2012 12 06 cmyk plto 04online.wsj.com/public/resources/documents/pageone1206.pdf · ongoing...

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YELLOW ***** THURSDAY, DECEMBER 6, 2012 ~ VOL. CCLX NO. 133 WSJ.com HHHH $2.00 CONTENTS Bus. Education...... B6-7 Corporate News B2-5,8 Global Finance........... C3 Heard on the Street C10 Leisure & Arts........... D5 Opinion .................. B15-17 Personal Finance ..... C8 Sports.............................. D6 Stock Listings............. C7 Stocks in the News C4 Style & Travel ....... D1-4 Technology................... B9 Weather....................... B10 DJIA 13034.49 À 82.71 0.6% NASDAQ 2973.70 g 0.8% NIKKEI 9468.84 À 0.4% STOXX 600 276.91 À 0.2% 10-YR. TREAS. À 6/32 , yield 1.591% OIL $87.88 g $0.62 GOLD $1,692.40 g $2.00 EURO $1.3067 YEN 82.47 s Copyright 2012 Dow Jones & Company. All Rights Reserved Vital Signs America’s service sector expanded last month. The Institute for Supply Manage- ment’s index of nonmanu- facturing businesses, which means mostly service busi- nesses, rose to 54.7 in No- vember from 54.2 in Octo- ber. Readings over 50 indicate expansion. At the same time, an index of employment in the service sector dropped to 50.3 from 54.9 in October. Nonmanufacturing Index Source: Institute for Supply Management 2012 2011 48 50 52 54 56 58 C itigroup set out plans to cut 11,000 jobs, close 84 branches and retreat from consumer banking in a hand- ful of countries, underlining CEO Corbat’s determination to crack down on costs. C1 n A government study’s en- dorsement of exporting some of the U.S.’s abundant natural gas has the potential to reshape global energy markets. A1 n The EU levied fines total- ing $1.92 billion on a group of global electronics firms for operating price-fixing cartels in TV and computer displays. B1 n U.S. stocks rose, with the Dow industrials gaining 82.71 points to 13034.49, their highest close since Nov. 6. C4 n John Paulson is poised to turn a tidy profit on the real- estate rebound after having made a fortune betting on the collapse of U.S. home prices. C1 n An analysis found unusual numbers of stocks beating the market on the last day of most quarters, suggesting deliberate efforts to tempo- rarily drive up their value. A1 n U.K. retailer Tesco is set to leave the U.S. after spend- ing five unprofitable years and $1.6 billion on an ill- timed American gambit. B1 n U.S. securities regulators are investigating allegations that Deutsche Bank hid billions of dollars of paper losses during the financial crisis. C10 n Freeport-McMoRan’s $9 bil- lion acquisition of two oil- and-gas companies marks a major bet by the miner on en- ergy exploration in the U.S. B2 n Airbus parent EADS said its French and German owners agreed on a new shareholding structure that potentially re- duces political influence. B3 n Operations resumed at the ports of Los Angeles and Long Beach after a deal on a contract ended an eight-day strike by clerical workers. B3 n The Starz pay-TV channel plans to begin discussions with potential buyers as soon as it is spun off from Liberty Media in early January. B2 n A consortium of bidders has offered onetime photog- raphy icon Eastman Kodak more than $500 million for a trove of digital patents. B2 n The Senate moved toward a measure to boost Ameri- can trade with Russia, even as the EU warned Moscow over protectionist policies. A12 n The Nasdaq said it erro- neously postponed the initial public offering of White- Horse Finance, marking an- other bungled IPO launch. C3 n Ocwen agreed to install an outside monitor who will ensure the mortgage-loan processor makes promised business-practice changes. C3 n Ten drug firms and 23 uni- versities are joining to create one of the world’s largest repos- itories of adult stem cells. B4 n Egyptian Islamists and their foes clashed in Cairo. Tens of thousands of support- ers and opponents of Presi- dent Morsi hurled rocks and Molotov cocktails, in the larg- est violent battle since last year’s revolution. The con- frontation started after Isla- mist protesters moved to break up a demonstration by the president’s opponents out- side the presidential palace. A1 Morsi’s administration has sent out confused mes- sages about how the con- flict could be resolved. n Obama hardened his posi- tion that Congress should raise the U.S. borrowing limit without preconditions, in a speech to corporate chiefs. A4 n A cap on tax breaks de- signed by an ex-Reagan aide is drawing attention after Boeh- ner floated it as an option. A4 n Britain said growth was weaker than expected and an austerity plan would continue longer than planned. A9 n Ireland detailed a tough budget to cut its deficit under a deal with bailout creditors. A9 n The U.S. and its allies are intensifying their efforts to weaken Syrian rebels be- lieved linked to al Qaeda and other extremist groups. A12 n The FBI is pursuing for- eign hackers who targeted the computers of Adm. Mike Mullen, the former head of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. A3 n Women who extended treatment with tamoxifen im- proved their chances of sur- viving breast cancer and re- duced its risk of recurring. A3 n The Philippines struggled to cope with the devastation from a typhoon that left hun- dreds dead or missing. A10 n Afghanistan plans major tax breaks and incentives for in- vestors ahead of U.S.