Tidewater CEO Jeffrey Platt retires after more than 5 years in the role

Tidewater Inc. said Monday that Chief Executive Jeffrey Platt retired, effective Oct. 15, after more being in the role since June 2012. Platt said the decision to transition leadership comes after the oil services company completed a financial restructuring in July. Tidewater named board member Larry Ridgon as interim CEO, while it conducts a search for a permanent successor. The stock, which was still inactive in premarket trade, has tumbled 12.3% over the past three months, while the VanEck Vectors Oil Services ETF has slipped 1.4% and the S&P 500 has gained 3.8%.

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Dutch food giant JBS Foods cancels plan for IPO

Netherlands-based JBS Foods International filed Monday to withdraw its registration statement for an initial public offering, a year after filing that statement. In the original December 2016 filing for an IPO, the company said it was the largest protein company, or meat producer, with $33.7 billion in revenue through the first nine months of 2016. JBS Foods did not give a reason for the withdrawal, just that it “decided not to pursue the sale of securities” at this time. The withdrawal comes at a time when the SPDR Consumer Staples Select Sector ETF has slipped 0.3% over the past three months, while the S&P 500 ahs gained 3.8%.

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Ford Motor’s stock slips after RBC downgrade

Ford Motor Co.’s stock slumped 0.5% in premarket trade Monday, after the automaker was downgraded at RBC Capital, which said it was “just too early” in the turnaround story to stay bullish. Analyst Joseph Spak cut his rating to sector perform, after being at outperform since January. He kept his stock price target at $13, which is 7.9% above Friday’s closing price of $12.05. Spak said when he turned bullish, which was just after the presidential inauguration, it was on expectations of tax reform, earnings improvement and a more attractive production outlook relative to rival General Motors Co. . But President Trump’s border-adjusted tax never passed, and the change in CEO since then has made the stock more of a turnaround story. “To that end, we believe new CEO Jim Hackett can get Ford back on an improved track, but it is very early in the turnaround story and specifics are light,” Spak wrote in a note to clients. “To be frank, aside from some cost-cutting that may be realizable, given the lead times in auto, most of whatever [Hackett] proposes wouldn’t have an impact until 2019 or 2020 at the earliest.” The stock has lost 2.5% since inauguration day through Friday, while GM shares have climbed 24% and the Dow Jones Industrial Average has run up 15%.

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Woman dies in Waterford, Ireland as a result of Tropical storm Ophelia: Irish TV

A woman has died in the southeastern county of Waterford in Ireland, as a direct result of damage caused by Storm Ophelia, the Irish national broadcaster RTE reported Monday. The woman was hurt after a tree fell on her car, RTE reported. The woman was the sole occupant of the car and was pronounced dead at the scene. The Irish police said conditions in the area are dangerous. The Irish weather service, Met Eireann, has issued a Status Red alert for the entire country as Ophelia lashes it with rain and heavy winds. The Taoiseach, the Irish Prime Minister, Leo Varadkar has declared an emergency and asked people to stay indoors. Schools are closed across the country and flights have been cancelled.

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GE names Rafael Santana CEO of GE Transportation, replacing Jamie Miller

General Electric Co. said Monday that Chief Executive of GE Latin America Rafael Santana will become Chief Executive of GE Transportation, effective Nov. 1. Santana, who has been with GE for over 17 years, will replace Jamie Miller, who will become chief financial officer on Nov. 1. “Rafael has deep roots in GE Transportation, having spent eight years in a variety of commercial and product management roles, as well as leading the Transportation team in Latin America,” said Chief Executive John Flannery. The stock, which edged up 0.2% in premarket trade, declined Friday for a sixth-straight session to close at a 4-year low. It has tumbled 14.2% over the past three months while the Dow Jones Industrial Average has gained 5.7%.

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Exelixis shares surge 19% premarket after FDA grants priority review to kidney cancer drug

Shares of biotech Exelixis Inc. rallied 19% in premarket trade Monday, after the company said it has won U.S. Food and Drug Administration priority review status for its supplemental New Drug Application (sNDA) for a treatment for advanced renal cell carcinoma (RCC). The company said its sNDA is based on results from a mid-stage trial of Cabometyx, and is aimed at patients with previously untreated advanced RCC. If approved, the company will be able to make changes to the product label, including modifications to the indication. Cabometyx was approved by the FDA in April of 2016 for the treatment of patients with advanced RCC who have received prior anti-angioegenic therapy, or drugs that stop tumors from growing their own blood vessels. Kidney cancer is one of the top 10 most common forms of cancer in the U.S., the company said. Exelixis shares have gained 66% in 2017, while the S&P 500 has gained 14%.

