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Rates
The average rate for 30-year mortgages was unchanged at 4.28 percent in the week ended July 31, according to Bankrate.com. The rate for 15-year mortgages dropped from 3.41 percent to 3.40 percent.
Leases/leasing contracts
-Byrd Enterprises Inc. leased 37,378 square feet at Carmel Market Place, 502 E. Carmel Drive, Carmel. The tenant was represented by Bruce Richardson of Dieterl/Richardson. The landlord, Buckingham Fountains LLC, was represented by Gary Perel of Newmark Knight Frank Halakar and Tiffany Oliver of Buckingham Cos.
-HHGregg leased 25,078 square feet of retail space in Washington Place Shopping Center, 10255 E. Washington St. The tenant was represented by Jack Esselman of J.F. Esselman Commercial. The landlord, PEBB Indianapolis LLC, was represented by Jamison Downs, Seth Biggerstaff and Paul Rogozinski of Veritas Realty.
-AIMCO leased 14,342 square feet at 4670 Haven Point Blvd. The tenant was represented by Brian Askins of Cushman & Wakefield/Summit. The landlord, Performance Services Inc., was represented by Ron Foster of Reliant Partners.
-Harvest Church leased 8,640 square feet at 6107 Airport Blvd. The tenant was represented by Brian Askins of Cushman & Wakefield/Summit. The landlord, The Peterson Co. LLC, was represented by Matt Langfeldt and Rich Forslund of Cushman & Wakefield/Summit.
-Corizon LLC leased 6,724 square feet of office space at 9245 N. Meridian St. The tenant was represented by Brook Sipe of Alliance Real Estate. The landlord, Echo Associates LLC, was represented by Ashley Bussell and Ralph Balber of Newmark Knight Frank Halakar.
-Madame Royale Nail Salon & Spa leased 2,800 square feet of retail space in Pine Creek Shoppes, 8790 E. 96th St., Fishers. The landlord, Pine Creek on 96th Street LLC, was represented by Seth Biggerstaff and Kyle Hughes of Veritas Realty. The tenant represented itself.
-Gutwein Law leased 2,504 square feet of office space at Station Place, 200 S. Meridian St. The tenant was represented by Ashley Bussell and Ralph Balber of Newmark Knight Frank Halakar. The landlord, Station Place, was represented by Zane Brown of CBRE.
-Louie’s Wine Dive Indianapolis LLC leased 2,500 square feet of retail space in the Massala Building, 345 Massachusettes Ave. The tenant was represented by Allison Hawley of Niessink Commercial Real estate Inc. The landlord, Massala Properties Inc., was represented by Ralph Balber and Ashley Bussell of Newmark Knight Frank Halakar.
-Jimmy Johns leased 1,760 square feet of retail space in Shelbyville Crossing, 2400 Marketplace Blvd, Suite C, Shelbyville. The tenant was represented by Drew Warner of Eclipse Realty. The landlord, Shelbyville Retail LLC, was represented by Jamison Downs and Kyle Hughes of Veritas Realty.
-A Nail Salon leased 1,608 square feet at Lebanon Crossing, 1370 S. Lebanon St., Lebanon. The landlord, Lebanon 39 LLC, was represented by Keith Fried of Sitehawk Retail Real Estate. The tenant represented itself.
-Infinity Chiropractor leased 1,600 square feet of retail space in Pine Creek Shoppes, 8966 E. 96th St., Fishers. The tenant was represented by Seth Biggerstaff of Veritas Realty. The landlord, Pine Creek Shoppes on 96th Street LLC, was represented by Paul Rogozinski of Veritas Realty.
-Raw Juice leased 1,200 square feet at Clearwater Springs Shopping Center, 5025 E 82nd St. The landlord, PK Clearwater Springs LLC, was represented by Keith Fried of Sitehawk Retail Real Estate. The tenant represented itself.
Sales/acquisitions
-Lowe’s Cos. Inc. bought Intech 12, a 140,368-square-foot office building at 6620 Network Way. The buyer was represented by Tom Hadley of Cushman & Wakefield/Summit. The seller, Encore Enterprises Inc., was represented by Mike Semler of Cassidy Turley.
-Taco Bell of America bought 0.6 acres at 3042 Stones Crossing Road West, Greenwood. The buyer was represented by John Byrne of Radar Commercial Real Estate. The seller, Stones Crossing Development LLC, represented itself.
ITT Educational CEO signals resignation amid stock freefall, federal scrutiny
Carmel-based ITT Educational Services Inc. announced late Monday afternoon that CEO Kevin Modany planned to resign within six months. The struggling for-profit education firm has drawn scrutiny from government officials for its marketing and lending practices.
Pacers’ NBA title odds plunge after George’s broken leg
The Pacers were among the favorites to challenge for the Eastern Conference title this season. That was before Paul George tried to block a layup during a Team USA scrimmage three days ago and broke his right leg in multiple places.
Small employers dumping plans faster than expected, WellPoint says
WellPoint saw 218,000 members of its health plans disappear because their employers ended their group plans. Other insurers, however, say small employers are ending their plans more slowly than expected.
City’s Covanta deal discourages rival recycling programs
Details of a pending recycling deal with Covanta are emerging. Under the pact, the city of Indianapolis would face financial penalties if it launches other recycling programs.
Indiana health startups have raised $100M this year
Investors seem to have rediscovered the Midwest this year, pouring a record $777 million into 139 companies, according to BioEnterprise. In the first half of 2013, Midwest companies raised $351 million.
ITT Educational shares reeling after deal falls through
The real estate deal would have brought as much as $119.1 million for the struggling, Carmel-based education firm.
