1
YELLOW ****** MONDAY, FEBRUARY 23, 2015 ~ VOL. CCLXV NO. 43 WSJ.com HHHH $3.00 WASHINGTON—The fledgling GOP-controlled Congress returns to the Capitol just days before its first major fiscal deadline as a battle over President Barack Obama’s immigration policies has set up a showdown on whether to fund the Department of Home- land Security. Set to expire Friday, the agency’s funding has been tied up by Republican leaders angered over President Obama’s executive actions that shielded millions of undocumented immigrants from deportation. GOP leaders haven’t yet signaled how they plan to re- solve the weekslong impasse, which already has spotlighted di- visions between House and Sen- ate Republicans that could inten- sify and escalate in the next few days. In one of the first signs of movement, Senate Republicans, still mulling their options, are most likely to end up supporting a short-term extension of the agency’s current funding, poten- tially for one or two months, ac- cording to GOP aides. But that would meet some conservative opposition in the chamber, and a short-term deal also could face hurdles passing the House, where many Republicans are demanding legislative steps to block the pres- ident’s immigration policy. Late last year, in the wake of the president’s November action on immigration, Republicans split off funding for Homeland Security, Please see DHS page A4 BY KRISTINA PETERSON Deadline Nears on Security Funding Along the southern frontier of the European Union, a small but growing number of aspiring jihad- ists are blazing trails by road and ferry to Syria’s battlefields, side- stepping heightened airport secu- rity and slipping through the holes in Europe’s intelligence dragnet. Some fighters follow meander- ing bus routes through several countries en route to the more loosely guarded border of Bulgaria to Turkey. Others engage in what authorities call “broken travel,” us- ing family visits or holiday desti- nations as an initial leg to mask their final destination. That was how the wife of Paris terrorist Amedy Coulibaly slipped into Syria days before her husband killed four people at a kosher gro- cery last month. The woman, Hayat Boumeddiene, drove from France to Spain, then flew to Tur- key before joining Islamic State in Syria. She later called for others to join her, in an interview with the militant group also known as ISIS or ISIL. Western diplomats and intelli- gence officials say most aspiring European fighters still try to fly di- rectly to Turkey, which borders western Syria. But the growing use of alterna- tive routes magnifies a security challenge for EU policy makers: How to catch suspected militants without undermining the bloc’s commitment to free movement across a region where passport and customs checks at national borders have been effectively abol- ished. U.S. intelligence agencies re- ported last week that despite greater Western efforts, foreign fighters are streaming into Syria and Iraq to join extremists. An es- timated 20,000 foreign militants there include at least 3,400 Euro- peans. About 100 in Syria are be- lieved to be from the U.S. A series of high-level EU meet- ings in Brussels this month is seek- Please see ROUTES page A13 By Maria Abi-Habib in Nicosia, Cyprus and Joe Parkinson in Sofia, Bulgaria Jihadists Slip European Net Despite heightened security, recruits find alternate routes to join Islamic State fighters Rising Franc Upends Daily Life in Swiss Borderlands CAMPIONE D’ITALIA, Italy— Switzerland’s decision last month to lift the cap on the franc sent the currency flying 40% against the euro and roiled financial markets world-wide. But for Enrico Lironi, the deci- sion hit painfully close to home. The teacher and consultant lives in Campione d’Italia, a tiny piece of Italian territory within Switzerland’s borders. He is paid in euros, but most of his ex- penses are in francs. So when the Swiss franc surged, he slashed his family’s budget— starting with scrapping plans to replace his 10-year-old BMW. “I’m losing tons because of the franc,” he says. “Our mantra now is to only buy what’s essen- tial.” Tiny Switzerland has long had Please see FRANC page A8 BY GIOVANNI LEGORANO AND JOHN REVILL LONDON—The private mem- bers’ clubs which are dotted around the Mayfair and St. James’s districts of central Lon- don are a serious affair: chief ex- ecutives, government ministers and military top brass all hobnob in what’s known as Lon- don’s clubland. One or- ganization, however, is altogether sillier in tone. Resurrected in 2008, the Eccentric Club brings together 200 gentlemen and, since 1984, ladies. The di- versely dressed mem- bers face two issues: the lack of a clubhouse, and the question of who is truly eccen- tric. The first problem has been solved, at least temporarily, by using other clubs’ facilities. At a recent dinner, the eccentrics gathered at the Oriental Club, in Stratford House, a London resi- dence built in the 1770s. The sec- ond question is more delicate. “Eccentricity is much harder to define than it used to be,” said Ima von Wen- den, the club’s presi- dent, resplendent in a gold-and-white high- collar jacket. “These days, anything goes.” Underneath paint- ings celebrating Brit- ain’s colonial exploits, members gathered for preprandial drinks. Guests wore fez hats, tartan trousers, and one woman held a bejew- eled handbag shaped like a champagne bottle in an ice- bucket. Some make, as well as wear, clothes: Alex Torun-Shaw, Please see CLUB page A14 BY FRANCES ROBINSON It Can Be Hard to Stand Out In This Wacky Crowd i i i In London, the ‘Eccentric Club’ embraces the idiosyncratic, but debates what that is Eccentric Club member Last week: DJIA 18140.44 À 121.09 0.7% NASDAQ 4955.97 À 1.3% NIKKEI 18332.30 À 2.3% STOXX 600 382.27 À 1.4% 10-YR. TREASURY g 1 2/32 , yield 2.136% OIL $50.34 g $2.44 EURO $1.1381 YEN 119.00 | CONTENTS Abreast of the Market C1 Business News...... B2,3 Global Finance............ C3 Heard on the Street C8 Markets Dashboard C6 Media............................... B6 Moving the Market C2 Opinion.................. A15-17 Sports.............................. B8 Technology................... B4 U.S. News................. A2-4 Weather Watch ........ B7 World News ......... A6-13 s Copyright 2015 Dow Jones & Company. All Rights Reserved > What’s News Congress faces a Friday deadline to fund the Depart- ment of Homeland Security amid an impasse over Obama’s immigration policies. A1 The DHS head urged cau- tion at the Mall of America af- ter a video called for attacks on major shopping centers. A3 Turkish forces entered Syria and retrieved an Ottoman tomb and 38 Turkish soldiers guarding it, fearing they were at risk from Islamic State. A6 A blast in Ukraine during a march to mark the one-year anniversary of a pro-Western uprising killed two people. A7 The U.S. military is leaning toward extending its mission in southern Afghanistan’s Kan- dahar province into 2016. A6 Israel’s Netanyahu stepped up criticism of nuclear talks with Tehran as Kerry met with Iranian officials. A6 Greece’s premier is temper- ing his election pledges as the new government races to de- liver reforms to creditors. A8 Biden’s recent comments and trips to states with early nominating contests have fanned talk of a presidential bid. A4 Oil production resumed at Libya’s largest field, which had been forced to shut after a pipeline was bombed. A13 Hungary’s governing party lost its two-thirds majority in Parliament after the oppo- sition won a seat. A7 A ferry in Bangladesh cap- sized after it was hit by a cargo vessel, killing at least 48. A7 V aleant said it would buy Salix for about $10 billion, a return to big deal making for the drug company after its failed bid for Allergan. B1 West Coast ports resumed full operations after the union and employers reached a labor pact, but it may take months for the backlog to clear. B1 Investors have pulled about $2.5 billion since Octo- ber from a Carlyle hedge fund after big bets on Fannie and Freddie led to steep losses. C1 Stock-trading volume and volatility have slumped this month even as the Dow and S&P 500 set new records. C1 The economic impact of this winter’s harsh weather doesn’t appear to be as bad as a year ago, economists say. A2 Prospects for legislation to ease regulations on small banks are dimming amid rifts among lawmakers. C7 AT&T said rival Dish skewed prices and distorted the results of last month’s U.S. sale of wireless licenses. B3 Union workers walked out of three more U.S. refineries this weekend, expanding a nearly monthlong strike. B3 Facebook drivers voted to ratify a contract, in what could be a big step for unions in Sili- con Valley’s service industry. B4 Prada sales eased in 2014, marking a halt to the fashion firm’s strong growth rates. B2 Rocket Fuel reported disap- pointing results and the ad- technology company offered weak first-quarter guidance. B6 Business & Finance World-Wide EXCHANGES, REGULATORS CALL TRADERS’ BLUFFS Market-manipulation probes eye ‘The Russian,’ others in ‘spoofing’ crackdown CHICAGO—One June morning in 2012, a col- lege dropout whom securities traders call “The Russian” logged on to his computer and began trading Brent-crude futures on a London ex- change from his skyscraper office here. Over six hours, Igor Oystacher’s computer sent roughly 23,000 commands, including thousands of buy and sell orders, according to correspon- dence from the exchange to his clearing firm re- viewed by The Wall Street Journal. But he can- celed many of those orders milliseconds after placing them, the documents show, in what the exchange alleges was part of a trading practice designed to trick other investors into buying and selling at artificially high or low prices. Traders call the illegal bluffing tactic “spoof- ing,” and they say it has long been used to ma- nipulate prices of anything from stocks to bonds to futures. Exchanges and regulators have only recently begun clamping down. The 33-year-old Mr. Oystacher referred inqui- ries to a spokesman for his firm, 3Red Group LLC, who declined to comment for this story. In his clearing firm’s correspondence with the ex- change, Mr. Oystacher—co-founder of Chicago- Please see TRADES page A14 BY BRADLEY HOPE BUSINESS & TECH. | B1 Battery Life: Tech’s Next Dimension Thin devices are robbing us of what we want most—power— but Christopher Mims says it doesn’t have to be this way JOURNAL REPORT | R2 How to Tell if You’re A Jerk at Work Most people see a valued colleague when they look in the mirror, but they’re often fooling themselves Inside Homeland Security chief calls for caution after mall threat... A3 TOP FLIGHT: ‘Birdman’ director Alejandro G. Iñárritu accepts the award for best picture Sunday. Mr. Iñárritu also won the best-directing Oscar—giving the film two of the night’s top awards. Other winners included Eddie Redmayne for best actor and Julianne Moore for best actress. For more, see B1 and WSJ.com. ‘Birdman’ Soars Above the Competition at the Academy Awards Turks enter Syria to rescue troops at tomb under terror threat... A6 Kevin Winter/Getty Images C M Y K Composite Composite MAGENTA CYAN BLACK P2JW054000-6-A00100-1--------XA CL,CN,CX,DL,DM,DX,EE,EU,FL,HO,KC,MW,NC,NE,NY,PH,PN,RM,SA,SC,SL,SW,TU,WB,WE BG,BM,BP,CC,CH,CK,CP,CT,DN,DR,FW,HL,HW,KS,LA,LG,LK,MI,ML,NM,PA,PI,PV,TD,TS,UT,WO P2JW054000-6-A00100-1--------XA

