I'd take that with a grain of salt...those pressures and many newer tire pressure recommendations by manufactures are as much influenced by fuel economy mandates as they are tire safety and performance. I mean, just look at that - 39/36?! If a corporation can spend nothing at all by overinflating tire pressure recommendations to save them millions of dollars in actual fuel economy improvements you can bet that many will. I'd suggest starting with something reasonable like maybe 34/34 and adjusting up or down from there, with a lower limit of 32 or 33 PSI. I believe the TPMS triggers @ 31 PSI. Finally, measure your pressures when the tires are COLD. Given that we are into winter, what was a fine 36/36 in summer is down to 31/31 in winter temps.
PS - we ran into a consequence of this philosophy of overinflation a few weeks ago. We were in the middle of nowhere on a very cold very windy night and the TPMS triggered. We had no warm clothes so this would have made for a real crappy time to have to use the spare. I always keep a tire pressure gauge in the glove box and I'll be damned if each tire wasn't something completely acceptable like 31.5 PSI. No real reason for concern in the short term.