List of CNBC personalities

This a list of current and former on-air staff of business news channel CNBC.

Current on-air staff

[1] [2]

Staff are based at CNBC's headquarters in Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey unless stated otherwise.

Anchors

Reporters

  • Julia Boorstin (Los Angeles) - media and entertainment reporter
  • Deirdre Bosa (San Francisco) - technology reporter
  • Contessa Brewer
  • Eric Chemi
  • Dominic Chu - senior markets commentator and occasional relief anchor
  • Scott Cohn - CNBC senior correspondent
  • Bertha Coombs (New York) - NASDAQ market site and healthcare reporter
  • Sharon Epperson - senior personal finance correspondent
  • Robert Frank - wealth editor
  • Frank Holland
  • Eamon Javers (Washington, DC) - White House correspondent
  • Phil LeBeau (Chicago) - autos and aviation reporter
  • Steve Liesman - senior economics reporter
  • Josh Lipton (San Francisco) - technology correspondent
  • Seema Mody - global markets reporter and travel industry reporter
  • Ylan Mui (Washington, DC) - political reporter focusing on economic and regulatory policy
  • Diana Olick (Washington, DC) - real estate reporter
  • Lesley Picker - hedge funds, private equity and asset management reporter
  • Bob Pisani (New York) - NYSE floor reporter
  • Courtney Reagan - retail reporter
  • Kate Rodgers - small business reporter
  • Aditi Roy (San Francisco)
  • Rick Santelli (Chicago) - CME floor reporter
  • Rahel Solomon
  • Kayla Tausche (Washington, DC) - political and corporate finance reporter
  • Meg Tirrell - pharmaceuticals and biotech reporter
  • Jane Wells (Los Angeles)

Contributors

Former on-air staff

Anchors and hosts

Reporters and others

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gollark: Star Trek isn't *remotely* realistic, so almost certainly not as they portray it. The closest vaguely plausible thing is probably the Alcubierre drive, which IIRC could maybe exist, isn't remotely practical, and comes with its own exciting problems.
gollark: They can't be conveniently converted to metres or... anything, really, and don't work with SI prefixes.
gollark: Miles are still an awful unit even if you're used to them.
gollark: <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electric_potential#Electric_potential_due_to_a_point_charge>

References

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