P2JW091000-4-B00100-1--------XA CMYK Composite 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 TECHNOLOGY B4, B5 | CFO JOURNAL B8 | WEATHER B8 Shareholders Promoting Social Issues Win Ground Caterpillar Deferred $2.4 Billion in Taxes GOVERNANCE B8 TAX LAW B3 © 2014 Dow Jones & Company. All Rights Reserved. Gilead’s new hepatitis C drug, Sovaldi, is fast outpacing its older rival, Incivek. Weekly U.S. prescriptions Sovaldi 7,159 8,000 15 weeks after its Dec. ’13 launch 7,000 6,000 5,000 4,000 3,000 Incivek 2,268 15 weeks after its May ’11 launch 2,000 1,000 0 0 1 2 3 Months after drug’s launch Sources: Mark Schoenebaum, ISI Group The Wall Street Journal $1,000-a-Day Hepatitis C DrugIsRapid Blockbuster BY JONATHAN D. ROCKOFF A hepatitis C pill from Gilead Sciences Inc. that costs $1,000 a day is on track to notch among the biggest sales ever for the first year of a newly approved drug, showing just how hard it is for insurers to curb the use of pricey life-saving medicines. The drug, called Sovaldi, is the first in a new generation of hepatitis C therapies that promise to cure more patients than older therapies. It could ring up $5 billion in U.S. sales this year if current prescription patterns hold. Some analysts say the figure might reach $9 billion. By comparison, AbbVie Inc.’s Humira, a treatment for rheumatoid arthritis, was the biggestselling drug last year with $10.7 billion in world-wide sales. Such heavy sales for Sovaldi, so soon after the drug’s approval just last December, threaten the bottom lines of many insurers, analysts say. Wells Fargo Securities analyst Peter Costa figures that hepatitis C treatments will cost the 10 largest publicly traded insurers $798 million more than they did in 2013. Sovaldi carries a list price of $84,000 for a 12-week course of treatment. The cost has spurred pushback among some payers and public officials, who say the price is too high for a drug with such a broad potential market. Some 3.2 million people in the U.S. are believed to carry hepatitis C—many of whom contracted it through intravenous drug use. Chronic infections that go untreated kill 15,000 Americans each year, and are a leading reaPlease turn to the next page Tuesday, April 1, 2014 | B1 Size, Cost of GM’s Recalls Mount Finger-Pointing Between Car Maker and Regulators Begins; Another 1.5 Million Cars Added to Recall BY SIOBHAN HUGHES AND JEFF BENNETT WASHINGTON—Capitol Hill is gearing up for a showdown Tuesday that will pit General Motors Co. against federal regulators about who is to blame for car defects now linked to 13 crash deaths. Separately, GM on Monday recalled another 1.5 million vehicles world-wide to fix steering system problems and more than doubled to $750 million its estimate of the hit to firstquarter results from recalls that now cover 6.3 million cars and trucks. That includes the 2.6 million vehicles linked to the ignition defect that will be at the center of congressional hearings Tuesday and Wednesday. Tuesday’s hearing, before a House subcommittee, will star GM Chief Executive Mary Barra as well as David Friedman, the acting head of the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration. The hearing promises a round of finger-pointing over where the blame lies for a nearly decadelong delay between the recalls that began this February and when GM engineers knew there were problems with ignition switches designed for the 2005 Chevrolet Cobalt. Engineers discovered it was easy to jostle the keys out of the “on” position while the car was running, cutting power to the air bags, power brakes and power steering. GM has since linked 13 deaths to accidents in which air bags didn’t deploy in the re- Matt McLoone for The Wall Street Journal Taking Off THE WALL STREET JOURNAL. **** Monica Cortinas, left, and her mother, Rosie Cortinas, discuss the death of 23-year-old Amador Cortinas in a Chevrolet Cobalt accident. B2. called vehicles. According to disclosures by GM and House investigators, executives at the auto maker decided not to delay the 2004 release of the Cobalt, which was an important piece of GM’s strategy for bolstering North American earnings. That strategy ultimately failed. GM filed for bankruptcy protection in 2009 and was taken over by the U.S. government, which owned a stake in the company until last December. Some lawmakers have signaled that they have questions about whether government ownership played any role in the handling of the ignition- switch matter. NHTSA took blows in a memo released Sunday by investigators for the House Energy and Commerce Committee’s Republican majority, which pointed to decisions by the agency in 2007 and 2010 not to pursue complaints about air bags that failed to deploy in