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YELLOW ****** THURSDAY, DECEMBER 5, 2013 ~ VOL. CCLXII NO. 133 WSJ.com HHHH $2.00 Silver to $902 on Cigna Corp.’s Health Flex 1500. On a single Cigna plan, Health Savings 3400, out-of-pocket costs for Atripla vary from zero if patients buy from an in-network pharmacy to $1,127 if they don’t. A spokeswoman for Cigna said the insurer offers several plan choices so patients can select one that best meets their needs and budget. A spokesman for Hu- mana said the out-of-pocket maximums on exchange plans protected patients from excess costs. A representative from Mo- lina didn’t respond to requests Please turn to page A4 But depending on the coverage they select, some patients on ex- pensive drug regimens could reach that level fast. Some medi- cations for conditions including hepatitis, rheumatoid arthritis, HIV and cancer can retail for thousands of dollars a month, and some plans require patients to pay as much as 50% of the cost. The HIV drug Atripla, for ex- ample, typically retails for about $2,200 a month. On “silver,” or midlevel, plans in Miami-Dade County, Fla., with comparable premiums, monthly out-of- pocket costs for Atripla range from $55 on Molina Marketplace Americans with chronic ill- nesses—who are expected to be among the biggest beneficiaries of the health law—face widely varying out-of-pocket drug costs that could be obscured on the new insurance exchanges. Under the law, patients can’t be denied coverage due to exist- ing conditions or charged higher rates than healthier peers. The law also sets an annual out-of- pocket maximum of up to $6,350 for individuals and $12,700 for families, after which insurers pay the full tab. DJIA 15889.77 g 24.85 0.2% NASDAQ 4038.00 À 0.02% NIKKEI 15407.94 g 2.2% STOXX 600 317.24 g 0.6% 10-YR. TREAS. g 19/32 , yield 2.841% OIL $97.20 À $1.16 GOLD $1,248.20 À $26.50 EURO $1.3593 YEN 102.35 TODAY IN PERSONAL JOURNAL Everything’s Coming Up Orchid PLUS The Battle for Airline Lounge Supremacy CONTENTS Business Tech............. B7 Corporate News B1-3,6 Global Finance............ C3 Heard on Street ..... C10 In the Markets........... C4 Leisure & Arts............ D4 Markets Dashboard C5 Opinion.................. A17-19 Sports.............................. D5 Style & Travel .... D1-3,6 U.S. News................. A2-8 Weather Watch........ B8 World News....... A10-15 s Copyright 2013 Dow Jones & Company. All Rights Reserved > What’s News i i i World-Wide n Biden and China’s Xi met but failed to resolve rising ten- sions over Beijing’s declaration of a new air-defense zone. A1 n Obama called for an in- crease in the federal minimum wage as he vowed to focus on income inequality in the U.S. A1 n Out-of-pocket drug costs for chronic illnesses vary widely under new health plans, patient groups warn. A1 n States warn they may not process Medicaid enrollments from people who have signed up through HealthCare.gov. A4 n Jihadist fighters from Eu- rope are returning from Syria, and some are suspected of plotting terror attacks. A10 n A Hezbollah commander was shot dead in an apparent spillover of sectarian violence from Syria to Lebanon. A11 n Antidrone protests in Pak- istan have forced the U.S. to stop using a key land route in and out of Afghanistan. A12 n Congress is nearing a small-scale budget deal, several aides and lobbyists said. A6 n Mexico’s Senate passed a political revamp that includes ending a re-election ban. A15 n A DNA study suggests in- terbreeding between Ice Age human species was more widespread than suspected. A2 n Toronto police papers allege gang members sought money from Mayor Ford in exchange for an alleged drug video. A13 n Detroit’s artwork at the city museum was valued by Chris- tie’s at up to $866 million. A5 i i i C hina Mobile signed a deal with Apple to offer iPhones on its network, with a rollout expected this month. B1 Icahn is seeking an Apple shareholder vote for a more- modest stock buyback than what he proposed earlier. B2 n The EU fined six financial firms $2.32 billion for seek- ing to rig key rates, a record EU penalty in a cartel case. C1 n The Volcker rule won’t let banks engage in so-called portfolio hedging, say people familiar with the rule. C1 n The U.S. economy expanded at a “modest to moderate” pace in recent months, the