WSJ What’s News - How Europe Is Investigating the Epstein Files

Episode Date: February 20, 2026

A.M. Edition for Feb. 20. Authorities from France, Norway, the U.K. and elsewhere across Europe are investigating evidence of potential crimes within recently-released Jeffrey Epstein files, while Jus...tice Department officials say those documents warrant no further prosecutions. WSJ reporter Matthew Dalton breaks down their differing approaches. Plus, warning signs from the private-credit market invite comparisons to the runup to the global financial crisis. And President Trump orders the release of government files on UFOs after former President Obama says aliens exist. Luke Vargas hosts. Sign up for the WSJ’s free What’s News newsletter. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

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Starting point is 00:00:00 Jitters in private credit markets prompt comparisons to the run-up to the financial crisis. Plus, we'll look at how Europe is leading investigations related to Jeffrey Epstein. European officials and prosecutors tend to be more independent than their counterparts in the U.S. And so they may have more latitude to bring investigations against high-profile people who have ties to the government. And President Trump orders the release of... government files on UFOs after Obama says that aliens exist. It's Friday, February 20th. I'm
Starting point is 00:00:37 Lou Vargas for the Wall Street Journal, and here is the AM edition of What's News, the top headlines and business stories moving your world today. Private credit markets are flashing warning signs after the industry's poster child, Blue Owl Capital, blocked everyday investors from withdrawing their money from one of its funds. The move got the attention of Democratic Senator Elizabeth Warren, who's calling for more oversight. Meanwhile, nervous investors sent shares in other private credit firms lower, reviving comparisons to the stress we saw in credit markets in 2007 just before the global financial crisis. Journal Finance editor Alex Franco says we don't yet know whether this is a canary in the coal mine, but that investors are increasingly worried.
Starting point is 00:01:22 Blue Owls is an asset manager. They go out and raise money from investors and invest in making loans to junk-rated companies that pay really high interest. and the idea is if you're an investor, you're going to get a really high return. And that was a really hot thing for a while. But then in the last few months, it's really not very hot, partly because a lot of the loans were going to software companies. And now people are worried about AI affecting the prospects for those companies. So a lot of the investors are asking for their money back. And what Blue Al did was instead of letting you cash out your shares in these funds, we're going to pay you back your principal, but it's going to take time. Alex added that.
Starting point is 00:02:01 the turmoil in credit markets isn't impacting wider stock markets, which remain at record highs. We are exclusively reporting that the White House wants to ban investors with more than a hundred single-family homes from purchasing additional homes. That's according to a memo sent to House and Senate committee leaders, with the Trump administration hoping to add the ban as an amendment to either of the landmark housing packages moving through Congress. The proposal affects more investors then initially thought with hundreds of investment firms set to lose their ability to buy single-family homes. And speaking of housing, we've got a special bonus episode coming later today. In the latest, what's news and earnings? We'll look at what some of the country's biggest
Starting point is 00:02:42 home builders tell us about the health of the U.S. housing market. Look out for that in your podcast feed at midday. S&P 500 companies are back to appointing fewer women and minority board directors. According to a Journal analysis of corporate board data diversity is now back to levels seen 10 years ago when institutional investors started pressuring companies to add diversity, equity, and inclusion policies. Since then, the political winds have changed, and nearly three quarters of last year's newly appointed directors at S&P 500 companies were men, and roughly four and five new appointments were white, according to data from people return. Just a quarter of S&P 500 firms
Starting point is 00:03:23 last year had a diversity policy down from about half the year prior. And a batch of economic data is set to be released today, including an advanced look at fourth quarter U.S. GDP and the Federal Reserve's preferred inflation gauge. And here with a look at what investors will be watching for in those releases, I'm joined by a friend of the podcast, Journal Deputy Finance Editor Quentin Webb. Quentin, let's start on inflation. We saw in the Fed minutes earlier this week, officials are setting a pretty high bar for more rate cuts this year. And yet markets are still expecting cuts, which brings us to this release of the PCE price index for December, a $1. delayed release because of the shutdown, what should we be watching for? We're looking for a rate of about 3% on a core basis, i.e. stripping out volatile food and energy costs for December. And, you know, that is another reminder that while the Fed has succeeded
Starting point is 00:04:13 in bringing inflation down from the very high level seen in and coming out of the pandemic, this last mile of getting back down towards the 2% level, which they target over time, is proving pretty difficult. All right. So inflation remaining above target. But what about growth? Quentin. Our most recent poll of economists show they expect the U.S. to have returned to growth above 2% for the last year and for 2026 as well. We do see this very strong growth in the economy. Now, if you look at the Atlanta Fed GDP Now model, which kind of takes recent data points and use them to extrapolate growth, that that model is spitting out a kind of very strong rate of growth for the fourth quarter, not quite as strong as the 4.4% we saw in the third quarter. But, you know, it's been a very kind of turbulent few quarter. for growth because of tariffs and tariff front running in the spring last year, we saw this kind of contraction and then this big bounce back in US growth. We've got this huge boost from
Starting point is 00:05:09 AI investments. So all of these data centers going up and so on, leading to extraordinary amounts of capex spending, construction. And that's helping, you know, underpin this very robust growth at the moment. Quentin, Alex was on earlier saying that in spite of these private credit warning signs, stocks just keep moving higher in the U.S. And now we see growth kind of in the same boat, the U.S. just remaining sort of the economic envy of the world in many ways. Correct. You know, the economy is running hot at the moment and we're going to see the kind of effects of big tax cuts coming in in the next few months as well. So that is likely to kind of add further fuel to this. It was Wall Street Journal Deputy Finance Editor, Quentin Webb. Quentin, as always,