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Page 1: 2015 02 23 cmyk NA 04 - The Wall Street JournalTOPFLIGHT: ‘Birdman’ director AlejandroG.Iñárritu accepts the awardfor bestpictureSunday. Mr.Iñárritu also wonthe best-directing

YELLOW

* * * * * * MONDAY, FEBRUARY 23, 2015 ~ VOL. CCLXV NO. 43 WSJ.com HHHH $3 .00

WASHINGTON—The fledglingGOP-controlled Congress returnsto the Capitol just days before itsfirst major fiscal deadline as abattle over President BarackObama’s immigration policies hasset up a showdown on whether tofund the Department of Home-land Security.

Set to expire Friday, theagency’s funding has been tied upby Republican leaders angeredover President Obama’s executiveactions that shielded millions ofundocumented immigrants fromdeportation. GOP leaders haven’tyet signaled how they plan to re-solve the weekslong impasse,which already has spotlighted di-visions between House and Sen-ate Republicans that could inten-sify and escalate in the next fewdays.

In one of the first signs ofmovement, Senate Republicans,still mulling their options, aremost likely to end up supportinga short-term extension of theagency’s current funding, poten-tially for one or two months, ac-cording to GOP aides. But thatwould meet some conservativeopposition in the chamber, and ashort-term deal also could facehurdles passing the House, wheremany Republicans are demandinglegislative steps to block the pres-ident’s immigration policy.

Late last year, in the wake ofthe president’s November actionon immigration, Republicans splitoff funding for Homeland Security,

Please see DHS page A4

BY KRISTINA PETERSON

DeadlineNearsonSecurityFunding

Along the southern frontier ofthe European Union, a small butgrowing number of aspiring jihad-ists are blazing trails by road andferry to Syria’s battlefields, side-stepping heightened airport secu-rity and slipping through the holesin Europe’s intelligence dragnet.

Some fighters followmeander-ing bus routes through severalcountries en route to the more

loosely guarded border of Bulgariato Turkey. Others engage in whatauthorities call “broken travel,” us-ing family visits or holiday desti-nations as an initial leg to masktheir final destination.

That was how the wife of Paristerrorist Amedy Coulibaly slippedinto Syria days before her husbandkilled four people at a kosher gro-cery last month. The woman,Hayat Boumeddiene, drove fromFrance to Spain, then flew to Tur-key before joining Islamic State inSyria. She later called for others tojoin her, in an interview with themilitant group also known as ISISor ISIL.

Western diplomats and intelli-gence officials say most aspiringEuropean fighters still try to fly di-rectly to Turkey, which borderswestern Syria.