-led forces’ pullout at the end of 2014. A11 n An appeals court heard ar- guments challenging the ex- tent of presidential power to make recess appointments. A5 n Federal prosecutors are in- vestigating New Orleans ex- Mayor Ray Nagin as part of an ongoing corruption probe. A6 n The European countries hardest hit by the euro-zone debt crisis were rated among the most corrupt in the EU. A13 n Japan’s LDP, the main oppo- sition party, appears likely to return to power in the coming elections, polls showed. A12 n Guatemalan police arrested McAfee for illegal entry. Belize wanted to question the soft- ware guru about a killing. A11 n A cybercrime ring that al- legedly used bogus ads to dupe Americans out of over $3 million was broken up. A6 n Died: Dave Brubeck, 91, celebrated jazz pianist and composer…Dame Elisabeth Murdoch, 103, philanthropist and Rupert Murdoch’s mother Oscar Niemeyer, 104, archi- tect of the U.N. building. A8 Business & Finance World-Wide Follow the news all day at WSJ.com What’s News– i i i i i i The stock of Iridex Corp., a maker of lasers used to treat visual ailments, had been hovering around $3.43 all day on June 29. At 3:55 p.m., five minutes before the market close, it took off. It moved to $3.65, then $3.80. Less than a half second before the trading day and calendar quar- ter ended, Iridex jumped 4% to $4.17, capping a nearly 22% rise for the day. Scott Shuda, a managing direc- tor at BlueLine Partners, an invest- ment firm in Danville, Calif., and Iridex’s largest shareholder, saw the stock jump. “Is it unusual for these little com- panies to move a lot?” he asks. “No. Is the timing suspect? Yes. I saw it and I thought, ‘Somebody wants to move this stock up today.’ ” The next trading day, July 2, Iridex dropped 10%—and it didn’t hit $4 again until late October. What happened to Iridex isn’t unusual. A Wall Street Journal analysis of daily trading in roughly 10,000 stocks since 2004 found that on the final trading day of each quarter, there was a sharp in- crease in the number of stocks that beat the mar- ket by at least five percentage points, then trailed it by three points or more the next trading day. The Journal’s analysis compared the perform- ance of those 10,000 stocks to the one-day return of the Standard & Poor’s 500-stock index. On days that didn’t end the quarter, an average of 217 stocks beat that index by at least 5 percentage points then trailed it by at least three the next day. But on the final trading days of quarters, an average of 280 stocks did. Regulators and market analysts have an expla- nation for the unusual pattern. They say some money managers wait until the waning moments of the quarter to bid aggressively for more shares of a stock they already own, which drives up the Please turn to page A14 BY JASON ZWEIG AND TOM MCGINTY Fund Managers Lift Results With Timely Trading Sprees From Cache to Cachet: Landlords Repurpose Classic Bank Vaults i i i New Combination of Bars, Shops Compounds Interest; Intimate ‘Atmosphere’ At the Kelvin Arms, a Scottish pub in Houston, the back room is the place to be. Its main attrac- tion isn’t the comfy leather chairs, the electric fireplace or the towering knight’s armor that guards the space. It’s what the room once was. “It is cool drinking in a re- furbished vault,” said Monica Ar- zola, a college student relaxing at the pub one evening. On her previous visit there, she and friends took pho- tos by the open vault door and posted them on Facebook. The classic bank vault—with its captain’s wheel, imposing steel door and prison bars at the entrance—is fast becoming a relic as older bank branches close down. But there is something about these confined, windowless spaces that continues to capti- vate people. The fascination is giving the anachronistic vault a new lease on life, spawning fresh uses its creators could never have imagined. People are shopping for clothes and an- tiques in former vaults. They are throwing holiday parties in vaults. Some are cele- brating birthdays and even getting married there. “Once