1
YELLOW ***** TUESDAY, APRIL 30, 2013 ~ VOL. CCLXI NO. 100 WSJ.com HHHH $2.00 CONTENTS Business Tech............ B4 CFO Journal................. B7 Corporate News B1-3,6 Global Finance............ C3 Health & Wellness D1-4 Heard on Street ..... C10 In the Markets........... C4 Leisure & Arts............ D5 Opinion.................. A15-17 Sports.............................. D6 U.S. News................. A2-8 Weather Watch ........ B7 World News ......... A9-13 DJIA 14818.75 À 106.20 0.7% NASDAQ 3307.02 À 0.85% NIKKEI Closed (13884.13) STOXX 600 297.39 À 0.5% 10-YR. TREAS. À 1/32 , yield 1.667% OIL $94.50 À $1.50 GOLD $1,467.40 À $13.80 EURO $1.3099 YEN 97.76 s Copyright 2013 Dow Jones & Company. All Rights Reserved Vital Signs Consumer spending, which accounts for more than two-thirds of U.S. eco- nomic activity, rose a sea- sonally adjusted 0.3% from the prior month after ad- justing for inflation. Con- sumers have slowed saving to offset higher payroll taxes since Jan. 1. A recent decline in gasoline prices, along with other downward pressure on inflation, also is propping up consumers de- spite slow wage gains. A8 Change from previous month in personal consumption Source: Commerce Department 2012 '13 –0.2 0 0.2 0.4% > F ederal prosecutors launched a criminal inves- tigation into whether corpo- rate directors misused govern- ment-sanctioned trading plans to sell company shares for in- vestment funds they run. A1 n Alfredo Sáenz, who helped turn Banco Santander into a global banking power, quit as CEO after a legal and po- litical controversy over his past criminal conviction. C1 n Kodak plans to turn over two businesses it was seek- ing to shed to U.K. retirees in exchange for wiping out a hefty pension obligation. B1 n The S&P 500 notched a re- cord close, finishing up 11.37 points, or 0.7%, at 1593.61. The Dow industrials gained 106.20 points, or 0.7%, to 14818.75. C4 n Deutsche Bank said it would raise $3.65 billion in fresh capital, giving in to pressure from investors and regulators to improve its capital base. C1 n Chrysler’s earnings fell 65% as the firm shipped fewer ve- hicles due to idled factories and higher retooling costs ahead of key new-vehicle launches. B3 n Alibaba struck a $586 mil- lion deal to acquire an 18% stake in Weibo, the influen- tial Chinese social-media outlet that is part of Sina. B1 n Occidental reversed plans to immediately replace CEO Steve Chazen, yielding to inves- tor pressure less than a week before its annual meeting. B6 n A settlement that ended suits against S&P, Moody’s and Mor- gan Stanley over mortgage- related deals will cost the firms a total of about $225 million. C3 n Sprint won approval from Japanese suitor SoftBank to gather more information about Dish Network’s com- peting takeover proposal. B3 n Japan’s industrial output rose for the fourth straight month in March, a sign the nation’s economy is continu- ing a gradual recovery. A11 n Loretta Fredy Bush,a onetime American success story in China, was sentenced to one month in prison for a U.S. tax violation. C3 n Richard Branson’s space- tourism venture cleared an important hurdle with the first powered test flight of its SpaceShipTwo craft. B2 n Nielsen is expected to an- nounce that it is testing a tool to measure online viewing of TV shows, aiming to hone its tracking of digital audiences. B4 n Female DNA was found on a bomb in the Boston attacks. Investigators cautioned there could be multiple explanations for why genetic material from someone other than the two suspects was found on bomb remnants. FBI agents visited the home of the parents of the widow of bombing suspect Ta- merlan Tsarnaev. A4 Russia revealed details about contacts between Tsarnaev and suspected Islamist radi- cals in the Caucasus. n Bangladeshi garment firms accused of forcing staff back to work in an unsafe building were under financial pressure due to political unrest. A1 n The U.S. is seeking to bridge a rift among Arab and Muslim allies that is imperil- ing efforts to respond to tur- moil in Syria and Egypt. A9 n A U.S. cargo plane crashed after takeoff in Afghanistan, killing seven. The coalition dis- missed Taliban claims it had shot down the aircraft. A13 n Karzai admitted receiving money from the CIA over the past 10 years but dismissed the sum as a “small amount.” A13 n Japan and Russia agreed to resume talks aimed at solving a long-standing territorial dis- pute over a group of islands. A11 n Five car bombs struck