Document:

EX-10.1

 Exhibit 10.1 

Amendment #9 
 to the

 Yahoo! Publisher Network Contract #1-26652287 

Effective Date August 28, 2010, as amended (“Agreement”) 

This Amendment #9 to the Agreement (“Amendment #9”) effective as of the latter date of Yahoo! Inc. or Local
Corporation’s signature below (“Amendment #9 Effective Date”) is entered into by and between Yahoo! Inc. and Yahoo! EMEA Limited (as successor in interest to Yahoo! Sarl (as further described herein) and together with
Yahoo! Inc., “Yahoo!”), on the one hand, and Local Corporation (“Publisher”), on the other hand, and modifies the Agreement. All capitalized terms not defined herein shall have the meanings assigned to them
in the Agreement. 
 In consideration of these mutual covenants and for such other good and valuable consideration, the sufficiency of which
is acknowledged by the parties hereto, Yahoo! and Publisher desire to as of the Amendment #9 Effective Date amend the Agreement as follows: 
  

	1.	The Agreement is hereby amended to reflect that as of November 1, 2013, the entity Yahoo! Sarl is no longer a party to the Agreement and is replaced with the new entity, Yahoo! EMEA Limited. Accordingly, all
references in the Agreement to Yahoo! Sarl are replaced with Yahoo! EMEA Limited and all associated references to notices under the Agreement shall reflect that such notices be sent to the following address: 

Yahoo! EMEA Limited 
 Pinnacle 1
East Point Business Park 
 Alfie Byrne Road 

Dublin, 3 IRELAND 
  

	2.	The following is added to Attachment A (Implementation Requirements) to the Agreement: 

“H. Adult Paid Search Results. Yahoo!’s provision of an adult Paid Search Results to Publisher or to its syndication partners
may be terminated by Yahoo! at any time and for any reason upon 24 hours notice to Publisher.” 
  

	3.	In Section 30 (Definitions) of Attachment B (Terms and Conditions) to the Agreement the definition of Territory is hereby deleted and replaced with the following: 

“Territory: the following countries or regions where Yahoo has a paid marketplace: the United States, Austria, Brazil,
Canada, Denmark, Finland, France, Germany, Hong Kong, India, Italy, Latin America (which as currently include: Mexico, Argentina, Colombia, Chile, Venezuela, Peru), Netherlands, Norway, Southeast Asia (which as of the Start Date includes Singapore,
Thailand, Vietnam, Philippines, Indonesia, Malaysia), Spain, Sweden, Taiwan, Ireland and the United Kingdom. The aforementioned countries or regions may be updated by Yahoo from time to time during the Term.” 

 

	4.	Miscellaneous. 

  

	 	(a)	Except as expressly set forth herein, the terms and conditions of the Agreement are unmodified and remain in full force and effect. 

  

	 	(b)	 The Agreement is amended to provide that references in the Agreement to “this Agreement” or “the Agreement” (including indirect
references such as “hereunder”, 

  
 1 

	 	
“hereby”, “herein” and “hereof”) shall be deemed references to the Agreement as amended hereby. All capitalized defined terms used but not defined herein shall have
the same meaning as set forth in the Agreement. 

  

	 	(c)	This Amendment #9 may be executed in one or more counterparts, each of which when executed shall be deemed to be an original but all of which taken together shall constitute one and the same instrument. An
electronically transmitted signature via pdf or facsimile shall be deemed the equivalent to an original ink signature. 

  

	 	(d)	In the event of a conflict between any of the terms and conditions of the Agreement and any of the terms and conditions of this Amendment #9, the terms and conditions of this Amendment #9 shall control.

 IN WITNESS WHEREOF, the parties hereto have caused this Amendment #9 to the Agreement to be executed by their duly authorized
representatives as of the dates set forth below. 
  

			
	 YAHOO! INC.
	  	LOCAL CORPORATION
		
	 By: /s/ Al Echamendi
	  	By: /s/ Michael Sawtell
		
	 Name: VP, Bus Dev
	  	Name: Michael Sawtell
		
	 Title: VP, Bus Dev
	  	Title: President/COO
		
	 Date: 3/10/14
	  	Date: 3/4/14
		
	 YAHOO! EMEA LIMITED
	  	
		
	 By: /s/ Michael McElligott
	  	
		
	 Name: Michael McElligott
	  	
		
	 Title: Director
	  	
		
	 Date: 19/3/2014
	  	

  
 2EX-10.23

 Exhibit 10.23 

CLOSING AGREEMENT 
 THIS CLOSING
AGREEMENT, made in duplicate, is entered into pursuant to Sections 6051.07 and 6091.06 of the Puerto Rico Internal Revenue Code of 2011 (hereinafter the “PR Code”) and Section 6126 of the Puerto Rico Internal Revenue Code of 1994, as
amended (hereinafter the “1994 Code”). 
 APPEAR 