But the growing use of alterna-tive routes magnifies a securitychallenge for EU policy makers:How to catch suspected militantswithout undermining the bloc’scommitment to free movementacross a region where passport

and customs checks at nationalborders have been effectively abol-ished.

U.S. intelligence agencies re-ported last week that despitegreater Western efforts, foreignfighters are streaming into Syriaand Iraq to join extremists. An es-timated 20,000 foreign militantsthere include at least 3,400 Euro-peans. About 100 in Syria are be-lieved to be from the U.S.

A series of high-level EU meet-ings in Brussels this month is seek-

Please see ROUTES page A13

ByMaria Abi-Habibin Nicosia, Cyprus

and Joe Parkinson inSofia, Bulgaria

Jihadists Slip European NetDespite heightenedsecurity, recruits findalternate routes to joinIslamic State fighters

Rising FrancUpends DailyLife in SwissBorderlands

CAMPIONE D’ITALIA, Italy—Switzerland’s decision lastmonth to lift the cap on thefranc sent the currency flying40% against the euro and roiledfinancial markets world-wide.But for Enrico Lironi, the deci-sion hit painfully close to home.

The teacher and consultantlives in Campione d’Italia, a tinypiece of Italian territory withinSwitzerland’s borders. He is paidin euros, but most of his ex-penses are in francs. So whenthe Swiss franc surged, heslashed his family’s budget—starting with scrapping plans toreplace his 10-year-old BMW.

“I’m losing tons because ofthe franc,” he says. “Our mantranow is to only buy what’s essen-tial.”

Tiny Switzerland has long hadPlease see FRANC page A8

BY GIOVANNI LEGORANOAND JOHN REVILL

LONDON—The private mem-bers’ clubs which are dottedaround the Mayfair and St.James’s districts of central Lon-don are a serious affair: chief ex-ecutives, governmentministers and militarytop brass all hobnob inwhat’s known as Lon-don’s clubland. One or-ganization, however, isaltogether sillier intone.

Resurrected in 2008,the Eccentric Clubbrings together 200gentlemen and, since1984, ladies. The di-versely dressed mem-bers face two issues:the lack of a clubhouse, and thequestion of who is truly eccen-tric.

The first problem has beensolved, at least temporarily, by

using other clubs’ facilities. At arecent dinner, the eccentricsgathered at the Oriental Club, inStratford House, a London resi-dence built in the 1770s. The sec-ond question is more delicate.

“Eccentricity is much harderto define than it used tobe,” said Ima von Wen-den, the club’s presi-dent, resplendent in agold-and-white high-collar jacket. “Thesedays, anything goes.”

Underneath paint-ings celebrating Brit-ain’s colonial exploits,members gathered forpreprandial drinks.Guests wore fez hats,tartan trousers, and onewoman held a bejew-

eled handbag shaped like achampagne bottle in an ice-bucket. Some make, as well aswear, clothes: Alex Torun-Shaw,

Please see CLUB page A14

BY FRANCES ROBINSON

It Can Be Hard to Stand OutIn This Wacky Crowd

i i i

In London, the ‘Eccentric Club’ embracesthe idiosyncratic, but debates what that is

Eccentric Clubmember

Lastweek: DJIA 18140.44 À 121.09 0.7% NASDAQ 4955.97 À 1.3% NIKKEI 18332.30 À 2.3% STOXX600 382.27 À 1.4% 10-YR. TREASURY g 1 2/32 , yield 2.136% OIL $50.34 g $2.44 EURO $1.1381 YEN 119.00

|

CONTENTSAbreast of the Market C1Business News...... B2,3Global Finance............ C3Heard on the Street C8Markets Dashboard C6Media............................... B6

Moving the Market C2Opinion.................. A15-17Sports.............................. B8Technology................... B4U.S. News................. A2-4Weather Watch........ B7World News......... A6-13

s Copyright 2015 Dow Jones & Company.All Rights Reserved

>

What’sNews

Congress faces a Fridaydeadline to fund the Depart-ment of Homeland Securityamid an impasse over Obama’simmigration policies. A1 The DHS head urged cau-tion at the Mall of America af-ter a video called for attackson major shopping centers. A3Turkish forces enteredSyria and retrieved an Ottomantomb and 38 Turkish soldiersguarding it, fearing they wereat risk from Islamic State. A6A blast in Ukraine during amarch to mark the one-yearanniversary of a pro-Westernuprising killed two people. A7The U.S. military is leaningtoward extending its missionin southern Afghanistan’s Kan-dahar province into 2016. A6 Israel’s Netanyahu steppedup criticism of nuclear talkswith Tehran as Kerry metwith Iranian officials. A6Greece’s premier is temper-ing his election pledges as thenew government races to de-liver reforms to creditors. A8 Biden’s recent commentsand trips to states with earlynominating contests have fannedtalk of a presidential bid. A4 Oil production resumed atLibya’s largest field, whichhad been forced to shut aftera pipeline was bombed. A13Hungary’s governing partylost its two-thirds majorityin Parliament after the oppo-sition won a seat. A7A ferry in Bangladesh cap-sized after it was hit by a cargovessel, killing at least 48. A7