I saw that space, I knew that our wedding was go- ing to be different,” says Tova Williams, who walked down the aisle a few weeks ago in the vault of the former Williams- burgh Savings Bank in Brooklyn. Please turn to page A14 Vault at Kelvin Arms BY CRAIG KARMIN Shipping some of the newly abundant U.S. natural gas over- seas would benefit the nation’s economy more than keeping it all at home, according to a long- awaited government study that has the potential to reshape the global energy market. The endorsement could turn the tide in a politically sensitive issue. Gas producers are eager to export more, while big consum- ers including manufacturers and chemical companies are leery that exports could raise domestic prices. Environmental groups, meanwhile, fear that allowing ex- ports would encourage more nat- ural-gas production. The administration had said the study would be central to its deci- sion on approving exports. It ana- lyzed more than a dozen scenarios for U.S. production and exports of natural gas. It found that “across all these scenarios, the U.S. was projected to gain net economic benefits” from liquefying and then exporting natural gas. The looming prospect of the U.S.’s becoming a major exporter of natural gas underscores how the energy revolution is trans- forming the nation’s economic prospects. Just a few years ago, many energy companies were planning to build facilities to im- port liquefied natural gas into the U.S. But thanks to technological advances, combining hydraulic fracturing and horizontal drill- ing, the U.S. has in a short time become a gas-producing power- house. The glut of cheap gas has helped underpin a revival in manufacturing and helped lower electricity costs for consumers. Most of the companies seek- ing permission to liquefy and then ship gas overseas have been awaiting the report. The Depart- ment of Energy had said it wouldn’t issue permits for ex- ports to countries lacking a free- trade agreement with the U.S. Please turn to page A6 BY KEITH JOHNSON AND TENNILLE TRACY U.S. Gas Exports Clear Hurdle Study Citing Benefits Could Hasten Approvals From Obama Administration COUNTING LOSSES: Residents salvaged belongings from their wrecked home Wednesday in New Bataan, Philippines, a day after the deadly Typhoon Bopha left thousands homeless in the country’s poor south. A10 Typhoon Leaves Path of Devastation, Hundreds Dead > DARK MARKETS Output Boom U.S. production of natural gas 1980-2040 Source: Energy Information Administration The Wall Street Journal 40 trillion cubic feet 0 1980 ’90 ’00 ’10 ’20 ’30 ’40 10 20 30 FORECAST 23.0 2011 33.1 2040 Agence France-Presse/Getty Images CAIRO—Tens of thousands of supporters and opponents of Egypt’s president clashed Wednesday, hurling rocks and Molotov cocktails and brawling in Cairo’s streets, in the largest violent battle between Islamists and their foes since the country’s revolution early last year. The confrontation started in the evening after Islamist protest- ers marching in support of Presi- dent Mohammed Morsi, a former leader of the Muslim Brother- hood, moved to break up a dem- onstration by the president’s non- Islamist opponents outside the presidential palace in Cairo, where Mr. Morsi has his offices. Supporters of the rival camps, spurred by public defiance by in- fluential figures on each side, waged back-and-forth battles in side streets outside the palace walls as night fell, shutting down major thoroughfares. Around midnight, police formed a barrier between the camps, with thou- sands of demonstrators on each side, as gunshots rang out and each side accused the other of firing live rounds. Those allegations couldn’t be confirmed. More than 120 people were wounded, Egyptian medics said late Wednesday. The Muslim Brotherhood said at least one of its supporters had been killed, while opposition officials said two of their supporters had died. A local television channel, ONTV, showed images of two people it said were killed in the clashes, and said violence was spreading elsewhere in Cairo. The Obama administration ex- Please turn to page A12 BY CHARLES LEVINSON AND MATT BRADLEY Egypt Sees Largest Clash Since Revolution personal Journal. Fired Up Over Small Satellites | 13D BAY Area BAY Area Emerald City The Cool Color for 2013 Copyright © 2012, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. Run some of your applications in the Oracle Cloud and others in your Private Cloud. You Choose. Oracle Cloud Applications, Platform, Infrastructure Our Data Center Your Data Center and Oracle Cloud Oracle Managed Private Cloud C M Y K Composite Composite MAGENTA CYAN BLACK P2JW341000-5-A00100-1--------NC NC CCA,PAL P2JW341000-5-A00100-1--------NC