in mostly Shiite areas of Iraq, kill- ing 36, in the latest wave of vi- olence roiling the country. A12 n The Supreme Court rebuffed Alabama over a law making it a crime to “harbor” or trans- port illegal immigrants. A2 n The court upheld a Virginia law that limits out-of-state resi- dents’ access to records. A2 n A Mississippi man charged with sending ricin-laced let- ters to Obama and others was ordered held without bond. A2 n A jury is set to begin delib- erating murder charges against a Philadelphia abortion doctor accused in five deaths. A2 n North Korea denied per- mission for seven South Kore- ans to exit a joint industrial park in a wage dispute. A12 n Italy’s new leader pledged to cut taxes and increase aid for the neediest and won his first confidence vote. A10 n The Treasury Department said it would pay down the national debt this quarter for the first time in six years. A6 n NBA veteran Jason Collins became the first active male player in the four big U.S. pro sports to come out as gay. D6 Business & Finance World-Wide Follow the news all day at WSJ.com Getty Images TODAY IN PERSONAL JOURNAL Heart-Attack Risk Starts Younger PLUS Doctors’ Tricks to Get You Motivated What’s News– i i i i i i Federal prosecutors launched a criminal investigation into whether corporate directors mis- used government-sanctioned trading plans to sell company shares for investment funds they run. The U.S. attorney’s office for the Eastern District of New York issued subpoenas requesting in- formation from companies and funds cited in an April 25 page- one article in The Wall Street Journal that highlighted trading at three companies by directors who also run funds, a person fa- miliar with the probe says. The investigation is an out- growth of another criminal probe, led by the U.S. attorney for the Southern District of New York and the Securities and Ex- change Commission, into trading by company insiders. Spokespeople for the SEC and the Eastern and Southern dis- tricts declined to comment. At issue are preset trading ar- rangements known as 10b5-1 plans, initiated by the SEC in 2000. The plans allow corporate executives and nonexecutive di- rectors a way to sell some shares despite potentially having knowledge of nonpublic informa- tion about their companies, though such plans must be set up when the executive doesn’t possess inside information. Prosecutors are interested in whether insiders are using such plans to shed their positions when they are privy to private information about companies, the person familiar with the probe said. There haven’t been any allegations of wrongdoing. The development comes as Please turn to page A4 By Susan Pulliam, Rob Barry and Scott Patterson Insider-Trading Probe Trains Lens on Boards DHAKA, Bangladesh—Factory owners accused of forcing staff back to work in a building shortly before it collapsed and killed about 400 people last week were under financial pressure because political unrest had scared off buyers, com- pany executives said. The companies lost orders to ri- val garment makers in other coun- tries after protests in Bangladesh since February led to strikes and port blockades ahead of elections next year. The $20-billion-a-year garment industry had lost $500 million in export orders due to the earlier turmoil, the Bangladesh Garment Manufacturers and Exporters As- sociation said this month. Western buyers had shifted many of those orders to India, it said, warning that some of the three million jobs in the sector were at risk if insta- bility continued. Workers for all five factories in the building said in interviews they were urged by factory man- agers Wednesday morning to re- turn to work at Rana Plaza, in Sa- var, a commercial hub north of Dhaka, despite warnings from en- gineers that an exterior crack on the building made it unsafe. It col- lapsed hours later. Just before last week’s disaster, two of the factories—Phantom Ap- parels Ltd. and Phantom Tac Ltd.— were rushing to complete an order from Spanish fast-fashion retailer Mango MNG Holding SL, said fac- tory executives who survived the building collapse. Those two factories, owned by Aminul Islam, a Dhaka-based busi- Please turn to page A9 BY SYED ZAIN AL-MAHMOOD Doomed Factories Raced to Fill Orders OAKLAND, Calif.