Fed said in its beige book survey. A8 n The Dow fell 24.85 points to 15889.77 as investors weighed the outlook for Fed stimulus. C4 n Treasury yields rose to their highest level since Septem- ber, nearing the 3% mark. C4 n GM is selling its remaining stake in Ally Financial through a private placement valued at about $900 million. B3 n The Lehman estate is look- ing to sell its 20% stake in hedge-fund firm D.E. Shaw. C3 n AT&T is considering a bid for a block of spectrum licenses held by Verizon Wireless. B8 n TV commercial time for next year’s Super Bowl XLVIII is sold out, according to Fox. B1 n A Rockwell work sold for $46 million, a Sotheby’s record in its American Art category. B3 Business & Finance BY MELINDA BECK Drug-Cost Surprises Lurk Inside New Health Plans Vice President Joe Biden and Chinese President Xi Jinping ended more than five hours of face-to-face meetings in Beijing without resolving the rising inter- national tensions over China’s dec- laration of a new air-defense zone, leaving questions over the next moves for each power and U.S. al- lies in the region. Mr. Biden, visiting Beijing on Wednesday, pressed the point that the White House “doesn’t recog- nize” the zone over the East China Sea and wants China’s leadership to avoid actions that could lead to confrontations with Japan and other nations, a U.S. official said. Mr. Xi, in turn, laid out China’s position in the dispute, but made no commitment to rolling back the zone, U.S. officials said. Rather, he indicated he would “take on board” Mr. Biden’s requests. A U.S. official, briefing report- ers in Beijing after the meetings, said: “From our perspective, it’s up to China. And we’ll see how things unfold in the coming days and weeks.” As part of his argument in fa- vor of reducing tensions, Mr. Bi- den told Mr. Xi that China should adopt a series of measures to re- store trust and confidence among neighbors in the region, including by establishing a system of emer- gency communications, or hot lines, that would rapidly connect officials from China and Japan, and possibly other countries. “The most urgent thing is, we want them to work with Japan and South Korea directly to do confidence-building measures,” said a senior administration offi- cial. In an illustration of the fine points of superpower diplomacy, the U.S. didn’t directly ask China to rescind the air-defense identifi- cation zone it established last month. And Washington didn’t ex- pect Mr. Xi to abolish the zone by the time Mr. Biden left for a scheduled stop Thursday in South Korea. “I don’t think that folks had the impression the vice president would return from Asia and the defense zone would be gone,” said Julianne Smith, a former national Please turn to page A12 BY PETER NICHOLAS AND JEREMY PAGE Biden’s China Trip Leaves Rift Open Vice President Says U.S. Doesn’t Recognize Air-Defense Zone; Xi Shows No Sign of Backing Down PIRAEUS, Greece—At a dark crossroads here in September, Greek police kept a safe distance while black-clad activists from the fascist movement Golden Dawn chased and attacked Pavlos Fyssas, a 34-year-old rapper. The police had long been in the habit of standing by while Golden Dawn’s paramilitary squads rolled into action, mirroring the hesi- tance of Greece’s political leader- ship to deal with the growing movement’s muscle. Only after a Golden Dawn member fatally stabbed the rapper did police of- ficers make an arrest, according to 15 police and witness depositions. The arrest was the start of a risky crackdown on a party steeped in street violence and neo- Nazi rhetoric, whose surging sup- port since last year symbolizes how Europe’s economic crisis has fueled the Continent’s most radical forces. From Spain to Finland, ex- tremes of left and right, regional separatists and antiestablishment populists are on the march. Golden Dawn, once a fringe group known for stiff-arm salutes and Holocaust denial, rose to nearly 15% support in opinion polls by this fall. Violence in Greece hasn’t come only from the far right. On Nov. 1, two men on a stolen motorcycle stopped at a Golden Dawn branch in an Athens suburb and shot two party activists dead. An extreme- left group took responsibility, say- ing it was revenge for the killing of Mr. Fyssas. The Golden Dawn crackdown the government is attempting