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Page 1: 2012 12 06 cmyk PLTO 04online.wsj.com/public/resources/documents/pageone1206.pdf · ongoing corruption probe. A6 nTheEuropean countries hardest hit by the euro-zone debt crisis were

YELLOW

* * * * * THURSDAY, DECEMBER 6, 2012 ~ VOL. CCLX NO. 133 WSJ.com HHHH $2 .00

CONTENTSBus. Education...... B6-7Corporate News B2-5,8Global Finance........... C3Heard on the Street C10Leisure & Arts........... D5Opinion.................. B15-17

Personal Finance..... C8Sports.............................. D6Stock Listings............. C7Stocks in the News C4Style & Travel....... D1-4Technology................... B9Weather....................... B10

DJIA 13034.49 À 82.71 0.6% NASDAQ 2973.70 g 0.8% NIKKEI 9468.84 À 0.4% STOXX600 276.91 À 0.2% 10-YR. TREAS. À 6/32 , yield 1.591% OIL $87.88 g $0.62 GOLD $1,692.40 g $2.00 EURO $1.3067 YEN 82.47

s Copyright 2012 Dow Jones & Company. All Rights Reserved

Vital Signs

America’s service sectorexpanded last month. TheInstitute for Supply Manage-ment’s index of nonmanu-facturing businesses, whichmeans mostly service busi-nesses, rose to 54.7 in No-vember from 54.2 in Octo-ber. Readings over 50indicate expansion. At thesame time, an index ofemployment in the servicesector dropped to 50.3 from54.9 in October.