—The Service Employees International Union is locked in battle here with an unusual opponent: another union. SEIU has enjoyed years of rapid growth even as organized labor has withered in the U.S. Now, it is competing with the National Union of Healthcare Workers to represent 45,000 nursing aides, pharmacy techni- cians and janitors at health-care giant Kaiser Permanente. The fight is playing out in cafeterias and break rooms, where NUHW supporters and organizers in bright red T-shirts have clashed in recent weeks with purple-clad SEIU backers. The National Labor Relations Board will begin counting ballots of Kaiser Permanente workers on Wednesday. The board threw out the results of a previous election in 2010, which the SEIU won, af- ter finding that the SEIU had threatened members who backed the NUHW. The SEIU has earned a repu- tation in recent years as a po- tent political player. In the 2012 election, it emerged as the top outside spender on Democratic campaigns. As of last fall, the union had funded roughly $70 million in campaign donations, television ads and voter mobili- zation efforts, according to Fed- eral Election Commission filings. It is currently helping lead orga- nized labor’s campaign to per- suade Congress to pass an immi- gration bill that would ease the path to citizenship for immi- grant workers. Losing Kaiser could lead to more defections at other SEIU-represented hospitals in California, where the union has a third of its 1.9 million mem- bers. SEIU last year lost 45,000 members—the big- Please turn to page A14 BY KRIS MAHER Powerful Union, Upstart Battle Over Shrinking Pie Wigged Out: Hong Kong’s Lawyers Bristle Over Horsehair Headpieces i i i Holdover From British Rule Causes Legal Split; ‘It’s Magical’ In hypermodern Hong Kong, a debate over 17th-century fashion is dividing the city’s legal circles. The city’s lawyers are among the last in the world to wear judi- cial wigs, those curly, horsehair headpieces that are a legacy of more than 150 years of British co- lonial rule. The affection is so great that one group of lawyers that doesn’t wear wigs wants the right to don them. The city’s wig- wearers are resisting. The feud has ignited passions over the wigs. “When I wear my wig, I know something big is go- ing to happen,” said Jacky Lai, a Hong Kong lawyer. “It makes me feel like I have more responsibil- ity. I think I exude more energy than without it. It’s magical.” Others say the wigs, and the robes that go with them, are anachronistic or ill-suited to Hong Kong’s subtropical climate. The city’s courtrooms are heavily air- conditioned, partly to keep law- yers cool, says lawyer Kevin Tang. “People complain, but it’s because all the counsel are dressed up—they have to make sure they don’t faint.” The split over wigs mirrors the divide in Hong Kong’s legal profes- sion. As in the U.K. and some former British colo- nies, Hong Kong’s lawyers are split between solici- tors, who work directly with clients, and barris- ters, who represent those clients in court. The difference has historically been easy to spot: Bar- risters, like judges, work in an elaborate uniform of robes topped with hand-woven hairpieces. For years, solicitors have been expanding their professional reach into areas traditionally considered barristers’ turf. In 2010, solicitors in Hong Kong gained the right to apply for a spe- cial status that would al- low them to represent their clients in higher courts. But Please turn to page A14 Barrister’s wig BY TE-PING CHEN AND ALLISON MORROW Violence Spirals as American Allies Bicker Over Syria FIERY: A bomb struck the convoy of Prime Minister al-Halqi, who wasn’t hurt, in Damascus, as Arab nations continued to spar over which rebels to support. A9 Associated Press Source: Labor Dept. The Wall Street Journal Organizing Retreat SEIU’s rapid member growth recently turned to a loss amid the weak economy and public-sector layoffs. 2.0 0 0.5 1.0 1.5 million 2005 '07 '09 '11 Screen image simulated. ©2013 BlackBerry. All rights reserved. BlackBerry® and related trademarks, names and logos are the property of Research In Motion Limited and are registered and/or used in the U.S. and countries around the world. All other trademarks are the property of their respective owners. ]STOP[PAUSING] ]AND][]STARTPEEKING.] The BlackBerry ® Z10 with a new way to check messages. See it in action at blackberry.com/z10 C M Y K Composite Composite MAGENTA CYAN BLACK P2JW120000-5-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 BGN,BMT,BRX,CCA,CHR,CKP,CPD,CXT,DNV,DRG,HAW,HLD,KCS,LAG,LAT,LKD,MIA,MLJ,NMX,PAL,PHI,PVN,SEA,TDM,TUS,UTA,WOK P2JW120000-5-A00100-1--------XA

