May 15, 2006
Scott OlsonMoney managers are dusting off their low-risk investment options for consumers who are finding certificates of deposit attractive
again. The run-up on CDs corresponds with rising interest rates that are meant to cool inflation by making the cost of borrowing
more expensive. The federal funds rate-the interest banks charge one another on overnight loans-is the highest it's been since
early 2001. While that's not so good for home buyers, it does benefit investors searching for short-term savings returns.
Interest rates...
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May 15, 2006
Scott OlsonIf David B. Girton isn't already regarded as an innovator in the local investment brokerage community, he should be now. The
45-year-old Indianapolis native is in the process of launching Liger Securities Corp., the only locally owned black investment
firm in the city. But 10 years ago, he accomplished a similar first, when he opened the local office of Cleveland-based SBK-Brooks
Investment Corp., then the only black-operated brokerage here. Make no mistake, though, Girton's credentials far outweigh
his designation as...
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May 8, 2006
Ken SkarbeckTwo recent Indianapolis business deals have provided local investors with excellent case studies in business valuation. What
is truly instructive is that these acquisitions are polar opposites based on the valuation methods employed and in the future
expectations the buyers have for these two businesses. They are the announced purchase of Marsh Supermarkets Inc. for $88
million by Florida-based Sun Capital Partners and the acquisition of Suros Surgical Systems for $240 million by Massachusetts-based
Hologic Inc. In the Marsh acquisition,...
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April 24, 2006
Peter SchnitzlerIn the past two weeks, central Indiana's two fastest-growing high-tech companies have announced their sales to larger out-of-state
firms. Local leaders are of two minds about it. On the one hand, there's the enormous payday for investors. Massachusetts-based
Hologic Inc. is buying Indianapolis-based medical-device maker Suros Surgical Systems Inc. for at least $240 million. And
St. Louis-based TALX Corp. scooped up Carmelbased Internet testing firm Performance Assessment Network Inc. for $75 million.
Optimists hope to see much of that money...
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April 17, 2006
Greg AndrewsNo wonder word leaked early this year that Union Federal Bank was about to be sold. A new federal filing reveals that a deal
had been brewing since early last year-spawned largely by mounting frustration among investors that they were unable to turn
their stake in the bank's privately held parent, Fort Wayne-based Waterfield Mortgage Co., into cash. "The concerns over liquidity
were voiced by many shareholders at Waterfield Mortgage's annual shareholders' meeting in the spring of 2004," according to...
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April 10, 2006
Peter SchnitzlerIt was a symbol of his success. For the last three years, environmental attorney Robert Clark has relished the view from his
corner office in One Indiana Square, high above the streets of Indianapolis. But on Sunday, April 2, tornadoforce winds left
it in tatters. His family photos are gone. Likewise his case files and the many gifts he'd received over the years from friends
or clients. "I understand there are no exterior walls," he said. "My desk is still...
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April 3, 2006
Scott OlsonIndianapolis might not be as glamorous as Los Angeles or New York City, but Midwestern life seems to be suiting Gene Huddleson
just fine. Nearly 10 years after returning to his Hoosier roots, the event planner has found a niche within the industry that
builds upon his past travels. He and his colleagues at Detail + Design, in the Stutz II building across the street from the
original Stutz building, accompany corporate clients who may be hosting activities throughout the...
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March 20, 2006
Chris O\'malleyITT Educational Services Inc. may nearly double by the end of this year the number of degree programs it offers entirely through
online instruction as the school seeks to enroll students who can't make class because of work or family obligations. Six
online bachelor degree programs and two online associate degree programs are in various stages of regulatory and accreditation
review, according to the Carmel-based technical education provider, which has 38,800 students enrolled at schools in 28 states.
President and...
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March 13, 2006
Scott OlsonBrent Kerns likes to compare the U.S. Department of Agriculture's lending program to that of the Small Business Administration's.
In short, the USDA helps farmers the way the SBA assists small-business owners. But if a proposal to cut the budget of the
farm loan program is approved, it could become as expensive to use as the SBA's offering. Supporters fear a hike in user fees
would hurt those who need the money the most. "That cost goes straight to the...
