United Trust Bank promotes Chris Pedlar to head of sales
Chris was previously head of specialist distribution for the North of England.

United Trust Bank has promoted Chris Pedlar to a new head of sales role, taking over responsibility of the Bank’s mortgage BDM team. He will also take the lead in delivering the sales strategy across the Bank’s specialist residential, buy-to-let and second charge product ranges.
Chris joined UTB in 2017 and has over two decades of experience in the financial services industry. In his previous role with the Bank, Chris was head of specialist distribution for the North of England and became an integral part of the senior sales management team.
Chris’s promotion is the latest of a number of recent people moves within UTB’s mortgages team. The Bank recently announced new roles and promotions for Barry Luhmann, Dave Burke, Mareeza Mitri and Fran Arnold.
Caroline Mirakian, sales and marketing director at United Trust Bank, said: “Chris’s promotion recognises both his hard work and dedication to the team and the skills he will bring to the role. He is an inspirational sales leader and I’m sure he will excel in delivering the ambitious targets we have set ourselves for next year.
“I would like to congratulate Chris on his promotion which is fully deserved. It’s another great example of our desire to develop home-grown talent and give our people the opportunity to take on new challenges, to encourage them to reach their full potential and to support them as they build successful careers”.

Breaking news
Direct to your inbox:
More
stories
you'll love:
This week's biggest stories:
This week's biggest stories:
Lloyds
Lloyds sets aside extra £4bn for high-LTI mortgage lending

Santander
Santander to acquire TSB in £2.65bn deal

Bank Of England
Bank of England issues first-of-its-kind fine of £11.9m

Regulation
Lenders urged to prepare for court ruling on commissions as motor finance complaints surge

Financial Conduct Authority
FCA moves ahead with targeted support in 'transformational' advice reforms

FCA
FCA fines Barclays £42m over financial crime risks