crashes involving now-recalled GM cars. “GM had critical informaPlease turn to the next page Online>> Follow live coverage of CEO Mary Barra’s testimony at 2 p.m. ET at WSJ.com/Business Chamber of Commerce Comes to Silicon Valley BY JONATHAN KRIM The U.S. Chamber of Commerce, among the most powerful business lobbying organizations in Washington, is planning a second outpost in Silicon Valley in an effort to broaden its membership and clout. The Chamber is expected to announce Tuesday that its second-in-command, David Chavern, 51, will relinquish his role as chief operating officer to lead the initiative. Mr. Chavern has been meeting with Silicon Valley entrepreneurs and leaders to both lay out the Chamber’s plans and to hear ideas on how the group can best help technology executives. Their businesses are increasingly confronting thorny public-policy issues, such as im- migration, privacy and taxation. The Chamber’s move is recognition that it hasn’t been a factor in representing the fastest-growing sector in the economy. Mr. Chavern said that while some major tech companies belong to the organization, he is focused on getting more small and midsize tech firms to join, as well as venture capitalists and other investors. The Chamber, which was founded in 1912, doesn’t disclose specific companies among its more than 300,000 members. “Too often we get tagged as being about the old economy,” Mr. Chavern said in an interview. “But our core messages are all forward-leaning.” Mr. Chavern said he hopes that the Chamber’s pro-business, low-tax, minimal regulation views will fit the sen- sibilities of technology companies. “The best representatives of our ideals are here” in Silicon Valley, he said. Mr. Chavern has tried to establish his own links to the Valley, making a personal investment in a mobile software company called Humin. That company’s co-founder and CEO, Ankur Jain, has in turn connected Mr. Chavern with others in the industry. “If the regulatory environment doesn’t understand these changes, it will not be able to protect consumers in the long term or allow the future of our nation’s economy to thrive,” said Mr. Jain in an interview. But the Chamber’s success in Silicon Valley is a question. Big tech companies already have active lobbying shops in Washington, and there are myriad technology trade groups. The Chamber has overwhelmingly backed Republican candidates in recent election cycles, and some of its positions aren’t universally popular in Silicon Valley. Apple Inc. quit the Chamber in 2009 after deciding the group was fighting against measures that would limit greenhouse gas emissions. Yahoo Inc. didn’t renew its membership in 2010, for undisclosed reasons. To some in the libertarianleaning Valley, the Chamber also is part of what is wrong with Washington: Lobbying for hire, a political system fueled by money and hyper-partisanship. In 2013, the Chamber and its subsidiaries spent $74.4 million on lobbying. It also sought to help take control of the Senate from the Democratic Party in the 2012 elections, though the effort failed. This year, the Chamber has angered some Tea Party conservatives by declaring it will work in primaries to defeat GOP candidates it deems too extreme to be electable in general elections. “I don’t really think we need them here,” said Carl Bass, CEO of software maker Autodesk Inc. He said he doesn’t think the Chamber’s politics and positions will sit well with the broad Valley constituency. Mr. Chavern said he seeks to “focus less on party than position... The middle is getting emptier all the time, and that’s a problem.” The Diet Soda Business Is in Free Fall Future of B-School BY MIKE ESTERL Thunderbird Is Still Up in the Air Not S Not So oS Sweet weet Volu Vo Volume lume lu me sales sal ales es o off diet diet sodas sod odas as continued con onti tinu ti nued nu ed to to fa fallll faster fas aste terr than te than rregular egul eg ular ul ar soft sof oftt drinks drin dr inks in ks last las astt ye year year. ar.. ar Bloomberg News Sprite Spri Sp rite ri te Coke Z Coke Zero ero er o Dr Pepper Pep eppe perr pe Coke Coke Mt. De Mt. Dew w Diet M Diet Mt. t. D Dew ew Peps Pe Pepsi-Cola psips i-Co iCola Co la Fant Fa Fanta nta nt a Diet C Diet Coke okee ok Diet P Diet Pepsi epsi ep si –7% BY MELISSA KORN –6% –5% –4% –3% –2% –1% 1% The Wall Street Journal Source: Beverage Digest billion gallons last year, the first yearly decline since 2009, despite a 4.7% rise in bottled water volumes. There are some areas of growth, however. Beverage Marketing estimated that U.S. volumes of caffeinated energy drinks and ready-to-drink coffee rose 5.5% and 6.2% last year, respectively. Sales of sports drinks edged up 0.6%, though volumes of fruit