VSVisaSignalOfficial filing intelligence

Employer profile

Mercury

Official filing activity, wage signals, roles, and source freshness in one place.

LCA

2

PERM

0

Median wage

$197,500

Last activity

Dec 30, 2025

Summary

Plain-language read

Mercury has filed two Labor Condition Applications (LCA) in FY2026 Q1, with roles including Senior Model Risk Manager and Software Engineer, each representing 50% of the applications. The positions are located in Norwalk, CT, and Seattle, WA. The salary statistics indicate a median salary of $197,500, with a range from $160,000 to $235,000. Both applications have been certified, but it's important to note that LCA certification does not guarantee USCIS H-1B petition approval, and there are no PERM applications filed. This information is not legal advice.

Sources

Imported periods

Roles

Top official job titles

Senior Model Risk Manager1
Software Engineer1

Worksites

Top locations

Norwalk, CT1
Seattle, WA1

Status mix

Case statuses

Certified2

LCA and PERM rows are filing signals, not USCIS approvals, green-card approvals, legal advice, or outcome predictions.

FAQ

Common questions

Does Mercury sponsor H-1B workers?

VisaSignal shows official LCA filing activity found in the imported dataset. That activity can indicate historical immigration-related hiring signals, but it is not a promise of sponsorship.

Does Mercury file PERM cases?

The PERM count reflects imported DOL PERM disclosure rows for this normalized employer. Raw employer names and aliases are preserved so users can inspect normalization confidence.

Does an LCA certification mean an H-1B petition was approved?

No. A DOL-certified LCA is not the same as USCIS H-1B petition approval. It is an official labor-condition filing signal that should be interpreted with that limit.

Does a PERM certification mean a green card was approved?

No. PERM certification is one step in an employment-based green card process. It does not mean a green card, I-140 petition, or adjustment of status was approved.

Can this data prove an employer will sponsor a candidate?

No. Official filing history can show recent activity, roles, worksites, and wage signals, but it does not guarantee future sponsorship or predict legal outcomes.