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Page 1: TODAYINPERSONAL JOURNAL Heart-AttackRiskStartsYoungeronline.wsj.com/public/resources/documents/pageone0430.pdflitical controversy over his past criminal conviction. C1 n Kodak plans

YELLOW

* * * * * TUESDAY, APRIL 30, 2013 ~ VOL. CCLXI NO. 100 WSJ.com HHHH $2 .00

CONTENTSBusiness Tech............ B4CFO Journal................. B7Corporate News B1-3,6Global Finance............ C3Health & Wellness D1-4Heard on Street..... C10

In the Markets........... C4Leisure & Arts............ D5Opinion.................. A15-17Sports.............................. D6U.S. News................. A2-8Weather Watch........ B7World News......... A9-13

DJIA 14818.75 À 106.20 0.7% NASDAQ 3307.02 À 0.85% NIKKEI Closed (13884.13) STOXX600 297.39 À 0.5% 10-YR. TREAS. À 1/32 , yield 1.667% OIL $94.50 À $1.50 GOLD $1,467.40 À $13.80 EURO $1.3099 YEN 97.76

s Copyright 2013 Dow Jones & Company. All Rights Reserved

Vital Signs

Consumer spending,which accounts for morethan two-thirds of U.S. eco-nomic activity, rose a sea-sonally adjusted 0.3% fromthe prior month after ad-justing for inflation. Con-sumers have slowed savingto offset higher payrolltaxes since Jan. 1. A recentdecline in gasoline prices,along with other downwardpressure on inflation, also ispropping up consumers de-spite slow wage gains. A8

Change from previous monthin personal consumption

Source: Commerce Department

2012 '13

–0.2

0

0.2

0.4%

>

Federal prosecutorslaunched a criminal inves-

tigation into whether corpo-rate directors misused govern-ment-sanctioned trading plansto sell company shares for in-vestment funds they run. A1n Alfredo Sáenz, who helpedturn Banco Santander into aglobal banking power, quitas CEO after a legal and po-litical controversy over hispast criminal conviction. C1n Kodak plans to turn overtwo businesses it was seek-ing to shed to U.K. retireesin exchange for wiping out ahefty pension obligation. B1n The S&P 500 notched a re-cord close, finishing up 11.37points, or 0.7%, at 1593.61. TheDow industrials gained 106.20points, or 0.7%, to 14818.75. C4nDeutsche Bank said it wouldraise $3.65 billion in freshcapital, giving in to pressurefrom investors and regulatorsto improve its capital base. C1nChrysler’s earnings fell 65%as the firm shipped fewer ve-hicles due to idled factories andhigher retooling costs ahead ofkey new-vehicle launches. B3n Alibaba struck a $586 mil-lion deal to acquire an 18%stake in Weibo, the influen-tial Chinese social-mediaoutlet that is part of Sina. B1n Occidental reversed plansto immediately replace CEOSteve Chazen, yielding to inves-tor pressure less than a weekbefore its annual meeting. B6nA settlement that ended suitsagainst S&P, Moody’s andMor-gan Stanley over mortgage-related deals will cost the firmsa total of about $225million. C3n Sprint won approval fromJapanese suitor SoftBank togather more informationabout Dish Network’s com-peting takeover proposal. B3n Japan’s industrial outputrose for the fourth straightmonth in March, a sign thenation’s economy is continu-ing a gradual recovery. A11n Loretta Fredy Bush, aonetime American successstory in China, was sentencedto one month in prison for aU.S. tax violation. C3n Richard Branson’s space-tourism venture cleared animportant hurdle with thefirst powered test flight ofits SpaceShipTwo craft. B2n Nielsen is expected to an-nounce that it is testing a toolto measure online viewing ofTV shows, aiming to hone itstracking of digital audiences. B4

