips. The Southeast Asian nation is one of the world’s top destinations for assembly and testing of the devices that control smartphones, car engines and medical equipment. Disruptions in Malaysia threaten to prolong uncertainty over chip supply well into next year, dashing hopes of relief in the second half of 2021. The supply crunch in Malaysia, caused primarily by staff shortages linked to virus-control measures combined with a surge in global demand, poses a new problem for the auto industry. For the first half of this year, shortages largely stemmed from companies miscalculating the pace of economic recoveries and not ordering enough parts. Now they Please turn to page B2 QILAI SHEN/BLOOMBERG NEWS INSIDE BUSINESS NEWS Cargo planes are filled to their limit as some goods are shifted away from ships. B3 COMMODITIES After reining in steel production, China is tested by economic slowdown. B9 Concerts’ long-anticipated comeback this fall is stumbling, as more big-name artists cancel their tours and other musicians are coping with the complexities and expense of doing live shows amid concerns about resurgent Covid-19 cases. The lingering pandemic has artist teams navigating a patchwork of safety protocols that vary by city and venue, looking to create “bubbles” around acts on the road, contending with higher logistical costs and appealing to eager fan bases to get vaccinated. Veteran music manager Irving Azoff has several major acts on the road this fall—including the Eagles, Dead & Company, Harry Styles and Maroon 5—whose dates were rescheduled, some of them twice. “We got into this euphoria here for a moment when the CDC said if you’re vaccinated you don’t have to be masked,” he said. “That moment gave us a false start, and then we were committed.” Foo Fighters and Fall Out Boy have pulled out of shows because of infections in their camps, while Garth Brooks, Florida Georgia Line, Nine Inch Nails, Stevie Nicks and Limp Bizkit canceled tours. Despite the cancellations, concert executives insist the shows going on are doing GETTY IMAGES FOR IHEARTRADIO BY ANNE STEELE Harry Styles’s tour will require proof of vaccination or a negative test, as well as wearing a mask. well—selling out and selling quickly. Mr. Azoff added that merchandise sales are up 40% to 50% from pre-pandemic levels. In all, global revenue from live shows rose to $26.1 billion in 2019 before tumbling 75% to $6.5 billion in 2020, according to Midia Research, an industry data provider. Over the past week, concert executives have focused more on vaccination. The Eagles recently added another tour stop in Seattle that will admit only vaccinated fans, and Mr. Azoff said new dates for his acts will require vaccination for entry. Live Nation Entertainment Inc., the world’s largest concert promoter, will require proof of vaccination or a negative Covid-19 test for entry at all of its owned venues and festivals, and allow artists to make those requirements at any shows it promotes, beginning in October. “We know people are eager to return to live events, and we hope these measures encourage even more people to get vacci- nated,” Live Nation Chief Executive Michael Rapino said in an internal memo this month. The company said 90% of Lollapalooza’s 400,000 attendees showed up fully vaccinated, with 12% of those fans reporting the festival was their motivation for getting vaccinated. Anschutz Entertainment Group’s AEG Presents will require proof of vaccination for entry into its owned and operated clubs, theaters and festivals, starting in October, and Please turn to page B2 For personal, non-commercial use only. Do not edit, alter or reproduce. For commercial reproduction or distribution, contact Dow Jones Reprints & Licensing at (800) 843-0008 or www.djreprints.com. B2 | Monday, August 30, 2021 * * THE WALL STREET JOURNAL. BUSINESS & FINANCE INDEX TO BUSINESSES These indexes cite notable references to most parent companies and businesspeople in today’s edition. Articles on regional page inserts aren’t cited in these indexes. D Danaher.......................A1 Deutsche Lufthansa...B3 Downstream Strategies A3 B Baowu Steel Group .... B9 Baxter Intl...................B1 Bettera Holdings ........ B4 Boeing ......................... B3 C Caesars Entertainment B8 Catalent.......................B4 China Huarong Asset Management.............B9 Colonial Pipeline.........A4 CVS Health..................B3 E-F Expedia Group.............B4 Ford Motor..................B2 G General Motors ..... B1,B2 Globetronics Technology Bhd............................B2 H HCA Healthcare..........A2 Hill-Rom Hldgs ........... B1 K Korean Air Lines.........B3 Kroger..........................A2 L Live Nation Entertainment..........B1 M Mahle........................A10 Meituan.....................B10 Moderna......................B1 N NextEra Energy .......... A1 Nissan Motor..............B2 P Peloton Interactive.....B4 Pinduoduo ................. B10 R Regeneron Pharmaceuticals.......B1 T Tencent Holdings......B10 Tesla............................B8 Theranos......................B1 Toyota Motor..............B2 Twitter ........................ B8 W Walgreens Boots Alliance.....................B3 Walmart.................B3,B4 REBECCA COOK/REUTERS A Airbus SE....................B3 Air France-KLM...........B3 Alibaba Group Holding B10 Alphabet......................B8 American Water Works A2 Anschutz Entertainment Group.........................B1 INDEX TO PEOPLE B Balwani, Ramesh “Sunny”.....................B1 Burnette, Juel.............A3 C Chiminski, John .......... B2 D Doll, Bob ..................... A2 Duckworth, Ken..........B3 H Horwitt, Jeff...............A6 L R Roof, Jason.................B4 Lang, Stephanie..........A2 S M Shen Bin......................B9 Sheppard, Jocelyn ...... A3 McNulty, Cara.............B3 Mechanic, Mindy.........B4 Myllyvirta, Lauri.........B9 V Vijayaraghavan, Ravi..B2 P W Phil Orlando................A2 Wang Xing ................ B10 Plans for Concerts Change TERRY WYATT/GETTY IMAGES Continued from page B1 will accommodate artists’ wishes where it can. “If you don’t want to get vaccinated—not can’t, don’t want to—we would prefer you stay home,” AEG Presents Chief Executive Jay Marciano said. “I know that sounds drastic, but this is a drastic situation again, and we don’t want to have to go back to where we were six months ago.” Ticketmaster, the world’s largest ticketing provider, said it expects over five million fans to attend events this week. “We are seeing two major trends: event activity is strong as attendance at concerts, festivals and games increases week over week, and health checks are now the norm with major event operators now requiring Covid vaccination or negative test for entry,” Ticketmaster President Mark Yovich said. Neil Young, in a post on his website Monday, slammed the fall return of concerts, calling them super-spreader events and wondering why more artists weren’t canceling shows. He said big concert promoters should pump the brakes and added that he pulled himself from the September lineup of Willie Nelson’s Farm Aid festival “for fear that unprotected children may become infected with Covid by folks who went to the show, caught the virus, had no symptoms and returned home to hug their kids or someone else’s kids.” Mr. Marciano said the biggest challenge moving forward is dealing with various state and local mandates. “Some markets don’t allow us to ask for proof of vaccination. In others, municipalities now require it. Same with mask mandates. And new mandates come out every day,” he said. “The lesson we’ve learned is ramping back up has been just as logistically difficult as pulling things down was, if not more so.” Concerts operate in a fragile economic environment, where an act needs to play a critical mass of dates—typically around 40 for a domestic tour—to a near full house to be profitable. Executives say they have been able to deal with spot cancellations, as most acts have more available places they can sell tickets than dates they have available to play. Most major acts are taking a similar tack to Harry Styles’s tour, which kicks off next week in Las Vegas and said ticket holders must provide proof of vaccination or a negative test, in addition to wearing a mask. Florida Georgia Line was among the acts that canceled tours. Baxter Near $10 Billion Purchase Continued from page B1 including critical care, nutrition and surgical products. There has been a boom in healthcare merger activity this year as companies in the industry jockey for scale and other benefits that deals bring, in many cases taking advantage of elevated stock prices used as currency. They have struck $399 billion of takeover deals in the U.S. this year, more than dou- ble last year’s pace, according to Dealogic. In June, a group of privateequity firms reached a deal to acquire Medline Industries Inc. that values that closely held medical-supply company at more than $30 billion. If completed, it would be the largest leveraged buyout since the 2008-09 financial crisis. Then, earlier this month, healthcare-software firm Inovalon Holdings Inc. agreed to be sold to a group of privateequity firms for over $6 billion. Overall U.S. deal activity has roughly tripled this year to nearly $2 trillion as the economy bounces back from the pandemic-triggered slowdown. GM confirmed five fires and recalled about 69,000 Bolts from 2017 and 2018 models and some from 2019. A Bolt being assembled in 2018. GM Effort On EVs Hit By Recall Continued from page B1 GM this month expanded the Bolt safety recall for the second time, calling back the roughly 142,000 models built since it went on sale five years ago. The Detroit auto maker also paused production of all new Bolts. The safety action on its lone U.S. electric car will cost GM an estimated $1.8 billion, or around $12,700 per car, among its costliest recalls. The safety problems underscore the risks for traditional auto makers as many take a sharp turn toward electric vehicles. The high cost of energydense lithium-ion battery cells means replacement expenses can spiral when defects occur. Ford Motor Co., Hyundai Motor Co. and other car companies have been hit with huge costs to fix relatively small numbers of electric cars. For GM, the recent troubles come as it tries to convince consumers and investors that it is ready to lead the car industry’s transition to electrics. While the cars have been recalled, GM and battery-cell supplier LG Energy Solution still don’t have a fix. GM has confirmed 10 fires linked to the problem and is aware of some complaints of smoke inhalation but no deaths. It is advising owners to avoid fully charging their cars and warning them to not charge them in their garages. “I am experiencing problems sleeping at night, due to the fact that I have a potential fire risk sitting outside of my home,” one Bolt owner wrote to the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration in a complaint published on the agency’s website. NHTSA has received dozens of complaints about the vehicle from Bolt owners since it warned them last month not to park or charge their cars indoors, its website shows. A GM spokesman declined to comment on specific consumer complaints. He said hundreds of employees from GM and LG are working to solve the problem. “We’re not going to begin the recall repairs in vehicles until we’re confident that LG is building defect-free products for us,” he said. “We’re working around the clock to get to that point.” The auto maker has said it is working with LG to reimburse costs associated with the recall. An LG spokeswoman didn’t return requests for comment. The companies have formed a joint venture that is spending around $4.5 billion on two new U.S. battery factories to supply future GM electric cars. GM has said those batteries will use a different chemistry than the ones in the Bolt. “The lessons learned from this entire experience are really going to benefit the industry and the importance of the manufacturing processes,” GM Chief Executive Mary Barra told Bloomberg TV last week. GM has cited a manufacturing flaw that can result in two defects in the same battery cell. Those defects can lead to a short circuit, which can cause a fire. The cost of replacing a battery pack can range from around $5,000 for smaller, lessexpensive cars to more than $30,000 for those used in highperformance models, said Malaysia Output Imperiled Continued from page B1 can’t always get the parts they need because Covid-19 outbreaks are denting factory output. “It’s a bit like a game of whack-a-mole,” said Ravi Vijayaraghavan, a Singaporebased partner at the consulting firm Bain & Co. specializing in semiconductors. “We think we have supply sorted out, and then a problem suddenly pops up somewhere else.” Some of the world’s leading car makers including Toyota Motor Corp., Ford Motor Co., General Motors Co. and Nissan Motor Co. have disclosed major production cuts due largely to chip shortages from factories in Malaysia. Ford suspended work for about a week at an F-150 plant in the Kansas City, Mo., area and a Fiesta factory in Cologne, Germany, because of missing parts, while Toyota said it would cut global production by around 40% in September. General Motors expects to make 100,000 fewer vehicles in North America in the second half of the year. The problems in Malaysia stem from the worst Covid-19 surge the country has seen since the start of the pandemic. The nation of around 32 million people has had more than 1.6 million reported cases and 15,000 