Honorable Jesús F. Méndez Rodríguez, in his capacity as Secretary of the Puerto Rico Department of the Treasury,
represented herein by Blanca A. Alvarez Ramírez, CPA, Esq., Undersecretary of the Treasury (the “Secretary”); 
 DORAL
FINANCIAL CORPORATION, employer identification number 66-0312162, a corporation duly organized under the laws of the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico with principal offices at 1451 F.D. Roosevelt Avenue, San Juan, Puerto Rico (“DFC”),
represented herein by Glen Wakeman in his capacity as President and Chief Executive Officer; 
 DORAL BANK, employer identification
number 66-0387312, a corporation duly organized under the laws of the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico with principal offices at 1451 F.D. Roosevelt Avenue, San Juan, Puerto Rico (“DB”), represented herein by Glen Wakeman in his capacity as
President and Chief Executive Officer; 
 DORAL MORTGAGE LLC, employer identification number 66-0365296, a limited liability company
duly organized under the laws of the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico with principal offices at 1451 F.D. Roosevelt Avenue, San Juan, Puerto Rico (“DMC”), represented herein by Glen Wakeman in his capacity as President and Chief Executive
Officer; 
 DORAL INSURANCE AGENCY, INC., employer identification number 66-0581930, a corporation duly organized under
the laws of the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico with principal offices at 1451 F.D. Roosevelt Avenue, San Juan, Puerto Rico (“DIA”), represented herein by Glen Wakeman in his capacity as President and Chief Executive Officer; and 

DORAL PROPERTIES, INC., employer identification number 66-0572283, a corporation duly organized under the laws of the
Commonwealth of Puerto Rico with principal offices at 1451 F.D. Roosevelt Avenue, San Juan, Puerto Rico (“DP” and, together with DFC, DB, DMC and DIA, hereinafter referred to as the “DFC Group”), represented herein by Glen
Wakeman in his capacity as President and Chief Executive Officer. 
 WITNESSETH 

WHEREAS, Section 6091.06(a)(1) of the PR Code provides that closing agreements to be executed by the Secretary after December 31,
2010 in connection to issues related to taxable years that commenced before January 1, 2011 or taxable events, or transfer of property that occurred before January 1, 2011, shall be governed by the provisions of the 1994 Code. 

WHEREAS, Section 6091.06(a)(2) of the PR Code provides that closing agreements to be executed by the Secretary after December 31,
2010 in connection to issues related to taxable years that commence after December 31, 2010 or taxable events, or transfer of property that occur after December 31, 2010, shall be governed by the provisions of the PR Code. 

WHEREAS, the appearing parties state and guarantee to each other that, in accordance with the provisions of both the PR Code and the 1994
Code, they each have full legal capacity and authority to enter into this Closing Agreement, and they further state as follows: 

REPRESENTATIONS 
 WHEREAS,
the DFC Group has made the following representations: 
 A. The DFC Group is engaged in mortgage banking, banking, insurance, and investment
activities. The entities of the DFC Group maintain their books and records under the accrual method of accounting, on the basis of a calendar year. The DFC Group’s principal offices are located at 1451 F.D. Roosevelt Avenue, San Juan, Puerto
Rico. 

  
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 B. DFC initially owned an interest only strip (“IOs”) asset which was developed from a
series of transactions in which DFC sold or securitized substantially all of the residential mortgage loans it produced, but retained the servicing rights and a portion of the interest income. These servicing rights and interest income entitled DFC
to a future stream of cash flow based on the outstanding principal balance of the mortgage loans, the contractual servicing fee and interest spread. For accounting purposes, DFC recognized the IOs as an asset equal to the present value of interest
cash flows to be received in excess of the servicing fees and the yield paid to the institutional purchaser of such loans which were realized over time through the receipt of these “excess” interest cash flows (hence the label of excess
servicing). The fair value of the IOs was generally determined based on market prices provided by dealers and external and internal valuation models. 

C. For income tax purposes, DFC recognized income from the excess servicing flows as earned through the passage of time, i.e., during
the life of the mortgage loan, consistent with the provisions of EITF 99-20; not immediately upon the sale or securitization of the mortgage. 

D. Through several transactions, and pursuant to a closing agreement entered into with the Secretary on December 9, 2004, as reiterated
and supplemented by closing agreements entered into with the Secretary on June 29, 2005, February 17, 2006 and September 26, 2006, DFC sold several of its IOs held for more than six months realizing a long term capital gain. 

