State Rep. Mike Kennedy — who finished ahead of Mitt Romney at Saturday’s Utah Republican Convention in the U.S. Senate race — is far from poor, but his net worth is a fraction of that of Romney, a former investment firm executive.

Kennedy’s net worth is between $1.1 million and $2.6 million, according to personal financial disclosure forms that he has filed with the Senate and provided to the Tribune on Tuesday.

Meanwhile, Romney earlier reported that his net worth is between $73.7 million and $271 million — or perhaps much more because some assets on his disclosure form were valued simply as “over $1 million.”

Forms require disclosures only within broad ranges, resulting in somewhat ambiguous totals.

Among assets that Kennedy listed were his home in Alpine — which he valued between $500,000 and $1 million — and his partnership in a medical practice, which he valued between $50,000 and $100,000.

A doctor and a lawyer, Kennedy reported income last year of $287,584 — including $189,791 in salary from his medical practice, $84,000 in salary from American Benefits Co., and $13,797 from his salary as a legislator.

Kennedy also reported pulling $287,589 out of a variety of retirement accounts. His spokesman, Joe DeBose, said that was used in part to fund loans to his campaign. Separate forms for his campaign show that he loaned it $250,000.

Meanwhile, Romney earlier reported that his total income last year was between $9 million and $31 million.

That included pocketing speech fees totaling more than $1.4 million (and another $127,000 went directly to charity).

Romney also received just over $2 million in earned and noninvestment income — including a $1.67 million distribution from an IRA account, a $220,000 fee as a director of Solamere Capital in Boston and a $131,000 fee as a director of Marriott International. His investment income ranged between $5.6 million and $27.6 million.

Salt Lake County Council member Jenny Wilson — the front-runner among Democrats in the Senate race — earlier reported an income of $73,160 over an 18-month period ending last year. It did not include her husband’s income, which she said Senate forms did not require.

The net worth of Wilson’s financial assets was listed between $900,000 and $2 million.

Senate rules normally require filing personal financial forms within 30 days of becoming a candidate (meaning raising or spending at least $5,000) and at least 30 days before an election — and Saturday’s convention was considered an election.