deaths, more than half of them this summer. In June, Malaysian chip maker Globetronics Technology Bhd., which assembles sensors for a U.S. smartphone maker as well as basic car components, voluntarily closed two of its factories for several days after three workers tested positive for Covid-19. It took about four weeks to normalize deliveries, according to Chief Executive Heng Huck Lee, who had back-to-back calls with customers as he and his team tried to shuffle around orders. —Chester Tay in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, and Jon Emont in Singapore contributed to this article. Go straight to smart. The Deloitte Insights app connects you to relevant, timely content from two of the most trusted sources in the world: Deloitte Insights and Dow Jones. Get personalized news, analysis, market updates, all in one easy-to-navigate mobile app. Scan the QR code to download the app today. Copyright © 2021 Deloitte Development LLC. All rights reserved. James Davies, chief executive of analytics company We Predict. He said manufacturing defects in battery cells often lead to full replacement of the battery pack, because it can be difficult to pinpoint which cells are bad. “If you get it right, electric vehicles last longer and cost less to own” than gas-powered cars, he said. “But if you get it wrong, there are going to be huge costs.” One of the first fires that drew regulators’ attention occurred on St. Patrick’s Day in 2019, when a Bolt owner in Belmont, Mass., plugged in to charge in the driveway. About an hour later, smoke began billowing from the vehicle’s underside. It took firefighters three hours to extinguish the fire, according to a fire department report. By November, GM said it had confirmed five fires and recalled about 69,000 Bolts from model years 2017 and 2018, along with some 2019 models. Analysts say battery-related fires are still rare, but incidents will likely multiply as more electric cars hit the road. Researchers have said fire risks in electric vehicles are comparable to those of gas-powered cars. For personal, non-commercial use only. Do not edit, alter or reproduce. For commercial reproduction or distribution, contact Dow Jones Reprints & Licensing at (800) 843-0008 or www.djreprints.com. Monday, August 30, 2021 | B3 THE WALL STREET JOURNAL. BUSINESS NEWS Snarled Supply Chains Send Goods to Air Cargo planes fly at almost 90% capacity as peak season starts; car tires ride in cabins The global air cargo sector is flying planes at almost 90% of capacity as record amounts of goods crisscross the globe, bound for free-spending consumers and parts-hungry manufacturers. Packed planes pose a challenge for shippers, airlines and airports entering the traditional peak U.S. season for moving goods, when demand increases for consumer electronics, household items and clothing ahead of the holidayshopping spree. Pinch points include overflowing airport cargo warehouses, spilling goods into offsite facilities and exacerbating the shortage of staff to sort, load and unload jets. Airlines have responded by expanding cargo flights beyond the big- YONHAP/EPA/SHUTTERSTOCK BY DOUG CAMERON Korean Air Lines is among the carriers that have expanded cargo service as the economy rebounds. gest gateways to such cities as Columbus, Ohio, and Tampa, Fla., to avoid congestion. Sometimes the cabins of repurposed passenger planes are used for cargo. “We are at the limit,” said Bernhard Kindelbacher, head of cargo operations in the U.S. and Canada for Deutsche Lufthansa AG, one of the world’s largest airfreight carriers. Charles Goodwin, opera- tions director at the Columbus Regional Airport Authority, said car tires packed between the seats of repurposed passenger jets are among the cargo now being flown that once traveled by sea. “The entire supply chain seems to be full,” Mr. Goodwin said. Flying goods by air is the last—and priciest—option for many manufacturers and retailers to move products through a global supply chain already snarled by pandemicdriven closures of Chinese seaports and widespread labor shortages. Airfreight accounts for less than 1% of global trade by weight but more than 30% by value, according to the International Air Transport Association, a trade group. The share of global airline industry revenue for freight traffic has doubled to around 30% from pre-pandemic levels, according to IATA. Soaring shipping prices have made freight a profit center for many airlines, offsetting some of the airline industry losses, which the trade group estimates will top $48 billion this year. “It is cargo demand that is determining where we fly,” Pieter Bootsma, chief revenue officer at Air France-KLM SA, said in April. The near shutdown of many airlines in spring 2020 removed most of the 50% of global air cargo capacity that is usually in the bellies of passenger jets. Cargo carriers pulled idled jets from desert storage, and passenger planes were repurposed to carry goods in cabins to help meet demand for personal protective equipment. More than half of the orders for widebody jets secured by Boeing Co. this year are for cargo aircraft, and both Boeing and rival Airbus SE are exploring new freighter planes. International passenger flight capacity is still down more than 50% from pre-pandemic levels, according to IATA, leaving dedicated cargo aircraft and repurposed passenger planes to pick up the slack, just as many industrial economies roar back from pandemic-induced slowdowns. The summer is traditionally a relative lull for air cargo as factories close for staff vacations and maintenance. IATA, however, said cargo jets are flying fuller this summer than at any time since it started keeping records in 1990. The combination of inventory restocking and ocean-cargo logjams boosted the appeal of airfreight, according to the group, even though pricing is 80% above pre-pandemic levels. In Columbus, traffic at Rickenbacker International Airport is up 50% from a year earlier as carriers including Korean Air Lines Co. have added cargo service. The airport has benefited in part from the spillover of cargo business from congested gateways including Chicago. ADVERTISEMENT The Marketplace To advertise: 800-366-3975 or WSJ.com/classifieds DAVID DELPOIO/THE PROVIDENCE JOURNAL/REUTERS NOTICE OF SALE CVS Health earlier this year stationed therapists at 13 of its stores, and is expanding the program. Mental-Health Counseling Comes to Retail Locations BY SHARON TERLEP CVS Health Corp. is betting Americans will get therapy at the same place they buy their snacks, soda and prescription drugs. The pharmacy company is among several retailers, including Walmart Inc. and Walgreens Boots Alliance Inc., that are experimenting with offering counseling services in or near stores. They see potential as the Covid-19 pandemic has prompted more people to seek help for addiction, depression and other issues, according to federal data. “It’s creative and we certainly need the help,” said Ken Duckworth, medical director of the National Alliance on Mental Illness. “It’s an interesting idea to post a mental-health resource at a place where people already are at.” CVS earlier this year started stationing mentalhealth providers, typically a licensed clinical social worker trained in cognitive behavioral therapy, at 13 locations in Houston, Philadelphia and Tampa, Fla., as a pilot program. The company said it saw a surprisingly high return rate for customers who had an initial consultation, and is now expanding the program to 34 locations in those areas. Some healthcare providers question how many people are comfortable seeking therapy in such a public setting, despite a growing acceptance and understanding of mental-health issues. CVS says other customers would have no way of knowing that a person is getting mentalhealth help, given that the stores offer a range of wellness services. Mental-health services are advertised inside the Tech Assists Rising Demand for Therapy Projects to offer mentalhealth therapy in stores come in addition to teletherapy models offered by retailers, healthcare organizations and other private companies that surged in popularity when much of the country was locked down by pandemic restrictions during stores, where an area designated for medical services includes a private room for counseling sessions. “We’re not putting up a big neon sign: ‘Getting therapy here,’ ” said Cara McNulty, president of behavioral health for CVS-owned Aetna Inc. A mental-health assessment costs $129; a 30-minute counseling session is $69. Based on the assessment results, a customer could return for a few therapy sessions, or they might get a referral for extensive services from a family doctor, psychiatrist or another local resource. People without insurance are referred to a community organization that helps the uninsured, CVS said. “We’re dealing with a system that is broken and confusing,” said Aetna’s Ms. McNulty. “Often people don’t know where to go, who to see and what they need to be seen for. When you really democratize access to care by putting mental-health support in a retail setting, it makes access easier for people.” Retail pharmacies have been pushing deeper into healthcare to offset rising competition from online retailers and slower profit growth from prescription drugs. At the same time, more for-profit companies are looking to upend traditional mental-health models. Last year, there was a record level of investments from venture-capital firms into therapy startups such as Talkspace and Calm, according to market researcher CB Insights. CVS, with its Aetna insurance business, stands to benefit as both a seller of services and as a payer, given that seeing a counselor at one of the stores costs less than alternatives such as an emergencyroom visit. An in-store therapist wouldn’t provide longterm therapy or treatment for disorders that require more than five or six visits. Walmart is adding in-person counseling via its Walmart Health locations, which are medical centers attached to Walmart Supercenters. The retailer offers in-person counseling at Walmart Health sites in Arkansas and Georgia and plans to expand to Illinois and Florida this year. An initial 60minute visit costs $60, according to Walmart’s website. Walgreens is adding mental-health offerings as part of a deal with primary-care provider VillageMD to attach doctor’s offices to hundreds of drugstores. Some mental-health experts say they are concerned about potential pitfalls in mixing retail and therapy. Adding another entity to what they say is an already convoluted system could complicate care, they say. Retailers also will need to ensure that there is no incentive to push a customer toward psychiatric medication, said Dr. Duckworth of the mental-illness alliance. Mental-health advocates generally say they welcome any system that will provide easy and visible access to services. parts of last year. Emergency rooms, family doctors and therapists say they are seeing a sharp increase in substance abuse, suicide attempts and people suffering with mood disorders such as anxiety and depression. Along with mounting stress, mentalhealth experts say that more people are open to getting help, as celebrities from singer Demi Lovato to gymnast Simone Biles go public with their struggles. From August 2020 to February 2021, the percentage of adults with recent symptoms of an anxiety or depressive disorder increased to 41.5% from 36.4%, according to a joint survey by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and U.S. Census Bureau. Emergency-room visits for mentalhealth crises among 12- to 17year-olds increased 31% between 2019 and 2020, the CDC reported in June. The pandemic has led many to seek help for depression and other woes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E '. , + " ' + 5 - . = <3 #A2&4 #2?&4 *CJ F #:9A?&4 KL , " #?AA &4 ; M1 <<* # 9: &4 H3 <<* #2 &4 <3 <<* #2:&4 , <<* # 1 &4 *8 + " <<* #A11:&4 < 8 <<* #12 &4 < * <<* #?2&4 < 6 . <<* #9 &4 # 2& , + 5 G "" " A * / F ,- 9 *" 7 . " . . 6 3 3 "" .. 3 3 G . , - N ' .. . . BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES !"# ! " #$% & & ' () * " + , - !"#$ (/0112#&3/&'"+!&#"),'"$ !" ## $%&%' &()*%&+ BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES !"#$ % &'()"*+ !"