
Eric Rosenbaum
Senior Editor at CNBC
Joined in 2010. CNBC Editor. Tweets, retweets, botched tweets are endorsements of this bio.
Articles
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3 weeks ago |
cnbc.com | Eric Rosenbaum
This year has already packed a lot of action into stocks: an aggressively bullish start, a swift correction, and a full recovery from those April losses. But based on the the flows into the U.S. exchange-traded funds, where much of the daily trading action occurs across asset classes, the message coming through most clearly from investors is lingering skepticism about the strength of the U.S. equities market.
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1 month ago |
cnbc.com | Eric Rosenbaum
The world of exchange-traded funds is about to face an unprecedented storm of new product launches. A fund industry that has already seen enormous growth in recent decades may soon close to double its presence in the market — and do so in just one month. That's because of a long anticipated changed from the Securities and Exchange Commission allowing traditional mutual fund managers to offer an ETF share class of their existing funds — "a gamechanger," as it has been called by some already.
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1 month ago |
cnbc.com | Eric Rosenbaum
As a kid, Diane Hoskins always loved building. Legos, Barbie Dreamhouses, the racecar sets that her brother got but didn't have the patience to put together himself when it took reading along with an hour's worth of instructions. "Whatever it was ... I just love putting things together and building things," Hoskins, global co-chair of architectural firm Gensler, told CNBC's Julia Boorstin in a recent CNBC Changemakers interview.
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1 month ago |
cnbc.com | Eric Rosenbaum
watch nowAs the 44th Vice President of the United States, Dan Quayle made dozens of diplomatic trips, many aimed at helping to shape the post-Cold War Soviet Union. As a voter, Quayle has cast his ballot for Donald Trump in three consecutive presidential elections. But when you put those two things together, the current view from the former V.P. comes to a pessimistic conclusion about the current posture in U.S.-Russia relations and the war in Ukraine.
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1 month ago |
cnbc.com | Eric Rosenbaum
On film, Arnold Schwarzenegger has been tough to take down. But in real life, the actor and former governor of California has had his share of health issues that required surgery and replacement parts as he has aged. Through it all, he continues to work out — a daily regimen that includes a bicycle for an hour, and 45 minutes with weights — and Schwarzenegger says that movement is the key to remaining healthy in our 50s, 60s and beyond.
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So, if Im to understand this argument correctly, a target of 3% hiring out of 100% total, in country where 13% of population is disabled per BLS, and is only hiring class per DoT where by law there is such a target, can be defined as “prioritizing” DEI over all, including safety?

Crazy

Worth pointing out here that the basis for the reader’s ability to add context here is reporting by … the “legacy” media

Lies are quickly corrected on this platform

RT @dhockey13: Life is so short and precious, gone but never forgotten. Rest In Peace Johnny Hockey you will always hold a special place in…