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March 13, 2006
On Feb. 24, IBJ Publisher Chris Katterjohn, Managing Editor Greg Andrews and banking reporter Matt Kish sat down with four
leaders from Indianapolis' banking and finance sector: Judith Ripley, director of the Indiana Department of Financial Institutions;
Kit Stolen, CEO of Union Federal Bank of Indianapolis; Steve Beck, president and CEO of the Indiana Venture Center; and Keith
Slifer, senior vice president of LaSalle Bank. Among the topics of conversation: How's the state's economy doing? Are more
bank mergers on...
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March 13, 2006
Scott OlsonFederal deposit insurance reforms signed into law by President Bush last month boost coverage of some retirement accounts
and will raise coverage for other bank accounts beginning in 2010. The legislation, debated by lawmakers for the past six
years, is significant because it offers the first increase in deposit insurance coverage in more than 25 years, and just the
seventh rise since 1935. Federal deposit insurance currently covers as much as $100,000 per depositor. Starting no later than
November, depositors...
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March 6, 2006
Greg AndrewsAn in-your-face ad campaign that First Indiana Corp. rolled out last month highlights the Indianapolisbased bank's local roots
and leaves the distinct impression it won't be accepting a buyout offer anytime soon. Rhetoric or reality? Time will tell.
"If you run an Indiana business, you need an Indiana bank," reads one of the ads. It continues: "Remember when your local
bank was actually local?" First Indiana executives and directors are savoring the sale of Union Federal Bank, which leaves
First...
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March 6, 2006
Matthew KishSimon Property Group Inc. wants to take the wrecking ball to the soon-to-be-vacant L.S. Ayres stores at Castleton Square and
Greenwood Park malls, clearing the way for development of a collection of smaller stores and restaurants, sources familiar
with the plans say. "There have been numerous site plans circulated showing redevelopment with the existing structures removed,"
said Bill French, a local retail broker with St. Louis-based Colliers Turley Martin Tucker. Mark Perlstein, a partner with
The Linder Co., an Indianapolis-based...
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February 13, 2006
Matthew KishUnion Federal Bank's profits have gone up and down like an electrocardiogram since a group of elite investors bought a major
stake in the privately held institution in 1999. That wildly inconsistent performance likely played a role in the decision
by investors to sell the bank, experts say. On Feb. 3, both the bank and its parent company were sold to Bowling Green, Ohio-based
Sky Financial Group Inc. for $330 million. The bank had been the thirdlargest in town. After...
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February 6, 2006
Tom MurphyFew topics might kill a cocktail conversation faster than the Sarbanes-Oxley Act, unless the dinner party includes hospital
administrators, university presidents or other not-for-profit leaders. A desire to boost credibility-coupled with prodding
from bond-rating ratings agencies-has broadened interest in the 4-year-old federal law far beyond the public companies it
actually targets. Sarbanes-Oxley-passed by Congress in the wake of high-profile scandals at Enron, WorldCom and elsewhere-was
intended to enhance financial disclosure and eliminate arrangements that could undermine the independence of auditors....
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January 30, 2006
Chris O\'malleyAdvertisements for mutual funds, watches and kolaches. Now as you wait at the gate for your flight, you'll even see ads on
electrical outlets. The Indianapolis Airport Authority on Jan. 20 was expected to approve a $65,000 marketing partnership
with Chase in what is the latest and certainly the most electrifying of all advertising schemes at Indianapolis International
Airport. These are desperate times for marketers. Too many ads are getting lost in the shuffle. And barraged consumers have
figured out...
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January 30, 2006
Anthony SchoettleIn recent months, Norwood Promotional Products has settled a lawsuit with its distributors, lost its CEO, put itself up for
sale, and then taken itself off the block. Last week, the 2,000-employee company announced plant closings in Iowa and Pennsylvania.
The swirl of activity is no cause for concern, according to Norwood officials, who say the No. 2 player in the promotional
products industry is doing fine and will stay in Indianapolis. The privately held company-known for making customized products...
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January 23, 2006
Anthony SchoettleIn recent months, Norwood Promotional Products has settled a lawsuit with its distributors, lost its CEO, put itself up for
sale, and then taken itself off the block. Last week, the 2,000-employee company announced plant closings in Iowa and Pennsylvania.
The swirl of activity is no cause for concern, according to Norwood officials, who say the No. 2 player in the promotional
products industry is doing fine and will stay in Indianapolis. The privately held company-known for making customized products...