takes the form of an effort to prove it is a “criminal organiza- tion” in which membership is a crime, a charge the party denies. Please turn to page A16 BY MARCUS WALKER AND MARIANNA KAKAOUNAKI RISKY CRACKDOWN Greece Struggles To Outlaw Its Fascists President Barack Obama vowed Wednesday to focus his final three years in office on in- come inequality in the U.S., call- ing for an increase in the fed- eral minimum wage and defending the government’s role in boosting economic mobility. “I take this personally,” Mr. Obama said at a speech hosted by a think tank closely aligned to the White House, noting that members of his family have ben- efitted from government pro- grams. It is “what drives me as a grandson, a son, a father—as an American.” He said that rising income inequality and decreased economic mobility “pose a fun- damental threat” to American prosperity. The economic agenda he de- tailed pushes a number of lib- eral priorities popular with the Democratic base. Mr. Obama called for eased rules for union organizers, pas- sage of a budget that combines stimulus spending with long- term deficit reduction measures, expanded government programs for children and new antidis- crimination laws. Republicans said the presi- dent was trying to distract at- tention from the problems of the health law and criticized many of the policy elements in Mr. Obama’s speech. “They promote government reliance rather than economic mobility,” said Brendan Buck, spokesman for House Speaker John Boehner (R., Ohio). “Rather than tackling income inequality by lifting people up, he’s been fixated on taxing some Please turn to page A6 BY CAROL E. LEE AND MICHAEL R. CRITTENDEN Obama Targets Income Inequality Assassination Fans Fears in Lebanon of Syria Spillover HEIGHTENED TENSIONS: Mourners on Wednesday carry the coffin of Hassan al-Laqees, a senior commander of the militant group Hezbollah, who was gunned down outside his home in Lebanon. The killing appeared to be part of escalating sectarian violence spilling over from Syria. A11 Hussein Malla/Associated Press Journal Report How managers pick stocks to play big trends, and more. Investing in Funds, R1-R12 Sharif Don’t Like It When This Turkish Imam Rocks i i i Heavy-Metal Cleric Shreds on Guitar; Authorities Order an Investigation PINARBASI, Turkey—Ahmet Tuzer’s motto could be: I rock, therefore imam. By day, the 42-year old Mus- lim cleric chants the Azan—the Islamic call to prayer—from a small mosque in the coastal vil- lage of Pinarbasi, where he preaches to about 150 people. By night, he preaches the gospel of Led Zeppelin, singing about a different stairway to heaven with his four-piece rock band, FiRock, led by Mr. Tuzer and heavily tat- tooed metal guitar- ist Dogan Sakin. FiRock—whose name is de- rived from math’s “golden ratio,” or the divine proportion of things—is soon to release its first album after playing in sev- eral Turkish towns. Videos of the band’s biggest hit, “Come to God,” have garnered more than 50,000 hits on YouTube and have been screened on Turkish TV channels. Mr. Tuzer wears his hair long and his jeans skinny. Mr. Tuzer, a third-generation imam who took up religious re- sponsibilities at the age of 19, says the band combines Islamic mysticism with the music of Led Zeppelin, Pink Floyd and Queen to spread a mes- sage of peace and tolerance. At home, he headbangs to Iron Maiden’s “Fear of the Dark” and Me- tallica’s “Wherever I May Roam.” He says there is no contradiction be- tween religion and heavy metal, and he is hoping to attract youn- ger people to the faith by carv- ing out a new genre: Muslim rock. “There are many old Islamic Please turn to page A14 BY JOE PARKINSON Ahmet Tuzer MARKETPLACE Apple to tap vast market in iPhone deal with China Mobile B1 Copyright © 2013, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. More Enterprise SaaS Applications Than Any Other Cloud Services Provider Oracle Cloud Applications ERP Financials Procurement Projects Supply Chain HCM Human Capital Recruiting Talent CRM Sales Service Marketing C M Y K Composite Composite MAGENTA CYAN BLACK P2JW339000-6-A00100-1--------XA CL,CN,CX,DL,DM,DX,EE,EU,FL,HO,KC,MW,NC,NE,NY,PH,PN,RM,SA,SC,SL,SW,TU,WB,WE BG,BM,BP,CC,CH,CK,CP,CT,DN,DR,FW,HL,HW,KS,LA,LG,LK,MI,ML,NM,PA,PI,PV,TD,TS,UT,WO P2JW339000-6-A00100-1--------XA

