1
YELLOW ***** MONDAY, APRIL 7, 2014 ~ VOL. CCLXIII NO. 80 WSJ.com HHHH $2.00 Last week: DJIA 16412.71 À 89.65 0.5% NASDAQ 4127.73 g 0.7% NIKKEI 15063.77 À 2.5% STOXX 600 339.18 À 1.6% 10-YR. TREASURY g 4/32 , yield 2.726% OIL $101.14 g $0.53 EURO $1.3704 YEN 103.30 CONTENTS Abreast of the Market C1 Ahead of the Tape.. C1 Corp. News....... B2,3,5,6 Global Finance............ C3 Heard on the Street C6 Law Journal ................ B4 Markets Dashboard C4 Moving the Market C2 Opinion.................. A17-19 Sports .............................. B7 U.S. News................. A2-6 Weather Watch........ B6 World News......... A8-16 s Copyright 2014 Dow Jones & Company. All Rights Reserved > What’s News i i i World-Wide n Karzai’s pick trailed an ex- World Bank executive and an opposition leader in Afghani- stan’s presidential vote, a tally of partial results found. A1 n Electoral-fraud allegations mounted in the crucial south- ern province of Kandahar, a focal point of campaigning for the ethnic Pashtun vote. A10 n Ships searching for the missing Malaysia Airlines jet reported detecting signals that might have come from the black-box recorder. A13 n Pro-Russian protesters seized regional government headquarters in two cities in eastern Ukraine. A16 n Jeb Bush said he would decide this year on whether to run for the 2016 GOP presidential nomination. A3 n Some Democrats are fight- ing with the administration over planned cuts to private plans offered in Medicare. A4 n The U.S. plans to increase the number of missile-defense destroyers based in Japan by two to seven, Hagel said. A11 n Israel’s Netanyahu blamed the Palestinians for an im- passe in peace talks and threatened unilateral steps. A8 n Iran has been unable to withdraw much of the oil rev- enue it was to receive under an interim nuclear deal. A8 n Hungary’s governing party won parliamentary elections, taking 133 of 199 seats. A12 n Some 100 people were ar- rested when a California college party turned into a brawl. A2 n Died: Peter Matthiessen, 86, writer and environmentalist. i i i Y ahoo is close to ordering four Web series as it raises its online-video ambitions to compete with cable networks and streaming services. A1 n India’s Sun Pharma is buying generic-drug maker Ranbaxy from Japanese owner Daiichi Sankyo in a deal valued at $3.2 billion. B1 n BlackRock reshuffled its executive ranks as the asset manager took a big step to- ward picking a successor to founder and CEO Fink. C1 n Cement makers Lafarge and Holcim approved merger plans and will seek to sell $8 billion of assets in a bid to se- cure antitrust clearance. B3 n Investors are opting for dividend-paying shares instead of growth stocks, reflecting concern over the recovery. C1 n Discount-brokerage shares have slid in response to scru- tiny of high-speed trading. C1 n Glaxo is probing allega- tions of bribery by the drug maker’s employees in the Mid- east, according to emails. B4 n Drugs from Pfizer and Lilly showed promise in slowing the course of breast cancer, accord- ing to early-stage research. B5 n Caterpillar could face tougher IRS scrutiny after be- ing grilled over its tax strategy by a Senate panel last week. B3 n Sears’s CEO is slicing off some of the company’s best assets for shareholders, leav- ing bondholders at risk. B1 n An ABN Ambro ex-officer and his family were found dead in their home. C5 Business & Finance Hillary Clinton’s phantom presence in the Democratic pres- idential-nomination stakes—nei- ther in nor out—is freezing the rest of the field, creating formi- dable obstacles for other candi- dates needing to raise money and set up an organization. When advisers to a fundrais- ing group backing a prospective 2016 Clinton bid came calling in late January, hedge-fund man- ager and political heavyweight Orin Kramer said he met them in his New York office and agreed to write a check. When another potential candidate, Maryland Gov. Martin O’Malley, tried to reach him, Mr. Kramer said he didn’t take the call. “She’s Gladys Knight and all the rest of them are the Pips,” said Robert Zimmerman, a long- time Democratic donor, compar- ing Mrs. Clinton with potential opponents from both parties. Possible 2016 candidates are in the crucial early