Nonmanufacturing Index

Source: Institute for SupplyManagement

20122011

48

50

52

54

56

58

C itigroup set out plans tocut 11,000 jobs, close 84

branches and retreat fromconsumer banking in a hand-ful of countries, underliningCEO Corbat’s determinationto crack down on costs. C1nA government study’s en-dorsement of exporting someof the U.S.’s abundant naturalgas has the potential to reshapeglobal energy markets. A1n The EU levied fines total-ing $1.92 billion on a groupof global electronics firms foroperating price-fixing cartels inTV and computer displays. B1n U.S. stocks rose, with theDow industrials gaining 82.71points to 13034.49, theirhighest close since Nov. 6. C4n John Paulson is poised toturn a tidy profit on the real-estate rebound after havingmade a fortune betting on thecollapse of U.S. home prices. C1n An analysis found unusualnumbers of stocks beatingthe market on the last day ofmost quarters, suggestingdeliberate efforts to tempo-rarily drive up their value. A1n U.K. retailer Tesco is setto leave the U.S. after spend-ing five unprofitable yearsand $1.6 billion on an ill-timed American gambit. B1n U.S. securities regulatorsare investigating allegationsthat Deutsche Bank hid billionsof dollars of paper lossesduring the financial crisis. C10nFreeport-McMoRan’s $9 bil-lion acquisition of two oil-and-gas companies marks amajor bet by the miner on en-ergy exploration in the U.S. B2nAirbus parent EADS said itsFrench and German ownersagreed on a new shareholdingstructure that potentially re-duces political influence. B3n Operations resumed atthe ports of Los Angeles andLong Beach after a deal on acontract ended an eight-daystrike by clerical workers. B3n The Starz pay-TV channelplans to begin discussionswith potential buyers as soonas it is spun off from LibertyMedia in early January. B2n A consortium of biddershas offered onetime photog-raphy icon Eastman Kodakmore than $500 million for atrove of digital patents. B2n The Senate moved towarda measure to boost Ameri-can trade with Russia, evenas the EU warned Moscowover protectionist policies. A12n The Nasdaq said it erro-neously postponed the initialpublic offering of White-Horse Finance, marking an-other bungled IPO launch. C3n Ocwen agreed to installan outside monitor who willensure the mortgage-loanprocessor makes promisedbusiness-practice changes. C3n Ten drug firms and 23 uni-versities are joining to createone of theworld’s largest repos-itories of adult stem cells. B4

n Egyptian Islamists andtheir foes clashed in Cairo.Tens of thousands of support-ers and opponents of Presi-dent Morsi hurled rocks andMolotov cocktails, in the larg-est violent battle since lastyear’s revolution. The con-frontation started after Isla-mist protesters moved tobreak up a demonstration bythe president’s opponents out-side the presidential palace. A1Morsi’s administration hassent out confused mes-sages about how the con-flict could be resolved.nObama hardened his posi-tion that Congress shouldraise the U.S. borrowing limitwithout preconditions, in aspeech to corporate chiefs. A4nA cap on tax breaks de-signed by an ex-Reagan aide isdrawing attention after Boeh-ner floated it as an option. A4n Britain said growth wasweaker than expected and anausterity plan would continuelonger than planned. A9n Ireland detailed a toughbudget to cut its deficit under adeal with bailout creditors. A9n The U.S. and its allies areintensifying their efforts toweaken Syrian rebels be-lieved linked to al Qaeda andother extremist groups. A12n The FBI is pursuing for-eign hackers who targetedthe computers of Adm. MikeMullen, the former head ofthe Joint Chiefs of Staff. A3nWomen who extendedtreatment with tamoxifen im-proved their chances of sur-viving breast cancer and re-duced its risk of recurring. A3nThe Philippines struggledto cope with the devastationfrom a typhoon that left hun-dreds dead ormissing. A10nAfghanistan plansmajor taxbreaks and incentives for in-vestors ahead of U.S.-led forces’pullout at the end of 2014. A11nAn appeals court heard ar-guments challenging the ex-tent of presidential power tomake recess appointments. A5n Federal prosecutors are in-vestigating New Orleans ex-Mayor Ray Nagin as part of anongoing corruption probe. A6nThe European countrieshardest hit by the euro-zonedebt crisis were rated amongthemost corrupt in the EU. A13n Japan’s LDP, the main oppo-sition party, appears likely toreturn to power in the comingelections, polls showed. A12nGuatemalan police arrestedMcAfee for illegal entry. Belizewanted to question the soft-ware guru about a killing. A11n A cybercrime ring that al-legedly used bogus ads todupe Americans out of over$3 million was broken up. A6n Died: Dave Brubeck, 91,celebrated jazz pianist andcomposer…Dame ElisabethMurdoch, 103, philanthropistand Rupert Murdoch’s mother…Oscar Niemeyer, 104, archi-tect of the U.N. building. A8