E. On December 15, 2005, DFC announced that its Audit Committee had decided to restate its financial statements for the periods from
January 1, 2000 through December 31, 2004 to record certain mortgage sales transactions with various local financial institutions as loans payable secured by mortgage loans and to reverse the gains previously recognized with respect to
such sales. The net effect of reversing the IOs and the mortgage loan sales resulted in a substantial reduction of DFC’s income for book purposes, which would have resulted in a concomitant reduction in its income tax liabilities during the tax
years covered by the restatement, which amounted to over $152 million, plus interest thereon. 
 F. Pursuant to the closing agreement
entered into by DFC and the Secretary on September 26, 2006 and the prior closing agreements cited therein, the IOs were recognized as a stand-alone asset independent from the mortgage pools that originally created it, subject to a
straight-line amortization allowance based on a useful life of 15 years pursuant to Section 1023(k) of the 1994 Code. The agreement further provides that: 

1. A 15-year amortization would start on January 1, 2005 of the IOs adjusted tax basis, which on such date equaled
$889,723,361; 
 2. Since the book value of the IOs asset was minimal and could not be attributed to any of the entities
within the DFC Group, the DFC Group could apportion the amortization deduction among the DFC Group in the manner in which they elect upon the filing of their respective income tax returns; 

3. As a stand-alone asset, the adjusted basis of the IOs would not be affected by a sale by the DFC Group of the mortgage loans
which originally created the IOs, including the sale or transfer of the servicing rights over such mortgage loans; and 
 4.
The recharacterization for accounting purposes of the mortgage loan transactions, resulting in the reversal of the IOs and mortgage loan sales, would have no effect on the sale of the IOs within the DFC group as described and covered in the closing
agreements entered into on December 9, 2004, June 29, 2005 and February 17, 2006. 
 G. On September 7, 2009, DFC
Group and the Secretary entered into another closing agreement, in which the Secretary agreed to grant a two year moratorium on the 15 year amortization period beginning January 1, 2009 and ending on December 31, 2010. The moratorium
effectively suspended the amortization available to the DFC Group from January 1, 2009 through December 31, 2010. After the agreed moratorium period, the amortization of the IOs will re-start on January 1, 2011 for its remaining
useful life, i.e., 11 years, under the same terms and conditions as those outlined in the previous Closing Agreements reached with the Secretary, and the IOs adjusted tax basis at January 1, 2011 will equal the IOs adjusted tax basis as
of December 31, 2008. 
 H. The DFC Group amortized $123,443,072 of IO adjusted tax basis in its returns for the taxable years 2005,
2006, 2007 and 2008, leaving a balance of unamortized IO adjusted tax basis as of January 1, 2009 and, hence, January 1, 2011, of $766,280,289. 

  
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 WHEREAS, the substantial reduction of DFC’s income tax liabilities referred to in
representation paragraph E. above would have resulted in income tax overpayments for such years, for which DFC would have been entitled to an income tax refund, including interest. 

WHEREAS, the closing agreements entered into by the DFC Group with the Treasury Department allowed DFC to recover such overpayments in the
form of future reductions to taxable income, in lieu of amending the affected returns and seeking repayment of said overpayments, plus interest thereon. 

WHEREAS, at the 39% maximum marginal tax rate then in effect, the nominal value of such future reduction in taxable income was $346,992,111,
of which $298,849,312 remained as of January 1, 2011. 
 WHEREAS, the nominal value of the current balance of unamortized IO adjusted
tax basis at present will depend upon whether the DFC Group files their income tax returns under the PR Code (which would result in a nominal value of $229,884,087, at the maximum marginal corporate tax rate presently in effect of 30%), or opt,
instead, to determine their tax and file their returns under the 1994 Code for taxable years 2011 through 2015, as allowed by Section 1022.06 of the PR Code (which would result in a nominal tax value of $261,231,917, again at the applicable
maximum marginal corporate tax rates). 
 WHEREAS, the United States’ economy has recently suffered a severe economic recession,
prompting the U.S. government, U.S. Federal Reverse, U.S. Treasury and other governmental regulatory bodies to take action to help stabilize the U.S. financial markets. 

