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Share this article SALT LAKE CITY, May 7, 2021 /PRNewswire/ Bryce Long has been promoted to Chief Executive Officer (CEO) of Salt Lake City-based mortgage lender Veritas Funding. Mr. Long will assume the position effective October 1, 2021, from the organization s co-founders and existing co-CEO s, Tim and Elizabeth Roush. The Roushes will remain with the company and transition into co-Chair roles where they will support Mr. Long in matters of long-range planning and exploring new growth opportunities. Bryce Long currently serves as the company s president and COO with broad oversight over its day-to-day operations. Bryce has consistently proven himself as a highly effective leader with boundless energy, innovative ideas, and fresh strategic thinking. He is the right person at the perfect time to propel Veritas Funding into its next stage of growth and success. We could not be more pleased to have Bryce as the new leader of Veritas Fund
Accounting, Ops, MLO Jobs; AMC, Lead, Warehouse Products; Financial Transparency; Employment Figures Sink Rates May 7 2021, 8:23AM
It’s Friday, so how ‘bout some non-mortgage supply and demand stuff? Let me start with an apology to Willie Mays’ family (who may or may not read this daily mortgage commentary) for missing his 90th birthday yesterday. (Years ago he was known for welcoming all ‘trick or treat’ kids, from anywhere, at Halloween, so we went. Yep, there he was!) There is only one Willie Mays. On the other hand, last year there were too many strawberries and Driscoll’s, which grows fresh berries, had to send $20 million worth of unwanted fresh berries to be frozen or juiced at a large loss. So it cut production on strawberries (which take a year of planning) by 5 percent, a bad call given that two months later berry sales exploded 8 percent by volume compared to the previous year and wholesale prices have hit $18 for an 8 pound flat,
Lipocine: Q1 Earnings Snapshot
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SALT LAKE CITY (AP) Lipocine Inc. (LPCN) on Thursday reported a loss of $3.4 million in its first quarter.
On a per-share basis, the Salt Lake City-based company said it had a loss of 4 cents.
The company s shares closed at $1.39. A year ago, they were trading at 59 cents.
This story was generated by Automated Insights (http://automatedinsights.com/ap) using data from Zacks Investment Research. Access a Zacks stock report on LPCN at https://www.zacks.com/ap/LPCN Top Picks In Shopping
Stertil-Koni Honors Rocky Mountain Lifts for Accelerated Sales Growth with Aspire Program Award
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Stertil-Koni today announced that despite the far-reaching business challenges presented by Covid, the company’s Salt Lake City-based distributor, Rocky Mountain Lifts, earned the coveted Stertil-Koni Aspire Program Award for 2020.
Scott Terry, owner of Rocky Mountain Lifts, brings 16 years of top vehicle equipment repair and servicing to his growing company.
It is my great honor to recognize the top performance of Rocky Mountain Lifts in what undoubtedly has been the most challenging environment for all of us. STEVENSVILLE, Md. (PRWEB) May 06, 2021 Stertil-Koni today announced that despite the far-reaching business challenges presented by Covid, the company’s Salt Lake City-based distributor, Rocky Mountain Lifts, earned the coveted Stertil-Koni Aspire Program Award for 2020.
X-ing out the MX
Forty years ago Wednesday, the church helped shoot down controversial plans to base a nuclear missile system in Utah’s West Desert.
In a detailed, descriptive and impassioned 700-word statement issued May 5, 1981, the governing First Presidency decried the arms buildup, the destabilizing nature of the proposed MX deployment, and the impact the weapons plan could have on the environment, the economy and all of humanity.
“By way of general observation, we repeat our warnings against the terrifying arms race in which the nations of the earth are presently engaged,” then-church President Spencer W. Kimball and his counselors wrote. “We deplore in particular the building of vast arsenals of nuclear weaponry.”