Category: Arkansas

  • Rick O'Brien to Lead Marketing Efforts for Sage Partners (Movers & Shakers)

    by Arkansas Business Staff  on Monday, Feb. 4, 2019 12:00 am   1 min read

    Rick O’Brien

    Rick O’Brien has been named market director for central Arkansas for Cushman & Wakefield-Sage Partners of Little Rock, a full-service commercial real estate firm. O’Brien, already an executive broker, will be responsible for directing brokerage, asset management and administrative functions for the central Arkansas office, including new business development.

    “It’s all about relationships,” said Marshall Saviers, president of Sage Partners. “With Sage’s capabilities and Rick’s relationships, we have grown our footprint in Central Arkansas since he joined us in 2018.”

    O’Brien began his career as a lawyer in private practice and has worked as a prosecutor in Pulaski County and in Dallas County, Texas. He worked at Crews & Associates in Little Rock from 1982-2009, ultimately as first vice president and manager of municipal trading and sales. In 2009, O’Brien co-founded Rock Financial Partners, acting as a senior managing director, before serving as president and CEO of its subsidiary, Heartland Bank. He has also been involved in various real estate investments and private equity ventures.


    See more of this week’s Movers & Shakers, and submit your own announcement at ArkansasBusiness.com/Movers.

  • Generations Bank Hires Banister, Promotes Three (Movers & Shakers)

    by Arkansas Business Staff  on Monday, Feb. 4, 2019 12:00 am   1 min read

    Charlotte Banister

    Charlotte Banister is the new director of marketing for Generations Bank in Rogers, and Max Harrell has been promoted to commercial lender.

    Banister previously worked as marketing coordinator, account manager and creative coordinator at B-Unlimited in Fayetteville. She earned her bachelor’s degree in advertising and public relations from the University of Arkansas.

    Harrell previously served as lender at the bank’s branch in Fayetteville.

    Sarah Lynch has been promoted to lender at Generations Bank in Fayetteville. Lynch has been at the bank for a year and a half and previously served as a credit analyst.

    Dalton Smith has been appointed assistant controller at Generations Bank in Hampton (Calhoun County). Smith has been with the bank for a year, previously serving as a lender.



    Todd Boswell

    Todd Boswell has been promoted to wealth management adviser at Northwestern Mutual Wealth Management in Little Rock.

    Boswell previously served as a financial adviser.

    He has worked with Northwestern Mutual for more than 16 years.


    See more of this week’s Movers & Shakers, and submit your own announcement at ArkansasBusiness.com/Movers.

  • In the Workplace 2019: Rethinking Sexual Harassment Prevention

    by Michelle Kaemmerling  on Thursday, Dec. 27, 2018 8:32 am   3 min read

    Preliminary data provided by the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission shows a 12 percent increase in the number of sexual harassment charges filed, and a 50 percent increase in the number of harassment lawsuits filed by the agency.

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  • Legal Marijuana Industry Had Banner Year in 2018

    PORTLAND, Ore. — The last year was a 12-month champagne toast for the legal marijuana industry as the global market exploded and cannabis pushed its way further into the financial and cultural mainstream.

    Liberal California became the largest legal U.S. marketplace, while conservative Utah and Oklahoma embraced medical marijuana. Canada ushered in broad legalization, and Mexico’s Supreme Court set the stage for that country to follow.

    U.S. drug regulators approved the first marijuana-based pharmaceutical to treat kids with a form of epilepsy, and billions of investment dollars poured into cannabis companies. Even main street brands like Coca-Cola said they are considering joining the party.

    “I have been working on this for decades, and this was the year that the movement crested,” said U.S. Rep. Earl Blumenauer, an Oregon Democrat working to overturn the federal ban on pot. “It’s clear that this is all coming to a head.”

    With buzz building across the globe, the momentum will continue into 2019.