WHEREAS, Puerto Rico’s economy has been subject to an even longer period of economic recession, thus negatively affecting the people of
Puerto Rico, the banking and financial industry, among others. 
 WHEREAS, DFC Group, in order to provide economic stability and stimulus to
the struggling economy and the people of Puerto Rico, instituted a Home Preservation Program allowing certain Puerto Rican families, who are clients of the DFC Group and diligent on their mortgage loans, to restructure their existing loans to remain
in their homes, often at a significant cost to the DFC Group. 
 WHEREAS, DFC Group wishes to continue and expand its current Home
Preservation Program to provide further economic stimulus to the economy and the people of Puerto Rico, however, the new banking regulations, i.e., the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act, make the continuance and
expansion of this Program difficult without DFC Group generating additional capital. 
 WHEREAS, DFC Group further wishes to participate in
the Puerto Rico Development Fund Loan Guaranty Program established by the Government Development Bank for Puerto Rico (GDB) to provide further economic stimulus to the economy and the people of Puerto Rico, for which additional capital is also
required. 
 WHEREAS, it is in the Puerto Rico government’s best interest and consistent with the public policy expressed in
Section 28 of the Puerto Rico Banking Law to increase the safety and soundness of the financial banking system and its participants. 

WHEREAS, it is in the Puerto Rico government’s interest to support the DFC Group in generating additional capital to both promote the
safety and soundness of the financial banking system and provide much needed aid to the people of Puerto Rico, thus facilitating Puerto Rico job retention, job creation and economic growth. 

DETERMINATIONS AND AGREEMENTS 

NOW, THEREFORE, it is hereby determined and agreed based on the representations made above, which are considered material facts, for Puerto
Rico income tax purposes as follows: 
 1. The DFC Group and the Secretary of the Treasury hereby agree to recognize the value of the
unamortized IO adjusted basis as a tax overpayment not recovered by DFC for the period covered by the restatement, amounting to $229,884,087 as of January 1, 2011. This overpayment of tax will be treated as a pre-payment of income tax by the DFC
Group and can be apportioned among 

  
 –3– 

 
and used by any member of the DFC Group to offset income taxes due to the Puerto Rico Government as of January 1, 2011 and in future years, either through reductions of estimated income
taxes or through refunds over a period of 5 years, upon proper claim by Doral. Each year, the DFC Group shall notify the Secretary of the allocation of the overpayment, or any remaining balance thereof, among the members of the group through a
statement submitted to the Assistant Secretary for Internal Revenue, a copy of which shall be attached to the applicable returns. 
 2. The
balance of any unused overpayment will carry-over to future years indefinitely until fully utilized through reductions of estimated income tax, or refunded over a period of 5 years, and shall survive any change in control, merger, acquisition,
disposition, or sale of any stock or asset in any member of the DFC Group (hereinafter the “Transaction”) without limitation. 

3. Any provision in a previous agreement which may provide for a different recognition of DFC’s overpayment of tax during the tax years
covered by the restatement shall not be applicable to taxable years of the DFC Group beginning after December 31, 2010, as the DFC Group is subject to the provisions of this agreement for taxable years beginning after December 31, 2010.

 4. The DFC Group agrees to expand its Home Preservation Program by $50 million allowing certain Puerto Rican families, who are clients of
the DFC Group and behind on their mortgage loan payments, to restructure or refinance their existing loans to remain in their homes. 
 5.
Upon request by the Puerto Rico Development Fund, the DFC Group agrees to originate up to $20 million in commercial loans under Puerto Rico Development Fund Loan Guaranty Program. 

6. The matters contained in this Closing Agreement will be final and conclusive, and will not be reopened, annulled, modified, set aside or
disregarded by the taxpayers, nor the Secretary or any civil servant, employee or agent of the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico in any lawsuit, action or administrative proceeding, or by the enactment of any law or issuance of any ruling, regulation,
order or decree, except in the event of fraud, malfeasance or misrepresentation of material facts, in accordance with Section 6051.07 of the PR Code and Section 6126 of the 1994 Code. 

IN WITNESS WHEREOF, the parties hereto have subscribed and executed this closing agreement, in San Juan, Puerto Rico, this 26th day of March
of 2012. 
  

									
	 SECRETARY OF THE TREASURY

OF PUERTO RICO
	 		 	DORAL FINANCIAL CORPORATION
					
	By:	 	

	 		 	By:	 	

		 	  
	 		 		 	  

		 	Blanca A. Alvarez Ramírez, CPA, Esq.	 		 		 	Glen R. Wakeman
		 	Undersecretary of the Treasury	 		 		 	President and CEO
			
	DORAL INSURANCE AGENCY, INC.	 		 	DORAL MORTGAGE LLC
					
	By:	 	

	 		 	By:	 	

		 	  
	 		 		 	  

		 	Glen R. Wakeman	 		 		 	Glen R. Wakeman
		 	President and CEO	 		 		 	President and CEO
			
	DORAL BANK	 		 	DORAL PROPERTIES, INC.
					
	By:	 	

	 		 	By:	 	

		 	  
	 		 		 	  

		 	Glen R. Wakeman President and CEO	 		 		 	Glen R. Wakeman President and CEO

  
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