stages of raising money, but they won’t likely set up formal campaign in- frastructures until after this year’s midterm elections. Even though she isn’t officially running, Mrs. Clinton retains huge influence with the Democratic Party’s fundraising and get-out- the-vote machinery. A super PAC called “Ready for Hillary” is re- cruiting Clinton campaign volun- teers in Iowa, New Hampshire and other early-voting states. A group called Priorities USA Action is pre- pared to raise millions for her campaign, having made early overtures to donors such as Mr. Please turn to page A4 BY PETER NICHOLAS Clinton Freezes Rest of ’16 Field KABUL—Former World Bank executive Ashraf Ghani and op- position leader Abdullah Abdul- lah appeared to be the two front-runners in Afghanistan’s presidential election, sidelining a candidate viewed as President Hamid Karzai’s favorite, accord- ing to partial results tallied by news organizations and one can- didate. A victory for Mr. Ghani or Mr. Abdullah could significantly re- duce the influence of Mr. Karzai, who has ruled Afghanistan since the 2001 U.S. invasion and paved the way for a long-term security deal with the U.S. that Mr. Karzai hasn’t agreed to sign, a refusal that has infuriated Wash- ington. Messrs. Ghani and Abdullah both say they will sign the bilat- eral security agreement, which is needed to maintain American aid and a limited U.S. military pres- ence in Afghanistan once the in- ternational coalition’s current mandate expires in December. The Wall Street Journal tal- lied partial election results from visits to roughly 100 polling sta- tions, out of more than 20,000 nationwide, in the capital Kabul and the cities of Mazar-e-Sharif in the north, Kandahar in the south, and Gardez and Jalalabad in the east. At nearly all these stations, Messrs. Ghani and Ab- dullah were the clear leaders, ac- cording to counts posted by local poll supervisors. Mr. Karzai’s former foreign minister, Zalmai Rassoul, trailed far behind. It wasn’t immediately clear whether Mr. Ghani or Mr. Abdul- lah managed to garner the abso- lute majority needed to avoid a runoff between the top two fin- ishers. Diplomats, campaign in- siders and election observers predicted a runoff sometime in late May or early June. Afghanistan’s Pajhwok news agency, which collated its infor- mation from Kabul and several Please turn to page A10 BY YAROSLAV TROFIMOV AND MARGHERITA STANCATI Afghanistan Vote Signals Smoother Relations With U.S. Angela Merkel, the German chancellor who promised a “decisive and united re- sponse” from Europe to Russia’s annexation of Crimea, arrived Sunday in Hannover to speak at the world’s biggest industrial fair. Inside one fair pavilion, employees of Tav- rida Electric, a manufacturer run by a top Crimean separatist leader, were working on mock utility poles to display the circuit breakers the company continues to sell in Germany and much of the Western world. It is largely business as usual for Tavrida Electric and company founder Alexei Chaly, one of 33 people sanctioned by European au- thorities with travel bans and a freeze on as- sets for helping Russia bite off a piece of Ukraine. By day, Mr. Chaly heads the new pro-Rus- sian government in the city of Sevastopol, having emerged as the de facto “people’s governor” since seizing power in February. By night, he runs Tavrida, which despite Eu- ropean and Canadian sanctions against Mr. Chaly, still operates largely unhindered in Western Europe and Canada. The U.S., where Tavrida plans to expand sales, hasn’t sanc- tioned him at all. “So far, so good,” said the 52-year-old chief executive, cracking a smile and switch- ing from Russian into near-perfect English in an interview with The Wall Street Journal at his office in Sevastopol. The relatively small interruptions in Tavr- ida’s global business show the limits of pen- alties targeting people behind Crimea’s se- cession. Even in the European Union, where Ms. Merkel and other European leaders promised a strong response, only Estonia, where the company employs about 60 peo- ple, has frozen Tavrida’s operations, accord- ing to Mr. Chaly. Mr. Chaly said he doesn’t know why the U.S. hasn’t singled him out for his role in the takeover. Even though he