State eyes downtown site for $17M archives project
Officials want developers to submit plans for a site on the American Legion Mall, including an existing historic building and a 36,000-square-foot addition.
REI Investments agrees to buy site of former GM stamping plant
The local developer plans to purchase the entire 102-acre property, which has been earmarked for a 15,000-seat outdoor concert venue and the city’s new criminal justice complex.
Company news
The U.S. Food and Drug Administration approved a new Type 2 diabetes drug from Indianapolis-based drugmaker Eli Lilly and Co. and its German partner, Boehringer Ingelheim, according to the Associated Press. The drug, called Jardiance, is designed to block glucose reabsorption in kidneys and remove excess glucose through urine. Unlike many other diabetes treatments, it does not depend on a patient's insulin levels to be effective. European Union regulators approved the drug, also known as empagliflozin, in May. Lilly is expected to garner $518 million in annual sales from Jardiance by 2019, according to the average of five analyst estimates compiled by Bloomberg earlier this year. Lilly and Boehringer had said FDA didn't approve the drug because of concerns about the Boehringer factory in Germany where it will be made. But a Lilly spokeswoman said Friday those concerns have been resolved.
Indianapolis-based SonarMed Inc., which makes an airway monitoring system used in operating rooms and intensive care units, has raised $2.4 million from institutional investors, according to the BioCrossroads life sciences business development group. The Series A1 funding round was led by Baylor Angel Network, Hyde Park Angels, Visiontech Partners, BioCrossroads’ Indiana Seed Fund II, Spring Mill Ventures, two former Abbott Laboratories executives and the SonarMed management team. SonarMed will use the money to develop a second version of its adult monitoring system as well as a version for children and infants. “Providers are being pressured to find new and better ways to provide higher quality care with a focus on patient safety, and doing so with fewer resources,” said SonarMed CEO Tom Bumgardner. “Consequently, health care systems are increasingly interested in our technology.”
Endocyte Inc. swung to a second-quarter profit of $22.4 million due to a change in accounting after its leading drug candidate failed and its partner, New Jersey-based Merck & Co. Inc., cancelled its development contract. The West Lafayette-based drug development firm earned 52 cents per diluted share compared with a loss of 23 cents per share in the same quarter last year. Revenue shot to $49.2 million from $16.5 million. All of that money comes from collaboration payments from Merck, not all of which were immediately recognized in Endocyte’s accounting. But now that the contract has ended, Endocyte accelerated its accounting recognition of the revenue, producing the spike in revenue and profit. After the failure in May of its drug vintafolide as a treatment for ovarian cancer, Endocyte is continuing to study the drug as a non-small cell lung cancer drug. The company has no products on the market.
WellPoint Inc. beat expectations with its second-quarter profit and raised its full-year profit forecast. But unlike peers UnitedHealth Group and Aetna, the Indianapolis-based health insurer could not improve its profit over the same quarter last year. Profit fell 8.6 percent, to $731.1 million, from $800.1 million. Excluding investment gains and other special items, WellPoint earned $2.44 per share. On that basis, Wall Street analysts expected $2.26, according to a survey by Thomson Reuters. WellPoint raised its full-year profit forecast 10 cents per share, saying it now expects more than $8.60 per share. Revenue rose 4.4 percent to nearly $18.5 billion. Analysts expected $18.2 billion, according to Thomson Reuters.
U.S. airfares on the rise, outpacing inflation
The average roundtrip ticket within the U.S., including taxes, reached $509.15 in the first six months of this year, up nearly $14 from the same period last year.
People
Kyle DeFur will step down as president of St. Vincent Indianapolis Hospital after more than six years in the position. Dr. Joel Feldman, chief medical officer, will serve as president while St. Vincent Health searches for a permanent replacement. Before coming to Indianapolis, DeFur was president of St. Vincent Anderson Hospital, then known as Saint John’s Health System. DeFur holds a bachelor’s degree from Anderson University as well as master’s degrees in hospital administration and business administration from Xavier University.
Dr. Mary Abernathy has been named executive director of medical education at St. Vincent Indianapolis Hospital. Abernathy joined St. Vincent Indianapolis in October as program director for medical residents in obstetrics and gynecology. Before that, she was director of graduate medical education and residency program director positions at Indiana University School of Medicine’s South Bend and Indianapolis campuses. Abernathy earned a bachelor’s degree in biology from Purdue University as well as medical and master’s degrees from IU School of Medicine.
Dr. Brent Benscoter, an otologist and neurotologist, has joined Midwest Ear Institute in Indianapolis and Mooresville. Benscoter earned his undergraduate and medical degrees from the University of Missouri-Columbia.
Not so golden: Wealth gap lasting into retirement
With traditional pensions becoming rarer in the private sector, and lower-paid workers less likely to have access to an employer-provided retirement plan, there is a growing gulf in the retirement savings of the wealthy and people with lower incomes.
Indiana ethics cases draw watchdog frustration
Lawmakers say they are going to look at new transparency rules after public officials skirted the law in three separate ethics cases this year.
Indiana students make small gains in ISTEP scores
State education officials say 74.7 percent of students passed both the math and English tests—up one percentage point from 2013.
Review: ‘The Tempest’ at White River State Park
The show proper began, I’m sure I wasn’t the only one in the sizable crowd bracing for sound problems…and relieved when none occurred. In fact, the sound was impeccable.
Paul George’s broken leg leaves Pacers reeling
The Indiana Pacers, a round short of the NBA Finals the last two years, are left pondering a season without their best player.