1
****** THURSDAY, JUNE 11, 2020 ~ VOL. CCLXXV NO. 136 WSJ.com HHHH $4.00 DJIA 26989.99 g 282.31 1.0% NASDAQ 10020.35 À 0.7% STOXX 600 368.15 g 0.4% 10-YR. TREAS. (New issue) , yield 0.744% OIL $39.60 À $0.66 GOLD $1,713.30 g $1.40 EURO $1.1379 YEN 107.12 Fed Plans To Keep Rates at Low Level For Years Unemployment in fourth quarter is forecast at about 10% amid economic damage stock deal, confirming an ear- lier report by The Wall Street Journal. Grubhub shareholders would receive 0.6710 Just Eat share for each Grubhub share, now worth just over $65 after a decline in Just Eat shares Wednesday. Based on Tuesday’s closing price, the deal values Grubhub at $7.3 billion. Uber and Grubhub had been negotiating a combination for weeks but the talks got bogged down over antitrust is- sues and Uber was already considering pulling the plug, according to people familiar with the matter. Uber said in a statement that the food-delivery industry will need to consolidate to reach its potential for consum- Please turn to page A8 You’re Not the Only One Who Forgot Things Under Lockdown i i i Even those with superior memories found monotony dulled their recall small coterie of people with an ability researchers have dubbed Highly Superior Autobiographi- cal Memory. HSAM individuals typically remember nearly ev- erything that has happened to them from a certain age, includ- ing the corresponding dates and days of the week. The pandemic upended all that. Researchers say repetitive sched- ules dim the ability for all of us to dredge up the recent past— and even those with some of the most powerful memories on Earth aren’t im- mune. Stay-at-home routines make it hard to affix things in time Please turn to page A10 Ask Markie Pasternak what she was doing on June 30, 2007, and she’ll quickly reminisce in detail: She rode her bike to Ice House Coffee & Creamery in De Pere, Wis., and over a mango smoothie, re- vealed to her cousin a crush on a boy from church. It was a Saturday. She was wearing a blue T-shirt from her figure-skat- ing team and Adidas AG shorts. Ask her what she was up to during quarantine, and her mind goes blank. This is unusual for Ms. Pas- ternak. Now 26, she is part of a BY JULIE STEINBERG Quarantine daze ers reached two weeks. About 30% of items were out of stock on some days. To keep delivery times from slipping further, Thrive made the previously unimag- inable decision to throttle demand by limiting shop- ping hours. “It was excruciating,” re- called co-founder and Chief Executive Nick Green. “It felt Please turn to page A10 Grubhub Jilts Uber For Europe’s Just Eat Grubhub Inc. agreed to combine with Europe’s Just Eat Takeaway.com NV, turning its back on Uber Technologies Inc. in a surprising twist in the scramble for mergers among food-delivery companies. The move would create a trans-Atlantic food-delivery giant at a time when industry players are seeking scale to help them cope with a land- scape that includes booming demand but also fierce compe- tition. Grubhub and Just Eat, which is based in the Nether- lands, said late Wednesday they plan to combine in all- By Cara Lombardo, Dana Cimilluca and Ben Dummett When coronavirus lock- downs sent Americans into a frenzy of panic buying, the bad news came almost as quickly as the good for online organic grocer Thrive Market. In March, the company that aims to compete with Amazon.com Inc. in the health-food sector suddenly found customers flocking to its site as its giant rival struggled to handle its own pandemic business surge. Thrive notched record sales and membership sign-ups. Then it buckled. Orders ballooned to five times what Thrive could handle. Deliv- ery times for some custom- BY SEBASTIAN HERRERA Police Barred From Using ID Software Amazon.com said it won’t let law enforcement use its facial- recognition technology........... A4 WASHINGTON—Federal Re- serve officials signaled plans to keep interest rates near zero for years and said they were studying how to provide more support to a U.S. economy bat- tered by the coronavirus and related shutdowns. “We are strongly committed to using our tools to do