YouTube cuts business ties with Logan Paul over offensive video

YouTube said Wednesday it has cut business ties with popular vlogger Logan Paul following a controversial video he posted that showed a dead body in a Japanese forest. “In light of recent events, we have decided to remove Logan Paul’s channels from Google Preferred,” a YouTube spokesperson said, according to a report by Variety. “Additionally, we will not feature Logan in Season 4 of ‘Foursome’ and his new originals are on hold.” Google Preferred is the company’s top-tier ad platform, and “Foursome” is a comedy on the YouTube Red channel. Paul has about 15 million subscribers to his channel, which has not been taken down. Days after posting the video, Paul apologized and took it down after a harsh outcry, but YouTube, a unit of Alphabet Inc.’s Google, was silent for 11 days, finally saying Tuesday that Paul’s channel violated community guidelines and promising “further consequences.” In a tweet Tuesday, YouTube said: “We’ll have more to share soon on steps we’re taking to ensure a video like this is never circulated again.”

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From:: Stock Market News

KB Home beats expectations, expects ‘solid demand’ for housing in 2018

Shares of KB Home rose 3% late Wednesday after the homebuilder reported fourth-quarter earnings above Wall Street forecasts and said it expects “solid demand for housing” this year. KB Home earned $84.3 million, or 84 cents a share, in the quarter, compared with $37.5 million, or 40 cents a share, in the year-ago period. Revenue rose 18% to $1.40 billion, compared with $1.19 billion a year ago. Analysts polled by FactSet had expected per-share earnings of 77 cents on sales of $1.35 billion. The company pinned its optimism for housing demand in 2018 on “healthy employment, rising household incomes and strong consumer confidence, and continued limited supply,” Chief Executive Jeffrey Mezger said in a statement. Shares ended the regular session up 0.4%.

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From:: Stock Market News

The Genesis of BackAgent

By Susanne Dwyer

In 2017, BackAgent provided more than 180,000 agents and brokers a cloud-based technology platform complete with a comprehensive intranet and one of the most robust transaction-management systems in the industry.

But when the Houston, Texas-based company first had the idea for the solution back in 2005, the initial goal was to solve the inefficiencies at one specific brokerage.

According to Eric Reed, the company’s CEO, while the early stages of the system used today were developed nearly a decade ago, additional clients began signing up for the service in 2009.

By 2010, 30 brands were on board. That number rose to 140 in 2012 and 320 in 2014. Today, BackAgent is deployed at more than 480 brands, increasing as much as 80 percent year-to-year.

In the Beginning
In 2005, while in between jobs, Reed found himself working at his parents’ brokerage. Willing to lend a helping hand, he didn’t want to get involved in the real estate industry because he’d been around it his entire life.

“I realized they were doing really well when it came to hiring agents, but they had no real process in terms of explaining what paperwork was needed for certain deals,” says Reed. “In fact, they had a sheet of paper upon which people would come by and check off whatever contract they were handing in.”

Reed began grilling his father about the process, and realized there had to be a better way.

“I’ve always loved technology, and my family has always been in real estate, an industry that’s conventionally slow to adopt new technologies—so the two never really fit together,” says Reed. “Once I came in and found out why (negative perceptions about operational complexities, ease of use and price), I realized I could do what I love and develop a program from scratch, while making it priced appropriately for a mom-and-pop shop.”

His first step involved reaching out to Ryan Missman, an old friend.

Having come up in the field with a software company tasked with doing the impossible—aka creating things others couldn’t­—Missman had previously worked with Reed when the two were employed at a telecommunications company. The two reconnected in 2005 when Reed approached him about his idea.

“He came to me and asked me to build this product to make things great for his parents’ brokerage,” says Missman, who not only had a good job, but also believed there was probably something already out there that could accomplish what Reed wanted.

While Reed began working on his idea with another friend, Missman’s interest was eventually piqued.

“We couldn’t find anything that could do what was needed—something cost-effective, efficient and surefire—and about a year later, Eric convinced me to come aboard,” says Missman, who now serves as BackAgent’s chief technology officer.

Focusing on building a tool that could make all the little annoyances of a brokerage go away, Missman’s goal wasn’t just to create a product that could help Reed’s parents, but rather, one that could be scaled for growth and resold to others.

“It was the combination of Eric’s strong understanding of real estate and my …read more

From:: Real Estate News

RE/MAX Co-CEO: ‘Will It Be the Same in 2018?’

By Susanne Dwyer

Editor’s Note: The below commentary is by Adam Contos, co-CEO of RE/MAX.

2017: The Fight to Find a Home. Will It Be the Same in 2018?
A few weeks ago, as we wrapped December’s RE/MAX National Housing Report and looked back at the year, we noticed one glaring anomaly: there were no real anomalies for 2017. No real valleys and no big peaks other than the expected seasonal ebbs and flows. Throughout the year, so many of the key market indicators we analyze in the monthly housing report remained steady: tight inventories, rising median home prices and increased sales. This was all good news for sellers but bitter news for buyers—especially ambitious first-time homebuyers looking to lay down roots.

And although inventory remains the primary storyline in the new year, here are a few other trends we can expect for the 2018 U.S. housing market:

Inventory Is Key (Tired of hearing about inventory yet?)
Turn up the volume on new-home building. Until that happens, we’ll struggle with low inventory and some markets will feature all-out bidding wars. In 2017, housing starts were down 2.9 percent year-over-year and well below the historic 50-year average. That hurts. Even though there’s a shortage of labor and a spike in material costs, the primary reason for the low starts is that builders have focused on more profitable, higher-priced homes and multi-family residential construction. We can’t blame them, but we need more entry-level houses. We’d love nothing more than to see the next generation of homebuyers start building equity now. We saw glimmers of hope at the end of the year as U.S. single-family home-building and permits began to surge. We’d like to see that trend continue.

