Rascoff co-founded the real-estate lister. He's led the company since 2010 and guided it through its IPO in 2011.
He'll be replaced by fellow co-founder Rich Barton, who served as CEO before Rascoff. (Rascoff will stay on the board of directors.)
"I am excited to be back," Barton said in a statement.
"The current economic expansion is the second-longest on record, and the nation's banks are stronger as a result," FDIC Chairman Jelena McWilliams said in a statement.
An undisclosed built-in microphone in Google's Nest Guard home security device has caught the attention of at least US lawmaker.
Senator Mark Warner (D-VA), vice chair of the Senate Intelligence Committee, blasted Google’s omission, saying it's "totally at odds with consumer expectations."
He added:
Today's movers:
This time it's from the Philly Fed. Newly released data came in lower than expected, according to our Matt Egan:
Despite the sudden drop, a Barclays analyst note said the lower data is a result of last month's partial government shutdown. The note adds:
Wall Street's waiting for news about the latest round of US-China trade talks from Washington.
Ride-hailing apps, like Uber and Lyft, aren't causing too big of a dent in their older competitors.
The pizza company's quarterly results broadly missed Wall Street's expectations, sending shares of the company down about 7% before the market opened Thursday.
US same-store sales popped 3.6% at company-owned stores and 5.7% at franchises in the last three months of 2018.
But Wall Street analysts expected better performance on both counts. They were looking on average for 6.6% growth in company-owned stores and a 7.25% spike for franchises, according to IBES data from Refinitiv.
Domino's net income came in at $111.6 million for the quarter, about 19.6%more than the same period the previous year. The company's earnings per share also fell short of expectations.
Competition among Domino's, Pizza Hut and Papa John's is fierce, and the earnings results may signal that Domino's is struggling to stay competitive.
The "points for pies" program is an "example of how we do things a bit differently," said CEO Richard Allison during a call with analysts on Thursday. He added that the program has been a good way to make news and raise customer engagement with the brand.