Howard Lutnick, a billionaire banker poised to run the Department of Commerce, has deep ties to the crypto industry. But he ...
Long before he was President Donald Trump’s pick for Commerce secretary, billionaire financier Howard Lutnick got into the sports gambling business. Lutnick wasn’t in it to make bets himself.
The Senate Commerce Committee on Wednesday advanced Howard Lutnick's nomination to be Commerce Department secretary. ]The big picture: Senators voted 16-12. Lutnick's nomination now goes to the full ...
The billionaire Wall Street CEO fielded questions about tariffs, China's AI progress, broadband access, allegiance to Trump ...
Cantor Fitzgerald CEO Howard Lutnick got choked up while discussing the company's 658 employees killed during the 9/11 attacks and his efforts to rebuild after it.
President Donald Trump's nominee to lead the Commerce Department, Howard Lutnick, told senators the argument that tariffs cause inflation is "nonsense" during a confirmation hearing on Wednesday.
The Senate Commerce Committee moved to advance the nomination of billionaire banker Howard Lutnick to lead the Commerce Department to the Senate floor on Wednesday. The nomination advanced out ...
In fact, President Trump’s Commerce Secretary, Howard Lutnick, has already taken aim at the E.U.’s interference with American energy production. In comments submitted to the Senate Commerce ...
Howard Lutnick, President Donald Trump's nominee for Commerce Secretary, says he's made enough money in his life and would sell all of his assets if confirmed. "I will sell all of my interest ...
raising questions about the disbursement of funds to companies like Intel Corp. and Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. “I can’t say that I can honor something I haven’t read,” Howard ...
Lutnick is the longtime head of Cantor Fitzgerald, an investment bank that serves Tether, a crypto platform with the most widely used stablecoin in the world. The Wall Street Journal reported last ...
Cantor Gaming was years ahead of the mobile sports betting craze. But it repeatedly ran afoul of state and federal regulators.