    Luxembourg is poised to become the first European country to legalize recreational marijuana, and South Africa is moving in that direction. Thailand legalized medicinal use of marijuana on Tuesday, and other Southeastern Asian countries may follow South Korea’s lead in legalizing cannabidiol, or CBD. It’s a non-psychoactive compound found in marijuana and hemp plants and used for treatment of certain medical problems.

    “It’s not just the U.S. now. It’s spreading,” said Ben Curren, CEO of Green Bits, a San Jose, California, company that develops software for marijuana retailers and businesses.

    Curren’s firm is one of many that blossomed as the industry grew. He started the company in 2014 with two friends. Now, he has 85 employees, and the company’s software processes $2.5 billion in sales transactions a year for more than 1,000 U.S. retail stores and dispensaries.

    Green Bits raised $17 million in April, pulling in money from investment firms including Snoop Dogg’s Casa Verde Capital. Curren hopes to expand internationally by 2020.

    “A lot of the problem is keeping up with growth,” he said.

    Legal marijuana was a $10.4 billion industry in the U.S. in 2018 with a quarter-million jobs devoted just to the handling of marijuana plants, said Beau Whitney, vice president and senior economist at New Frontier Data, a leading cannabis market research and data analysis firm. There are many other jobs that don’t involve direct work with the plants but they are harder to quantify, Whitney said.

    Investors poured $10 billion into cannabis in North America in 2018, twice what was invested in the last three years combined, he said, and the combined North American market is expected to reach more than $16 billion in 2019.

    “Investors are getting much savvier when it comes to this space because even just a couple of years ago, you’d throw money at it and hope that something would stick,” he said. “But now investors are much more discerning.”

    Increasingly, U.S. lawmakers see that success and want it for their states.

    Nearly two-thirds of U.S. states now have legalized some form of medical marijuana.

    Voters in November made Michigan the 10th state — and first in the Midwest — to legalize recreational marijuana. Governors in New York and New Jersey are pushing for a similar law in their states next year, and momentum for broad legalization is building in Pennsylvania and Illinois.

    “Let’s legalize the adult use of recreational marijuana once and for all,” New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo said last week.

    State lawmakers in Nebraska just formed a campaign committee to put a medical cannabis initiative to voters in 2020. Nebraska shares a border with Colorado, one of the first two states to legalize recreational marijuana, and Iowa, which recently started a limited medical marijuana program.

    “Attitudes have been rapidly evolving and changing. I know that my attitude toward it has also changed,” said Nebraska state Sen. Adam Morfeld, a Democrat. “Seeing the medical benefits and seeing other states implement it … has convinced me that it’s not the dangerous drug it’s made out to be.”

    With all its success, the U.S. marijuana industry continues to be undercut by a robust black market and federal law that treats marijuana as a controlled substance like heroin. Financial institutions are skittish about cannabis businesses, even in U.S. states where they are legal, and investors until recently have been reluctant to put their money behind pot.

    Marijuana businesses can’t deduct their business expenses on their federal taxes and face huge challenges getting insurance and finding real estate for their brick-and-mortar operations.

    “Until you have complete federal legalization, you’re going to be living with that structure,” said Marc Press, a New Jersey attorney who advises cannabis businesses.

    At the start of the year, the industry was chilled when then-U.S. Attorney General Jeff Sessions rescinded a policy shielding state-licensed medical marijuana operators from federal drug prosecutions. Ultimately the move had minimal impact because federal prosecutors showed little interest in going after legal operators.

    Sessions, a staunch marijuana opponent, later lost his job while President Donald Trump said he was inclined to support an effort by U.S. Sen. Cory Gardner, a Colorado Republican, to relax the federal prohibition.

    In November, Democrats won control of the U.S. House and want to use it next year to pass legislation that eases federal restrictions on the legal marijuana industry without removing it from the controlled substances list.

    Gardner and Massachusetts Democratic Sen. Elizabeth Warren have proposed legislation allowing state-approved commercial cannabis activity under federal law. The bill also would let states and Indian tribes determine how best to regulate marijuana commerce within their boundaries without fear of federal intervention.