n Female DNAwas found ona bomb in the Boston attacks.Investigators cautioned therecould be multiple explanationsfor why genetic material fromsomeone other than the twosuspects was found on bombremnants. FBI agents visitedthe home of the parents of thewidow of bombing suspect Ta-merlan Tsarnaev. A4Russia revealed details aboutcontacts between Tsarnaevand suspected Islamist radi-cals in the Caucasus.nBangladeshi garment firmsaccused of forcing staff backto work in an unsafe buildingwere under financial pressuredue to political unrest. A1nThe U.S. is seeking tobridge a rift among Arab andMuslim allies that is imperil-ing efforts to respond to tur-moil in Syria and Egypt. A9nAU.S. cargo plane crashedafter takeoff in Afghanistan,killing seven. The coalition dis-missed Taliban claims it hadshot down the aircraft.A13nKarzai admitted receivingmoney from the CIA over thepast 10 years but dismissed thesum as a “small amount.”A13n Japan and Russia agreed toresume talks aimed at solvinga long-standing territorial dis-pute over a groupof islands.A11nFive car bombs struck inmostly Shiite areas of Iraq, kill-ing 36, in the latest wave of vi-olence roiling the country.A12nTheSupremeCourt rebuffedAlabama over a law making ita crime to “harbor” or trans-port illegal immigrants. A2nThecourtupheld aVirginialaw that limits out-of-state resi-dents’ access to records.A2nAMississippi man chargedwith sending ricin-laced let-ters to Obama and others wasordered held without bond. A2nA jury is set to begin delib-eratingmurder charges againsta Philadelphia abortion doctoraccused in five deaths.A2nNorth Korea denied per-mission for seven South Kore-ans to exit a joint industrialpark in a wage dispute. A12n Italy’s new leader pledgedto cut taxes and increase aidfor the neediest and won hisfirst confidence vote. A10n The Treasury Departmentsaid it would pay down thenational debt this quarter forthe first time in six years. A6nNBA veteran Jason Collinsbecame the first active maleplayer in the four big U.S. prosports to come out as gay. D6

Business&Finance World-Wide

Follow the news all day at WSJ.com

Getty

Images

TODAY IN PERSONAL JOURNAL

Heart-Attack Risk Starts YoungerPLUS Doctors’ Tricks to Get You Motivated

What’s News–i i i i i i

Federal prosecutors launcheda criminal investigation intowhether corporate directors mis-used government-sanctionedtrading plans to sell companyshares for investment funds theyrun.

The U.S. attorney’s office forthe Eastern District of New Yorkissued subpoenas requesting in-formation from companies andfunds cited in an April 25 page-one article in The Wall StreetJournal that highlighted tradingat three companies by directorswho also run funds, a person fa-miliar with the probe says.

The investigation is an out-

growth of another criminalprobe, led by the U.S. attorneyfor the Southern District of NewYork and the Securities and Ex-change Commission, into tradingby company insiders.

Spokespeople for the SEC andthe Eastern and Southern dis-tricts declined to comment.

At issue are preset trading ar-rangements known as 10b5-1plans, initiated by the SEC in2000. The plans allow corporate

executives and nonexecutive di-rectors a way to sell some sharesdespite potentially havingknowledge of nonpublic informa-tion about their companies,though such plans must be setup when the executive doesn’tpossess inside information.

Prosecutors are interested inwhether insiders are using suchplans to shed their positionswhen they are privy to privateinformation about companies,the person familiar with theprobe said. There haven’t beenany allegations of wrongdoing.

The development comes asPleaseturntopageA4

By Susan Pulliam,Rob Barry

and Scott Patterson

Insider-TradingProbeTrains Lens onBoards

DHAKA, Bangladesh—Factoryowners accused of forcing staffback to work in a building shortlybefore it collapsed and killed about400 people last week were underfinancial pressure because politicalunrest had scared off buyers, com-pany executives said.

The companies lost orders to ri-val garment makers in other coun-tries after protests in Bangladeshsince February led to strikes andport blockades ahead of electionsnext year.

The $20-billion-a-year garmentindustry had lost $500 million inexport orders due to the earlierturmoil, the Bangladesh GarmentManufacturers and Exporters As-sociation said this month. Westernbuyers had shifted many of thoseorders to India, it said, warningthat some of the three million jobsin the sector were at risk if insta-bility continued.

Workers for all five factories inthe building said in interviewsthey were urged by factory man-agers Wednesday morning to re-turn to work at Rana Plaza, in Sa-var, a commercial hub north ofDhaka, despite warnings from en-gineers that an exterior crack onthe building made it unsafe. It col-lapsed hours later.

Just before last week’s disaster,two of the factories—Phantom Ap-parels Ltd. and Phantom Tac Ltd.—were rushing to complete an orderfrom Spanish fast-fashion retailerMango MNG Holding SL, said fac-tory executives who survived thebuilding collapse.

Those two factories, owned byAminul Islam, a Dhaka-based busi-

PleaseturntopageA9

BY SYED ZAIN AL-MAHMOOD

DoomedFactoriesRaced toFillOrders

OAKLAND, Calif.—The ServiceEmployees International Unionis locked in battle here with anunusual opponent: anotherunion.