what- ever we can and for as long as it takes to provide some relief and stability,” Fed Chairman Jerome Powell said Wednesday at a virtual news conference af- ter a two-day policy meeting. The commitment from the central-bank chief comes as the virus has forced the nation into a recession, ending the longest economic expansion on record, and sent unemployment to post-World War II highs. In projections released Wednes- day, most of the 17 Fed officials who participate in the rate-set- ting meetings see the unem- ployment rate averaging be- tween 9% and 10% during the last three months of the year. That would be down from 13.3% in May but still well above the 3.5% level of February. Stocks were little changed, with the S&P 500 index closing down 17 points, or 0.5%, at 3190.14 after initially rallying following the Fed’s statement. Please turn to page A2 BY NICK TIMIRAOS and Infectious Diseases. Meant to determine a vaccine’s safety and effectiveness, they would mark the final stage of testing. Moderna Inc.’s vaccine is set to be first, starting in July, followed in August by one co- developed by Oxford Univer- sity and AstraZeneca PLC and in September by Johnson & Johnson’s, he said. The timetable suggests re- searchers are making rela- tively rapid progress advanc- ing their vaccines through earlier stages of testing—fo- cused on whether they are safe and induce the desired immune response—to at least merit the planning. “We will want to use the in- vestigative resources of the country as best we can to op- timize us getting an answer as quickly as possible,” said Larry Corey, a vaccine and infec- tious-disease specialist at the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Re- search Center in Seattle and member of a committee advis- ing the National Institutes of Health on the design of the coronavirus-vaccine trials. A Moderna spokesman con- firmed the plan for the NIH- funded trial of its vaccine. An AstraZeneca spokeswoman said the company’s recent con- tract with the U.S. Biomedical Advanced Research and Devel- opment Authority would sup- port a large study, which Barda previously said would begin in the summer. J&J said on Wednesday it plans to start the first human study of its vaccine in the sec- Please turn to page A7 The federal government plans to fund and conduct the decisive studies of three ex- perimental coronavirus vac- cines starting this summer, a lead government vaccine re- searcher said. These Phase 3 trials are ex- pected to involve tens of thou- sands of subjects at dozens of sites around the U.S., said John Mascola, director of the vaccine research center at the National Institute of Allergy BY PETER LOFTUS U.S. to Launch Advanced Trials Of Possible Vaccines This Summer Nascar Bans Confederate Flag Nascar said Wednesday it would forbid the Confederate flag’s display. Bubba Wallace, the racing association's only full-time black driver, raised the issue in the wake of nationwide Black Lives Matter protests. A4 Amazon Rivals Strain to Win Edge The pandemic offered an opportunity, but Thrive Market buckled under online surge Tyson Has A Deal To Avoid Charges Tyson Foods Inc., the lead- ing U.S. chicken producer, said it is cooperating in a Justice Department price-fixing inves- tigation under a leniency pro- gram that will allow the com- pany to avoid criminal prosecution in exchange for aiding in the continuing probe of other poultry suppliers. After receiving a grand jury subpoena in April 2019, Tyson discovered that some of its em- ployees were implicated in the alleged scheme. The company said it approached the Justice Department, disclosing its own actions and seeking leniency. “Tyson took appropriate ac- tions to address the internal issues and has been fully co- operating with the DOJ as part of its application for leniency under the DOJ’s Corporate Le- niency Program,” Tyson said in a statement provided to The Wall Street Journal. A Justice Department spokeswoman declined to comment. Tyson’s public acknowledg- ment of its role in the investi- gation comes a week after four chicken-industry executives, including employees of Pil- grim’s