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Articles
CNO Financial approves $100M stock buyback
Carmel-based insurance holding company CNO Financial Group Inc. said Wednesday its board of directors approved the repurchase of up to $100 million in stock.
TORR: Right-to-work won’t cost a single legislator his or her job
Our own polling showed that even union members and self-identified Democrats supported right-to-work by slim margins.
Castleton Square Mall lands Borders replacement
Forever 21, a privately held California-based chain, has begun converting the roughly 25,000-square-foot former bookstore at the south entrance to the mall and is targeting a summer opening.
Roundup: Forever 21, Hollister, Cheddar’s, Aldi, Jack in the Box, Staples
The latest retail roundup includes a new Forever 21, a shuttered Hollister, new Staples and United Package Liquor stores, and new locations for Cheddar’s Casual Cafe and Jack in the Box.
KAR Auction reports higher earnings, profit
Carmel-based KAR Auction Services Inc. on Monday said it doubled its profit in the fourth quarter compared to the same quarter of the previous year.
Leases/leasing contracts
-DZ Investments renewed its lease for 135,451 square feet in Franklin Road Business Center, 3131 N. Franklin Road. The landlord, Duke Realty, was represented by Duke’s Jay Archer. The tenant represented itself.
-Salvation Army leased 18,000 square feet at County Line Corners, 1285 N. State Road 135, Greenwood. The tenant was represented by Pat Boyle of Midland Atlantic Properties. The landlord, Friedman Management Co., was represented by Roger Curry of Presnell Cos.
-Amerisure Insurance leased 9,374 square feet in Three Parkwood, 450 E. 96th St. The tenant was represented by Tim Norton of Summit Realty Group. The landlord, Duke Realty, was represented by Duke’s Traci Kapsalis.
-National Conference of Insurance Guaranty Funds renewed its lease for 5,400 square feet at 300 N. Meridian St. The tenant was represented by Adam Broderick and Graham Summers of Jones Lang LaSalle. The landlord, University Park Associates LLC, was represented by Mike Napariu of REI Real Estate Services LLC.
-American Teleservices Association Inc. leased 2,930 square feet of office space at 8500 Keystone Crossing. The tenant was represented by Paul Dick and Kevin Dick of Colliers International. The landlord, PWA Keystone Crossing LP, was represented by Bennett Williams of Cassidy Turley.
-School of Rock leased 2,850 square feet at Mohawk Place Shopping Center, 626-628 S. Rangeline Road, Carmel. The tenant was represented by Tracey Holtzman of Midland Atlantic Properties. The landlord, Mohawk LP, represented itself.
-El Maguey Mexican Restaurant renewed its lease for 2,800 square feet of retail space in River Ridge Plaza, 2038 S. Scatterfield Road, Anderson. The landlord was represented by Sandor Development. The tenant represented itself.
-Radio Shack renewed its lease for 2,500 square feet of retail space in Honey Creek Plaza, 5418 W. 38th St. The landlord was represented by Sandor Development. The tenant represented itself.
-Delhi Palace Restaurant leased 1,966 square feet at Lockefield Commons, 901-921 Indiana Ave. The landlord, Lockefield Commons Limited Partnership, was represented by Mark Perlstein of Sitehawk Retail Real Estate. The tenant represented itself.
-The National Foundation for Special Needs Integrity Inc. leased 1,632 square feet of office space at Carmel Office Court, 301 E. Carmel Drive, Carmel. The tenant was represented by Craig Kaiser of Northern Commercial. The landlord, Carmel-301 LLC, was represented by Paul Dick and Kevin Dick of Colliers International.-Tri Star Filtration Inc. leased 1,200 square feet of industrial space at 5303 5331 W. 86th St. The landlord, Forester Properties Inc., was represented by Bryan Poynter of Cassidy Turley. The tenant represented itself.
-Solace Risk Management LLC has leased 981 square feet of office space at 5455 W 86th St. The landlord, Polaris Commercial Investments LLC, was represented by Dan Baldini of Polaris Real Estate. The tenant represented itself.Company news
Eli Lilly and Co. plans to invest about $440 million in a new drug plant at an existing company site in southern Ireland, according to Bloomberg News. The new facility in Kinsale in County Cork will require as many as 200 skilled employees when fully operational, according to a statement on economic development organization IDA Ireland's website. Indianapolis-based Lilly will begin construction on the 240,000-square-foot manufacturing facility next month and plans to have it operational by late 2013, according to the Belfast Telegraph. Lilly already employs about 700 people at four sites in Ireland. Its first plant in the country opened in 1981. The company opened the Kinsale campus in 2010 after announcing it would spend about $360 million on the project. The existing Kinsale facility manufactures active ingredients in treatments for cancer and diabetes. Lilly employs about 38,000 people worldwide.