SEIU has enjoyed years ofrapid growth even as organizedlabor has withered in the U.S.Now, it is competing with theNational Union of HealthcareWorkers to represent 45,000nursing aides, pharmacy techni-cians and janitors at health-caregiant Kaiser Permanente. Thefight is playing out in cafeteriasand break rooms, where NUHWsupporters and organizers inbright red T-shirts have clashedin recent weeks with purple-clad SEIU backers.

The National Labor Relations Board will begincounting ballots of Kaiser Permanente workers onWednesday. The board threw out the results of aprevious election in 2010, which the SEIU won, af-

ter finding that the SEIU hadthreatened members who backedthe NUHW.

The SEIU has earned a repu-tation in recent years as a po-tent political player. In the 2012election, it emerged as the topoutside spender on Democraticcampaigns. As of last fall, theunion had funded roughly $70million in campaign donations,television ads and voter mobili-zation efforts, according to Fed-eral Election Commission filings.It is currently helping lead orga-nized labor’s campaign to per-suade Congress to pass an immi-gration bill that would ease thepath to citizenship for immi-grant workers.

Losing Kaiser could lead to more defections atother SEIU-represented hospitals in California,where the union has a third of its 1.9 million mem-bers. SEIU last year lost 45,000 members—the big-

PleaseturntopageA14

BY KRIS MAHER

Powerful Union, UpstartBattle Over Shrinking Pie

Wigged Out: Hong Kong’s Lawyers Bristle Over Horsehair Headpiecesi i i

Holdover From British Rule Causes Legal Split; ‘It’s Magical’

In hypermodern Hong Kong, adebate over 17th-century fashionis dividing the city’s legal circles.

The city’s lawyers are amongthe last in the world to wear judi-cial wigs, those curly, horsehairheadpieces that are a legacy ofmore than 150 years of British co-lonial rule. The affection is sogreat that one group of lawyersthat doesn’t wear wigs wants theright to don them. The city’s wig-wearers are resisting.

The feud has ignited passionsover the wigs. “When I wear mywig, I know something big is go-ing to happen,” said Jacky Lai, aHong Kong lawyer. “It makes mefeel like I have more responsibil-ity. I think I exude more energythan without it. It’s magical.”

Others say the wigs, and therobes that go with them, areanachronistic or ill-suited to HongKong’s subtropical climate. Thecity’s courtrooms are heavily air-conditioned, partly to keep law-yers cool, says lawyer Kevin Tang.“People complain, but it’s because

all the counsel aredressed up—they have tomake sure they don’tfaint.”

The split over wigsmirrors the divide inHong Kong’s legal profes-sion. As in the U.K. andsome former British colo-nies, Hong Kong’s lawyersare split between solici-tors, who work directlywith clients, and barris-ters, who represent thoseclients in court. The difference hashistorically been easy to spot: Bar-

risters, like judges, workin an elaborate uniformof robes topped withhand-woven hairpieces.

For years, solicitorshave been expandingtheir professional reachinto areas traditionallyconsidered barristers’turf. In 2010, solicitors inHong Kong gained theright to apply for a spe-cial status that would al-low them to represent

their clients in higher courts. ButPleaseturntopageA14

Barrister’s wig

BY TE-PING CHENAND ALLISON MORROW

Violence Spirals as American Allies Bicker Over Syria

FIERY: A bomb struck the convoy of Prime Minister al-Halqi, who wasn’t hurt, in Damascus, as Arab nations continued to spar over which rebels to support. A9

AssociatedPress

Source: Labor Dept.

The Wall Street Journal

Organizing RetreatSEIU’s rapid member growthrecently turned to a loss amidthe weak economy andpublic-sector layoffs.2.0

0

0.5

1.0

1.5

million

2005 '07 '09 '11

Screen image simulated. ©2013 BlackBerry. All rights reserved. BlackBerry® and related trademarks, names and logosare the property of Research In Motion Limited and are registered and/or used in the U.S. and countries around the world.

All other trademarks are the property of their respective owners.

]]STOP[PAUSING]]AND][]START PEEKING.]

The BlackBerry® Z10with a new way tocheck messages.

See it in action at blackberry.com/z10

CM Y K CompositeCompositeMAGENTA CYAN BLACK

P2JW120000-5-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,WEBGN,BMT,BRX,CCA,CHR,CKP,CPD,CXT,DNV,DRG,HAW,HLD,KCS,LAG,LAT,LKD,MIA,MLJ,NMX,PAL,PHI,PVN,SEA,TDM,TUS,UTA,WOK

P2JW120000-5-A00100-1--------XA