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  • YELLOW

    * * * * * * THURSDAY, DECEMBER 5, 2013 ~ VOL. CCLXII NO. 133 WSJ.com HHHH $2 .00

    Silver to $902 on Cigna Corp.’sHealth Flex 1500. On a singleCigna plan, Health Savings 3400,out-of-pocket costs for Atriplavary from zero if patients buyfrom an in-network pharmacy to$1,127 if they don’t.

    A spokeswoman for Cigna saidthe insurer offers several planchoices so patients can selectone that best meets their needsand budget. A spokesman for Hu-mana said the out-of-pocketmaximums on exchange plansprotected patients from excesscosts. A representative from Mo-lina didn’t respond to requests

    PleaseturntopageA4

    But depending on the coveragethey select, some patients on ex-pensive drug regimens couldreach that level fast. Some medi-cations for conditions includinghepatitis, rheumatoid arthritis,HIV and cancer can retail forthousands of dollars a month, andsome plans require patients topay as much as 50% of the cost.

    The HIV drug Atripla, for ex-ample, typically retails for about$2,200 a month. On “silver,” ormidlevel, plans in Miami-DadeCounty, Fla., with comparablepremiums, monthly out-of-pocket costs for Atripla rangefrom $55 on Molina Marketplace

    Americans with chronic ill-nesses—who are expected to beamong the biggest beneficiariesof the health law—face widelyvarying out-of-pocket drug coststhat could be obscured on thenew insurance exchanges.

    Under the law, patients can’tbe denied coverage due to exist-ing conditions or charged higherrates than healthier peers. Thelaw also sets an annual out-of-pocket maximum of up to $6,350for individuals and $12,700 forfamilies, after which insurers paythe full tab.

    DJIA 15889.77 g 24.85 0.2% NASDAQ 4038.00 À 0.02% NIKKEI 15407.94 g 2.2% STOXX600 317.24 g 0.6% 10-YR. TREAS. g 19/32 , yield 2.841% OIL $97.20 À $1.16 GOLD $1,248.20 À $26.50 EURO $1.3593 YEN 102.35

    TODAY IN PERSONAL JOURNAL

    Everything’s Coming Up OrchidPLUS The Battle for Airline Lounge Supremacy

    CONTENTSBusiness Tech............. B7Corporate News B1-3,6Global Finance............ C3Heard on Street..... C10In the Markets........... C4Leisure & Arts............ D4

    Markets Dashboard C5Opinion.................. A17-19Sports.............................. D5Style & Travel .... D1-3,6U.S. News................. A2-8Weather Watch........ B8World News....... A10-15

    s Copyright 2013 Dow Jones & Company.All Rights Reserved

    >

    What’sNews

    i i i

    World-WidenBiden and China’s Xi metbut failed to resolve rising ten-sions over Beijing’s declarationof a new air-defense zone. A1nObama called for an in-crease in the federal minimumwage as he vowed to focus onincome inequality in the U.S. A1nOut-of-pocket drug costsfor chronic illnesses varywidely under new healthplans, patient groups warn. A1n States warn they may notprocess Medicaid enrollmentsfrom people who have signedup through HealthCare.gov. A4n Jihadist fighters from Eu-rope are returning from Syria,and some are suspected ofplotting terror attacks. A10n A Hezbollah commanderwas shot dead in an apparentspillover of sectarian violencefrom Syria to Lebanon. A11n Antidrone protests in Pak-istan have forced the U.S. tostop using a key land route inand out of Afghanistan. A12nCongress is nearing asmall-scale budget deal, severalaides and lobbyists said.A6nMexico’s Senate passed apolitical revamp that includesending a re-election ban. A15nA DNA study suggests in-terbreeding between Ice Agehuman species was morewidespread than suspected. A2nToronto police papers allegegangmembers soughtmoneyfromMayor Ford in exchangefor an alleged drug video.A13nDetroit’s artwork at the citymuseumwas valued by Chris-tie’s at up to $866million. A5

    i i i

    ChinaMobile signed a dealwith Apple to offer iPhoneson its network, with a rolloutexpected this month. B1 Icahn is seeking an Appleshareholder vote for a more-modest stock buyback thanwhat he proposed earlier. B2n The EU fined six financialfirms $2.32 billion for seek-ing to rig key rates, a recordEU penalty in a cartel case. C1n The Volcker rule won’t letbanks engage in so-calledportfolio hedging, say peoplefamiliar with the rule. C1nThe U.S. economy expandedat a “modest tomoderate” pacein recentmonths, the Fed saidin its beige book survey.A8nTheDow fell 24.85 points to15889.77 as investors weighedthe outlook for Fed stimulus. C4nTreasury yields rose to theirhighest level since Septem-ber, nearing the 3% mark. C4n GM is selling its remainingstake in Ally Financial througha private placement valuedat about $900 million. B3nThe Lehman estate is look-ing to sell its 20% stake inhedge-fund firm D.E. Shaw. C3nAT&T is considering a bidfor a block of spectrum licensesheld by VerizonWireless. B8nTV commercial time fornext year’s Super Bowl XLVIIIis sold out, according to Fox. B1nARockwell work sold for$46 million, a Sotheby’s recordin its American Art category. B3