Valeant said it would buySalix for about $10 billion,

a return to big deal makingfor the drug company after itsfailed bid for Allergan. B1West Coast ports resumedfull operations after the unionand employers reached a laborpact, but it may take monthsfor the backlog to clear. B1 Investors have pulledabout $2.5 billion since Octo-ber from a Carlyle hedge fundafter big bets on Fannie andFreddie led to steep losses. C1 Stock-trading volume andvolatility have slumped thismonth even as the Dow andS&P 500 set new records. C1 The economic impact ofthis winter’s harsh weatherdoesn’t appear to be as bad asa year ago, economists say. A2 Prospects for legislationto ease regulations on smallbanks are dimming amidrifts among lawmakers. C7 AT&T said rival Dishskewed prices and distortedthe results of last month’s U.S.sale of wireless licenses. B3 Union workers walked outof three more U.S. refineriesthis weekend, expanding anearly monthlong strike. B3 Facebook drivers voted toratify a contract, in what couldbe a big step for unions in Sili-con Valley’s service industry. B4 Prada sales eased in 2014,marking a halt to the fashionfirm’s strong growth rates. B2Rocket Fuel reported disap-pointing results and the ad-technology company offeredweak first-quarter guidance. B6

Business&Finance

World-Wide

EXCHANGES, REGULATORSCALL TRADERS’ BLUFFS

Market-manipulation probes eye ‘The Russian,’ others in ‘spoofing’ crackdown

CHICAGO—One June morning in 2012, a col-lege dropout whom securities traders call “TheRussian” logged on to his computer and begantrading Brent-crude futures on a London ex-change from his skyscraper office here.

Over six hours, Igor Oystacher’s computer sentroughly 23,000 commands, including thousandsof buy and sell orders, according to correspon-dence from the exchange to his clearing firm re-viewed by The Wall Street Journal. But he can-celed many of those orders milliseconds afterplacing them, the documents show, in what the

exchange alleges was part of a trading practicedesigned to trick other investors into buying andselling at artificially high or low prices.

Traders call the illegal bluffing tactic “spoof-ing,” and they say it has long been used to ma-nipulate prices of anything from stocks to bondsto futures. Exchanges and regulators have onlyrecently begun clamping down.

The 33-year-old Mr. Oystacher referred inqui-ries to a spokesman for his firm, 3Red GroupLLC, who declined to comment for this story. Inhis clearing firm’s correspondence with the ex-change, Mr. Oystacher—co-founder of Chicago-

Please see TRADES page A14

BY BRADLEY HOPE

BUSINESS & TECH. | B1

Battery Life: Tech’sNext Dimension

Thin devices are robbing us ofwhat we want most—power—but Christopher Mims says itdoesn’t have to be this way

JOURNAL REPORT | R2

How to Tell if You’reA Jerk at Work

Most people see a valuedcolleague when they look inthe mirror, but they’re often

fooling themselves

Inside

Homeland Security chief callsfor caution after mall threat... A3

TOP FLIGHT: ‘Birdman’ director Alejandro G. Iñárritu accepts the award for best picture Sunday. Mr. Iñárritu also won the best-directing Oscar—giving the filmtwo of the night’s top awards. Other winners included Eddie Redmayne for best actor and Julianne Moore for best actress. For more, see B1 and WSJ.com.

‘Birdman’ Soars Above the Competition at the Academy Awards

Turks enter Syria to rescue troopsat tomb under terror threat... A6

KevinWinter/Getty

Images

CM Y K CompositeCompositeMAGENTA CYAN BLACK

P2JW054000-6-A00100-1--------XA CL,CN,CX,DL,DM,DX,EE,EU,FL,HO,KC,MW,NC,NE,NY,PH,PN,RM,SA,SC,SL,SW,TU,WB,WEBG,BM,BP,CC,CH,CK,CP,CT,DN,DR,FW,HL,HW,KS,LA,LG,LK,MI,ML,NM,PA,PI,PV,TD,TS,UT,WO

P2JW054000-6-A00100-1--------XA