    If those provisions become law, they could open up banking for the marijuana industry nationwide and make it easier for cannabis companies to secure capital.

    Blumenauer’s “blueprint” to legalize marijuana also calls for the federal government to provide medical marijuana for veterans, more equitable taxation for marijuana businesses and rolling back federal prohibitions on marijuana research, among other things.

    “We have elected the most pro-cannabis Congress in history and more important, some of the people who were roadblocks to our work … are gone,” Blumenauer said. “If we’re able to jump-start it in the House, I think there will be support in the Senate, particularly if we deal with things that are important, like veterans’ access and banking.”

    (All contents © copyright 2018 Associated Press. All rights reserved.)
  • A Strong Economy Means Big Sales This Holiday

    by Associated Press  on Thursday, Dec. 27, 2018 6:55 am   1 min read

    (Shutterstock)

    NEW YORK — Americans buoyed by a strong economy pushed holiday sales growth to a six-year high.

    Retail sales rose 5.1 percent between Nov. 1 and Dec. 24 from a year ago, according to Mastercard SpendingPulse, which tracked spending online and in stores across all payment types, including those who paid by cash or check. Total sales topped $850 billion this year, Mastercard said.

    “From shopping aisles to online carts, consumer confidence translated into holiday cheer for retail,” said Steve Sadove, a senior adviser at Mastercard and the former CEO of the department store chain Saks.

    Online sales continued to grow, up more than 19 percent from a year ago. Last week, Mastercard said online sales made up 13 percent of total retail sales.

    Clothing sold well this year — up nearly 8 percent from last year, the biggest growth for apparel sales since 2010, Mastercard said. Home furniture sales rose 2.3 percent, while electronics and appliances slipped 0.7 percent.

    Shoppers spent less at department stores, which Mastercard said was partly due to store closings. But shoppers did head to the websites of department stores, where sales rose 10.2 percent, Mastercard said. Traditional retailers have been updating their websites and smartphone apps, as well as making it easier for shoppers to buy online and then pick up their items in store.

    (All contents © copyright 2018 Associated Press. All rights reserved.)

  • Best Quotes of 2018: 'What NYC and the Delta Have in Common'

    by Arkansas Business Staff  on Monday, Dec. 24, 2018 12:00 am   4 min read

    They said it, we only quoted them. Here are some of the best things said in 201.

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  • Doctors, Lawyers and Lauren James Big Online Draws in 2018

    by Sarah Campbell-Miller  on Monday, Dec. 24, 2018 12:00 am   4 min read

    A March 19 follow-up to a Whispers column item about the firing of CARTI’S highest-paid oncologist was the most-read story of the year on ArkansasBusiness.com. The Whisper item itself, which was published just hours earlier, was a close second.

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  • Dave’s Place Marks 25 Years In Heart of Little Rock

    by Jan Cottingham  on Monday, Dec. 24, 2018 12:00 am   3 min read

    Dave’s Place at 210 Center St. in Little Rock. (George Fisher/Google Maps)

    Restaurateur David Williams has seen a lot of change in downtown Little Rock since he opened Dave’s Place on Dec. 20, 1993. And yet in the notoriously difficult restaurant business, Dave’s Place has reached its 25th anniversary.

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  • Forming the Coaching Habit in 2019 (Barry Goldberg On Leadership)

    by Barry Goldberg  on Monday, Dec. 24, 2018 12:00 am   3 min read

    Somewhere between telling your direct reports what to do and taking the action item yourself is the territory of the leader as coach.

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  • Reince Priebus Spotted at Capital Bar & Grill

    by Arkansas Business Staff  on Monday, Dec. 24, 2018 12:00 am   1 min read

    Reince Priebus speaking at the 2017 Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC) in National Harbor, Maryland. (Gage Skidmore)

    Reince Priebus, who served President Donald Trump for the first six months of his administration, was in Little Rock last week.

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