#$" %& ' ( " ) " * # $ + , , "#%+*+%+-. /+&+ ' #%&'% -'. THE MARKETPLACE ADVERTISE TODAY (800) 366-3975 For more information visit: wsj.com/classifieds © 2021 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved. For personal, non-commercial use only. Do not edit, alter or reproduce. For commercial reproduction or distribution, contact Dow Jones Reprints & Licensing at (800) 843-0008 or www.djreprints.com. B4 | Monday, August 30, 2021 * * THE WALL STREET JOURNAL. BUSINESS NEWS Holmes May Claim Abuse BY JARED S. HOPKINS KATE MUNSCH/REUTERS Continued from page B1 In reality, as the Journal reported in 2015, Theranos’s proprietary technology was unreliable and the company ran many of its tests on commercial analyzers, including some that it modified to work with smaller blood samples. Ms. Holmes met Mr. Balwani, a veteran tech executive about 20 years her senior, when she was a student at Stanford University, and he later joined her at Theranos as its president and chief operating officer. The pair kept their romantic relationship secret from investors, board members and company employees for years, according to depositions of former directors and staff members taken in civil cases brought by disgruntled investors and reviewed by the Journal. Mr. Balwani used his personal wealth, gained from his work at an earlier tech startup, to help prop up Theranos, including putting his own money up as collateral for a loan in 2009 and later investing in the company, according to the deposition of Theranos’s former corporate controller. Ms. Holmes and Mr. Balwani worked closely together until he departed in 2016 as the company faced a raft of regulatory, legal and public relations challenges. The newly public court documents include filings by Ms. Holmes indicating she could bring a mental-health or mental-defect defense, based on what she called the psychological impact of the relationship with Mr. Balwani and abusive tactics that allowed him to exert control over her. This line of defense could also include testimony that Ms. Holmes suffers from posttraumatic stress disorder, the filings show, from the relationship with Mr. Balwani and a Catalent Expands Vitamin Business Elizabeth Holmes says the abuse by her former business and romantic partner was psychological, emotional and sexual. second event that remains redacted in the court record. The filings show Ms. Holmes could argue that “she lacked the intent to deceive because, as a result of her deference to Mr. Balwani, she believed that various representations were true.” Jason Roof, a forensic psychiatrist and professor at University of California, Davis, said defenses rooted in PTSD can help explain situations where brief, acute episodes severely impaired a defendant’s behavior but could be more challenging in cases like Ms. Holmes’s. “Given the complexity of a white-collar crime over the span of a great deal of years, making the case that a person throughout each of those dealings was unable to understand the nature and quality of what they were doing is going to be difficult,” said Dr. Roof, who conducts psychiatric evaluations in criminal cases but isn’t involved in Ms. Holmes’s. People close to Ms. Holmes during Theranos’s rise and fall said they observed that Mr. Balwani was typically deferential to Ms. Holmes in public and that Ms. Holmes seemed to be in full control of decisions made at the company. Also unsealed were motions made by Mr. Balwani and Ms. The defense could also testify that Elizabeth Holmes suffers from PTSD. Holmes asking the court to separate their trials, citing her allegations against him. Mr. Balwani requested a separate trial from Ms. Holmes in December 2019, arguing that there would be “devastating prejudice” if she raised her allegations against him at a joint trial. “In the minds of nearly any potential juror this Court finds, this case will be against a sexual predator,” rather than a tech executive, Mr. Coopersmith argued in a motion. Judge Davila scheduled Mr. Balwani’s trial second when granting the motion to split the proceedings in March 2020. It is expected to begin early next year. In Ms. Holmes’s request for separate trials, her lawyers argued that the physical presence of Mr. Balwani in the same courtroom could be an emotional and psychological trigger that could make it hard for her to concentrate during her case. One of Ms. Holmes’s lawyers told the judge it “was highly likely Holmes would testify” about Mr. Balwani’s abuse, an unsealed court order shows, shedding light on the question of whether jurors would hear from her directly. Ms. Holmes’s attorneys have said they could call Mindy Mechanic as an expert witness tied to the mentalhealth defense. The newly unsealed documents show Dr. Mechanic would testify about intimate partner abuse, its psychological effects during and after the relationship and whether Ms. Holmes and Mr. Balwani’s relationship fits that definition. Portions of the filings remained redacted under the order by Judge Davila. The filings indicate Ms. Holmes may have been especially susceptible to being controlled by an abusive partner, but details about this suggestion remain redacted. The unsealed records show Dr. Mechanic’s testimony could address how survivors of past sexual abuse are susceptible to being victimized again. Ms. Holmes also had told confidantes over the years that she was a past survivor of sexual assault before meeting Mr. Balwani, people who were close to her said in interviews. Contract drug manufacturer Catalent Inc. is expected to announce Monday that it has agreed to buy closely held Bettera Holdings LLC for $1 billion, according to people familiar with the matter, the latest deal involving nutritional supplement companies. The all-cash deal, which is expected to be announced Monday morning, would expand Catalent’s manufacturing capabilities for vitamins, minerals and supplements to make them in the high-growth gummy form, the people said. The transaction is expected to close by the end of the fourth quarter. Bettera, based in Plano, Texas, and backed by privateequity firm Highlander Partners LP, manufactures gummy, soft-chew and lozenge forms of vitamins and supplements. Bettera has about 500 employees. Bettera’s sales last year totaled about $150 million, according to the people, and are forecast to grow by at least 20% annually in the short term. Gummy vitamins and supplements, initially created and marketed for children, are increasingly popular among adults, especially younger demographics. The global gummy vitamins market is projected to reach $9.3 billion by 2026, compared with $5.7 billion in 2018, according to an Allied Market Research report released last year. Catalent, of Somerset, N.J., has helped manufacture Covid-19 vaccines and treatments for several companies. Shares of the company have more than doubled since health authorities declared the pandemic in March 2020, closing at nearly $130 on Friday. Catalent develops and manufactures drugs for pharmaceutical companies. The Wall Street Journal CEO Council Summit September 28, 2021, 3:00 p.m.—6:30 p.m. HKT | 8:00 a.m.—11:30 a.m. BST Online Event FEATURED SPEAKERS OVERVIEW Kai-Fu Lee On September 28, The Wall Street Journal will gather global business leaders for a meeting of the CEO Council. As countries around the world wrestle with the challenges of the Covid-19 Delta variant, we will dig into the health challenges, the uneven global recovery, the risk of inflation and frothy markets, and how geopolitical tensions and the virus have affected trade. We will explore how companies are emerging from the pandemic with new ways of working and how technology continues to reshape business and society. Through news-breaking interviews, panel discussions, off-the-record breakouts and networking, we will probe the areas CEOs need to understand as they adapt to today’s fast-changing world. CEO, Sinovation Ventures Adar Poonawalla CEO, Serum Institute of India Jes Staley Group CEO, Barclays Jane Sun CEO, Trip.com Group Anthony Tan Group CEO and Co-Founder, Grab Presenting Sponsors Supporting Sponsors © 2021 Dow Jones & Co., Inc. All rights reserved. 6DJ8541 Membership is by invitation: [email protected]. Learn more at CEOCouncil.wsj.com/inquire. For personal, non-commercial use only. Do not edit, alter or reproduce. For commercial reproduction or distribution, contact Dow Jones Reprints & Licensing at (800) 843-0008 or www.djreprints.com. THE WALL STREET JOURNAL. Monday, August 30, 2021 | B5 Rework work Don’t just come back, come back to better. An Envoy workplace flexes to balance people and mission in ways the old-school office simply can’t. With Envoy’s people-centric platform you can manage hybrid scheduling, flex your space, welcome visitors, and ensure everyone is safe — all from a single dashboard. It’s time to welcome hybrid and create a workplace people love. Make hybrid work Desks | Rooms | Visitors | Deliveries | Mobile | Protect 21-ENV-001-14-146309-1 For personal, non-commercial use only. Do not edit, alter or reproduce. For commercial reproduction or distribution, contact Dow Jones Reprints & Licensing at (800) 843-0008 or www.djreprints.com. B6 | Monday, August 30, 2021 THE WALL STREET JOURNAL. Alex Hussey “My victory is removing ‘can’t’ from my vocabulary.” Alex was hit by an IED in Afghanistan. He lost both legs, his left hand and has a traumatic brain injury. With support from DAV, Alex is taking on mountains. DAV helps veterans of all generations get the benefits they’ve earned—helping more than a million veterans each year. Support more victories for veterans®. Go to DAV.org. For personal, non-commercial use only. Do not edit, alter or reproduce. For commercial reproduction or distribution, contact Dow Jones Reprints & Licensing at (800) 843-0008 or www.djreprints.com. THE WALL STREET JOURNAL. Monday, August 30, 2021 | B7 CLOSED-END FUNDS Listed are the 300 largest closed-end funds as measured by assets. Closed-end funds sell a limited number of shares and invest the proceeds in securities. Unlike open-end funds, closed-ends generally do not buy their shares back from investors who wish to cash in their holdings. Instead, fund shares trade on a stock exchange. NA signifies that the information is not available or not applicable. NS signifies funds not in existence for the entire period. 12 month yield is computed by dividing income dividends paid (during the previous 12 months for periods ending at monthend or during the previous 52 weeks for periods ending at any time other than month-end) by the latest month-end market price adjusted for capital gains distributions. Depending on the fund category, either 12-month yield or total return is listed. Source: Lipper Friday, August 27, 2021 52 wk Prem Ttl Fund (SYM) NAV Close /Disc Ret General Equity Funds Adams Diversified Equity ADX 24.06 20.72 -13.9 30.6 Boulder Growth & Income BIF 16.49 14.03 -14.9 40.5 Central Secs CET 51.29 43.13 -15.9 54.8 CohenStrsCEOppFd FOF 14.27 14.86 +4.1 36.6 EVTxAdvDivIncm EVT 28.50 28.37 -0.5 49.2 GabelliDiv&IncTr GDV 29.35 26.87 -8.4 47.1 Gabelli Equity Tr GAB 6.63 6.86 +3.5 38.5 GeneralAmer GAM 53.51 44.76 -16.4 36.2 JHancockTaxAdvDiv HTD 25.26 24.58 -2.7 35.9 Liberty All-Star Equity USA 8.31 8.50 +2.3 51.8 Liberty All-Star Growth ASG 8.91 8.72 -2.1 28.5 Royce Micro-Cap Tr RMT 13.65 11.95 -12.5 55.8 Royce Value Trust RVT 21.02 18.81 -10.5 46.3 Source Capital SOR 49.12 46.25 -5.8 31.5 Tri-Continental TY 39.19 34.74 -11.4 34.6 Specialized Equity Funds Aberdeen Glb Prem Prop AWP 6.96 6.61 -5.0 47.4 Adams Natural Resources PEO 17.40 14.96 -14.0 35.3 ASA Gold & Prec Met Ltd ASA 23.88 20.93 -12.4 -9.8 BR Enh C&I CII 21.50 21.42 -0.4 41.8 BlackRock Energy & Res BGR 9.39 8.84 -5.9 32.8 BlackRock Eq Enh Div BDJ 10.43 10.20 -2.2 43.7 BlackRock Enh Glbl Div BOE 13.29 12.56 -5.5 35.8 BlackRock Enh Intl Div BGY 6.77 6.38 -5.8 24.1 BlackRock Hlth Sci Tr II BMEZ 29.51 28.25 -4.3 23.2 BlackRock Hlth Sciences BME 48.31 48.24 -0.1 17.7 BlackRock Res & Comm BCX 9.43 9.32 -1.2 50.7 BlackRock Sci&Tech Tr II BSTZ 42.31 40.60 -4.0 61.0 BlackRock Sci&Tech Trust BST 55.93 54.16 -3.2 29.4 52 wk Prem Ttl Fund (SYM) NAV Close /Disc Ret BlackRock Utl Inf & Pwr BUI 25.53 26.50 +3.8 26.8 CLEARBRIDGEENGYMDSOPP EMO 26.09 21.22 -18.7 95.0 ClearBridge MLP & Midstm CEM 30.88 26.60 -13.9 92.4 ChnStrInfr UTF 27.42 28.83 +5.1 33.7 Cohen&SteersQualInc RQI 16.64 15.88 -4.6 49.4 Cohen&Steers TotRet RFI 15.49 16.20 +4.6 34.2 CohenStrsREITPrefInc RNP 27.62 27.08 -2.0 43.8 Columbia Sel Prm Tech Gr STK 34.14 34.29 +0.4 62.3 DNP Select Income DNP 9.82 10.86 +10.6 15.2 Duff&Ph Uti&Infra Inc Fd DPG 14.24 14.59 +2.5 45.5 EtnVncEqtyInc EOI 19.14 19.35 +1.1 33.4 EtnVncEqtyIncoII EOS 23.94 24.68 +3.1 33.9 EVRskMnDvsEqInc ETJ 10.52 11.17 +6.2 19.0 ETnVncTxMgdBuyWrtInc ETB 16.12 16.47 +2.2 26.5 EtnVncTxMgdBuyWrtOpp ETV 16.02 16.52 +3.1 23.0 EvTxMnDvsEqInc ETY 14.18 14.50 +2.3 36.0 EtnVncTxMgdGlbB ETW 11.02 11.10 +0.7 34.7 EVTxMnGblDvEqInc EXG 10.52 10.69 +1.6 47.6 First Trust Energy Inc G FEN 14.27 13.80 -3.3 51.6 First Tr Enhanced Eq FFA 21.14 21.18 +0.2 43.1 FirstTrMLPEner&Inc FEI 8.13 7.30 -10.2 50.5 Gabelli Healthcare GRX 15.47 13.66 -11.7 32.8 Gab Utility GUT 4.40 8.20 +86.4 23.4 GAMCOGlGold&NatRes GGN 3.79 3.85 +1.6 16.3 J Han Finl Opptys BTO 38.20 44.00 +15.2 102.2 Neuberger Brmn MLP & EI NML 6.08 4.79 -21.2 80.9 NuvDow 30 DynOverwrite DIAX 18.27 17.60 -3.7 33.0 NuvCorEqAlpha JCE 17.58 17.04 -3.1 37.3 NuveenNasdaq100DynOv QQQX 29.74 30.00 +0.9 22.3 Nuv Real Est JRS 12.25 11.29 -7.8 51.5 Nuveen Rl Asst Inc & Gro JRI 17.24 15.89 -7.8 40.4 NuvS&P500DynOvFd SPXX NA 18.20 NA 36.8 NuvSP500BuyIncFd BXMX 15.21 14.91 -2.0 34.2 ReavesUtilityIncome UTG 35.14 35.60 +1.3 20.5 Tortoise Enrgy Infra Crp TYG 34.01 27.06 -20.4 70.9 VAGIAI & Tech Opptys AIO 30.11 27.71 -8.0 39.6 VDivInt&PremStr NFJ NA 15.66 NA 34.5 Income & Preferred Stock Funds CalamosStratTot CSQ 18.36 18.80 +2.4 42.2 CohenStrsLtdDurPref&Inc LDP 26.24 26.71 +1.8 19.3 CohenStrsSelPref&Income PSF 27.11 30.85 +13.8 22.1 CohenStrsTaxAvPreSecs&I PTA 26.06 25.46 -2.3 NS FirstTrIntDurPref&Inc FPF 25.13 26.04 +3.6 25.4 JHanPrefInc HPI 20.76 21.94 +5.7 17.6 A Week in the Life of the DJIA A look at how the Dow Jones Industrial Average component stocks did in the past week and how much each moved the index. The DJIA gained 335.72 points, or 0.96%, on the week. A $1 change in the price of any DJIA stock = 6.58-point change in the average. To date, a $1,000 investment on Dec. 31 in each current DJIA stock component would have returned $34,876, or a gain of 16.25%, on the $30,000 investment, including reinvested dividends. The Week’s Action Pct Stock price Point chg chg (%) change in average* Company Symbol Close 7.37 6.02 5.57 5.38 4.60 4.49 23.82 8.90 8.33 4.34 29.56 156.83 58.60 54.84 28.57 Dow Goldman Sachs American Express JPMorgan Chase Chevron DOW GS AXP JPM CVX $65.38 419.69 168.65 163.05 98.64 $1,204 1,603 1,408 1,307 1,216 4.27 4.06 3.85 3.61 2.87 9.08 10.40 7.89 1.88 5.02 59.78 68.47 51.95 12.38 33.05 Boeing salesforce.com Caterpillar Intel Walt Disney BA CRM CAT INTC DIS 221.75 266.53 212.83 53.89 180.14 1,036 1,198 1,187 1,102 994 1.51 1.37 0.78 0.57 0.46 3.44 0.80 1.25 1.33 0.89 22.65 5.27 8.23 8.76 5.86 Honeywell Cisco Travelers Visa 3M HON CSCO TRV V MMM 231.14 59.02 162.09 232.69 195.05 1,101 1,348 1,168 1,068 1,142 0.37 0.28 0.22 –0.13 –0.34 0.18 0.41 0.30 –0.21 –0.75 1.19 2.70 1.98 –1.38 –4.94 Walgreens Apple IBM Nike Amgen WBA AAPL IBM NKE AMGN 48.48 148.60 139.41 167.58 222.78 1,250 1,125 1,148 1,191 991 –0.42 –1.35 –1.52 –1.75 –1.78 –1.01 –0.75 –4.64 –0.99 –5.86 –6.65 –4.94 –30.55 –6.52 –38.58 McDonald’s Verizon Microsoft Coca-Cola Home Depot MCD 237.48 VZ 54.77 MSFT 299.72 KO 55.65 HD 323.38 1,120 963 1,356 1,031 1,231 –1.92 –2.78 –2.55 –10.95 –3.02 –2.38 –3.26 –4.93 –3.63 –6.51 –18.30 –72.09 –15.67 –32.46 –42.86 Procter & Gamble PG UnitedHealth Group UNH Merck MRK Walmart WMT Johnson & Johnson JNJ $1,000 Invested(year-end '20) $1,000 1,042 1,203 995 1,029 1,119 142.31 418.76 76.30 146.52 172.93 *Based on Composite price. DJIA is calculated on primary-market price. Source: Dow Jones Market Data; FactSet. 