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New company taking over troubled Standard Life
State Insurance Commissioner Stephen Robertson said agreements have been reached for the $1.7 billion in policies and financial obligations of Carmel-based Standard Life Insurance Co. to be assumed by Guggenheim Life and Annuity Co.
Christmas Eve dash caps banner shopping season
A strong Christmas Eve would round out a surprisingly successful holiday season for retailers. The National Retail Federation predicts that holiday sales will reach $451.5 billion this year, up 3.3 percent over last year.
Toyota adding full-time jobs at Princeton plant
The 53 production positions will be filled by current temporary workers at the southern Indiana plant, as the carmaker anticipates continued strong sales.
People
Centerstone of Indiana, a Columbus, Ind.-based provider of mental health care, named Suzanne Koesel its new CEO as of Jan. 1. She will replace Bob Williams, who is taking the new role of chief strategy officer to focus on responding to health care reform and other changes affecting the organization. Centerstone of Indiana, which has nearly 800 employees in more than 60 facilities across 17 central southern Indiana counties, serves more than 20,000 individuals and families each year. Koesel has been Centerstone of Indiana’s chief operating officer. She holds degrees in social work from Indiana University and Washington University. Centerstone of Indiana is a subsidiary of Tennessee-based Centerstone of America.
Bloomington-based Cook Medical Inc. promoted Rob Dorocke to vice president of global e-communications. Dorocke, an Indiana University graduate, joined the Cook organization in 1997.
Company news
It’s back to reality for Bioanalytical Systems Inc. After its stock price soared 135 percent in three trading days, the stock started falling back to earth—helped in no small part by the company’s underwhelming earnings report. The West Lafayette-based firm said revenue dipped 13 percent, to $7.4 million, in its fiscal fourth quarter compared to the same period a year ago. Its loss narrowed to $300,000 in the quarter, compared to a loss of $1.4 million in the same period last year. The company sells testing equipment and services to pharmaceutical firms, which have been retrenching the past two years. “The revenue decline in fiscal 2010 stems mainly from study delays, price declines and spending reductions by our customers as part of their overall cost-savings initiatives,” Bioanalytical officials noted in a statement. But the company’s business accelerated in the second half of its fiscal year, causing CEO Anthony Chilton to give an upbeat outlook for 2011.
Eli Lilly and Co. and Amylin Pharmaceuticals Inc. have asked the U.S. Food and Drug Administration to approve their diabetes medicine Byetta for use in combination with basal insulin, which diabetics take in between meals to control their blood sugar. The companies would like to reignite Byetta sales, which have slumped since 2008, when the FDA publicized cases of pancreatitis among patients taking the drug. Indianapolis-based Lilly and San Diego-based Amylin tried to win approval this year for a once-weekly version of Byetta, called Bydureon, but the FDA asked for more tests, delaying the drug’s approval until 2012.
BioCrossroads’ Indiana Seed Fund invested $250,000 in Indianapolis-based Aarden Pharmaceuticals. Aarden’s leading drug program focuses on tuberculosis. The company’s product is based on research by Zhong-Zin Zhang, a professor and chairman of biochemistry and molecular biology at the Indiana University School of Medicine. Zhang is an expert in protein tyrosine phosphates, a group of signaling enzymes that regulate cellular processes. His research was funded through Lilly Endowment’s Indiana Genomics Initiative. The company decided last year to establish its headquarters here, selecting Indianapolis over San Diego.
Clarian Health physicians will now provide cardiac services to patients at Columbus Regional Hospital facilities under a new affiliation. The agreement ensures Columbus Regional has full-time availability of heart surgeons, in additional to the interventional cardiology care provided by Indiana Heart Physicians-Columbus. Columbus Regional has offered 24-7 heart surgery since 2002. In 2011, Clarian will change its name to Indiana University Health.
CNO Financial Group Inc. got a financial strength upgrade from A.M. Best Co., the pre-eminent rating agency for insurance companies. New Jersey-based Best boosted its grade on Carmel-based CNO from B (fair) to B+ (good), crediting CNO with focusing more on business lines where it has a clear competitive advantage and its recent financial restructurings. CNO, which was formerly called Conseco, sells life and health policies to middle-income families.
Warsaw-based Zimmer Holdings Inc. acquired Sodem Diffusion S.A., a Switzerland-based maker of orthopedic surgical power tools. The company will be merged into Zimmer Surgical, a unit based in Dover, Ohio. Zimmer has been trying to diversify its business as sales of its hip and knee implants have stagnated in western markets.
Group questions growth of pharmacy schools
Two weeks before Manchester College announced a $35 million gift to help open a pharmacy school, a national trade group suggested there are too many pharmacy schools already.
Q&A
Bruce Frank, a former Roche Diagnostics manager, McKinsey consultant and pro basketball player, talks about changes in the medical device and life sciences industries.
12 arts days of Xmas day 10: ‘Butler’s Big Dance’
New book takes a literary look at campus life during the NCAA tournament.
Sound Mind launches its third mutual fund
The Securities and Exchange Commission on Thursday approved the Sound Mind Balanced Fund, a Columbus, Ind.-based mutual fund that aims to cater to conservative investors.
Economy brightens as consumers spend, layoffs slow
The latest data confirm that the economy is improving, even though too few jobs are being created to lower the 9.8 percent unemployment rate.
Serial robber strikes again
An armed man matching the description of a serial robber has hit a Fishers gas station yet again. Fishers Police were called to the Circle K at 96th Street and Allisonville Road around 4:30 a.m. Thursday on a report of an armed robbery. The clerk told police a masked man dressed head to toe in black showed a gun and demanded money. The robber got away with an unknown amount of cash and fled on foot. He was last seen running toward the Cedar Cove Apartments. Officers from four other departments helped set up a perimeter in the area, but only found the suspect's mask.
Diner owner shoots at robbers
A south-side diner owner fought back when two would-be robbers demanded money early Thursday. The owner of E.J.'s Diner, 3301 Shelby St., told police that two men entered his business about 5 a.m. and ordered him to hand over cash. At some point, one of the robbers implied he had a gun. That's when the owner reached under his counter, pulled out his own handgun and fired one shot at the pair. One of the suspects was hit in the right shoulder. Police searched the area, but did not locate the would-be robbers. Investigators also are looking for gunshot wound victims at local hospitals.
Attacker waited in warming car
Police are investigating a home invasion robbery on the east side that began when a woman went outside to warm up her car Thursday morning. The victim told police a man was waiting for her in the running vehicle when she returned from her home at 38th Street and Post Road. She said the man then forced her back into the house, restrained her and her husband with duct tape and took their bank cards. Police say the suspect made off in the couple’s 1998 Chevy Malibu, then went to an ATM with withdrew money from their accounts. The couple was not hurt during the incident. Investigators believe the suspect had an accomplice.
New Artsgarden skywalk will connect with PNC Center
The fourth skywalk connection to the Indianapolis Artsgarden is moving forward more than 15 years after the landmark structure opened.
Fourth Artsgarden walkway gets final approval
Construction on the walkway that will connect the downtown PNC Center with the Indianapolis Artsgarden should begin in March. Plans to pave the gravel parking lots on the former site of Market Square also received approval.
Indiana Seed Fund makes 11th investment
A $250,000 investment in Aarden Pharmaceuticals will go toward advancing tuberculosis therapy through the pre-clinical development stage.
Broadbent spins off construction business
Beleaguered local developer The Broadbent Co. plans to spin out its construction arm as an independent company as of Jan. 1.
HETTRICK: An annual report on the mixed blessing of 2010
When I was 53, it was not a very good year. Then again…