Home USA Howard Lutnick, Trump’s Commerce Nominee, Discloses Business Interests

Howard Lutnick, Trump’s Commerce Nominee, Discloses Business Interests

by Curtis Jones
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Howard Lutnick, the wealthy Wall Street executive whom President Trump has tapped to lead the Department of Commerce, detailed a complex network of financial holdings on Friday as he prepared to face scrutiny from lawmakers during a confirmation hearing next week.

The financial disclosures showed that Mr. Lutnick, who has built a fortune in brokerages, real estate and financial services, holds at least $800 million in assets, though he is likely wealthier than the disclosures reveal.

They also laid out executive positions he has held or holds in more than 800 individual firms, and showed that he received in excess of $300 million in income, distributions and bonuses in the last two years from his network of financial services and real estate firms.

The documents also reflect Mr. Lutnick’s vast collection of real estate properties, including a Washington, D.C., mansion that was formerly owned by the Fox News anchor Bret Baier.

In an ethics form filed with the government, Mr. Lutnick said he would divest stakes in the brokerage and real estate firms that have generated his wealth. But his network of business ties could still raise concerns about potential conflicts of interest, as he leads the way on government policies that could have significant effects on businesses and markets, potentially enriching former customers or business partners.

As Commerce secretary, Mr. Lutnick would take the lead on carrying out Mr. Trump’s trade plans, which include proposals to impose tariffs on a wide variety of countries. He would oversee an agency with an $11 billion budget and roughly 51,000 workers. Commerce has a vast mandate that includes promoting businesses abroad, restricting U.S. technology exports for national security concerns, along with investing in broadband infrastructure and semiconductor factories around the United States and many other responsibilities.

Mr. Lutnick worked on Wall Street for decades. He gained national attention when many of the employees at Cantor Fitzgerald, the brokerage firm where he was president and chief executive officer, died in the 2001 terrorist attack on the World Trade Center. Mr. Lutnick joined Cantor Fitzgerald in 1983, shortly after graduating college, and took over as president and chief executive officer in 1991.

He built Cantor Fitzgerald into an expansive web of businesses that crossed real estate, financial services and brokerage or trading. He continues to serve as chief executive and chairman at Cantor Fitzgerald, as well as at the brokerage firm BGC, and as the executive chairman of the commercial real estate firm Newmark Group.

He said in the disclosures that he would follow legal requirements to resign from those positions, and not to participate in any government matter in which he, his wife, any minor children or certain close business partners had a direct financial interest. The Senate will hold a confirmation hearing for Mr. Lutnick on Wednesday.

Ana Swanson reported from Washington and Maureen Farrell from New York.

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