52 wk Prem Ttl Fund (SYM) NAV Close /Disc Ret JHPrefIncII HPF 20.50 22.55 +10.0 32.8 HnckJPfdInco III HPS 18.34 19.30 +5.2 25.8 J Han Prm PDT 14.97 16.86 +12.6 39.3 LMP CapInco SCD 16.10 14.59 -9.4 45.4 Nuveen Pref & Inc Opp JPC 9.91 9.99 +0.8 21.4 Nuveen Fd JPS 9.91 9.98 +0.7 16.1 Nuveen Pref & Inc Term JPI 25.33 25.49 +0.6 19.2 Nuveen TxAdvDivGr JTD 18.03 16.49 -8.5 30.3 TCW Strat Income TSI NA 5.84 NA 2.7 Convertible Sec's. Funds AdvntCnvrtbl&IncFd AVK 20.15 19.05 -5.5 43.5 CalamosConvHi CHY 16.11 16.23 +0.7 40.5 CalmosConvOp CHI 15.26 15.56 +2.0 42.8 VAGI Conv & Inc II NCZ 5.72 5.36 -6.3 35.1 VAGI Conv & Inc NCV 6.38 6.12 -4.1 37.2 VAGI Dvs Inc & Conv ACV 36.68 35.77 -2.5 42.2 VAGI Eqty & Conv Inc NIE 34.25 30.70 -10.4 27.9 World Equity Funds Aberdeen Emg Mkts Eq Inc AEF 9.63 8.64 -10.3 32.2 Aberdeen Tot Dyn Div AOD 11.21 10.42 -7.0 37.0 BlackRock Capital Alloc BCAT 21.55 22.00 +2.1 NS Calamos GloDynInc CHW 10.11 10.60 +4.8 37.0 China CHN 30.42 26.78 -12.0 10.8 EV TxAdvGlbDivInc ETG 22.76 22.14 -2.7 49.7 EtnVncTxAdvOpp ETO 31.46 32.35 +2.8 56.8 FirstTr Dyn Euro Eq Inc FDEU 15.14 13.61 -10.1 35.8 Gabelli Multimedia GGT 9.04 9.40 +4.0 45.0 Highland Global Alloc HGLB 11.87 9.91 -16.5 67.3 India Fund IFN 25.44 22.82 -10.3 48.2 Japan Smaller Cap JOF 10.37 9.07 -12.5 17.4 Korea KF NA 42.94 NA 45.3 LazardGlbTotRetInc LGI 21.96 21.80 -0.7 49.5 MS ChinaShrFd CAF 23.16 20.87 -9.9 3.3 MS India IIF 30.84 26.75 -13.3 49.3 New Germany GF 23.75 20.90 -12.0 49.0 Templeton Dragon TDF 22.08 20.86 -5.5 6.7 Templeton Em Mkt EMF 19.69 17.60 -10.6 16.1 Wells Fargo Gl Div Oppty EOD 6.10 5.90 -3.3 43.1 Prem12 Mo Fund (SYM) NAV Close /Disc Yld U.S. Mortgage Bond Funds BlckRk Income BKT 5.95 6.33 +6.4 6.4 Invesco HI 2023 Tgt Term IHIT 9.46 9.75 +3.1 6.0 Investment Grade Bond Funds Angel Oak FS Inc Trm FINS NA 18.31 NA 6.9 BlRck Core Bond BHK 16.19 16.30 +0.7 5.2 BR Credit Alloc Inc BTZ 15.61 15.12 -3.1 6.5 Insight Select Income INSI 21.96 21.02 -4.3 3.5 InvescoBond VBF 21.18 20.40 -3.7 3.2 J Han Income JHS 16.27 15.92 -2.2 5.2 MFS Intmdt MIN 3.73 3.69 -1.1 8.9 Western Asset Inf-Lk Inc WIA 14.78 13.87 -6.2 5.4 Western Asset Inf-Lk O&I WIW 14.73 13.22 -10.3 2.8 Westn Asst IG Def Opp Tr IGI 21.92 21.68 -1.1 3.6 Loan Participation Funds Apollo Senior Floating AFT NA 15.69 NA 6.3 BR Debt Strategy DSU 11.63 11.46 -1.5 6.9 BR F/R Inc Str FRA 13.91 13.25 -4.7 6.4 BlackRock Floatng Rt Inc BGT 13.50 12.97 -3.9 6.3 Blackstone Strat Cr BGB 14.64 13.92 -4.9 6.7 Eagle Point Credit ECC NA 13.88 NA 7.3 EtnVncFltRteInc EFT 14.52 14.61 +0.6 5.3 EV SenFlRtTr EFR 14.29 14.18 -0.8 5.8 EVSnrIncm EVF 6.94 6.84 -1.4 6.1 FT/Sr Fltg Rte Inc 2 FCT 12.50 12.46 -0.3 9.8 FT/Sr Fltg Rte 2022 TgTr FIV 9.68 9.55 -1.3 1.7 Highland Income HFRO 13.91 10.93 -21.4 9.0 InvDYCrOpp VTA 12.33 11.70 -5.1 7.6 InvSnrIncTr VVR 4.65 4.37 -6.0 5.8 Nuveen Credit Strat Inc JQC 6.91 6.47 -6.4 13.0 NuvFloatRateIncFd JFR 10.39 9.92 -4.5 6.4 NuvFloatRteIncOppty JRO 10.29 9.89 -3.9 6.3 Nuveen Senior Income NSL 6.11 5.75 -5.9 6.6 High Yield Bond Funds AllianceBernGlHiIncm AWF 13.06 12.39 -5.1 6.3 Barings Glb SD HY Bd BGH 17.78 17.03 -4.2 7.5 BR Corporate HY HYT 12.17 12.53 +3.0 7.5 BlackRock Ltd Dur Inc BLW 16.95 17.21 +1.5 6.8 BNY Mellon Hi Yield Str DHF 3.31 3.33 +0.6 7.3 Brookfield Real Asst Inc RA 20.44 21.99 +7.6 10.7 CrSuisHighYld DHY 2.56 2.50 -2.3 7.8 DELAWAREIVYHIGHINCOPP IVH 14.95 14.14 -5.4 7.2 DoubleLine Inc Sol DSL 18.48 17.83 -3.5 8.3 DoubleLine Yld Opps DLY 20.37 19.89 -2.4 7.0 First Tr Hi Inc Lng/Shrt FSD 16.47 15.92 -3.3 8.2 First Trust HY Opp:2027 FTHY 20.94 20.68 -1.2 6.5 KKR Income Opportunities KIO NA 16.43 NA 8.0 NexPointStratOppty NHF 22.66 15.11 -33.3 5.1 Nuveen CI Nov 2021 Tgt JHB 9.42 9.38 -0.5 2.7 Nuveen Crdt Opps 2022 TT JCO 8.25 8.29 +0.5 6.4 Nuveen Global High Inc JGH 17.01 16.17 -4.9 7.2 PGIM Global High Yield GHY 16.69 15.61 -6.5 8.0 PGIM High Yield Bond ISD 17.19 16.27 -5.4 7.7 PGIM Sh Dur Hi Yld Opp SDHY 19.88 19.01 -4.4 NS PioneerHilncm PHT 9.63 10.74 +11.5 8.0 Wells Fargo Income Oppty EAD 9.21 9.10 -1.2 7.6 WstAstHIF II HIX 7.18 7.53 +4.9 7.9 Western Asset Hi Inc Opp HIO 5.48 5.23 -4.6 7.2 Western Asset Hi Yld D O HYI 15.88 15.58 -1.9 7.2 Other Domestic Taxable Bond Funds Apollo Tactical Income AIF NA 15.87 NA 6.5 Ares Dynamic Crdt Alloc ARDC NA 16.25 NA 7.3 BlackRock Mlt-Sctr Inc BIT 18.25 18.50 +1.4 8.0 BlackRock Tax Muni Bd BBN 25.82 26.23 +1.6 5.3 Prem12 Mo Fund (SYM) NAV Close /Disc Yld DoubleLine:Oppor Crdt Fd DBL 19.53 19.80 +1.4 8.6 EVLmtDurIncm EVV 13.48 13.31 -1.3 9.0 Franklin Ltd Dur Income FTF 9.26 9.37 +1.2 8.3 J Han Investors JHI 18.99 18.90 -0.5 7.4 MFS Charter MCR 8.62 8.65 +0.3 8.1 Nuveen Taxable Muni Inc NBB 23.25 23.30 +0.2 4.9 PIMCO Corp & Inc Oppty PTY 14.38 20.10 +39.8 7.5 PIMCO Corp & Inc Strat PCN 14.54 18.13 +24.7 7.1 PIMCOHilnco PHK 5.92 6.81 +15.0 8.2 PIMCO IncmStrFd PFL 10.64 13.09 +23.0 8.6 PIMCO IncmStrFd II PFN 9.39 11.30 +20.3 8.7 Putnam Mas Int PIM 4.11 4.08 -0.7 7.1 Putnam Prem Inc PPT 4.58 4.57 -0.2 7.4 Wells Fargo Multi-Sector ERC 12.82 13.09 +2.1 8.6 World Income Funds Abrdn AP IncFd FAX 4.60 4.24 -7.8 7.5 BrndywnGLB Glb Inc Oppts BWG 13.61 12.62 -7.3 7.2 EtnVncStDivInc EVG 13.54 13.57 +0.2 7.3 MS EmMktDomDebt EDD 6.79 6.13 -9.7 6.5 PIMCO Dyn Crd & Mrt Inc PCI 20.48 22.04 +7.6 9.3 PIMCO Dynamic Income PDI 25.21 28.08 +11.4 9.3 PIMCO Dynamic Inc Opp PDO 20.57 21.55 +4.8 NS PIMCO Income Opportunity PKO 23.82 26.35 +10.6 8.6 PIMCO Stratg Inc RCS NA 8.00 NA 7.9 Templeton Em Inc TEI 8.29 7.82 -5.7 5.3 Templtn Glbl Inc GIM 5.72 5.43 -5.1 3.4 WstAstEmergDebt EMD 14.70 13.92 -5.3 7.9 Western Asset Gl Cr D Op GDO 18.57 18.12 -2.4 6.4 National Muni Bond Funds AllBerNatlMunInc AFB 15.58 15.12 -3.0 4.2 BlckRk Inv Q Mun BKN 16.72 18.47 +10.5 4.3 BlackRock Muni 2030 Tgt BTT 27.16 26.32 -3.1 2.8 BlackRock Muni BFK 14.83 15.66 +5.6 4.5 BlackRock Muni II BLE 15.18 16.03 +5.6 4.7 BlckRk Muni Inc Qly BYM 15.95 16.19 +1.5 4.1 BR MuniAssets Fd MUA 15.11 16.06 +6.3 3.9 BR MuniHoldings Qly MFL 15.37 14.83 -3.5 3.8 BR MH Qly 2 MUE 14.36 14.60 +1.7 4.2 BR MuniHoldngs MHD 17.42 17.22 -1.1 4.2 BR MuniVest Fd MVF 10.09 9.89 -2.0 4.1 BR MuniVest 2 MVT 15.72 16.66 +6.0 4.4 BR MuniYield Fd MYD 15.40 15.36 -0.3 4.3 BR MuniYield Qlty MQY 16.63 16.92 +1.7 4.7 BR MuniYld Qlty2 MQT 14.63 14.72 +0.6 4.2 BR MuniYld Qly 3 MYI 15.48 15.16 -2.1 3.9 BNY Mellon Muni Bd Infra DMB 14.77 15.46 +4.7 4.1 BNY Mellon Str Muni Bond DSM 8.49 8.43 -0.7 4.2 BNY Mellon Strat Muni LEO 8.87 9.48 +6.9 4.5 DWS Muni Inc KTF 12.85 12.34 -4.0 3.9 EVMuniBd EIM 14.17 13.85 -2.3 4.2 EVMuniIncm EVN 14.41 14.32 -0.6 4.0 EVNatMuniOpp EOT 22.30 22.84 +2.4 3.3 InvAdvMuIncTrII VKI 12.33 12.75 +3.4 4.6 Invesco MuniOp OIA 7.96 8.44 +6.0 4.5 InvescoMuOppTr VMO 13.81 14.05 +1.7 4.6 InvescoMuTr VKQ 13.83 14.11 +2.0 4.5 InvescoQual Inc IQI 13.91 13.69 -1.6 4.4 InvTrInvGrMu VGM 14.24 14.23 -0.1 4.6 InvescoValMunInc IIM 16.90 17.06 +0.9 4.4 MAINSTAY:MKDEFTRMUNOP MMD 21.25 22.62 +6.4 4.4 NeubrgrBrm NBH 15.40 17.40 +13.0 4.7 Nuveen AMT-Fr Mu Val NUW 17.63 17.38 -1.4 2.7 Nuveen AMT-Fr Qlty Mun I NEA 16.07 15.89 -1.1 4.4 Nuveen AMT-Fr Mu CI NVG 17.67 18.17 +2.8 4.5 Nuveen Dyn Muni Opp NDMO 16.10 16.81 +4.4 NS Nuveen Enh Muni Val NEV 16.07 16.86 +4.9 4.3 Nuveen Int Dur Mun Term NID 14.91 14.90 -0.1 3.5 Nuveen Mu Crdt Opps NMCO 15.78 15.64 -0.9 4.7 Nuv Muni Credit Income NZF 17.34 17.43 +0.5 4.4 NuvMuniHiIncOpp NMZ 14.83 15.38 +3.7 4.9 Nuveen Muni Val NUV 10.79 11.75 +8.9 3.1 Nuveen Quality Muni Inc NAD 16.47 16.30 -1.0 4.3 Nuveen Sel TF NXP 16.53 17.49 +5.8 3.1 Nuveen Sel TF 2 NXQ 15.75 16.05 +1.9 3.1 PIMCO MuniInc PMF 13.52 15.48 +14.5 4.3 PIMCOMuniIncII PML 12.56 15.10 +20.2 4.6 Pimco Muni III PMX 11.55 13.13 +13.7 4.3 PioneerHilncAdv MAV 12.34 12.01 -2.7 4.6 PioneerMunHiIcm MHI 13.25 12.65 -4.5 4.4 Putnam Mgd Inc PMM 8.41 8.60 +2.3 4.4 Putnam Muni Opp PMO 14.05 14.71 +4.7 4.5 RiverNorth Flx Mu Inc II RFMZ 20.57 21.33 +3.7 NS RiverNorth Mgd Dur Mun I RMM 20.40 21.35 +4.7 5.1 Western Asset Mgd Muni MMU 14.21 13.63 -4.1 3.9 Single State Muni Bond BlackRock CA Mun BFZ 16.12 14.91 -7.5 3.2 BR MH CA Qly Fd Inc MUC 16.02 15.98 -0.2 4.0 BR MH NJ Qly MUJ 16.13 15.90 -1.4 4.7 BR MH NY Qly MHN 15.21 14.85 -2.4 4.3 BR MuniYld CA MYC 16.49 15.52 -5.9 3.3 BR MuniYld CA Qly MCA 16.35 15.98 -2.3 4.0 BR MuniYld MI Qly MIY 15.89 15.61 -1.8 4.1 BR MuniYld NJ MYJ 16.22 15.90 -2.0 4.7 BR MuniYld NY Qly MYN 14.57 14.35 -1.5 4.1 EVCAMuniBd EVM 12.63 12.03 -4.8 4.1 Eaton Vance NY Muni Bd ENX 13.50 12.65 -6.3 4.1 Prem12 Mo Fund (SYM) NAV Close /Disc Yld InvCaValMuIncTr VCV 13.77 14.06 +2.1 4.0 InvPAValMuIncTr VPV 14.45 13.53 -6.4 4.4 InvTrInvGrNYMu VTN 14.66 13.81 -5.8 3.9 Nuveen CA AMT-F Qual MI NKX 16.87 16.50 -2.2 4.0 Nuveen CA Val NCA 10.86 10.67 -1.7 2.9 NuveenCAQtyMuInc NAC 16.26 15.90 -2.2 4.0 NuvNJ Qual Muni Inc NXJ 16.77 15.53 -7.4 4.4 Nuveen NY AMT/FrQual MI NRK 15.20 14.22 -6.4 4.0 Nuveen NY Qual Muni Inc NAN 15.70 15.22 -3.1 4.0 Nuveen OH Qual Muni Inc NUO 17.69 16.39 -7.3 3.4 Nuveen PA Qual Muni Inc NQP 16.12 15.11 -6.3 4.4 Nuveen VA Qlty Mun Inc NPV 15.52 17.33 +11.7 3.4 PIMCO CA PCQ 14.24 18.84 +32.3 4.1 PIMCOCAMuniII PCK 9.17 9.76 +6.4 4.0 52 wk Prem Ttl Fund (SYM) NAV Close /Disc Ret General Equity Funds Alternative Strategies:I 6.60 NA NA 40.6 BOW RIVER CAPTL EVGN;I NA NA NA N Specialized Equity Funds Aspiriant Rsk-Mgd RA NA NA NA NS Broadstone Rl Est Acc:I 2.11 NA NA 3.8 Broadstone Rl Est Acc:W 2.10 NA NA 3.6 CBRE ClrnGlbRlEst IGR 9.86 9.09 -7.8 39.8 CIM RA&C A 25.94 NA NA 9.8 CIM RA&C C 25.68 NA NA 9.0 CIM RA&C I 26.02 NA NA 10.0 CIM RA&C L 25.85 NA NA 9.5 Clarion Partners REI D 10.99 NA NA 17.3 Clarion Partners REI I 11.00 NA NA 17.6 Clarion Partners REI S 10.99 NA NA 16.6 Clarion Partners REI T 10.98 NA NA 16.7 GS Real Est Div Inc:A 10.56 NA NA 16.5 GS Real Est Div Inc:C 10.54 NA NA 15.5 GS Real Est Div Inc:I 11.04 NA NA 16.8 GS Real Est Div Inc:L 10.56 NA NA 16.2 GS Real Est Div Inc:P 11.04 NA NA NS GS Real Est Div Inc:W 10.72 NA NA 16.3 NexPointRlEstStrat;A 19.06 NA NA 35.4 NexPointRlEstStrat;C 19.27 NA NA 34.4 NexPointRlEstStrat;Z 19.27 NA NA 35.7 PREDEX;I 26.79 NA NA 10.4 PREDEX;T 26.93 NA NA 10.3 PREDEX;W 26.93 NA NA 10.3 Principal Dvs Sel RA A 27.96 NA NA 21.6 Principal Dvs Sel RA Ins 28.03 NA NA 21.7 Principal Dvs Sel RA Y 28.15 NA NA 22.0 RMR Mortgage Trust RMRM NA 11.20 NA NA The Private Shares;A 43.85 NA NA 42.0 The Private Shares;I 44.26 NA NA 42.4 The Private Shares;L 43.46 NA NA 41.6 USQ Core Real Estate:I 25.96 NA NA 8.5 USQ Core Real Estate:IS 25.98 NA NA 8.6 Versus Cap MMgr RE Inc:I 29.05 NA NA NE Versus Capital Real Asst 26.35 NA NA 9.6 Wildermuth Endwmnt:A 14.24 NA NA 7.1 Wildermuth Endwmnt:C 13.63 NA NA 6.3 Wildermuth Endowment:I 14.34 NA NA 7.4 Income & Preferred Stock Funds A3 Alternative Inc 9.68 NA NA -3.6 Calamos L/S Eqty and DI CPZ 21.87 20.16 -7.8 25.8 Destra Multi-Altrntv;A 12.27 NA NA 11.5 Destra Multi-Altrntv;C 11.67 NA NA 10.7 Destra Multi-Altrntv;I 12.54 NA NA 11.8 Destra Multi-Altrntv;T 11.87 NA NA 11.0 Flat Rock Opportunity 22.36 NA NA 44.0 The Relative Value:A NA NA NA NS Variant Altrntv Inc:Inst 27.98 NA NA 12.0 Variant Altrntv Inc:Inv 27.98 NA NA 11.7 Zell Capital NA NA NA NS Convertible Sec's. Funds Calmos Dyn Conv and Inc CCD 31.08 30.90 -0.6 28.7 World Equity Funds ACAP Strategic:A 25.88 NA NA 2.7 ACAP Strategic:W 19.18 NA NA 3.5 Aspiriant Rsk-Mgd Cap Ap NA NA NA NS CalamosGlbTotRet CGO 15.61 16.60 +6.3 31.1 CPG Cooper Square IE A NA NA NA NS CPG Cooper Square IE I NA NA NA NS Primark Priv Eq Inv:I 13.09 NA NA 31.0 Thornburg Inc Bldr Opps TBLD.O 20.31 NA NA NS VirtusTotalRetFd ZTR 9.46 9.67 +2.2 16.0 Prem12 Mo Fund (SYM) NAV Close /Disc Yld U.S. Mortgage Bond Funds Arca US Treasury NA NA NA 0.0 Loan Participation Funds 1WS Credit Income;A2 NA NA NA NS 1WS Credit Income;Inst NA NA NA 5.6 AlphCntrc Prime Merid In 9.78 NA NA 10.5 Axonic Alternative Inc NA NA NA 6.6 Borrowing Benchmarks | wsj.com/market-data/bonds/benchmarks Money Rates August 27, 2021 Key annual interest rates paid to borrow or lend money in U.S. and international markets. Rates below are a guide to general levels but don’t always represent actual transactions. Week Latest ago Inflation July index level Insider-Trading Spotlight Trading by ‘insiders’ of a corporation, such as a company’s CEO, vice president or director, potentially conveys new information about