JANUARY 21, 2010 10:28 a.m.
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Entering the third year of being battered by the recession, The South Financial Group took steps to build a neglected business segment.
The company has created a 19-person department to become a bigger player in Small Business Administration loan programs in the Carolinas and Florida. Continue reading...
FEBRUARY 11, 2010 9:12 p.m.
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The board of directors of The South Financial Group have cut their own compensation for 2010 and announced resignations of two more directors.
The board said in a statement to the Securities and Exchange Commission dated Feb. 11 that the compensation cut “represents a reduction of approximately 50 percent” and that the action was taken “in recognition of the current environment and management compensation levels.” Continue reading...
MARCH 4, 2010 11:17 a.m.
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The appointment was announced by H. Lynn Harton, president and chief executive officer of The South Financial Group, holding company for Carolina First and Mercantile Bank in Florida.
Gompper fills the position left vacant when Scott Frierson resigned in September. Frierson had been appointed in June 2008 to replace Maurice J. Spagnoletti. Continue reading...
MARCH 15, 2010 9:00 a.m.
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The South Financial Group has shed several senior-level jobs to become a leaner company to help restore profitability and emerge from the recession as a more nimble bank, H. Lynn Harton, president and chief executive officer, said.
In the latest example, Christopher S. Gompper, 50, who had been executive vice president for corporate strategy, last week was named interim president of Carolina First, and his prior position was eliminated. Gompper joined TSFG in 2005. Continue reading...
APRIL 2, 2010 8:21 a.m.
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Fewer events are being held at the Carolina First Center, but attendance is rising.
And the convention center which has been named a Facilities and Destinations Magazine 2010 Prime Site Award winner is on track to lose less money this year than it did last year. Continue reading...
MAY 20, 2010 12:21 p.m.
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In 20 years, The South Financial Group shot like a rocket from a small Carolina First office in Greenville to one of the nation’s 50 largest banks and South Carolina’s largest.
In less than three, it flamed out, burdened by soured loans in the credit and real estate collapse. The estimated $1 billion anticipated in losses still to come – TSFG already had absorbed more than $900 million in loss – is a legacy of those go-go years. Continue reading...
AUGUST 30, 2010 9:01 a.m.
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ScanSource Sets Revenue Record
ScanSource, the Greenville-based international distributor and reseller of technology products, had a good year with higher sales and income, but it could have been even better if it were not for product shortages, the company reported. Continue reading...
OCTOBER 6, 2010 11:14 a.m.
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With shareholder approval of the sale to TD Bank, Greenville’s homegrown but troubled Carolina First Bank sees new life as regional headquarters for TD in a merger that even revives possible use of Carolina First’s mostly unused $90-million campus off Interstate 85.
At a sparsely attended and brief shareholder meeting at Poinsett Plaza headquarters, The South Financial Group, the parent company, announced shareholder approval of the sale with 66 percent of the vote, all by proxy in advance. Continue reading...
DECEMBER 9, 2010 12:39 p.m.
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“The key for us really is the attitudinal change in the past year because of TD,” said Robert G. Hoak, who was named TD’s regional president for South Carolina and the five offices in Wilmington, N.C.
“The fact that we can be much more proactive than in the past, when our employees feel better, which they do, that will translate to our customers and to the market, and then profit will take care of itself.” Continue reading...
APRIL 24, 2011 2:22 p.m.
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Emily Post has been dead for half a century and some say good manners died along with her.
But Sybil Davis, a graduate of the Protocol School of Washington and professor of hospitality arts at the Culinary Institute of the Carolinas at Greenville Tech, said proper etiquette and proper manners are more important than ever. Continue reading...