Pride Corp. and Claxton Poultry Farms, were indicted on charges of price fixing and bid rigging. The Justice De- partment alleged chicken com- pany executives and employ- ees for years exchanged details of their own pricing and that of competitors via phone calls and text messages, at the same time that they were negotiating supply deals with restaurants. The defendants include Pil- grim’s Pride Chief Executive Jayson Penn. All have pleaded Please turn to page A6 BY BRENT KENDALL AND JACOB BUNGE Jobless picture is clear despite report’s flaws........... A2 JARED C. TILTON/GETTY IMAGES CONTENTS Business & Finance B2,10 Business News... B3,6 Crossword.............. A14 Heard on Street... B12 Life & Arts....... A11-13 Markets..................... B11 Opinion.............. A15-17 Sports ....................... A14 Staying Inside Guide A13 Technology............... B4 U.S. News............. A2-7 Weather................... A14 World News... A8-9,18 s 2020 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved > What’s News The federal government plans to fund and conduct the decisive studies of three experimental corona- virus vaccines starting this summer, a lead government vaccine researcher said. A1 Amazon is halting law- enforcement use of its facial- recognition software, adding its voice to a chorus calling for greater regulation of the technology amid concern over its potential for racial bias. A4 A retired federal judge tapped to review the criminal case against Flynn rebuked the Justice Department for moving to drop it and urged that the ex-national secu- rity adviser be sentenced. A3 The State Department watchdog fired by Trump told lawmakers that a senior department official discour- aged him from probing U.S. arms sales to a pair of Gulf states before his ouster. A3 Trump sought to extin- guish a growing national de- bate, rejecting calls for Army bases honoring Confederate officers to be renamed. A4 The administration is pro- posing a far-reaching over- haul of the asylum system that would make it harder for applicants to win humanitar- ian protection in the U.S. A3 Sweden closed an inves- tigation into the 1986 murder of Prime Minister Palme, but the mystery surrounding the case will likely endure because the only suspect is dead. A18 Two of China’s most celebrated athletes have denounced the country’s ruling Communist Party. A8 F ederal Reserve offi- cials signaled plans to keep interest rates near zero for years and said they were studying how to pro- vide more support to the battered U.S. economy. A1 Grubhub agreed to com- bine with Europe’s Just Eat Takeaway.com, turning its back on Uber in a surprising twist in the merger rush among food-delivery firms. A1 Tyson Foods said it is co- operating in a Justice Depart- ment price-fixing probe un- der a leniency program that will allow the firm to avoid criminal prosecution. A1 The Nasdaq closed above 10000 for the first time, rising 66.59 points, or 0.7%, while the Dow fell 1% and the S&P 500 gave up 0.5%. B11 Tesla investors pushed the stock to more than $1,000 a share after Musk said it was time to begin volume pro- duction of the company’s all- electric semitrailer truck. B1 Starbucks said it would close some traditional cafes and open more to-go loca- tions as the chain bets more on convenience and speed. B1 The Labor Department is struggling to document accu- rately how many workers are unemployed in the recession caused by the coronavirus. A2 Simon Property is scrap- ping its deal to acquire Taub- man, the latest sign of the pressures afflicting the retail sector and mall industry. B1 Zara’s owner, Inditex, said it would close as many as 1,200 stores and pivot more aggressively toward selling fashion online. B3 Business & Finance World-Wide Barriers Removed After Days of Protests Over Floyd Killing NEW OPENING: Workers on Wednesday removed barriers that were installed near the White House during recent protests after the killing of George Floyd. Mr. Floyd’s brother, Philonise, testified before Congress at a hearing on police brutality. A4 KEVIN LAMARQUE/REUTERS P2JW163000-6-A00100-17FFFF5178F