    Business&Finance

    BY MELINDA BECK

    Drug-Cost Surprises LurkInside New Health Plans

    Vice President Joe Biden andChinese President Xi Jinpingended more than five hours offace-to-face meetings in Beijingwithout resolving the rising inter-national tensions over China’s dec-laration of a new air-defense zone,leaving questions over the nextmoves for each power and U.S. al-lies in the region.

    Mr. Biden, visiting Beijing onWednesday, pressed the point that

    the White House “doesn’t recog-nize” the zone over the East ChinaSea and wants China’s leadershipto avoid actions that could lead toconfrontations with Japan andother nations, a U.S. official said.

    Mr. Xi, in turn, laid out China’sposition in the dispute, but madeno commitment to rolling back thezone, U.S. officials said. Rather, heindicated he would “take onboard” Mr. Biden’s requests.

    A U.S. official, briefing report-ers in Beijing after the meetings,said: “From our perspective, it’s

    up to China. And we’ll see howthings unfold in the coming daysand weeks.”

    As part of his argument in fa-vor of reducing tensions, Mr. Bi-den told Mr. Xi that China shouldadopt a series of measures to re-store trust and confidence amongneighbors in the region, includingby establishing a system of emer-gency communications, or hotlines, that would rapidly connectofficials from China and Japan,and possibly other countries.

    “The most urgent thing is, we

    want them to work with Japanand South Korea directly to doconfidence-building measures,”said a senior administration offi-cial.

    In an illustration of the finepoints of superpower diplomacy,the U.S. didn’t directly ask Chinato rescind the air-defense identifi-cation zone it established lastmonth. AndWashington didn’t ex-pect Mr. Xi to abolish the zone bythe time Mr. Biden left for ascheduled stop Thursday in SouthKorea.

    “I don’t think that folks had theimpression the vice presidentwould return from Asia and thedefense zone would be gone,” saidJulianne Smith, a former national

    PleaseturntopageA12

    BY PETER NICHOLASAND JEREMY PAGE

    Biden’s China Trip Leaves Rift OpenVice President Says U.S. Doesn’t Recognize Air-Defense Zone; Xi Shows No Sign of Backing Down

    PIRAEUS, Greece—At a darkcrossroads here in September,Greek police kept a safe distancewhile black-clad activists from thefascist movement Golden Dawnchased and attacked Pavlos Fyssas,a 34-year-old rapper.

    The police had long been in thehabit of standing by while GoldenDawn’s paramilitary squads rolledinto action, mirroring the hesi-tance of Greece’s political leader-ship to deal with the growingmovement’s muscle. Only after aGolden Dawn member fatallystabbed the rapper did police of-ficers make an arrest, according to15 police and witness depositions.

    The arrest was the start of arisky crackdown on a partysteeped in street violence and neo-Nazi rhetoric, whose surging sup-port since last year symbolizeshow Europe’s economic crisis hasfueled the Continent’s most radicalforces. From Spain to Finland, ex-tremes of left and right, regionalseparatists and antiestablishmentpopulists are on the march. GoldenDawn, once a fringe group knownfor stiff-arm salutes and Holocaustdenial, rose to nearly 15% supportin opinion polls by this fall.

    Violence in Greece hasn’t comeonly from the far right. On Nov. 1,two men on a stolen motorcyclestopped at a Golden Dawn branchin an Athens suburb and shot twoparty activists dead. An extreme-left group took responsibility, say-ing it was revenge for the killingof Mr. Fyssas.

    The Golden Dawn crackdownthe government is attemptingtakes the form of an effort toprove it is a “criminal organiza-tion” in which membership is acrime, a charge the party denies.

    PleaseturntopageA16

    BY MARCUS WALKERAND MARIANNA KAKAOUNAKI

    RISKY CRACKDOWN

    GreeceStrugglesTo OutlawIts Fascists

    President Barack Obamavowed Wednesday to focus hisfinal three years in office on in-come inequality in the U.S., call-ing for an increase in the fed-eral minimum wage anddefending the government’s rolein boosting economic mobility.