As expected, SynCare LLC has filed for Chapter 7 bankruptcy protection. The once fast-growing, Indianapolis-based disease-management company listed in court papers liabilities of nearly $5.7 million and assets of just $125,864. The company’s decline pushed CEO Stephanie DeKemper into personal bankruptcy in late December, with the company itself expected to follow. SynCare’s largest secured creditors include Fifth Third Bank, which provided two loans totaling $850,000 to the company. Unsecured creditors include Bank of America, with a claim totaling $676,964, and Centene Corp. in St. Louis, which provided SynCare a loan totaling nearly $1.5 million. SynCare effectively ceased operation in September after it withdrew from a major contract it had with the Missouri Medicaid program. Also earlier last year, Centene—which was both a client and a lender to SynCare—stopped funding the company’s operations. SynCare used nurses and social workers to call and visit Medicaid patients to evaluate their needs and teach them how to handle their health issues, in order to avoid expensive hospitalizations.
Profit at CNO Financial Group Inc. was flat in the fourth quarter, but the Carmel-based life and health insurer still beat analysts’ predictions. CNO Financial announced Feb. 22 that it earned $73 million, or 26 cents per diluted share, in the three months ended Dec. 31. In the same quarter a year ago, the company earned $168.2 million—of which $95 million was one-time gain from an accounting adjustment. Excluding investment gains, CNO’s operations generated $60.1 million, or 22 cents per share, in its most recent quarter. On that basis, Wall Street analysts were expecting CNO to earn 19 cents per share in the quarter, according to a survey by Thomson Reuters. CNO’s revenue totaled $1.05 billion in the fourth quarter. That was 2 percent lower than the same quarter last year, driven by lower investment gains and income. Analysts were expecting only $1.01 billion in revenue.
Franciscan to mark Beech Grove closure
Franciscan St. Francis Health announced five years ago that it would consolidate its Beech Grove operations into an expanded hospital seven miles south, near Interstate 65 and Emerson Avenue. The last inpatient department to close at Beech Grove will be its emergency room, on March 16.
Bank seeks $2M from estate of London Witte Group founder
The estate of Richard J. Salewicz, who died in 2010, is named in the foreclosure suit that also targets Tyson Corp., the company he owned on the southwest side of Indianapolis. Local accounting firm London Witte is not part of the court action.
Serial entrepreneur builds more than business
Westfield resident Jenn Kampmeier is a CEO—that’s “chief everything officer” in the get-it-done world of startups—who prefers an even-loftier title: Mom.
Couple accused of tax fraud turning the tables on state
Real estate investor Chris Marten and his wife, Janice—a longtime Carmel jeweler—charge in a new federal lawsuit that investigators trampled on their constitutional rights during the inquiry, which resulted in 28 criminal charges.
DINING: Variety admirable at soup seller
Last in a month-long series of looks at new north-side restaurants.
CNO Financial profits beat analysts’ predictions
Excluding investment gains and one-time charges, CNO’s operations generated $60.1 million, or 22 cents per share, in the fourth quarter, up 16 percent from the same period last year.
Charlie White cries foul on residency, cites other cases
The ousted secretary of state claims Sen. Richard Lugar and former Sen. Evan Bayh vote from Indiana despite living near Washington, D.C. Lugar doesn't own a home in Indiana, and tea party activists want his candidacy disqualified as a result.
DINING: Two winners at Carmel City Center
The friendly wait staff and artisan breakfasts could lead you to not care at all about the oversized shell that surrounds superior newcomer Eggshell Bistro.
Electric-grid facility in Carmel suffers $11M in damages
In a filing earlier this month, the Midwest Independent Transmission System Operator Inc. told federal regulators that a mechanical failure in September contaminated the data center.
For-profit colleges lose incentive to target vets under bills
For-profit college operators such as Carmel-based ITT Educational Services Inc.would lose a financial incentive to enroll soldiers and veterans under U.S. Senate and House bills aimed at curbing what sponsors call aggressive marketing of subpar programs.