the prospects of a company. Insiders are required to report large trades to the SEC within two business days. Here’s a look at the biggest individual trades by insiders, based on data received by Refinitiv on August 27, and year-to-date stock performance of the company Company Symbol Oscar Health Momentus Rafael Holdings Morphic Holding Six Flags Entertainment Apartment Investment & Management Chinook Therapeutics Vertex Pharmaceuticals MercadoLibre Ring Energy Neoleukin Therapeutics CrossAmerica Partners Energy Transfer Finance of America Companies Krispy Kreme Cyxtera Technologies Lumos Pharma Compass Diversified Holdings 0.48 0.33 Latest Week ago 52-Week High Low Title Insider No. of shrs in Price range ($) $ Value trans (000s) in transaction (000s) Close ($) Ytd (%) OSCR MNTS RFL MORF SIX AIV KDNY VRTX MELI REI NLTX CAPL ET FOA DNUT CYXT LUMO CODI 1,269 12.69-13.41 1,300 10.00 113 44.92 75 54.71-56.82 100 37.89-38.60 450 6.50-6.61 209 11.98 10 195.14-196.34 n.a. 1779.83-1787.57 764 1.90-1.93 150* 6.11-6.45 53 17.48-18.23 100 8.90 168* 5.07-5.22 60 13.21 94 8.39 84 8.73-9.58 28 27.46-27.47 J. Kushner E. Freedman H. Jonas T. Springer A. Ruchim T. Considine S. Akkaraju R. Kewalramani H. Dubugras W. Kruse J. Drachman J. Topper R. Washburne B. Libman O. Goudet G. Waters K. Lalande G. Burns HI BI CEOI DOI DI DI DI CEO DI B CEO DOI DI DO CB DI DI DI T. Cook S. Walton A. Walton J. Walton S. Walton A. Walton J. Walton D. Loeb A. Counselman L. Schleifer C. Chan J. Smith A. Karp L. Page L. Page L. Page L. Page A. Bechtolsheim CEO 2,386 148.30-149.97 DOI 1,473 148.72-150.93 BI 1,473 148.72-150.93 BI 1,473 148.72-150.93 DOI 1,216 148.91-152.16 BI 1,216 148.91-152.16 BI 1,216 148.91-152.16 OXI 981 199.62-208.69 O 608 193.23-213.17 CEO 210* 650.03-660.03 CEO 279 314.98-316.43 DI 700 112.00 CEO 2,891 23.93-25.14 DO 14 2730.95-2770.36 DO 14 2706.83-2749.85 DO 14 2710.17-2747.42 DO 14 2691.40-2725.93 H 100* 367.81-376.25 16,191 14.05 9.55 -46.8 13,000 5,056 47.60 104.1 4,213 62.50 86.3 3,807 42.41 24.4 7.08 34.1 2,940 2,498 13.91 -12.3 1,956 199.92 -15.4 1,507 1865.00 11.3 2.35 256.1 1,468 7.81 -44.6 934 927 18.95 10.4 9.49 53.6 890 5.46 -47.5 874 793 17.00 8.36 -19.3 785 776 10.52 -70.5 769 29.66 52.5 3.25 3.25 3.25 3.25 2.45 2.45 2.45 2.45 1.475 1.475 1.475 1.475 Policy Rates Euro zone Switzerland Britain Australia 0.00 0.00 0.10 0.10 0.00 0.00 0.10 0.10 0.00 0.00 0.10 0.25 0.00 0.00 0.10 0.10 0.12 -0.04 0.04 U.S. 0.03 U.S. government rates Discount 0.25 0.25 —52-WEEK— High Low 0.0500 0.0300 0.0900 0.0000 0.0600 0.0800 0.0900 0.0100 0.0800 0.1000 0.1200 0.0500 Low Bid Offer Treasury bill auction 0.035 0.040 0.090 0.000 0.055 0.070 0.115 0.015 0.050 0.050 0.125 0.030 4 weeks 13 weeks 26 weeks Fannie Mae 30-year mortgage yields 2.386 2.335 2.622 1.836 2.420 2.371 2.674 1.875 30 days 60 days 0.25 0.25 Federal funds Effective rate 0.0900 0.0900 0.1000 0.0500 High 0.1000 0.1000 0.1500 0.0700 Latest Week ago 2.00 2.00 AAPL WMT Upstart Holdings UPST Regeneron Pharmaceuticals Synopsys Papa John's International Palantir Technologies Alphabet REGN GOOG Arista Networks ANET SNPS PZZA PLTR 354,568 220,015 220,015 220,015 182,714 182,714 182,714 198,231 122,725 136,606 87,865 78,400 71,106 38,331 37,998 37,961 37,665 37,185 148.60 146.52 12.0 1.6 663.29 331.81 125.02 25.71 2891.01 37.3 28.0 47.3 9.2 65.0 372.86 28.3 Based on actual transaction dates in reports received this past week Sector Basic Industries Business services Capital goods Consumer durables Consumer nondurables Consumer services Energy Buying 527,567 636,040 0 11,045 260,439 812,361 1,332,040 Energy Coal,C.Aplc.,12500Btu,1.2SO2-r,w Coal,PwdrRvrBsn,8800Btu,0.8SO2-r,w 63.850 11.900 Gold, per troy oz Engelhard industrial Handy & Harman base Handy & Harman fabricated LBMA Gold Price AM LBMA Gold Price PM Krugerrand,wholesale-e Maple Leaf-e American Eagle-e Mexican peso-e Austria crown-e Austria phil-e Engelhard industrial Handy & Harman base Handy & Harman fabricated LBMA spot price (U.S.$ equivalent) Coins,wholesale $1,000 face-a Buying and selling by sector Selling 14,627,334 39,315,439 0 11,163,444 34,273,901 122,501,442 197,156 Sector Finance Health care Industrial Media Technology Transportation Utilities Buying 4,603,861 2,646,502 575,552 132,000 846,839 13,650 283,582 Selling 145,254,700 60,558,666 39,033,556 2,427,123 136,238,361 1,206,292 2,470,754 Sources: Refinitiv; Dow Jones Market Data 0.25 0.04 0.08588 0.12838 0.15263 0.23663 0.15863 0.25388 0.30988 0.44525 0.07263 0.11775 0.14825 0.22988 -0.581 -0.543 -0.558 -0.501 -0.546 -0.470 -0.503 -0.371 -0.607 -0.574 -0.548 -0.511 Libor 0.08600 0.11988 0.15475 0.23513 One month Three month Six month One year One month Three month Six month One year -0.577 -0.562 -0.545 -0.498 Secured Overnight Financing Rate 0.05 0.11 0.05 52-Week high low 0.01 Value 52-Week Traded High Low Latest DTCC GCF Repo Index 2.00 2.00 Treasury MBS 0.056 0.062 57.910 0.132 -0.008 17.204 0.143 0.002 Notes on data: U.S. prime rate is the base rate on corporate loans posted by at least 70% of the 10 largest U.S. banks, and is effective March 16, 2020. Other prime rates aren’t directly comparable; lending practices vary widely by location; Discount rate is effective March 16, 2020. Secured Overnight Financing Rate is as of August 26, 2021. DTCC GCF Repo Index is Depository Trust & Clearing Corp.'s weighted average for overnight trades in applicable CUSIPs. Value traded is in billions of U.S. dollars. Federal-funds rates are Tullett Prebon rates as of 5:30 p.m. ET. Sources: Federal Reserve; Bureau of Labor Statistics; DTCC; FactSet; Tullett Prebon Information, Ltd. Friday, August 27, 2021 wsj.com/market-data/commodities These prices reflect buying and selling of a variety of actual or “physical” commodities in the marketplace— separate from the futures price on an exchange, which reflects what the commodity might be worth in future months. 1794.00 1798.50 1996.34 *1783.80 *1786.60 1889.52 1907.69 1907.69 2198.58 1783.88 1907.69 Silver, troy oz. * Half the transactions were indirect **Two day transaction p - Pink Sheets n.a. 0.09 90 days Cash Prices | Metals 223.18 447.7 —52-WEEK— High Low Commercial paper (AA financial) Other short-term rates Friday Apple Walmart Week Latest ago Euro Libor Secondary market Call money Overnight repurchase Sellers Aug. 25 Aug. 23-25 Aug. 23-25 Aug. 23-25 Aug. 18-19 Aug. 18-19 Aug. 18-19 Aug. 20-24 Aug. 19 Aug. 18-19 Aug. 20-23 Aug. 19 Aug. 20-24 Aug. 20 Aug. 20 Aug. 19 Aug. 19 Aug. 23-24 5.4 4.3 International rates U.S. Canada Japan Buyers Aug. 20-24 Aug. 12 Aug. 24 Aug. 18-20 Aug. 19-20 Aug. 19-23 Aug. 18 Aug. 19 Aug. 18 Aug. 19-20 Aug. 24-25 Aug. 19-23 Aug. 19 Aug. 18-19 Aug. 19 Aug. 25 Aug. 20-24 Aug. 17-18 273.003 279.146 All items Core Prime rates Based on reports filed with regulators this past week Date(s) Chg From (%) June '21 July '20 U.S. consumer price index KEY: B: beneficial owner of more than 10% of a security class CB: chairman CEO: chief executive officer CFO: chief financial officer CO: chief operating officer D: director DO: director and beneficial owner GC: general counsel H: officer, director and beneficial owner I: indirect transaction filed through a trust, insider spouse, minor child or other O: officer OD: officer and director P: president UT: unknown VP: vice president Excludes pure options transactions Biggest weekly individual trades 52 wk Prem Ttl Fund (SYM) NAV Close /Disc Ret Blackstone FR EI D 24.11 NA NA 5.4 Blackstone FR EI I 24.07 NA NA 5.6 Blackstone FR EI T 24.03 NA NA 5.1 Blackstone FR EI T-I 24.62 NA NA 5.1 Blackstone FR EI U 25.09 NA NA 5.1 Blstn Commnty Dev NA NA NA 2.8 BNYM Alcntr Glb MS Cr Fd 105.12 NA NA 6.6 CliffwaterClFd;I 10.57 NA NA 7.6 CliffwaterElFd;A 10.23 NA NA NS CNR Strategic Credit 10.90 NA NA 8.0 FedProj&TrFinanceTendr 9.98 NA NA 1.8 Flat Rock Core Income NA NA NA NS Schrdrs Opp Inc;A 25.98 NA NA 3.2 Schrdrs Opp Inc;A2 NA NA NA 1.3 Schrdrs Opp Inc;I 25.99 NA NA 3.4 Schrdrs Opp Inc;SDR 26.03 NA NA 3.6 Invesco Sr Loan A 6.55 NA NA 3.2 Invesco Sr Loan C 6.56 NA NA 2.5 Invesco Sr Loan IB 6.55 NA NA 3.5 Invesco Sr Loan IC 6.55 NA NA 3.3 Invesco Sr Loan Y 6.55 NA NA 3.5 OFS Credit Company OCCI NA NA NA 14.9 High Yield Bond Funds Griffin Inst Access Cd:A NA NA NA 6.0 Griffin Inst Access Cd:C NA NA NA 6.0 Griffin Inst Access Cd:F NA NA NA 6.0 Griffin Inst Access Cd:I NA NA NA 6.0 Griffin Inst Access Cd:L NA NA NA 6.0 PIMCO Flexible Cr I;A-1 9.68 NA NA NS PIMCO Flexible Cr I;A-2 9.68 NA NA 7.1 PIMCO Flexible Cr I;A-3 9.68 NA NA NS PIMCO Flexible Cr I;A-4 9.68 NA NA 7.1 PIMCO Flexible Cr I;Inst 9.68 NA NA 7.8 WA Middle Mkt Inc 644.69 NA NA 5.3 Other Domestic Taxable Bond Funds AFA MMC;Inst 10.02 NA NA NS AFA MMC;Inv 10.01 NA NA NS Alternative Credit Inc:A 11.15 NA NA 6.3 Alternative Credit Inc:C 11.26 NA NA 5.5 Alternative Credit Inc:I 11.17 NA NA 6.5 Alternative Credit Inc:L 11.14 NA NA 6.0 Alternative Credit Inc:W 11.14 NA NA 6.3 Angel Oak Str Crdt:Inst NA NA NA 8.0 BR Credit Strat;A 10.42 NA NA 4.9 BR Credit Strat;Inst 10.42 NA NA 5.6 BR Credit Strat;U 10.43 NA NA NS BR Credit Strat;W 10.43 NA NA NS BlackRock Mlt-Sctr Oppty 89.46 NA NA 7.2 BlackRock Mlt-Sec Opp II 92.34 NA NA 7.2 Carlyle Tact Pvt Cred:A NA NA NA 6.8 Carlyle Tact Pvt Cred:I NA NA NA 7.3 Carlyle Tact Pvt Cred:L NA NA NA 6.8 Carlyle Tact Pvt Cred:M NA NA NA 6.6 Carlyle Tact Pvt Cred:N NA NA NA 7.3 Carlyle Tact Pvt Cred:Y NA NA NA 7.1 CION Ares Dvsfd Crdt;A NA NA NA 5.4 CION Ares Dvsfd Crdt;C NA NA NA 5.4 CION Ares Dvsfd Crdt;I NA NA NA 5.4 CION Ares Dvsfd Crdt;L NA NA NA 5.4 CION Ares Dvsfd Crdt;U NA NA NA 5.4 CION Ares Dvsfd Crdt:U2 NA NA NA 5.4 CION Ares Dvsfd Crdt;W NA NA NA 5.4 CNR Select Strategies 11.82 NA NA 0.0 First Eagle Crdt Opps A 26.25 NA NA NS First Eagle Crdt Opps I 26.26 NA NA NS FS Credit Income;A NA NA NA 5.3 FS Credit Income;I NA NA NA 5.5 FS Credit Income;T NA NA NA 5.0 FS Credit Income;U NA NA NA 4.9 FS Credit Income;U-2 NA NA NA NS GL Beyond Income 0.48 NA NA NE KKR CREDIT OPPTY;D NA NA NA NS KKR CREDIT OPPTY;I NA NA NA 5.6 KKR CREDIT OPPTY;T NA NA NA 4.9 KKR CREDIT OPPTY;U NA NA NA NS Lord Abbett Cred Opps Fd 10.86 NA NA 6.0 Lord Abbett Cred Opps Fd 10.86 NA NA 6.7 Lord Abbett Crd Op:U 10.86 NA NA 6.0 Palmer Square Opp Inc 18.90 NA NA 4.9 Thrivent Church Ln&Inc:S 10.70 NA NA 2.4 World Income Funds BlueBay Destra Itl E:A 29.54 NA NA 2.3 BlueBay Destra Itl E:I 29.55 NA NA 2.5 BlueBay Destra Itl E:L 29.51 NA NA 2.1 BlueBay Destra Itl E:T 29.46 NA NA 1.9 National Muni Bond Funds Ecofin Tax-Adv Soc Impct 9.40 NA NA 4.2 Nuveen En HY Muni Bd:A 10.15 NA NA NS Nuveen En HY Muni Bd:I 10.17 NA NA NS PIMCO Flex Mun Inc;A-3 11.97 NA NA 1.9 PIMCO Flex Mun Inc:A1 11.97 NA NA 2.1 PIMCO Flex Mun Inc;A2 11.97 NA NA NS PIMCO Flex Mun Inc;Inst 11.97 NA NA 2.6 23.8000 23.9950 29.9940 *£17.2400 *23.6750 19892 Other metals LBMA Platinum Price PM Platinum,Engelhard industrial Palladium,Engelhard industrial Aluminum, LME, $ per metric ton Copper,Comex spot *991.0 995.0 2441.0 *2635.0 4.3165 Friday Iron Ore, 62% Fe CFR China-s Shredded Scrap, US Midwest-s,m Steel, HRC USA, FOB Midwest Mill-s 159.1 n.a. 1922 Battery/EV metals BMI Lithium Carbonate, EXW China, =99.2%-v,k BMI Lithium Hydroxide, EXW China, =56.5% -v,k BMI Cobalt sulphate, EXW China, >20.5% -v,m BMI Nickel Sulphate, EXW China, >22%-v,m BMIFlakeGraphite,FOBChina,-100Mesh,94-95%-v,m 14250 16550 12168 5696 530 Fibers and Textiles Burlap,10-oz,40-inch NY yd-n,w 0.7700 Cotton,1 1/16 std lw-mdMphs-u 0.9452 Cotlook 'A' Index-t *103.90 Hides,hvy native steers piece fob-u n.a. Wool,64s,staple,Terr del-u,w n.a. Grains and Feeds Barley,top-quality Mnpls-u n.a. Bran,wheat middlings, KC-u 125 Corn,No. 2 yellow,Cent IL-bp,u 5.9550 Corn gluten feed,Midwest-u,w 143.0 Corn gluten meal,Midwest-u,w 510.4 Cottonseed meal-u,w 300 Hominy feed,Cent IL-u,w 165 Meat-bonemeal,50% pro Mnpls-u,w 355 Oats,No.2 milling,Mnpls-u 4.9850 Rice, Long Grain Milled, No. 2 AR-u,w 27.25 Sorghum,(Milo) No.2 Gulf-u 7.2338 SoybeanMeal,Cent IL,rail,ton48%-u,w 360.40 Soybeans,No.1 yllw IL-bp,u 13.2700 Friday Wheat,Spring14%-pro Mnpls-u 10.3775 Wheat,No.2 soft red,St.Louis-u 6.8250 Wheat - Hard - KC (USDA) $ per bu-u 7.4325 Wheat,No.1soft white,Portld,OR-u 10.8000 Food Beef,carcass equiv. index choice 1-3,600-900 lbs.-u select 1-3,600-900 lbs.-u Broilers, National comp wtd. avg.-u,w Butter,AA Chicago Cheddar cheese,bbl,Chicago Cheddar cheese,blk,Chicago Milk,Nonfat dry,Chicago lb. Coffee,Brazilian,Comp Coffee,Colombian, NY Eggs,large white,Chicago-u Flour,hard winter KC Hams,17-20 lbs,Mid-US fob-u Hogs,Iowa-So. Minnesota-u Pork bellies,12-14 lb MidUS-u Pork loins,13-19 lb MidUS-u Steers,Tex.-Okla. Choice-u Steers,feeder,Okla. City-u,w 258.30 231.31 1.0451 1.7075 140.25 175.00 129.25 1.7967 2.3655 1.2950 20.05 n.a. 98.73 n.a. 1.1358 122.42 168.13 Fats and Oils Degummed corn oil, crude wtd. avg.-u,w 61.0000 Grease,choice white,Chicago-h 0.6650 Lard,Chicago-u 0.7400 Soybean oil,crude;Centl IL-u,w 0.6739 Tallow,bleach;Chicago-h 0.6800 Tallow,edible,Chicago-u n.a. KEY TO CODES: A=ask; B=bid; BP=country elevator bids to producers; C=corrected; E=Manfra,Tordella & Brookes; H=American Commodities Brokerage Co; K=bi-weekly; M=monthly; N=nominal; n.a.