    “I take this personally,” Mr.Obama said at a speech hostedby a think tank closely alignedto the White House, noting thatmembers of his family have ben-efitted from government pro-grams.

    It is “what drives me as agrandson, a son, a father—as anAmerican.” He said that risingincome inequality and decreasedeconomic mobility “pose a fun-damental threat” to Americanprosperity.

    The economic agenda he de-tailed pushes a number of lib-eral priorities popular with theDemocratic base.

    Mr. Obama called for easedrules for union organizers, pas-sage of a budget that combinesstimulus spending with long-term deficit reduction measures,expanded government programsfor children and new antidis-crimination laws.

    Republicans said the presi-dent was trying to distract at-tention from the problems of thehealth law and criticized manyof the policy elements in Mr.Obama’s speech.

    “They promote governmentreliance rather than economicmobility,” said Brendan Buck,spokesman for House SpeakerJohn Boehner (R., Ohio).

    “Rather than tackling incomeinequality by lifting people up,he’s been fixated on taxing some

    PleaseturntopageA6

    BY CAROL E. LEEAND MICHAEL R. CRITTENDEN

    ObamaTargetsIncomeInequality

    Assassination Fans Fears in Lebanon of Syria Spillover

    HEIGHTENED TENSIONS: Mourners on Wednesday carry the coffin of Hassan al-Laqees, a senior commander of the militant group Hezbollah,who was gunned down outside his home in Lebanon. The killing appeared to be part of escalating sectarian violence spilling over from Syria. A11

    Hussein

    Malla/A

    ssociatedPress

    Journal ReportHow managers pick stocksto play big trends, and more.Investing in Funds, R1-R12

    Sharif Don’t Like ItWhen This Turkish Imam Rocks

    i i i

    Heavy-Metal Cleric Shreds on Guitar;Authorities Order an Investigation

    PINARBASI, Turkey—AhmetTuzer’s motto could be: I rock,therefore imam.

    By day, the 42-year old Mus-lim cleric chants the Azan—theIslamic call to prayer—from asmall mosque in the coastal vil-lage of Pinarbasi, where hepreaches to about 150 people. Bynight, he preachesthe gospel of LedZeppelin, singingabout a differentstairway to heavenwith his four-piecerock band, FiRock,led by Mr. Tuzerand heavily tat-tooed metal guitar-ist Dogan Sakin.

    FiRock—whose name is de-rived from math’s “golden ratio,”or the divine proportion ofthings—is soon to release itsfirst album after playing in sev-eral Turkish towns. Videos of theband’s biggest hit, “Come to

    God,” have garnered more than50,000 hits on YouTube and havebeen screened on Turkish TVchannels. Mr. Tuzer wears hishair long and his jeans skinny.

    Mr. Tuzer, a third-generationimam who took up religious re-sponsibilities at the age of 19,says the band combines Islamicmysticism with the music of LedZeppelin, Pink Floyd and Queen

    to spread a mes-sage of peace andtolerance.

    At home, heheadbangs to IronMaiden’s “Fear ofthe Dark” and Me-tallica’s “WhereverI May Roam.” Hesays there is nocontradiction be-

    tween religion and heavy metal,and he is hoping to attract youn-ger people to the faith by carv-ing out a new genre: Muslimrock.

    “There are many old IslamicPleaseturntopageA14

    BY JOE PARKINSON

    Ahmet Tuzer

    MARKETPLACE

    Apple to tap vastmarket in iPhone dealwith China Mobile B1

    Copyright © 2013, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.

    More Enterprise SaaS ApplicationsThan Any Other Cloud Services Provider

    Oracle CloudApplications

    ERPFinancialsProcurementProjectsSupply Chain

    HCMHuman CapitalRecruitingTalent

    CRMSalesServiceMarketing

    CM Y K CompositeCompositeMAGENTA CYAN BLACK

    P2JW339000-6-A00100-1--------XA CL,CN,CX,DL,DM,DX,EE,EU,FL,HO,KC,MW,NC,NE,NY,PH,PN,RM,SA,SC,SL,SW,TU,WB,WEBG,BM,BP,CC,CH,CK,CP,CT,DN,DR,FW,HL,HW,KS,LA,LG,LK,MI,ML,NM,PA,PI,PV,TD,TS,UT,WO

    P2JW339000-6-A00100-1--------XA