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The CNBC Europe version of Street Signs was originally co-anchored by Louisa Bojesen and Carolin Roth. Bojesen was previously anchor of the now-cancelled European Closing Bell and Roth, who became the solo anchor of Street Signs following Bojesen's departure from CNBC Europe on April 28, 2017, was previously co-anchor of Worldwide Exchange ...
Louisa Bojesen (Street Signs; left CNBC Europe in April 2017) Gloria Borger (Capital Report; now a Senior Political Analyst for CNN) Erin Burnett (Squawk on the Street, Street Signs; now anchor of CNN's Erin Burnett OutFront) Brenda Buttner (The Money Club; business correspondent for Fox News and host of Bulls & Bears; died February 20, 2017)
Louisa Bojesen (Danish pronunciation: [luˈiːsæ ˈpʌjəsn̩]) (born May 13, 1974) is a Danish-American [1] financial journalist who worked for CNBC Europe television in London for 17 years. She was most recently a co-host of the channel's European version of Street Signs, reporting on global financial markets.
Only two programmes, Squawk Box Europe and the European version of Street Signs (the latter debuted on the same day), are produced out of CNBC Europe's Fleet Place studios in London. [ 15 ] On 1 February 2019, CNBC Europe launched free-to-air in HD on Astra 28.2°E .
Seema Mody is a reporter and anchor for CNBC.She joined CNBC in July 2011 after previously being one at CNBC-TV18 in Mumbai, India. While airing on CNBC-TV18, Mody co-anchored two programs, Power Breakfast and After the Bell, as well as co-producing and anchoring other special features.
Before joining CNBC he worked for LBC news radio in the UK for 8 years, rising from reporter to executive producer, with stints at BBC Radio 4 and BBC Radio 1's Newsbeat. [ 14 ] For CNBC Europe , Hobbs initially co-anchored Squawk Box Europe and also anchored Europe Today and its replacement Today's Business was the first show to totally ...
Brian Sullivan is an anchor and correspondent for CNBC. He is the network's Senior National Correspondent and has also presented a number of the station's flagship programs, most recently Last Call, until it ended in July 2024, having previously hosted Worldwide Exchange. Before this Brian co-hosted Power Lunch and Street Signs.
Insana was the Managing Director of Insana Capital Partners from inception to dissolution. He was the anchor of CNBC's Street Signs, [2] which aired on weekdays during stock market hours. Until December 5, 2003, he and Sue Herera co-anchored CNBC's then flagship nightly financial news program, Business Center.