=not quoted or not available; R=SNL Energy; S=Platts-TSI; T=Cotlook Limited; U=USDA; V=Benchmark Mineral Intelligence; W=weekly; Z=not quoted. *Data as of 8/26 Source: Dow Jones Market Data For personal, non-commercial use only. Do not edit, alter or reproduce. For commercial reproduction or distribution, contact Dow Jones Reprints & Licensing at (800) 843-0008 or www.djreprints.com. B8 | Monday, August 30, 2021 THE WALL STREET JOURNAL. * *** MARKETS DIGEST Dow Jones Industrial Average MARKETS S&P 500 Index Last Year ago 35455.80 s 335.72, or 0.96% last week Trailing P/E ratio 23.86 P/E estimate * 19.26 High, low, open and close for each of Dividend yield 1.78 the past 52 weeks Last 4509.37 s 67.70, or 1.52% last week High, low, open and close for each of the past 52 weeks 28.62 25.89 2.23 All-time high 35625.40, 08/16/21 Year ago Trailing P/E ratio * 31.26 36.19 P/E estimate * 22.26 26.74 Dividend yield * 1.31 1.75 All-time high 4509.37, 08/27/21 Current divisor 0.15188516925198 Week's high UP Friday's close t DOWN Monday's open 4500 34000 4250 32000 4000 30000 3750 Monday's open t Friday's close 36000 Week's low 65-day moving average 65-day moving average 28000 200-day moving average 3500 200-day moving average 26000 3250 Bars measure the point change from Monday's open 24000 O N D J F M A M J J AS t Primary market NYSE weekly volume, in billions of shares 3000 A t AS O N D J F M A M J J N D J F M A M J J A Composite Track the Markets 36 24 12 0 AS O Compare the performance of selected global stock indexes, bond ETFs, currencies and commodities at wsj.com/graphics/track-the-markets A Major U.S. Stock-Market Indexes High Nasdaq Composite Latest Week Close Net chg Low % chg 52-Week Close (l) Low Industrial Average 35501.14 35160.97 35455.80 Transportation Avg 14937.43 14574.25 14905.00 Utility Average 951.54 927.26 932.25 Total Stock Market 46838.32 46069.26 46795.53 Barron's 400 1047.93 1030.66 1045.96 0.96 2.41 335.72 350.29 -18.50 921.67 22.56 2.01 2.20 26501.60 10945.62 785.16 33005.83 687.57 2.82 2.26 10632.99 10833.33 -1.95 l 35625.4 15943.3 l 950.75 l 46795.53 l 1045.96 23.7 31.6 16.4 31.0 41.4 15.8 19.2 7.8 19.3 22.7 10.8 9.3 8.6 15.8 10.0 l 15129.5 l 15432.95 29.4 28.7 17.4 19.7 23.6 26.9 l s 414.84, or 2.82% last week % chg YTD 3-yr. ann. % chg High 15150 Nasdaq Stock Market 15144.48 14776.98 15129.50 15447.03 15140.14 15432.95 414.84 340.38 S&P 500 Index MidCap 400 SmallCap 600 4513.33 4450.29 2772.80 2675.67 1377.47 1326.60 1.52 3.42 4.09 67.70 91.39 54.08 4509.37 2767.06 1375.04 l 4509.37 3236.92 1792.09 822.63 l 2770.27 l 1414.12 20.1 20.0 22.9 28.5 42.2 50.8 20 23 24 25 26 27 August 15.9 10.6 8.0 2169.11 2277.15 16516.68 16844.75 648.89 671.96 5773.00 5939.27 786.71 787.37 126.20 131.70 128.02 134.46 50.07 55.14 3287.36 3436.45 16.39 16.11 5.05 1.99 3.56 2.88 l 1451.46 12359.16 444.77 5128.49 613.07 5.22 69.87 6.81 125.78 13.62 26.30 5.53 2108.61 15.07 109.55 328.07 23.07 166.26 -2.52 -20.33 6.53 8.57 6.612 179.95 -2.17 -11.69 2360.17 l 16875.39 l 685.08 l 6319.77 l 811.41 l 134.82 166.01 l 69.77 l 3436.9 40.28 l l Nasdaq PHLX Close MSCI ACWI 737.24 MSCI ACWI ex-USA 348.11 MSCI World 3133.67 MSCI Emerging Markets 1272.67 World Americas Canada Latin Amer. Brazil Chile Mexico MSCI AC Americas S&P/TSX Comp MSCI EM Latin America BOVESPA S&P IPSA S&P/BMV IPC 472.34 3625.98 470.29 4190.98 3609.68 4318.44 6681.92 15851.75 914.39 1760.64 26006.63 787.04 5325.87 1664.25 67646.08 8922.20 992.09 12439.00 7148.01 Asia-Pacific Australia China Hong Kong India Japan Malaysia Singapore South Korea Taiwan 197.35 7488.30 3522.16 25407.89 56124.72 27641.14 1590.16 3080.77 3133.90 17209.93 MSCI AC Asia Pacific S&P/ASX 200 Shanghai Composite Hang Seng S&P BSE Sensex NIKKEI 225 FTSE Bursa Malaysia KLCI Straits Times KOSPI TAIEX Low 2.03 2.62 1.74 4.25 549.57 273.57 2292.93 1057.74 2.37 1.97 2423.14 35517.77 0.75 0.22 0.97 1.05 1.52 0.96 0.84 0.28 3.54 2.06 0.34 2.03 341.76 2700.62 333.02 2958.21 2034.19 3036.59 4569.67 11556.48 564.93 1275.23 17872 533.88 3863.20 1066.60 51684.70 6411.8 679.56 9556.14 5577.27 –0.21 2.51 2.48 0.08 0.45 0.19 0.85 167.7 5784.1 3217.53 23235.42 36553.60 22882.65 1461.45 2423.84 2267.15 2.40 5.31 12232.91 3.34 0.37 2.77 2.25 1.44 2.32 4.75 –0.71 • • • • • • • • YTD % chg High • • • • 1250.80 1.76 15580.64 1.50 5.22 1801.73 93580.35 2.22 1751.31 20644.64 2489.08 120677.6 0 2979.16 52425.64 STOXX Europe 600 STOXX Europe 50 Eurozone Euro STOXX Euro STOXX 50 Austria ATX Belgium Bel-20 France CAC 40 Germany DAX Greece Athex Composite Israel Tel Aviv Italy FTSE MIB Netherlands AEX Portugal PSI 20 Russia RTS Index South Africa FTSE/JSE All-Share Spain IBEX 35 Sweden OMX Stockholm Switzerland Swiss Market U.K. FTSE 100 EMEA 52-Week Range Close • • 737.24 359.82 3133.67 1444.93 14.1 6.6 16.5 –1.4 1751.31 20644.64 2687.02 130776.27 19.3 18.4 1.5 1.4 3396.76 52425.64 4.25 19.0 475.83 3664.18 473.90 4229.70 3647.24 4361.97 6896.04 15977.44 927.29 1767.34 26653 787.04 5361.77 1689.76 69617.16 9281.1 1003.75 12545.35 7220.14 18.4 16.7 18.3 18.0 29.8 19.3 20.4 15.5 13.0 17.5 17.0 26.0 8.7 19.9 13.9 10.5 29.1 16.2 10.6 220.6 7628.9 3696.17 31084.94 56124.72 30467.75 1684.58 3221.58 3305.21 18034.19 –1.3 13.7 1.4 –6.7 17.5 0.7 –2.3 8.3 9.1 16.8 • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Source: FactSet; Dow Jones Market Data Selected rates A consumer rate against its benchmark over the past year 30-year mortgage, Rate 4.00% 2.75% 785-335-2243 t 3.00 10-year Treasury note yield 2.00 Dearborn Federal Svgs Bk 2.75% Dearborn, MI 313-565-3100 1.00 First National Bank Waverly, IA t 0.00 S O N D J F M A M J JA 2020 2021 Interest rate 2.75% 319-266-2000 Guardian Savings Bank, A F.S.B. 2.88% Covington, KY 859-341-0700 20 23 24 25 26 27 August Yield/Rate (%) Last (l)Week ago Federal-funds rate target 0.00-0.25 0.00-0.25 Prime rate* 3.25 3.25 Libor, 3-month 0.13 0.12 Money market, annual yield 0.08 0.08 Five-year CD, annual yield 0.44 0.42 30-year mortgage, fixed† 3.05 3.10 15-year mortgage, fixed† 2.34 2.40 Jumbo mortgages, $548,250-plus† 3.14 3.08 Five-year adj mortgage (ARM)† 2.86 2.86 New-car loan, 48-month 4.06 3.89 3-yr chg 52-Week Range (%) Low 0 2 4 6 8 High (pct pts) 0.00 3.25 0.12 0.08 0.42 2.83 2.28 2.85 2.83 3.89 l l l l l l l l l l 0.25 3.25 0.25 0.24 0.66 3.37 2.64 3.41 3.43 4.23 45000 Aug. 31 YTD % chg 45.29 5.31 22.80 12.22 5.90 30.62 Crude oil, $ per barrel 68.74 6.60 10.62 41.67 Natural gas, $/MMBtu 4.370 0.519 13.48 72.12 1816.60 Gold, $ per troy oz. -1.75 -1.75 -2.20 -0.41 -1.40 -1.42 -1.56 -1.62 -1.43 -0.53 Bankrate.com rates based on survey of over 4,800 online banks. *Base rate posted by 70% of the nation's largest banks.† Excludes closing costs. Sources: FactSet; Dow Jones Market Data; Bankrate.com ISOS.U 10.00 200.0 2.1 180 days March 4, ’21 First Reserve Sustainable GrowthFRSG U 10.00 200.0 –0.2 180 days 1147.0 –64.0 180 days 2.00 -4.04 35.60 Sept. 1 March 2, ’21 Oscar Health OSCR March 3, ’21 InnovAge Holding INNV 21.00 341.7 –27.4 180 days March 5, ’21 Lerer Hippeau Acquisition LHAA 10.00 200.0 –2.6 180 days 10.00 300.0 –1.7 180 days March 4, ’21 Khosla Ventures Acquisition KVSA IPO Scorecard Performance of IPOs, most-recent listed first 92.68 -0.81 -0.87 3.06 WSJ Dollar Index 87.38 -0.82 -0.93 2.80 Company SYMBOL IPO date/Offer price Cascadia Acquisition CCAIU Aug. 26/$10.00 Euro, per dollar 0.8477 -0.007 -0.81 3.55 Yen, per dollar 109.85 0.07 0.06 6.33 1.38 0.013 0.98 52-Week Low Close(l) High U.K. pound, in dollars 2.6 AxonprimeInfrastructureAcquisition APMIU Aug. 13/$10.00 9.82 –1.8 –0.3 0.70 MinorityEqualityOpportunitiesAcquisition 10.06 MEOAU Aug. 26/$10.00 0.6 0.3 CENAQ Energy CENQU Aug. 13/$10.00 9.95 –0.5 0.3 % Chg RenovoRx RNXT Aug. 26/$9.00 7.71 –14.3 6.2 Dermata Thera DRMA Aug. 13/$7.00 5.29 –24.4 1.9 Springwater Special Situations 9.85 SWSSU Aug. 26/$10.00 –1.5 ... Jupiter Acquisition JAQCU Aug. 13/$10.00 9.80 –2.0 0.5 Waverley Capital Acquisition 1 9.98 WAVC.UT Aug. 20/$10.00 –0.2 0.8 Kensington Capital Acquisition V 10.08 KCGI.UT Aug. 13/$10.00 0.8 –0.4 610.25 l 915.91 41.19 144.12 l 221.21 42.84 Natural gas, $/MMBtu 1.834 Gold, $ per troy oz. 75.25 59.97 4.370 64.47 l l 1677.70 1968.20 -7.53 0.34 U.S. Dollar Index 89.44 l 94.64 WSJ Dollar Index 84.56 l 89.50 -0.16 Euro, per dollar 0.8112 Yen, per dollar 102.72 U.K. pound, in dollars l 0.8597 0.93 l 111.53 4.26 1.42 3.06 l 1.27 0.50 One year ago 0.00 1 2 3 5 7 10 20 30 years maturity Symbol/ Primary Amount exchange ($mil.) Expected Issuer/Business Week of Aug. 30 Muliang Viagoo Technology Inc MULG MULG Nq Monday, August 30 0 s Thursday, September 2 in US$ US$vs, YTDchg Fri per US$ (%) 2021 Sources: Tradeweb ICE U.S. Treasury Close; Tullett Prebon; Dow Jones Market Data Corporate Borrowing Rates and Yields 0.870 1.840 1.430 1.700 3.313 0.776 4.579 36 34 264 10 317 29 7 247 7 303 62 69 470 37 409 Total Return 52-wk 3-yr -1.76 -6.07 0.21 -0.11 8.62 2.47 3.96 15.9 0.2 –0.9 10.2 11.9 unch 1.6 0.6 4.95 9.19 5.42 3.75 5.75 4.77 6.55 Sources: J.P. Morgan; S&P Dow Jones Indices; Bloomberg Barclays; ICE BofA Australian dollar .7312 1.3676 5.2 China yuan .1545 6.4718 –0.9 Hong Kong dollar .1284 7.7877 0.4 India rupee .01361 73.497 0.6 Indonesia rupiah .0000694 14418 2.6 Japan yen .009103 109.85 6.3 Kazakhstan tenge .002340 427.30 1.4 Macau pataca .1246 8.0270 0.5 Malaysia ringgit .2384 4.1950 4.3 New Zealand dollar .7014 1.4257 2.4 Pakistan rupee .00600 166.600 3.9 Philippines peso .0201 49.822 3.8 Singapore dollar .7430 1.3459 1.9 South Korea won .0008604 1162.23 7.0 Sri Lanka rupee .0049875 200.50 8.2 Taiwan dollar .03586 27.886 –0.7 Thailand baht .03076 32.510 8.2 Sources: Tullett Prebon, Dow Jones Market Data in US$ US$vs, YTDchg Fri per US$ (%) .00004388 22789 –1.3 Country/currency Vietnam dong .0103 97.4787 .1921 5.2048 .7922 1.2623 .001277 783.20 .000261 3829.01 1 1 .0495 20.1982 .02347 42.6150 Asia-Pacific –10 Bond total return index Boustead Securities LLC Auction of 13 and 26 week bills; Auction of 4 and 8 week bills; announced on August 26; settles on September 2announced on August 31; settles on September 7 Argentina peso Brazil real Canada dollar Chile peso Colombiapeso Ecuador US dollar Mexico peso Uruguay peso Euro U.S. Treasury, Barclays U.S. Treasury Long, Barclays Aggregate, Barclays Fixed-Rate MBS, Barclays High Yield 100, ICE BofA Muni Master, ICE BofA EMBI Global, J.P. Morgan 5.00 Treasurys Americas Spread +/- Treasurys, Yield (%) in basis pts, 52-wk Range Last Wk ago Last Low High 40.0 Public and Private Borrowing Country/currency 10% –5 Friday’s price ($) Bookrunner(s) U.S.-dollar foreign-exchange rates in late New York trading Yen, euro vs. dollar; dollar vs. major U.S. trading partners 2020 0.860 1.800 1.430 1.710 3.511 0.759 4.607 Secondaries and follow-ons expected this week in the U.S. market Currencies WSJ Dollar Index t Other Stock Offerings None expected this week Real-time U.S. stock quotes are available on WSJ.com. Track most-active stocks, new highs/ lows, mutual funds and ETFs. All are available free at WSJMarkets.com 1.00 Sources: Dow Jones Market Data; FactSet Off the Shelf WSJ .com Yen % Chg From Friday3s Offer 1st-day close ($) price close Company SYMBOL IPO date/Offer price –1.5 DJ Commodity l % Chg From Friday3s Offer 1st-day close ($) price close 9.85 Refinitiv/CC CMD Crude oil, $ per barrel 35.79 39.00 Sources: Dealogic; Dow Jones Market Data U.S. Dollar Index 1.50 Bookrunner(s) 18.00/ B Riley Securities Inc 20.00 Offer Offer amt Through Lockup Symbol price($) ($ mil.) Friday (%) provision Issuer Aug. 29 March 2, ’21 Isos Acquisition 898.41 5 0.3 DDI Nq Below, companies whose officers and other insiders will become eligible to sell shares in their newly public companies for the first time. Such sales can move the stock’s price. Lockup expiration Issue date 2.00 1 3 6 month(s) DoubleDown Interactive Co Ltd Software-Gaming Platforms company engaged with casino games on the Internet. Lockup Expirations 45750 Refinitiv/CC CRB Index 219.18 2.50% Symbol/ Pricing primary Shares Range($) exchange (mil.) Low/High Issuer/business 46500 DJ Commodity Yield to maturity of current bills, notes and bonds Tradeweb ICE Friday Close 7/20 47250 Last Week Close Net chg %Chg First Federal Savings of Lorain 2.63% Lorain, OH 440-282-6188 Astra Bank Scandia, KS Initial public offerings of stock expected this week; might include some offerings, U.S. and foreign, open to institutional investors only via the Rule 144a market; deal amounts are for the U.S. market only Commodities and Currencies t 30-year fixed-rate mortgage 3.10% Bankrate.com avg†: IPOs in the U.S. Market Benchmark Yields and Rates Treasury yield curve Forex Race Consumer Rates and Returns to Investor U.S. consumer rates 14400 8/31 s Region/Country Index Latest Week % chg Public Offerings of Stock Expected pricing date Filed Sources: FactSet; Dow Jones Market Data International Stock Indexes were boosted by the company’s merger with Eldorado Resorts Inc. in July 2020, but they also reflected improving demand in the company’s regional markets and in Las Vegas. Other notable companies that recovered strongly include Tesla Inc., Twitter Inc. and Google parent Alphabet Inc. —Brian McGill contributed to this article. 