U.S. to LaunchAdvancedTrials OfPossibleVa ccinesThisSummer · ing team and Adidas AG shorts. Ask her what she wasupto during quarantine,and her mind goes blank. This is unusual forMs

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Page 1: U.S. to LaunchAdvancedTrials OfPossibleVa ccinesThisSummer · ing team and Adidas AG shorts. Ask her what she wasupto during quarantine,and her mind goes blank. This is unusual forMs

* * * * * * THURSDAY, JUNE 11, 2020 ~ VOL. CCLXXV NO. 136 WSJ.com HHHH $4 .00

DJIA 26989.99 g 282.31 1.0% NASDAQ 10020.35 À 0.7% STOXX600 368.15 g 0.4% 10-YR. TREAS. (New issue) , yield 0.744% OIL $39.60 À $0.66 GOLD $1,713.30 g $1.40 EURO $1.1379 YEN 107.12

Fed PlansTo KeepRates atLow LevelFor YearsUnemployment infourth quarter isforecast at about 10%amid economic damage

stock deal, confirming an ear-lier report by The Wall StreetJournal. Grubhub shareholderswould receive 0.6710 Just Eatshare for each Grubhub share,now worth just over $65 aftera decline in Just Eat sharesWednesday.

Based on Tuesday’s closingprice, the deal values Grubhubat $7.3 billion.

Uber and Grubhub had beennegotiating a combination forweeks but the talks gotbogged down over antitrust is-sues and Uber was alreadyconsidering pulling the plug,according to people familiarwith the matter.

Uber said in a statementthat the food-delivery industrywill need to consolidate toreach its potential for consum-

PleaseturntopageA8

You’re Not the Only One WhoForgot Things Under Lockdown

i i i

Even those with superior memoriesfound monotony dulled their recall

small coterie of people with anability researchers have dubbedHighly Superior Autobiographi-cal Memory. HSAM individualstypically remember nearly ev-erything that has happened tothem from a certain age, includ-ing the corresponding dates and

days of the week.The pandemic

upended all that.Researchers sayrepetitive sched-ules dim theability for all ofus to dredge upthe recent past—and even those

with some of the most powerfulmemories on Earth aren’t im-mune.

Stay-at-home routines makeit hard to affix things in time

PleaseturntopageA10

Ask Markie Pasternak whatshe was doing on June 30, 2007,and she’ll quickly reminisce indetail: She rode her bike to IceHouse Coffee & Creamery in DePere, Wis., and over a mangosmoothie, re-vealed to hercousin a crushon a boy fromchurch. It was aSaturday. Shewas wearing ablue T-shirt fromher figure-skat-ing team andAdidas AG shorts.

Ask her what she was up toduring quarantine, and hermindgoes blank.

This is unusual for Ms. Pas-ternak. Now 26, she is part of a

BY JULIE STEINBERG

Quarantine daze

ers reached two weeks.About 30% of items were outof stock on some days. Tokeep delivery times fromslipping further, Thrivemade the previously unimag-inable decision to throttledemand by limiting shop-ping hours.

“It was excruciating,” re-called co-founder and ChiefExecutive Nick Green. “It felt

PleaseturntopageA10

Grubhub Jilts UberFor Europe’s Just Eat

Grubhub Inc. agreed tocombine with Europe’s JustEat Takeaway.com NV, turningits back on Uber TechnologiesInc. in a surprising twist in thescramble for mergers amongfood-delivery companies.

The move would create atrans-Atlantic food-deliverygiant at a time when industryplayers are seeking scale tohelp them cope with a land-scape that includes boomingdemand but also fierce compe-tition.

Grubhub and Just Eat,which is based in the Nether-lands, said late Wednesdaythey plan to combine in all-

By Cara Lombardo,Dana Cimilluca

and Ben Dummett

When coronavirus lock-downs sent Americans into afrenzy of panic buying, thebad news came almost asquickly as the good for onlineorganic grocer Thrive Market.

In March, the companythat aims to compete withAmazon.com Inc. in thehealth-food sector suddenlyfound customers flocking toits site as its giant rivalstruggled to handle its ownpandemic business surge.Thrive notched record salesand membership sign-ups.

Then it buckled. Ordersballooned to five times whatThrive could handle. Deliv-ery times for some custom-

BY SEBASTIAN HERRERA

Police Barred FromUsing ID SoftwareAmazon.com said it won’t letlaw enforcement use its facial-recognition technology........... A4

WASHINGTON—Federal Re-serve officials signaled plans tokeep interest rates near zerofor years and said they werestudying how to provide moresupport to a U.S. economy bat-tered by the coronavirus andrelated shutdowns.

