Brittany Moore headshot

North State Bank Names Brittany Moore Commercial Loan Portfolio Manager




March 11, 2024
 
For more information, contact:
Amanda M. Lloyd
Executive Vice President and Chief People Officer
ALloyd@NorthStateBank.com
919.855.9925
 

RALEIGH, N.C. . . . North State Bank (the "Bank") named Brittany Moore a commercial loan portfolio manager for the Bank’s Downtown Raleigh office, announced Amanda Lloyd, North State Bank executive vice president and chief people officer. Moore will help businesses access the funding they need to start or grow their company.

"Brittany is a welcomed addition to our Downtown Raleigh team,” shared Lloyd. “With a combination of underwriting and lending experience, she has a holistic understanding of the lending process, which is a plus for customers and her teammates.” 

A native of Oxford, North Carolina, Moore began her banking career over a decade ago with Union Bank & Trust (now First National Bank), and in the course of her time there, advanced to the position of portfolio manager. She most recently served as a portfolio underwriter at M&F Bank. She earned a Master of Business Administration with a concentration in finance from East Carolina University as well as a Bachelor of Science in Accounting from North Carolina Agricultural & Technical State University.

“Behind every business, there’s a story,” shared Moore. “Those stories fuel my passion for banking.”

Founded in 2000, North State Bank is an independent, full-service community bank serving Wake and New Hanover counties through seven offices and serves the community management association industry through its division, CommunityPLUS.

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NorthStateBank.com

This news release may contain forward-looking statements. Actual results might differ materially from those projected in the forward-looking statements for various reasons, including our ability to manage growth, changes in real estate values and the real estate market, regulatory changes and increased deposit insurance assessments, economic conditions, changes in interest rates, substantial changes in financial markets, loss of deposits and loan demand to other savings and financial institutions and our limited operating history.