Existing-Home Sales on the Rise
Fueled by renewed consumer confidence, wage growth and an improving economy, existing-home sales could increase and may even surpass record levels set back in 2006. What would slow us down? Any negative impacts on the stock market, even tighter inventories (there’s that word again), a repeat of 2017’s devastating hurricanes and fires or even the recently signed tax reform bill. Without getting too deep into the provisions of the tax bill that passed at year-end, new restrictions on mortgage interest deduction and property tax deduction could deter some from buying homes in the country’s priciest markets. This could also deter some homeowners with existing large mortgages from selling. The changes to the standard deductions for both individual and married filers may also remove some of the incentive to buying a home nationwide. But we’ll wait and see what the real effects are of these provisions as buyers weigh their options with financial planners.

Changing Migration Patterns
Homebuyers discouraged by affordability and low inventory (sorry, I had to do it) in certain cities, markets and states will look to other, more attractive and more inviting neighborhoods. We expect to see more home sales in the suburbs, less-populated markets and even more affordable states. Cities that have the most effective transportation systems and those that promote high-amenity, “walkable,” contemporary neighborhoods will benefit the …read more

From:: Real Estate News

S&P 500, Nasdaq break six-day win streak

U.S. stock-market indexes closed slightly lower on Wednesday as investors grew cautious following a temporary jump in the yield on the 10-year Treasury note, prompted by a report that China is considering halting purchases of U.S. debt. Investors dumped bond-proxies, or stocks such as utilities, real estate and telecoms. Meanwhile financials stocks were the only bright spot on Wall Street, rising along with the yields. The S&P 500 fell 3.06 points, or 0.1%, to 2,748.23, breaking a six-day winning streak. The tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite index declined by 10.01 points, or 0.1%, to 7,153.57, also breaking its six-day advance and retreating from records. The Dow Jones Industrial Average slipped 16.67 points, or less than 0.1%, to 25,369.13. Among the best performers on Wall Street, shares of Eastman Kodak Co. soared 57%, building on a 119% surge from Tuesday when the image-technology company said it is launching a cryptocurrency and would begin a “major blockchain initiative.”

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From:: Stock Market News

5 Mortgage Firms Recognized Among Best Employers

The latest rankings of best employers are in, and five mortgage organizations made the cut. Also among firms recognized was a compliance service provider and a trade group.

PrimeLending said it made the 2017 Best Workplaces for Diversity and Best Workplaces for Parents lists from Fortune and Great Place to Work.

Dallas-based PrimeLending, which is a subsidiary of Hilltop Holdings Inc., last reported its headcount at 2,800 employees as of year-end 2015.


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From:: Financing

Trump says it’s ‘unlikely’ he’d speak with Special Counsel Mueller

President Donald Trump said Wednesday it’s “unlikely” he would answer questions from Special Counsel Robert Mueller since “there was absolutely no collusion” between his campaign and Russia. At a White House news conference with Norwegian Prime Minister Erna Solberg, Trump said “it seems unlikely that you’d even have an interview.” Mueller has reportedly told Trump’s lawyers he may want to interview the president.

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From:: Stock Market News

Mexico and Canada ETFs fall on report Trump will announce pullout of Nafta

Exchange-traded funds that track both Canada’s and Mexico’s stock markets fell on Wednesday, following a report that suggested U.S. President Donald Trump may announce a withdrawal from the North American Free Trade Agreement. The iShares MSCI Mexico ETF sank 2.5% while the iShares MSCI Canada ETF lost 1.1%. The S&P 500 fell 0.2%. According to Reuters, which cited two Canadian government officials, Canada is increasingly convinced that President Donald Trump will announce that the U.S. will exit Nafta. The trade pact is currently being renegotiated with the latest round of talks scheduled for later this month in Montreal. A dissolution of Nafta is seen as detrimental to both Mexico and Canada, which benefit from free trade with the world’s largest economy.

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From:: Stock Market News

Oil prices settle above $63 for the first time in over 3 years

Oil prices on Wednesday settled above $63 a barrel for the first time in more than three years after the Energy Information Administration reported an eighth-straight weekly decline in U.S. crude supplies, along with a fall in weekly production. February West Texas Intermediate crude rose 61 cents, or 1%, to settle at $63.57 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange.

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From:: Stock Market News

Report that Trump will announce end of Nafta pact adds to stock-market jitters

U.S. stocks, struggling to maintain record-setting altitude in 2018, took a firmer slide Wednesday afternoon amid a report that Canadian officials expect that President Donald Trump will end the North American Free Trade Agreement, according to a Reuters. The Dow Jones Industrial Average was off about 41 points, or 0.2%, at 25,344, the S&P 500 index was off 0.3% at 2,743, while the Nasdaq Composite Index retreated 0.4% at 7,134. The main benchmarks had been treading water, trying to recover from an earlier slide, before reports about Nafta surfaced. The U.S. dollar also strengthened against Canada’s loonie and the Mexico’s peso . Discussion to redraft the 23-year old trade pact between Mexico, Canada and the U.S. has been thorny.

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From:: Stock Market News