Starting point is 00:05:50 a pleasure. Thank you so much. Thanks very much. Coming up, the rest of the day's news, including a look at Europe's widening investigations into the Epstein files and why U.S. authorities aren't following suit after the break. The recent release of millions of files relating to convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein is highlighting a transatlantic rift with European authorities finding plenty to investigate while U.S. officials maintain that there's nothing warranting further prosecution. The journal's Matthew Dalton is in Paris. Matt, you and a pair of colleagues in the United States have been exploring.
Starting point is 00:06:29 these differing approaches that we've seen emerging in relation to these documents, something that was cast into quite sharp relief yesterday with the arrest of former Prince Andrew in the UK. Though we should note he's not the only example of the fact that Epstein remains a very live story, shall we say, on this side of the pond. Yeah, prosecutors in a number of European countries are going to be looking through these documents, millions of them, to see if there are crimes involving either their citizens or people on their national territories. One of the challenges, of course, is that in some cases, the statute of limitations may have expired. In other cases, evidence may have been lost. Two of the main
Starting point is 00:07:10 characters in this story, Jeffrey Epstein himself, and the model scout, Jeanette Brunel, are both dead. And so that's going to be another obstacle to investigate the crimes that his associates may or may not have committed. They're definitely obstacles, but you were speaking there sort of in the future tense, and we've actually seen in addition to Andrew, other activity recently across Europe that's worth mentioning, specifically beyond the UK. Right. So the Norwegian authorities have charged former Prime Minister Thelbjorn Jaglund with corruption related to favors gifts that Jeffrey Epstein may have provided to him while he was the head of the Council of Europe. And in France, prosecutors have opened a new sort of investigative effort. France is a place where
Starting point is 00:07:58 Epstein spent a lot of time. He owned a vast apartment next to the Arc de Triumph. He was friends with a lot of people in the French elite, and the former culture minister, Jack Lang, is under investigation for funds that he may have accepted from Epstein starting in 2012. So that's the first shoot a drop, I would say, and we'll see whether the French investigation leads to charges being filed against other people. There are several people who have been associated with Epstein or are friends with Epstein who have been accused of sexual assault and rape in recent days, and it's unclear whether those incidents had anything to do with Epstein himself, but that's another thing that's on our radar. We should note here that Matt Lang's lawyer didn't respond
Starting point is 00:08:45 to a request for comment, though he said in the past that neither Lang nor his family received money from Epstein. Meanwhile, over in the U.K., former Prince Andrew has consistently denied wrongdoing, as has Yagland, the former Prime Minister of Norway. Matt, these cases are very much about misconduct, but as you write, there are other countries that are looking into something else, potential trafficking. Right. Epstein is known to have looked at a number of Eastern European countries for recruits for his, what he's called his massages. So the government's authorities in Lithuania and Latvia are looking in to whether their citizens were trafficked by Epstein and by his associates to places in Western Europe, maybe to the U.S., and they're going to be looking at the new files that were published to
Starting point is 00:09:32 make that determination. We have very little information about what exactly they're looking at, but France, too, is going to be looking at sexual trafficking that may have happened on its territory based on the new information in these files. Matt, just zooming out here, you and your colleagues spoke to legal experts, as well as the DOJ, to try to understand what accounts for the kind of difference in approach we're seeing between the U.S. and in Europe. What did you learn? Well, in the case of Prince Andrew, for example, he was arrested for misconduct in public office and the Justice Department said that there's no similar crime under U.S. law. You know, one of the experts that we spoke to said that European officials and prosecutors tend to be more independent than their counterparts in the U.S.
Starting point is 00:10:15 who are under the oversight of the Justice Department. And so they may have more latitude to bring investigations against high-profile people who have ties to the government. You know, we'll see what the prosecutions in other European countries, in particular France, lead to. We'll be watching closely. I've been speaking to Wall Street Journal reporter Matthew Dalton in Paris. Thanks a lot. And President Trump is ordering the DOD and other divisions of the federal government
Starting point is 00:10:44 to release files related to alienation. in life and unidentified flying objects. Trump's order posted on truth social overnight comes after former President Obama set off an online firestorm with these comments over the weekend in a podcast interview with Brian Tyler Cohen. Are aliens real? They're real, but I haven't seen them, and they're not being kept in, what is it? Area 51. There's no underground facility, unless there's this enormous conspiracy.
Starting point is 00:11:16 and they hit it from the President of the United States. A Pentagon spokesman said the department looks forward to fulfilling Trump's directive. The DOD in 2024 said it found no evidence that UFO sightings were extraterrestrial spacecraft. And the journal reported last year that the U.S. military fabricated evidence of alien technology and let rumors fester in order to cover up secret weapons programs. And that's it for what's news for this Friday morning. Today's show was produced by Daniel Bach and Hattie Moyer, Our supervising producer is Sandra Kilhoff, and I'm Luke Vargas for The Wall Street Journal.
Starting point is 00:11:50 We will be back tonight with a new show. Otherwise, have a great weekend, and thanks for listening.

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