Business&Finance World-Wide

Follow the news all day at WSJ.com

What’s News–i i i i i i

The stock of Iridex Corp., a maker of lasers usedto treat visual ailments, had been hovering around$3.43 all day on June 29. At 3:55 p.m., five minutesbefore the market close, it took off.

It moved to $3.65, then $3.80. Less than a halfsecond before the trading day and calendar quar-

ter ended, Iridex jumped 4% to$4.17, capping a nearly 22% risefor the day.

Scott Shuda, a managing direc-tor at BlueLine Partners, an invest-ment firm in Danville, Calif., andIridex’s largest shareholder, saw

the stock jump. “Is it unusual for these little com-panies to move a lot?” he asks. “No. Is the timingsuspect? Yes. I saw it and I thought, ‘Somebodywants to move this stock up today.’ ”

The next trading day, July 2, Iridex dropped10%—and it didn’t hit $4 again until late October.

What happened to Iridex isn’t unusual. A WallStreet Journal analysis of daily trading in roughly10,000 stocks since 2004 found that on the finaltrading day of each quarter, there was a sharp in-crease in the number of stocks that beat the mar-ket by at least five percentage points, then trailedit by three points or more the next trading day.

The Journal’s analysis compared the perform-ance of those 10,000 stocks to the one-day returnof the Standard & Poor’s 500-stock index. On daysthat didn’t end the quarter, an average of 217stocks beat that index by at least 5 percentagepoints then trailed it by at least three the nextday. But on the final trading days of quarters, anaverage of 280 stocks did.

Regulators and market analysts have an expla-nation for the unusual pattern. They say somemoney managers wait until the waning momentsof the quarter to bid aggressively for more sharesof a stock they already own, which drives up the

PleaseturntopageA14

BY JASON ZWEIG AND TOM MCGINTY

Fund Managers Lift ResultsWith Timely Trading Sprees

From Cache to Cachet: LandlordsRepurpose Classic Bank Vaults

i i i

New Combination of Bars, ShopsCompounds Interest; Intimate ‘Atmosphere’

At the Kelvin Arms, a Scottishpub in Houston, the back room isthe place to be. Its main attrac-tion isn’t the comfy leatherchairs, the electric fireplace orthe towering knight’s armor thatguards the space.

It’s what the room once was.“It is cool

drinking in a re-furbished vault,”said Monica Ar-zola, a collegestudent relaxingat the pub oneevening. On herprevious visitthere, she andfriends took pho-tos by the open vault door andposted them on Facebook.

The classic bank vault—withits captain’s wheel, imposingsteel door and prison bars at theentrance—is fast becoming arelic as older bank branches

close down.But there is something about

these confined, windowlessspaces that continues to capti-vate people. The fascination isgiving the anachronistic vault anew lease on life, spawning freshuses its creators could neverhave imagined.

People are shopping forclothes and an-tiques in formervaults. They arethrowing holidayparties in vaults.Some are cele-brating birthdaysand even gettingmarried there.

“Once I sawthat space, I

knew that our wedding was go-ing to be different,” says TovaWilliams, who walked down theaisle a few weeks ago in thevault of the former Williams-burgh Savings Bank in Brooklyn.

PleaseturntopageA14

Vault at Kelvin Arms

BY CRAIG KARMIN

Shipping some of the newlyabundant U.S. natural gas over-seas would benefit the nation’seconomy more than keeping it allat home, according to a long-awaited government study thathas the potential to reshape theglobal energy market.