said he sold his controlling stake in Tavrida before the sanc- tions as a precaution, his business should have made him among the most vulnerable to Western sanctions. A spokeswoman for the Treasury Depart- ment, which oversees U.S. sanctions, de- clined to comment on why Mr. Chaly wasn’t Please turn to page A16 By Paul Sonne in Sevastopol, Ukraine, and Anton Troianovski in Hannover, Germany ‘SO FAR, SO GOOD’ Crimean Leader Dodges Sanctions Yahoo Inc. is raising its ambi- tions in online video, with plans to acquire the kind of original programming that typically winds up on high-end cable-TV networks and streaming services like Netflix, people briefed on the company’s plans said. The company is close to or- dering four Web series, these people said. And unlike in years past, Yahoo isn’t looking for short-form Web originals, but rather 10-episode, half-hour comedies with per-episode bud- gets ranging from $700,000 to a few million dollars, the people said. The projects being considered would be led by writers or direc- tors with experience in televi- sion. “They want to blow it out big time,” said one of the people Please turn to page A6 BY MIKE SHIELDS AND DOUGLAS MACMILLAN Yahoo Sets New Push Into Video Programs Mourning the Victims of the Latest Fort Hood Shooting SEEKING SOLACE: Kathy Abad, a military wife, prays at a memorial service at the Tabernacle Baptist Church on Sunday in Killeen, Texas, for the victims and families affected by the Fort Hood shooting. On Wednesday, three soldiers were killed before the alleged gunman shot himself to death. A2 Tamir Kalifa/Associated Press Ernie Ostuno had two big hopes recently: victory for his Michigan teams in the March Madness basketball competition and the conquest of the uni- verse. The latter has proved to be a much better bet. Most nights at home in Grand Rapids, Mich., Mr. Ostuno has been logging on to his personal computer to track the fortunes of a celestial phenomenon known as the Horsehead Nebula in a space race with a difference. The 51-year-old has already seen the Horsehead Nebula—a giant cosmic dust cloud—survive a close call with a galaxy several million light years away. A brush with the vast blue aurora sur- rounding Jupiter also had nerves jangling, but it emerged un- scathed. Now, the Horsehead Nebula has become the red-hot favorite to win “Hubble Madness,” an on- line game created by scientists that shows two images taken by the Hubble Space Telescope at a time and asks the public to vote on the best one. It runs something like the Na- tional Collegiate Athletic Associ- ation March Madness basketball competition, with a series of winner-takes-all contests taking place over several rounds. The competition, held for the first time this year, ends Monday, just like the famed basketball tourna- ment. Please turn to page A12 BY LUCY CRAYMER Hubble Madness: Space Odyssey Heads to Final Round i i i Fans Vote for Favorite Telescope Images; Rooting for Horsehead Nebula Hubble Space Telescope TODAY IN JOURNAL REPORT Nurture Your Nest Egg SPORTS Jason Gay on the NCAA Tournament Getty Images Pro-Russia protesters seize government buildings in eastern Ukraine............................ A16 Senior Staff Shuffle Coming to BlackRock NEW PICKS: BlackRock CEO Laurence Fink said lineup changes tap a deep bench of talent at the world’s largest asset manager. C1 Associated Press Before investing, carefully consider the fund’s investment objectives, risks, charges and expenses. For a prospectus containing this and other important information, contact a Client Services representative. Please read the prospectus carefully before investing. TD Ameritrade, Inc., member FINRA/SIPC/NFA. TD Ameritrade is a trademark jointly owned by TD Ameritrade IP Company, Inc. and The Toronto-Dominion Bank. © 2014 TD Ameritrade IP Company, Inc. All rights reserved. Used with permission. No one knows what the next 12 months will bring. But with 100+ commission-free ETFs, TD Ameritrade gives you more ways to diversify and engage in the market. tdameritrade.com/600offer With uncertainty comes opportunity. C M Y K Composite Composite MAGENTA CYAN BLACK P2JW097000-5-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 P2JW097000-5-A00100-1--------XA