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Exelix shares surge 19% premarket after FDA grants priority review to kidney cancer drug

Shares of biotech Exelixis Inc. rallied 19% in premarket trade Monday, after the company said it has won U.S. Food and Drug Administration priority review status for its supplemental New Drug Application (sNDA) for a treatment for advanced renal cell carcinoma (RCC). The company said its sNDA is based on results from a mid-stage trial of Cabometyx, and is aimed at patients with previously untreated advanced RCC. If approved, the company will be able to make changes to the product label, including modifications to the indication. Cabometyx was approved by the FDA in April of 2016 for the treatment of patients with advanced RCC who have received prior anti-angioegenic therapy, or drugs that stop tumors from growing their own blood vessels. Kidney cancer is one of the top 10 most common forms of cancer in the U.S., the company said. Exelixis shares have gained 66% in 2017, while the S&P 500 has gained 14%.

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Catalonia must drop independence call by Thursday: Spain’s deputy PM

The Spanish government has given Catalonia’s separatist leader Carles Puigdemont until Thursday morning to drop plans to make the region independent, Spain’s Deputy Prime Minister Soraya Saenz de Santamaria said on Monday. If the Catalan leader sticks to his bid to split from Spain, the central government in Madrid will take control of the region and rule it directly, by triggering the so-called Article 155 of the Spanish constitution. “Mr. Puigdemont still has the opportunity to start resolving this situation, he must answer ‘yes’ or ‘no’ to the declaration,” Saenz de Santamaria said. Spanish Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy had given Puigdemont a deadline of Monday at 10 a.m. local time, or 4 a.m. Eastern Time, to clarify whether he had declared independence for the region in an ambiguous statement made last Tuesday. Puigdemont in a letter before the Monday deadline said the aim is to negotiate over the next two months, but didn’t clarify if he had declared independence or not.

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Catalan leader dodges clear declaration of independence

Catalan leader Carles Puigdemont has responded to the Spanish government’s demand that he clarify whether the region has declared independence without actually clarifying the matter, local media reports said Monday. In a letter, Puigdemont says the aim is to hold a dialogue and negotiate over the next two months. However, it does not add any more information to the ambiguous statement the Catalan president made on Tuesday, in which he seemed to make a declaration of independence and then suspend it immediately. Spanish Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy then demanded the Catalan government say whether it had made an official declaration, with a deadline of Monday, Oct, 16. Puigdemont may face prosecution and a prison sentence if he does make a declaration.

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Cyber Security: The Threat and the Measures to Take

By Susanne Dwyer

The National Association of REALTORS® (NAR) Power Broker Roundtable this month discusses cyber security.

Moderator:
Robert Bailey, Broker/Owner, Bailey Properties, Santa Cruz, Calif.; Liaison for Large Residential Firms Relations, NAR

Panelists:
Rick Haase
, President, Latter & Blum Inc., REALTORS®, New Orleans, La.
Joan Docktor, President, Fox & Roach REALTORS®, Devon, Pa.
Gurtej Sodhi, CIO/EVP, Crye-Leike Group of Companies, Memphis, Tenn.
Rei Mesa, President/CEO, Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices Florida Realty, Ft. Lauderdale, Fla.
Scott MacDonald, President, RE/MAX Gateway, Chantilly, Va.

Robert Bailey: The threat of cyber-crime is incredibly serious—more dangerous and more commonplace than ever before, as unwitting citizens on public and private networks are targeted daily by a host of cyber criminals. According to NAR’s Associate Counsel Jessica Edgerton, the cost of cyber-crime will top $2 trillion annually by 2019—four times the 2015 statistic. How is the real estate industry fighting back, and what advice can experienced industry professionals share with colleagues—including the small to medium-sized firms who are being increasingly targeted? Rick, you oversee more than 3,000 agents. How much effort goes into cyber-security?

Rick Haase: I can tell you cyber-crime is on everyone’s mind, because we have come close to being victimized. All it takes is one breach, one click on a fraudulent link or one unsecured e-mail re-routed, to set a fraudulent wire transfer in motion that pours money into some criminal’s offshore bank account—and once the money’s gone, of course, it’s most likely gone forever. So, for us, it starts with our agents—all 3,000 of them, who we constantly remind to use encrypted company email only when communicating with their customers—and it continues with frequent warnings to our customers that we will never send an email asking them to wire funds, so if they receive one, they need to contact us immediately.

Joan Docktor: We also use a two-step authentication protocol, part of what we call our Phishing and Fraud Campaign. When agents log into our email, a text is sent to their phone, and they must input a verifiable security code in order for the log-in to be successful. Also, we are so serious about preparing our agents that we sometimes send out phishing-type emails ourselves just to see if they recognize them. If they don’t recognize and react properly to the threat, we let them know immediately that, “Hey, you fell for this,” and we push even harder on awareness training.

Gertej Sodhi: At Crye-Leike, we had so many close calls a year or so ago that we contacted the local FBI office. They put interceptors, called “sniffers,” into place in our networks to monitor for potential threats. In essence, they have partnered with us in guarding against cyber-crime, so that we now have a four-pronged approach in place: infrastructure security, including firewalls and sniffers; user-level security systems—ID and access management systems for our agents, similar to what Joan described—sophisticated monitoring to prevent the hijacking of emails; and monthly education/awareness programs to keep our agents consistently updated and aware.

Rei Mesa: Customer education is also critical. Customers tend to trust their agents—and that’s a good thing—but they must …read more

From:: Real Estate News