The endorsement could turnthe tide in a politically sensitiveissue. Gas producers are eager toexport more, while big consum-ers including manufacturers andchemical companies are leerythat exports could raise domesticprices. Environmental groups,meanwhile, fear that allowing ex-

ports would encourage more nat-ural-gas production.

The administration had said thestudy would be central to its deci-sion on approving exports. It ana-lyzedmore than a dozen scenariosfor U.S. production and exports ofnatural gas. It found that “acrossall these scenarios, the U.S. wasprojected to gain net economicbenefits” from liquefying and thenexporting natural gas.

The looming prospect of theU.S.’s becoming a major exporterof natural gas underscores howthe energy revolution is trans-forming the nation’s economicprospects. Just a few years ago,many energy companies wereplanning to build facilities to im-

port liquefied natural gas intothe U.S.

But thanks to technologicaladvances, combining hydraulicfracturing and horizontal drill-ing, the U.S. has in a short timebecome a gas-producing power-house. The glut of cheap gas hashelped underpin a revival inmanufacturing and helped lowerelectricity costs for consumers.

Most of the companies seek-ing permission to liquefy andthen ship gas overseas have beenawaiting the report. The Depart-ment of Energy had said itwouldn’t issue permits for ex-ports to countries lacking a free-trade agreement with the U.S.

PleaseturntopageA6

BY KEITH JOHNSONAND TENNILLE TRACY

U.S.GasExports ClearHurdleStudy Citing Benefits Could Hasten Approvals From Obama Administration

COUNTING LOSSES: Residents salvaged belongings from their wrecked home Wednesday in New Bataan,Philippines, a day after the deadly Typhoon Bopha left thousands homeless in the country’s poor south. A10

Typhoon Leaves Path of Devastation, Hundreds Dead

>

DARKMARKETS

Output BoomU.S. production of natural gas1980-2040

Source: Energy Information AdministrationThe Wall Street Journal

40 trillion cubic feet

0

1980 ’90 ’00 ’10 ’20 ’30 ’40

10

20

30

FORECAST

23.02011

33.12040

AgenceFrance-Presse/Getty

Images

CAIRO—Tens of thousands ofsupporters and opponents ofEgypt’s president clashedWednesday, hurling rocks andMolotov cocktails and brawlingin Cairo’s streets, in the largestviolent battle between Islamistsand their foes since the country’srevolution early last year.

The confrontation started inthe evening after Islamist protest-ers marching in support of Presi-dent Mohammed Morsi, a formerleader of the Muslim Brother-hood, moved to break up a dem-onstration by the president’s non-Islamist opponents outside thepresidential palace in Cairo,where Mr. Morsi has his offices.

Supporters of the rival camps,spurred by public defiance by in-fluential figures on each side,waged back-and-forth battles inside streets outside the palacewalls as night fell, shutting downmajor thoroughfares. Aroundmidnight, police formed a barrierbetween the camps, with thou-sands of demonstrators on eachside, as gunshots rang out andeach side accused the other offiring live rounds.

Those allegations couldn’t beconfirmed. More than 120 peoplewere wounded, Egyptian medicssaid late Wednesday. The MuslimBrotherhood said at least one ofits supporters had been killed,while opposition officials saidtwo of their supporters had died.A local television channel, ONTV,showed images of two people itsaid were killed in the clashes,and said violence was spreadingelsewhere in Cairo.

The Obama administration ex-PleaseturntopageA12

BY CHARLES LEVINSONAND MATT BRADLEY

Egypt SeesLargestClash SinceRevolution

personalJournal.

Fired Up OverSmall Satellites | 13D

BAY AreaBAY Area Emerald CityThe Cool Color for 2013

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

Run some of your applications in the Oracle Cloudand others in your Private Cloud. You Choose.

Oracle CloudApplications, Platform, Infrastructure

Our Data Center Your Data Center

and

OracleCloud

Oracle ManagedPrivate Cloud

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P2JW341000-5-A00100-1--------NC