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Page 1: TODAYINJOURNAL REPORT NurtureYour Nest Egg - online.wsj.comonline.wsj.com/public/resources/documents/PageOne040714.pdf · focalpoint of campaigning for the ethnic Pashtun vote. A10

YELLOW

* * * * * MONDAY, APRIL 7, 2014 ~ VOL. CCLXIII NO. 80 WSJ.com HHHH $2 .00

Lastweek: DJIA 16412.71 À 89.65 0.5% NASDAQ 4127.73 g 0.7% NIKKEI 15063.77 À 2.5% STOXX600 339.18 À 1.6% 10-YR. TREASURY g 4/32 , yield 2.726% OIL $101.14 g $0.53 EURO $1.3704 YEN 103.30

CONTENTSAbreast of the Market C1Ahead of the Tape.. C1Corp. News....... B2,3,5,6Global Finance............ C3Heard on the Street C6Law Journal................ B4

Markets Dashboard C4Moving the Market C2Opinion.................. A17-19Sports.............................. B7U.S. News................. A2-6Weather Watch........ B6World News......... A8-16

s Copyright 2014 Dow Jones & Company.All Rights Reserved

>

What’sNews

i i i

World-WidenKarzai’s pick trailed an ex-World Bank executive and anopposition leader in Afghani-stan’s presidential vote, a tallyof partial results found. A1n Electoral-fraud allegationsmounted in the crucial south-ern province of Kandahar, afocal point of campaigning forthe ethnic Pashtun vote. A10n Ships searching for themissing Malaysia Airlines jetreported detecting signalsthat might have come fromthe black-box recorder. A13n Pro-Russian protestersseized regional governmentheadquarters in two cities ineastern Ukraine. A16n Jeb Bush said he woulddecide this year on whetherto run for the 2016 GOPpresidential nomination. A3n Some Democrats are fight-ing with the administrationover planned cuts to privateplans offered in Medicare. A4nThe U.S. plans to increasethe number of missile-defensedestroyers based in Japan bytwo to seven, Hagel said. A11n Israel’s Netanyahu blamedthe Palestinians for an im-passe in peace talks andthreatened unilateral steps. A8n Iran has been unable towithdraw much of the oil rev-enue it was to receive underan interim nuclear deal. A8nHungary’s governing partywon parliamentary elections,taking 133 of 199 seats. A12nSome 100 peoplewere ar-restedwhen a California collegeparty turned into a brawl.A2nDied: PeterMatthiessen, 86,writer and environmentalist.

i i i

Yahoo is close to orderingfour Web series as it raises

its online-video ambitions tocompete with cable networksand streaming services. A1n India’s Sun Pharma isbuying generic-drug makerRanbaxy from Japaneseowner Daiichi Sankyo in adeal valued at $3.2 billion. B1n BlackRock reshuffled itsexecutive ranks as the assetmanager took a big step to-ward picking a successor tofounder and CEO Fink. C1n Cement makers Lafargeand Holcim approved mergerplans and will seek to sell $8billion of assets in a bid to se-cure antitrust clearance. B3n Investors are opting fordividend-paying shares insteadof growth stocks, reflectingconcern over the recovery. C1nDiscount-brokerage shareshave slid in response to scru-tiny of high-speed trading. C1nGlaxo is probing allega-tions of bribery by the drugmaker’s employees in the Mid-east, according to emails. B4nDrugs from Pfizer and Lillyshowed promise in slowing thecourse of breast cancer, accord-ing to early-stage research.B5nCaterpillar could facetougher IRS scrutiny after be-ing grilled over its tax strategyby a Senate panel last week. B3n Sears’s CEO is slicing offsome of the company’s bestassets for shareholders, leav-ing bondholders at risk. B1n An ABN Ambro ex-officerand his family were founddead in their home. C5

Business&Finance

Hillary Clinton’s phantompresence in the Democratic pres-idential-nomination stakes—nei-ther in nor out—is freezing therest of the field, creating formi-dable obstacles for other candi-dates needing to raise moneyand set up an organization.

When advisers to a fundrais-ing group backing a prospective2016 Clinton bid came calling inlate January, hedge-fund man-ager and political heavyweightOrin Kramer said he met them inhis New York office and agreedto write a check. When anotherpotential candidate, MarylandGov. Martin O’Malley, tried toreach him, Mr. Kramer said hedidn’t take the call.

“She’s Gladys Knight and allthe rest of them are the Pips,”said Robert Zimmerman, a long-time Democratic donor, compar-ing Mrs. Clinton with potentialopponents from both parties.

Possible 2016 candidates arein the crucial early stages ofraising money, but they won’tlikely set up formal campaign in-frastructures until after thisyear’s midterm elections.