drinks dropped 1.9%. Diet sodas represent nearly a third of U.S. soda sales but have posted three straight years of declines. A growing number of Americans are worried that aspartame 0% and other artificial sweeteners are unhealthy, despite decades of studies by the Food and Drug Administration and other government agencies having found them to be safe. There is also a debate over how diet drinks might affect metabolism. Sales volumes of full-calorie Coke, the top-selling U.S. soda, slipped 0.5% last year but Diet Coke plunged 6.8%, according to Beverage Digest. Consumption of Pepsi-Cola and Diet Pepsi dropped 3.6% and 6.9%, respectively. Diet Mountain Dew also declined more sharply than regular Mountain Dew, according to the data service. Coke said Monday it is committed to expanding its U.S. soda business again through “increased investment, better execution and new innovation.’’ PepsiCo, meanwhile, said it has a “diverse, well-positioned’’ portfolio in several growth areas, including its Gatorade sports drinks and Lipton teas. Beverage giant Coke is far more exposed to soda than chief rival PepsiCo, which also has a huge snacks business. About 60% of Coke’s U.S. revenue comes from soda, compared with roughly 25% at PepsiCo. The bulk of Dr Pepper’s sales are also tied to soda. The Thunderbird School of Global Management is back at the bargaining table after an accreditor effectively quashed a proposed deal with Laureate Education Inc., which operates a network of for- and nonprofit universities, last month. On Monday Thunderbird’s president, Larry Edward Penley, said the deal with Laureate— which would have supplied muchneeded cash and an avenue to expand abroad with Laureate’s 80school network—won’t go forward as proposed. While that doesn’t rule out an alliance with Laureate, the Glendale, Ariz.-based business school has contacted other institutions to signal it is again open to a deal, Dr. Penley said. Laureate has encouraged Thunderbird to reach out to other partners, according to its chief executive. One official at a school that has been approached by Thunderbird in recent weeks said the leadership there worries that the business school is seeking a fast fix. “They were getting married to Laureate. They’re looking for another partner a week later,” the official said, adding that such haste makes that school “uneasy.” The development is the latest P2JW091000-4-B00100-1--------XA Composite A nearly decade-long decline in U.S. carbonated soft drink sales accelerated last year as more Americans turned their backs on artificially sweetened diet sodas, according to data published Monday. The drop-off is a mounting problem for industry giants CocaCola Co., PepsiCo Inc. and Dr Pepper Snapple Group Inc., which have long depended on zero-calorie sodas to make up the difference as Americans became increasingly concerned about the health effects of sugared drinks. Overall soda volumes fell an estimated 3% in 2013, the ninth straight yearly contraction and more than double the 1.2% decline in 2012, according to Beverage Digest. The trade publication and data service also estimated U.S. retail sales of carbonated soft drinks shrank 1% to $76.3 billion, the first downturn in dollar terms in at least 15 years, indicating that the companies were unable last year to offset volume declines by raising prices. There is no sign that 2014 will be any better. U.S. store sales of soda were down 1.9% in dollar terms for the 12 weeks ended March 15, according to Citi Research, which cited Nielsen scanner data. The soda falloff is weighing on overall beverage sales. Beverage Marketing Corp., another industry tracker, estimated Monday that U.S. purchases of nonalcoholic drinks slipped 0.1% to 30.21 twist in a saga that has exposed Thunderbird’s precarious position in the marketplace and led to open revolt among some alumni and trustees, who formed a separate alumni group to question the board’s decision-making process and attempt a rescue of the school. Thunderbird ended fiscal 2013 with an $8.7 million loss, more than double its prior-year loss, and had $5.6 million in cash and short-term investments as of June 30, according to its annual report. That reflected a $2.7 million decline in tuition revenue and a 62% drop-off in contributions. Thunderbird ended fiscal 2013 with an $8.7 million loss. Once recognized as the premier M.B.A. program for global business, Thunderbird enrolled 1,041 students across about a dozen degree programs this spring—nearly 300 fewer students than it had in its full-time M.B.A. alone in 2000. The next steps remain uncertain. The school started partPlease turn to the next page MAGENTA BLACK CYAN YELLOW
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