“We are strongly committedto using our tools to do what-ever we can and for as long asit takes to provide some reliefand stability,” Fed ChairmanJerome Powell said Wednesdayat a virtual news conference af-ter a two-day policy meeting.

The commitment from thecentral-bank chief comes as thevirus has forced the nation intoa recession, ending the longesteconomic expansion on record,and sent unemployment topost-World War II highs. Inprojections released Wednes-day, most of the 17 Fed officialswho participate in the rate-set-ting meetings see the unem-ployment rate averaging be-tween 9% and 10% during thelast three months of the year.That would be down from 13.3%in May but still well above the3.5% level of February.

Stocks were little changed,with the S&P 500 index closingdown 17 points, or 0.5%, at3190.14 after initially rallyingfollowing the Fed’s statement.

PleaseturntopageA2

BY NICK TIMIRAOS

and Infectious Diseases. Meantto determine a vaccine’s safetyand effectiveness, they wouldmark the final stage of testing.

Moderna Inc.’s vaccine isset to be first, starting in July,followed in August by one co-developed by Oxford Univer-sity and AstraZeneca PLC andin September by Johnson &Johnson’s, he said.

The timetable suggests re-searchers are making rela-tively rapid progress advanc-ing their vaccines throughearlier stages of testing—fo-

cused on whether they aresafe and induce the desiredimmune response—to at leastmerit the planning.

“We will want to use the in-vestigative resources of thecountry as best we can to op-timize us getting an answer asquickly as possible,” said LarryCorey, a vaccine and infec-tious-disease specialist at theFred Hutchinson Cancer Re-search Center in Seattle andmember of a committee advis-ing the National Institutes ofHealth on the design of the

coronavirus-vaccine trials.A Moderna spokesman con-

firmed the plan for the NIH-funded trial of its vaccine. AnAstraZeneca spokeswomansaid the company’s recent con-tract with the U.S. BiomedicalAdvanced Research and Devel-opment Authority would sup-port a large study, whichBarda previously said wouldbegin in the summer.

J&J said on Wednesday itplans to start the first humanstudy of its vaccine in the sec-

PleaseturntopageA7

The federal governmentplans to fund and conduct thedecisive studies of three ex-perimental coronavirus vac-cines starting this summer, alead government vaccine re-searcher said.

These Phase 3 trials are ex-pected to involve tens of thou-sands of subjects at dozens ofsites around the U.S., saidJohn Mascola, director of thevaccine research center at theNational Institute of Allergy

BY PETER LOFTUS

U.S. to Launch Advanced TrialsOf Possible Vaccines This Summer

Nascar Bans Confederate Flag

Nascar said Wednesday it would forbid the Confederateflag’s display. Bubba Wallace, the racing association's onlyfull-time black driver, raised the issue in the wake ofnationwide Black Lives Matter protests. A4

Amazon RivalsStrain toWin EdgeThe pandemic offered an opportunity, butThrive Market buckled under online surge

Tyson HasA DealTo AvoidCharges

Tyson Foods Inc., the lead-ing U.S. chicken producer, saidit is cooperating in a JusticeDepartment price-fixing inves-tigation under a leniency pro-gram that will allow the com-pany to avoid criminalprosecution in exchange foraiding in the continuing probeof other poultry suppliers.

After receiving a grand jurysubpoena in April 2019, Tysondiscovered that some of its em-ployees were implicated in thealleged scheme. The companysaid it approached the JusticeDepartment, disclosing its ownactions and seeking leniency.

“Tyson took appropriate ac-tions to address the internalissues and has been fully co-operating with the DOJ as partof its application for leniencyunder the DOJ’s Corporate Le-niency Program,” Tyson saidin a statement provided to TheWall Street Journal.

A Justice Departmentspokeswoman declined tocomment.