14650 s 921.67, or 2.01% 15.3 9.6 16.0 8.7 18.1 4.3 3.5 4.0 14.2 10.6 34.5 5.7 -6.7 25.0 24.4 -27.8 22.9 35.0 -28.0 10.5 44.3 27.9 38.7 10.6 16.9 68.1 -12.0 51.6 51.8 -28.6 The consumer-services sector had the largest decline in second-quarter 2021 revenues from the same period of 2019. It was largely dragged down by companies related to travel and tourism. The major U.S. airlines have seen passenger numbers rebound but are still reporting Roughly a third of the S&P 500 have seen steady or rapid growth. New to the Market DJ US TSM Other Indexes Russell 2000 2281.84 NYSE Composite 16858.42 Value Line 672.97 NYSE Arca Biotech 6002.06 NYSE Arca Pharma 813.27 KBW Bank 131.78 PHLX§ Gold/Silver 135.02 PHLX§ Oil Service 55.51 PHLX§ Semiconductor 3441.78 Cboe Volatility 19.27 Continued from page B1 of 2021, largely thanks to its use of experimental treatment for Covid-19. Other pharmaceutical companies in the sector posted strong revenue growth in their respective markets. Retailers—including those that are primarily online as well as those with stores—led some of the largest growth in the retail sector. Select retail businesses that specialize in home improvement and auto parts also saw continuous revenue growth. Videogame companies were some of the best performers in media and entertainment. Most companies in the S&P experienced some level of revenue drop in their first year of the pandemic before rebounding back to pre-pandemic levels or better. Caesars Entertainment Inc. experienced the biggest rebound in revenue among S&P 500 companies. The gains 14900 s Nasdaq Composite Nasdaq-100 Bounced back Slower to recover *Weekly P/E data based on as-reported earnings from Birinyi Associates Inc.; † Based on Nasdaq-100 Index Dow Jones Revenue Growth Reported revenues below 2019 levels. In the energy sector, revenues at the largest oil-and-gas companies are returning to pre-pandemic levels after big drops last year. Europe Czech Rep. koruna Denmark krone Euro area euro Hungary forint Iceland krona Norway krone Poland zloty Russia ruble Sweden krona Switzerland franc Turkey lira Ukraine hryvnia UK pound .04623 21.631 .1586 6.3042 1.1797 .8477 .003378 296.06 .007895 126.66 .1147 8.7156 .2578 3.8792 .01365 73.250 .1157 8.6403 1.0977 .9110 .1197 8.3546 .0371 26.9500 1.3761 .7267 0.7 3.5 3.6 –0.3 –0.9 1.6 3.9 –1.0 5.0 2.9 12.3 –4.9 –0.7 Middle East/Africa Bahrain dinar Egypt pound Israel shekel Kuwait dinar Oman sul rial Qatar rial Saudi Arabia riyal South Africa rand 2.6522 .3771 ... .0637 15.6979 –0.3 .3103 3.2229 0.3 3.3239 .3009 –1.1 2.5972 .3850 0.01 .2710 3.690 1.3 .2666 3.7509 –0.02 .0679 14.7277 0.2 Close Net Chg % Chg YTD%Chg WSJ Dollar Index 87.38 –0.41–0.47 2.80 For personal, non-commercial use only. Do not edit, alter or reproduce. For commercial reproduction or distribution, contact Dow Jones Reprints & Licensing at (800) 843-0008 or www.djreprints.com. Monday, August 30, 2021 | B9 THE WALL STREET JOURNAL. MARKETS Demand for Treasurys Resists Pullback Bond investors are encouraged by latest comments from Fed chief on inflation, rates BY SAM GOLDFARB Investors keep buying U.S. Treasury securities, defying predictions for a broad selloff that would send bond yields back to their March highs. Yields, which move in the opposite direction of bond prices, have held steady in recent weeks after rising sharply in the first quarter and sliding in subsequent months as investors scaled back some of their most optimistic economic forecasts. Many Wall Street analysts and investors continue to argue that yields are bound to rise based on surging U.S. inflation, a still solid economic outlook and the approaching reduction in central-bank bond purchases. But the market so far hasn’t cooperated, reflecting continuing demand from around the globe. Treasurys cleared their latest big hurdle Friday when Federal Reserve Chairman Je- rome Powell delivered a speech at the central bank’s annual symposium hosted by the Kansas City Fed. Analysts thought Mr. Powell might offer clues as to when the Fed might start scaling back its $120 billion in monthly asset purchases, including $80 billion of Treasurys—the type of move that sent shudders through the bond market in 2013. Mr. Powell complied, to a degree, saying he thought the process likely could start before the end of the year. Yields fell when his prepared remarks were made public, underscoring the market’s nearindifference to tapering since the topic arose toward the end of last year. Explaining Friday’s drop in yields, some analysts noted that Mr. Powell stopped short of laying out an aggressive timetable for tapering, which would likely start with a formal announcement at the central bank’s September meeting. More significantly, they said, Mr. Powell reiterated that tapering wouldn’t automatically lead the Fed to raise short-term interest rates above their current level near Yields on U.S. Treasury notes 1.5 2.0% 10-year note 1.0 5-year note 0.5 0 2021 Aug. Source: Tradeweb ICE Closes zero, which most believe would have a larger impact on Treasurys. Last December, Fed officials pledged to maintain its bondbuying program until it sees substantial progress toward improved economic and labormarket health. Since then, officials made it clear they are nearing that goal. But Mr. Powell on Friday took pains to note there was “a different and substantially more stringent test” for raising rates. He added there was “much ground to cover” to reach the Fed’s goal of maxi- mum employment and spent a large portion of the speech detailing again why he thought the pace of consumer-price increases would moderate once the supply of goods ramps up to meet demand and longterm disinflationary forces, such as globalization and technological advances, reassert themselves. “I think there’s some comfort in this sort of separation of asset purchase sunsetting and rate hikes,” said James Camp, managing director of strategic income at Eagle Asset Management, where he man- ages portfolios that hold both stocks and bonds. Leading up to Mr. Powell’s remarks, there had been some discussion of faster rate increases, but Mr. Powell “quickly doused that.” The market’s interpretation of Mr. Powell’s message could be seen in the nature of Friday’s move. The yield on the benchmark 10-year note settled Friday at 1.311%, down from 1.342% Thursday and its March high of 1.749%. But the yield on the five-year note led declines, suggesting investors anticipate a slower pace of rate increases over the next half-decade when near-term monetary policy would have a bigger impact. Investors pay close attention to Treasury yields because they can both influence and reflect the economic outlook. The 10-year yield, in particular, helps set interest rates across the economy—from mortgages to corporate bonds—and tends to rise and fall along with expectations for growth and inflation. The decline in yields since March has therefore been welcome to many borrowers but somewhat concerning to investors who have looked for various explanations for why it might be a temporary phenomenon. Even now, many think that the tide is about to turn partly just because of the change in seasons, as traders return from summer vacations and children return to school, encouraging some parents to reenter the job market. Yields also could rise when new cases of Covid-19 start to fall, some analysts say, noting how the recent resurgence of cases has weighed on investors’ sentiment and sent them searching for safer assets. John Briggs, global head of desk strategy at NatWest Markets, said he still thinks the 10-year yield can rise to around 1.65% by the end of the year, as coronavirus cases recede, inflation stays hot and investors start to more directly confront the prospect of tighter monetary policy. Still, he said, “as long as the Fed holds credibility on inflation fighting...you’re not going to lose the long end,” referring to longer-term Treasurys. The thinking, he said, is that if the Fed raises rates “earlier, maybe they don’t need to go as high.” Economic Slowdown Tests Curbs On Steel Output Set by Beijing Ada Is the Latest Crypto to Surge BY CHUIN-WEI YAP BY CAITLIN MCCABE HONG KONG—A two-month fall in China’s steel output, ordered by economic officials, handed Beijing a global showcase for advancing climate goals and controlling commodity markets. A brewing economic slowdown is testing the government’s will to sustain the cuts. China’s production of crude steel, half the world’s annual total, fell in July by the widest year-on-year margin since the 2008 global financial crisis. Early indicators suggest it might slip again this month. Culled by state inspections and other official curbs at mills nationwide, the usually prodigious flow that is often the subject of global trade and environmental tensions has fallen by 12.5 million metric tons— about twice Britain’s annual total—in July from May’s record. The steel cuts have driven global iron-ore prices down 40% since mid-July, delivering China twin triumphs: a show of policy leadership ahead of a major climate summit in Glasgow in November and a demonstration that it can tamp down rising global commodity prices. Beijing has set a national goal to secure peak carbon emissions by 2030, with an earlier target of 2025 for the steel sector, China’s secondlargest such emitter after power utilities. “We have to resolutely implement the output-cut policy—this is a political issue, and there is no room for bargaining,” said Chen Derong, chairman of Baowu Steel Group, China’s largest producer, at a conference this month. Also this month, climate envoy Xie Zhenhua said China plans to stick to its emissions goals and present them in Glasgow. But with the economy slow- China ordered steel-output cuts to pursue climate goals and tamp commodity prices. Falling output at China's steel mills hit global prices of iron ore, an essential steel ingredient. China crude-steel output, monthly Australian 62% iron-ore fines price 200 million metric tons $225 a metric ton Data aggregated when reported 150 200 100 175 50 150 Aug 23 0 $136.71 125 2021 June 2021 July Aug. Sources: National Statistics Bureau(output); Metal Bulletin (price) ing as Covid-19 surges again, China’s top brass has begun to provide some wiggle room. A high-level meeting in late July chaired by President Xi Jinping warned against “campaignstyle” climate measures. State media weighed in to discourage “unrealistic pledges.” Growth in consumption, industrial production and investment slowed beyond alreadylowered expectations in July, state data show. The government responded by putting off further credit tightening. Analysts say more supportive measures are likely, as Beijing tries to prevent its pollution achievement from backfiring on its larger goal of stable economic growth. “It’s very difficult to do,” Larry Hu, chief China economist at Macquarie Group, said of Beijing’s balancing task. “The cut on steel production is due to environmental issues and high iron-ore prices but not a calibration on [the extent of] a demand slowdown.” For now, the steel policy, which calls for annual output no greater than last year’s, remains in place. But it requires a production cut of 11%—59 million metric tons—in the second half, a huge sacrifice. Past cases of similar orders suggest they aren’t always followed, no matter from how high they came. To fight pollution, Mr. Xi in 2013 demanded that the province of Hebei, which produced a quarter of China’s steel, slash its capacity by 60 million metric tons over five years. There is no conclusive evidence to show the goal was attained, though officials say it was. State data show Hebei last year produced a record 250 million metric tons of steel, up 33% from 2013—and still a quarter of China’s total. The latest cuts were forced through at times by old-school Communist Party methods. The sector had been enjoying a banner year—industrywide profit in May was up 416% from a year earlier. The state-backed China Iron and Steel Association had members conduct a “self-discipline” videoconference session to publicly distance themselves from the recent successes. “We have to actively cooper- ate with the national ministries and commissions to reduce crude steel output and maintain the pressure to do so,” said Shen Bin, president of the China Iron and Steel Association. Images of the session show dozens of steel leaders gathered via a Chinese conferencing platform, taking turns to vow allegiance to state objectives. Beijing had tried to quell expansion in the industry by raising tariffs on some steel exports in May. But that policy didn’t work well, indicating how global demand and low world-wide inventories are working against Beijing’s steel policy. Chinese finished-steel exports in the January-to-July period were up 31% year over year, official data show. “The sector looks likely to miss the target of limiting 2021 steel output to 2020 levels,” the Centre for Research on Energy and Clean Air said in a report. The organization said in an email to The Wall Street Journal that officials might emphasize more broadly maintaining a downward output trend. The industry has proved resilient, bouncing back with every stimulus-fueled construction boom, the government’s preferred weapon to ward off slowdowns in the past 15 years. Maintaining an even keel for China’s economy will become increasingly paramount as the Communist Party gathers for a major congress next year to weigh leadership transition. China’s leaders are caught between unleashing another wave of debt-fueled stimulus to propel the economy or allowing demand to keep slumping, said the clean-energy center’s lead analyst, Lauri Myllyvirta. “It’s now a matter of managing an exit while keeping everyone reasonably happy until the big party meeting,” Mr. Myllyvirta said. Huarong Confirms $16 Billion Loss BY XIE YU China’s top manager of distressed assets, China Huarong Asset Management Co., confirmed it had a net loss of roughly $16 billion last year, and warned investors that it fell short of regulatory requirements on financial strength. The publication of the 2020 results is a key step in the rehabilitation of Huarong. The company, a major borrower in international bond markets, rattled global investors earlier this year after it delayed the release of its annual results. The figures, issued late Sunday Hong Kong