Even though she isn’t officiallyrunning, Mrs. Clinton retains hugeinfluence with the DemocraticParty’s fundraising and get-out-the-vote machinery. A super PACcalled “Ready for Hillary” is re-cruiting Clinton campaign volun-teers in Iowa, New Hampshire andother early-voting states. A groupcalled Priorities USA Action is pre-pared to raise millions for hercampaign, having made earlyovertures to donors such as Mr.

PleaseturntopageA4

BY PETER NICHOLAS

ClintonFreezesRest of’16 Field

KABUL—Former World Bankexecutive Ashraf Ghani and op-position leader Abdullah Abdul-lah appeared to be the twofront-runners in Afghanistan’spresidential election, sidelining acandidate viewed as PresidentHamid Karzai’s favorite, accord-ing to partial results tallied bynews organizations and one can-didate.

A victory for Mr. Ghani or Mr.

Abdullah could significantly re-duce the influence of Mr. Karzai,who has ruled Afghanistan sincethe 2001 U.S. invasion and pavedthe way for a long-term securitydeal with the U.S. that Mr.Karzai hasn’t agreed to sign, arefusal that has infuriated Wash-ington.

Messrs. Ghani and Abdullahboth say they will sign the bilat-eral security agreement, which isneeded to maintain American aidand a limited U.S. military pres-ence in Afghanistan once the in-

ternational coalition’s currentmandate expires in December.

The Wall Street Journal tal-lied partial election results fromvisits to roughly 100 polling sta-tions, out of more than 20,000nationwide, in the capital Kabuland the cities of Mazar-e-Sharifin the north, Kandahar in thesouth, and Gardez and Jalalabadin the east. At nearly all thesestations, Messrs. Ghani and Ab-dullah were the clear leaders, ac-cording to counts posted by localpoll supervisors. Mr. Karzai’s

former foreign minister, ZalmaiRassoul, trailed far behind.

It wasn’t immediately clearwhether Mr. Ghani or Mr. Abdul-lah managed to garner the abso-lute majority needed to avoid arunoff between the top two fin-ishers. Diplomats, campaign in-siders and election observerspredicted a runoff sometime inlate May or early June.

Afghanistan’s Pajhwok newsagency, which collated its infor-mation from Kabul and several

PleaseturntopageA10

BY YAROSLAV TROFIMOVAND MARGHERITA STANCATI

Afghanistan Vote SignalsSmoother RelationsWith U.S.

Angela Merkel, the German chancellorwho promised a “decisive and united re-sponse” from Europe to Russia’s annexationof Crimea, arrived Sunday in Hannover tospeak at the world’s biggest industrial fair.

Inside one fair pavilion, employees of Tav-rida Electric, a manufacturer run by a topCrimean separatist leader, were working onmock utility poles to display the circuitbreakers the company continues to sell inGermany and much of the Western world.

It is largely business as usual for TavridaElectric and company founder Alexei Chaly,one of 33 people sanctioned by European au-thorities with travel bans and a freeze on as-

sets for helping Russia bite off a piece ofUkraine.

By day, Mr. Chaly heads the new pro-Rus-sian government in the city of Sevastopol,having emerged as the de facto “people’sgovernor” since seizing power in February.By night, he runs Tavrida, which despite Eu-ropean and Canadian sanctions against Mr.Chaly, still operates largely unhindered inWestern Europe and Canada. The U.S., whereTavrida plans to expand sales, hasn’t sanc-tioned him at all.

“So far, so good,” said the 52-year-oldchief executive, cracking a smile and switch-ing from Russian into near-perfect English inan interview with The Wall Street Journal athis office in Sevastopol.

The relatively small interruptions in Tavr-ida’s global business show the limits of pen-alties targeting people behind Crimea’s se-

cession. Even in the European Union, whereMs. Merkel and other European leaderspromised a strong response, only Estonia,where the company employs about 60 peo-ple, has frozen Tavrida’s operations, accord-ing to Mr. Chaly.

Mr. Chaly said he doesn’t know why theU.S. hasn’t singled him out for his role in thetakeover. Even though he said he sold hiscontrolling stake in Tavrida before the sanc-tions as a precaution, his business shouldhave made him among the most vulnerableto Western sanctions.