Tyson’s public acknowledg-ment of its role in the investi-gation comes a week after fourchicken-industry executives,including employees of Pil-grim’s Pride Corp. and ClaxtonPoultry Farms, were indictedon charges of price fixing andbid rigging. The Justice De-partment alleged chicken com-pany executives and employ-ees for years exchangeddetails of their own pricingand that of competitors viaphone calls and text messages,at the same time that theywere negotiating supply dealswith restaurants.

The defendants include Pil-grim’s Pride Chief ExecutiveJayson Penn. All have pleaded

PleaseturntopageA6

BY BRENT KENDALLAND JACOB BUNGE

Jobless picture is cleardespite report’s flaws........... A2

JARE

DC.

TILTON/G

ETTY

IMAGES

CONTENTSBusiness &FinanceB2,10Business News... B3,6Crossword.............. A14Heard on Street... B12Life & Arts....... A11-13Markets..................... B11

Opinion.............. A15-17Sports....................... A14Staying Inside GuideA13Technology............... B4U.S. News............. A2-7Weather................... A14World News... A8-9,18

s 2020 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.All Rights Reserved

>

What’sNews

The federal governmentplans to fund and conductthe decisive studies ofthree experimental corona-virus vaccines starting thissummer, a lead governmentvaccine researcher said. A1 Amazon is halting law-enforcement use of its facial-recognition software, addingits voice to a chorus callingfor greater regulation of thetechnology amid concern overits potential for racial bias.A4 A retired federal judgetapped to review the criminalcase against Flynn rebukedthe Justice Department formoving to drop it and urgedthat the ex-national secu-rity adviser be sentenced. A3 The State Departmentwatchdog fired by Trumptold lawmakers that a seniordepartment official discour-aged him from probing U.S.arms sales to a pair of Gulfstates before his ouster. A3 Trump sought to extin-guish a growing national de-bate, rejecting calls for Armybases honoring Confederateofficers to be renamed. A4The administration is pro-posing a far-reaching over-haul of the asylum systemthat wouldmake it harder forapplicants to win humanitar-ian protection in the U.S. A3 Sweden closed an inves-tigation into the 1986murderof PrimeMinister Palme, butthe mystery surrounding thecasewill likely endure becausethe only suspect is dead. A18 Two of China’s mostcelebrated athletes havedenounced the country’sruling Communist Party. A8

Federal Reserve offi-cials signaled plans to

keep interest rates nearzero for years and said theywere studying how to pro-vide more support to thebattered U.S. economy. A1Grubhub agreed to com-bine with Europe’s Just EatTakeaway.com, turning itsback on Uber in a surprisingtwist in the merger rushamong food-delivery firms.A1Tyson Foods said it is co-operating in a Justice Depart-ment price-fixing probe un-der a leniency program thatwill allow the firm to avoidcriminal prosecution. A1 The Nasdaq closed above10000 for the first time,rising 66.59 points, or 0.7%,while the Dow fell 1% and theS&P 500 gave up 0.5%. B11Tesla investors pushed thestock to more than $1,000 ashare after Musk said it wastime to begin volume pro-duction of the company’s all-electric semitrailer truck. B1 Starbucks said it wouldclose some traditional cafesand open more to-go loca-tions as the chain bets moreon convenience and speed. B1The LaborDepartment isstruggling to document accu-rately howmanyworkers areunemployed in the recessioncaused by the coronavirus.A2 Simon Property is scrap-ping its deal to acquire Taub-man, the latest sign of thepressures afflicting the retailsector and mall industry. B1 Zara’s owner, Inditex,said it would close as manyas 1,200 stores and pivotmore aggressively towardselling fashion online. B3

Business&Finance

World-Wide

Barriers Removed After Days of Protests Over Floyd Killing

NEW OPENING: Workers on Wednesday removed barriers that were installed near the White House during recent protestsafter the killing of George Floyd. Mr. Floyd’s brother, Philonise, testified before Congress at a hearing on police brutality. A4

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