time, showed that Huarong had a net loss of about 103 billion yuan last year, equivalent to $15.9 billion, as it took huge write-downs on its assets. Those impairment charges were equivalent to $16.7 bil- lion. Huarong, which is majority owned by China’s Ministry of Finance, warned on Aug. 18 that it expected to have a net loss equivalent to about $16 billion for 2020. It said it planned to obtain a capital infusion from five state-owned financial institutions and reassured bond investors that it has no plans to restructure its debt. In a separate set of results for the six months through June 30, released Sunday, Huarong said it had failed to reach minimum regulatory requirements for certain financial measures, such as its capital adequacy and leverage ratios. It blamed last year’s “significant decline in operating performance and financial condition” and warned that regulators could impose a range of restrictive measures. Huarong said the decline could also trigger immediate repayment of borrowings totaling 17.9 billion yuan, or the equivalent of $2.8 billion. But the company also said its management believed that by implementing measures including asset sales and the capital boost, the company could ensure it and its subsidiaries continue to operate for the next 12 months. Huarong didn’t disclose further details on the planned bailout by state-backed investors. In its annual report, Huarong blamed “aggressive operation and disorderly expansion” by former Chairman Lai Xiaomin for a buildup of risks. Mr. Lai was executed earlier this year, after a court found him guilty of bribery and embezzlement. In a statement in Huarong’s results, Chairman Wang Zhan- feng said the result was a harsh lesson for the company. “What is gone is gone, but go for what to come. We will learn from the lesson and take it as valuable experience and the desire to move forward,” he said. For the first half of this year, net profit totaled 158.3 million yuan, or $24.5 million, down 24.6% year over year. Total revenue rose 0.8% to 46 billion yuan or about $7.1 billion. In June, S&P Global Ratings said China Huarong International Holdings Ltd., a core subsidiary of the group, could be in technical default on its debt if it didn’t publish results by the end of August. The ratings firm said Huarong International couldn’t issue its results until the parent company had published its own figures. —Frances Yoon contributed to this article. After a brief hibernation this summer, cryptocurrencies are surging again. And this time, traders are abuzz about Cardano’s ada token. But what is it and how did it become the third-largest cryptocurrency? Here is what you need to know: What is Cardano? Cardano is a decentralized blockchain platform launched in 2017 and spearheaded by Ethereum co-founder Charles Hoskinson. Its self-described mission is to become a more environmentally sustainable and scalable blockchain network, in part by relying less on energy-consuming cryptocurrency miners. What is ada? Ada is a digital token, or cryptocurrency, that runs on the Cardano blockchain. It is named for Ada Lovelace, a 19thcentury mathematician who is often regarded as the first computer programmer. Why is its price rising? In general, altcoins—or alternatives to bitcoin—have been surging as individual investors pile into cryptocurrencies. Cardano’s ada token has emerged as a recent favorite in the pack. Behind some of its recent momentum is enthusiasm over what is expected to be a September upgrade to Cardano that will provide for smart contracts, which many believe will enable Cardano to better compete with the Ethereum network. Smart contracts are digital agreements, written in code, that can be executed without an intermediary once certain conditions are met. Smart contracts make popular nonfungible tokens, better known as NFTs, possible, as well as decentralized finance applications. How has Cardano’s ada token performed? Ada’s price has more than doubled over the past month. It traded early Friday afternoon at $2.85, according to CoinDesk, up from around $1.28 a month ago. That gives ada a market capitalization of more than $90 billion, making it the third-largest cryptocurrency. Ada’s market capitalization is eclipsed only by bitcoin and ether, according to Coinmarketcap.com. On a year-to-date basis, ada has surged nearly 1,500% after starting the year hovering below 20 cents. Bitcoin, in contrast, is up about 67% in 2021, CoinDesk figures show, while ether has gained almost 340%. Still, ada’s rise hasn’t matched that of dogecoin. That cryptocurrency was created as a joke, but has since gone mainstream. It has gained about 5,900% this year. Price of Cardano's ada token in U.S. dollars $3 2 1 0 2021 Aug. Source: Kraken THE TICKER MARKET EVENTS COMING THIS WEEK Monday Earnings expected* Estimate/Year Ago Catalent 1.10/0.90 Nordson 2.08/1.42 StoneCo 0.18/0.10 Zoom Video Communications 1.16/0.92 Tuesday Chicago PMI July, previous 73.4 Aug., expected 69.8 Consumer Confidence July, previous 129.1 Aug., expected 124.0 Earnings expected* Estimate/Year Ago CrowdStrike Holdings 0.09/0.03 PVH 1.20/0.13 Wednesday Construction spending June, previous up 0.1% July, expected up 0.2% EIA status report Previous change in stocks in millions of barrels Crude-oil stocks, down 3 Gasolinestocks, down2.2 Distillates up 0.6 ISM mfg. index July, previous 59.5 Aug., expected 58.8 Mort. bankers indexes Purch., previous up 3% Refinan., previous up 1% Earnings expected Estimate/Year Ago Brown-Forman 0.39/0.40 CampbellSoup 0.47/0.63 Chewy (0.02)/(0.08) Five Below 1.11/0.53 Okta (0.35)/0.07 Veeva Systems 0.87/0.72 Thursday EIA report: natural-gas Previous change in stocks in billions of cubic feet up 29 Factory orders June, previous up 1.5% July, expected up 0.3% Initial jobless claims Previous 353,000 Expected 347,000 Productivity 1st qtr., prev up 2.3% 2nd qtr. prel, exp. up 2.4% Int’l trade deficit in billions June, previous $75.7 July, expected $72.6 Unit labor costs 1st qtr., prev. up 1.0% 2nd qtr. prel., exp. up 1.0% Earnings expected* Estimate/Year Ago Broadcom 6.88/5.40 Cooper 3.29/2.28 Guidewire Software 0.24/0.83 Hewlett Packard Enterprise 0.42/0.32 Hormel Foods 0.40/0.37 Toro 0.78/0.82 Friday Nonfarm payrolls July, previous 943,000 Aug., expected 750,000 Unemployment rate July, previous 0.054 Aug., expected 0.052 ISM non-mfg index July, previous 64.1 Aug., expected 62.0 Monday U.S. markets are closed for Labor Day For personal, non-commercial use only. Do not edit, alter or reproduce. For commercial reproduction or distribution, contact Dow Jones Reprints & Licensing at (800) 843-0008 or www.djreprints.com. THE WALL STREET JOURNAL. B10 | Monday, August 30, 2021 HEARD STREET ON THE FINANCIAL ANALYSIS & COMMENTARY China’s New Populism Looks to Common Prosperity Investors are realizing that President Xi Jinping’s rhetoric on inequality is far more than just empty sloganeering Surveyed unemployment in China by age 16% 16 to 24 14 12 Youth unemployment gap* 10 8 6 4 ZHANG LONG/XINHUA/ZUMA PRESS After decades of hewing to Deng Xiaoping’s maxim that it is OK for some people to become wealthy first, Beijing suddenly seems more inclined to eat its rich—or at least take a healthy nibble out of their fortunes. Following the high-profile action against tech firms like Alibaba and Meituan, an Aug. 17 speech from President Xi Jinping on “common prosperity” caught investors’ attention. Mr. Xi called for rationally “adjusting” excessive incomes and for high-income individuals and companies to contribute more to society. He also called for more aggressive measures to expand the middle class and the social safety net, including health and elderly care. China has long been one of the most unequal major economies in the world, with one common measure of income inequality, the Gini coefficient, at 0.465 in 2019 according to official data out of a possible 1.0. Wealth inequality is higher: The top 1% hold 30.6% of the country’s wealth according to Credit Suisse data, below the U.S. at 35.3% but well above the U.K., Japan and Italy. But rapidly falling birthrates, the coronavirus pandemic and its aftermath have made inequality tougher to ignore. The political stumbles and anticompetitive practices of tech titans like Alibaba and Tencent have also handed Mr. Xi a convenient target for the public’s ire. As a result, high-net-worth individuals and tech firms could come under further pressure to “donate” resources to social causes and find their tax rates rising. China’s long-mooted property tax could finally become a reality, although that is less certain. Beijing’s response to the pandemic focused on loan forbearance for businesses and goosing credit growth rather than direct support for households as in the West. That helped small businesses survive and positioned China well for rebounding exports. But it also meant a big income loss for average households 25 to 59 2 2018 '20 China's housing price and household income , year-over-year change 15% Median urban household disposable income (year to date) 10 5 Housing prices 0 -5 2012 '15 '20 *Percentage-point difference in unemployment between workers under 25 and workers 25 to 59. Source: CEIC and even more debt as housing prices headed skyward again. The climb in China’s household debt over the past half-decade has been among the most impressive in recent global history: one reason consumption has remained stubbornly weak this year, even as income growth has finally rebounded. The weak recovery in services— where most college students head after graduation—has also further exacerbated already high youth joblessness: Surveyed unemployment among the 16-to-24 set, which averaged 11% in 2018 and 2019, has since then averaged 14%. Demographic changes are making the problem worse: About half of the newly available labor force every year are now college graduates, according to HSBC. China’s rising population of graduates is often cited as a key advantage, but if structural economic problems mean there aren’t enough suitable jobs, it could end up as a major source of discontent instead. In this context, Beijing’s decision to paint big, fast-growing tech companies as the villain looks risky. The IT, software and finance industries have experienced by far the largest private-sector salary growth since 2008, according to HSBC—roughly quadrupling to around 80,000 yuan, the equivalent of $12,360, annually in 2019. Those are also the two sectors that employ the most new graduates of Tsinghua, one of China’s top two universities, according to the bank. Cracking down hard on fast-growing, highly remunerative sectors is one way to deal with inequality. But it is unlikely to do much to salve the anxiety of ambitious young grads—especially if prospective internet entrepreneurs are scared away, rather than encouraged, by the wide-ranging assault. Tech giants clearly have received The weak recovery in services has exacerbated already high youth joblessness. Students at a job fair in Xining, China, in March. the message that they are expected to give back more. On Tuesday, internet commerce firm Pinduoduo reported its first quarterly profit since listing in 2018. It also said it would donate it all—$374 million— to support agriculture and rural areas, and would do the same with any future profit up to a total of 10 billion yuan. Its shares rose 22% that day. On Aug. 18, Tencent pledged to contribute 50 billion yuan, the equivalent of $7.73 billion, to low-income groups, basic healthcare and education—on top of a separate 50 billion-yuan charitable pledge in April. Meituan founder Wang Xing donated 10% of his stake in the food-delivery company to his philanthropic foundation in June. All of this might indeed help to a certain extent with issues like rural poverty—but it also looks like a convenient way for the government to shift the political and financial burden of dealing with social problems to private actors, forcing them to act more like state-owned enterprises, without necessarily addressing the deep structural roots of inequality and scarce opportuni- ties for good jobs. China’s public revenue system, which relies heavily on value-added taxes and mandatory contributions to social insurance funds, is extraordinarily regressive. Effective tax rates at the lower end of the income distribution can be above 40%, according to a 2020 blog post by Brad Setser, formerly of the Council on Foreign Relations. China’s household registration system, which in many cases still ties benefits to a person’s place of birth, often in small cities or the countryside, makes it harder for workers to chase the best jobs. Fundamentally, China needs a better-funded social safety net not tied to a certain location, and a financial sector that is less unfair to small businesses and households, if it really wants to fight inequality and keep young graduates employed. Foisting the blame on the tech sector without undertaking tougher fiscal overhauls, on the other hand, looks a lot like trying to have your cake and eat it too. —Nathaniel Taplin and Jacky Wong Trying to find relevant investing information online is a never ending headache for you. There’s way too much investing information on the internet. That’s why we created a personalized learning experience that customizes to fit your investing goals. Curated from our vast library of exclusive content, it gives you exactly the information you need, and none of the information you don’t. Get started at tdameritrade.com/education TD Ameritrade, Inc., member FINRA/SIPC. © 2019 TD Ameritrade.