More
January 23, 2006
Chris O\'malleyAdvertisements for mutual funds, watches and kolaches. Now as you wait at the gate for your flight, you'll even see ads on
electrical outlets. The Indianapolis Airport Authority on Jan. 20 was expected to approve a $65,000 marketing partnership
with Chase in what is the latest and certainly the most electrifying of all advertising schemes at Indianapolis International
Airport. These are desperate times for marketers. Too many ads are getting lost in the shuffle. And barraged consumers have
figured out...
More
January 16, 2006
Matthew KishBig-ticket bank mergers grabbed plenty of headlines in the past two years. Just don't let the splashy news stories fool you.
The number of players in the Indianapolis banking market is expanding, even amid consolidation in the industry nationwide.
Over the past 10 years, the number of banks taking deposits in the metropolitan area has grown from 41 to 56, according to
annual data from the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. Analysts attribute much of the growth to smaller banks and...
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January 9, 2006
Matthew KishOfficials with the companies in Fort Wayne and here aren't saying one way or the other. "We have nothing to announce," said
Alvin "Kit" Stolen, CEO of Union Federal since 2002. "We officially wouldn't comment or address those kinds of rumors or speculation."
The privately held companies are among the largest financial firms headquartered in Indiana. Union Federal has more than $3.4
billion in assets and ranks as the city's third-largest bank. Waterfield ranked 51st nationwide in mortgage originations in...
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January 2, 2006
Chris O\'malleyYou probably wouldn't want to buy shares of the first discount airline in recent years to file bankruptcy reorganization-not
unless you're a short-seller or a relative of Norman Vincent Peale. Not in this airline climate. But even they won't have
a chance to buy shares being issued in ATA Holdings Corp. after the Indianapolis airline emerges from Chapter 11 as early
as next month. ATA was delisted from Nasdaq shortly after it filed for bankruptcy in October 2004. Old shares...
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November 28, 2005
Matthew KishThe signs were ominous. Profits had turned to losses. Key executives were leaving. Financial statements were being rewritten.
In the middle of the turmoil, Columbus, Ind.-based Irwin Financial Corp. pulled an interesting rabbit out of its hat. After
posting a second-quarter loss of $3.4 million, Irwin this month surprised Wall Street with an impressive thirdquarter profit
of $18.5 million. The $6.5-billion-in-assets financial services company expects similar results this quarter. Company leaders
are pointing to a somewhat straightforward fix. "The quarter-over-quarter...
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November 7, 2005
Chris O\'malleyAn Indianapolis company that provides wireless broadband service from atop grain elevators, water towers or darned near anywhere
the warbler roosts is expanding at a rapid clip and plans to launch Internet-based phone service in early 2006. Omnicity Inc.
also plans another private offering to raise cash for its ambitious build-out in rural areas that are underserved by high-speed
Internet providers. Improving broadband access has economic development implications in Indianapolis' remote bedroom communities
and throughout sparsely populated areas. Now, even...
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October 31, 2005
Tracy DonhardtBanks and credit unions statewide will soon have a larger pool of customers to tap into when a central Indiana program that
helps people barred from opening checking accounts expands. Get Checking, a national program that began at the University
of Wisconsin-Milwaukee in 2001, is a way for people who have landed on the ChexSystem register-a list of consumers barred
from opening an account-to get off the list. People find themselves in ChexSystem due to bouncing too many checks, failing...
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Can IBJ please stop referring to this property as "Kessler Mansion"? What a ridiculous title for the biggest, bloated, blight in our city. It's not a mansion. At best, it's an ideal site to shoot low-budget porn. Ahhh! Another business use!
Its stories like these that prove that a Ball State diploma is worth less than the paper that its printed on. A real institution of higher learning would have taken care of this long ago. No way should this crap be taught in a SCIENCE class.
It is such a shame that King Ballard has made Indianapolis into Chicago south with all of the rampant corruption.
How many of these 1,259 bills were actually heard and voted on on the floor vs how many were shot down in committee?
When a an arrogant young guy with essentially no experience and no qualifications for the job, was dropped into an Administrator position out of nowhere by his "mentor" in the Mayor's office things seemed fishy. Sometimes things are what they seem.