A spokeswoman for the Treasury Depart-ment, which oversees U.S. sanctions, de-clined to comment on why Mr. Chaly wasn’t

PleaseturntopageA16

By Paul Sonne in Sevastopol, Ukraine,and Anton Troianovskiin Hannover, Germany

‘SO FAR, SO GOOD’

Crimean Leader Dodges Sanctions

Yahoo Inc. is raising its ambi-tions in online video, with plansto acquire the kind of originalprogramming that typicallywinds up on high-end cable-TVnetworks and streaming serviceslike Netflix, people briefed onthe company’s plans said.

The company is close to or-dering four Web series, thesepeople said. And unlike in yearspast, Yahoo isn’t looking forshort-form Web originals, butrather 10-episode, half-hourcomedies with per-episode bud-gets ranging from $700,000 to afew million dollars, the peoplesaid.

The projects being consideredwould be led by writers or direc-tors with experience in televi-sion. “They want to blow it outbig time,” said one of the people

PleaseturntopageA6

BY MIKE SHIELDSAND DOUGLAS MACMILLAN

Yahoo SetsNew PushInto VideoPrograms

Mourning the Victims of the Latest Fort Hood Shooting

SEEKING SOLACE: Kathy Abad, a military wife, prays at a memorial service at the Tabernacle Baptist Church on Sunday in Killeen, Texas, for thevictims and families affected by the Fort Hood shooting. On Wednesday, three soldiers were killed before the alleged gunman shot himself to death. A2

TamirKa

lifa/AssociatedPress

Ernie Ostuno had two bighopes recently: victory for hisMichigan teams in the MarchMadness basketball competitionand the conquest of the uni-verse. The latter has proved tobe a much better bet.

Most nights at home in GrandRapids, Mich., Mr. Ostuno hasbeen logging on to his personalcomputer to track the fortunesof a celestial phenomenonknown as the Horsehead Nebulain a space race with a difference.

The 51-year-old has alreadyseen the Horsehead Nebula—agiant cosmic dust cloud—survivea close call with a galaxy severalmillion light years away. A brushwith the vast blue aurora sur-rounding Jupiter also had nervesjangling, but it emerged un-scathed.

Now, the Horsehead Nebulahas become the red-hot favoriteto win “Hubble Madness,” an on-

line game created by scientiststhat shows two images taken bythe Hubble Space Telescope at atime and asks the public to voteon the best one.

It runs something like the Na-tional Collegiate Athletic Associ-ation March Madness basketballcompetition, with a series ofwinner-takes-all contests takingplace over several rounds. Thecompetition, held for the firsttime this year, ends Monday, justlike the famed basketball tourna-ment.

PleaseturntopageA12

BY LUCY CRAYMER

Hubble Madness: Space OdysseyHeads to Final Round

i i i

Fans Vote for Favorite Telescope Images;Rooting for Horsehead Nebula

Hubble Space Telescope

TODAY IN JOURNAL REPORT

Nurture Your Nest EggSPORTS Jason Gay on the NCAA Tournament

Getty

Images

Pro-Russia protesters seize governmentbuildings in eastern Ukraine............................ A16

Senior Staff ShuffleComing to BlackRock

NEW PICKS: BlackRock CEOLaurence Fink said lineup changestap a deep bench of talent at theworld’s largest asset manager. C1

AssociatedPress

Before investing, carefully consider the fund’s investmentobjectives, risks, charges and expenses. For a prospectuscontaining this andother important information,contact aClient Servicesrepresentative.Pleasereadtheprospectuscarefully before investing.TD Ameritrade, Inc., member FINRA/SIPC/NFA. TD Ameritrade is a trademarkjointly ownedbyTDAmeritrade IPCompany, Inc. andTheToronto-DominionBank.© 2014 TD Ameritrade IP Company, Inc. All rights reserved. Usedwith permission.

No one knows what the next12 months will bring. But with 100+

commission-free ETFs, TD Ameritradegives you more ways to diversify

and engage in the market.

tdameritrade.com/600offer

With uncertaintycomes opportunity.

CM Y K CompositeCompositeMAGENTA CYAN BLACK

P2JW097000-5-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

P2JW097000-5-A00100-1--------XA