Cantor Fitzgerald Securities

Cantor Fitzgerald Securities is an investment bank specializing in bond trading. It was founded in 1945 by Bernie Cantor and John Fitzgerald as a limited partnership, which it remains today. It created the eSpeed electronic trading network, a subsidiary it spun-off in 1999. Its former New York office, on the 101st-105th floors of One World Trade Center, lost 685 employees in the September 11, 2001 attacks, considerably more than any other employer, including the FDNY. This was about 2/3 of its employees. The company was able to bring its trading markets back online within a week, and chairman and CEO Howard Lutnick, whose brother was among those killed in the attacks, vowed to keep the company viable. Before the attacks, Cantor handled about one-quarter of the daily transactions in the multi-billion dollar U.S. treasuries market. Cantor has since rebuilt its infrastructure and now has its headquarters in midtown Manhattan. The company's effort to regain its footing is the subject of a 2003 book titled On Top of the World: Cantor Fitzgerald, Howard Lutnick, and 9/11: A Story of Loss and Renewal (ISBN 0060510307) by Tom Barbash. See also: One World Trade Center tenants

External links

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
currying
cyrus
case
computer rendering
cartridge
chaosium
ciconiiformes
carolina panthers
chicago bears
cincinnati bengals
yangtze river
chrono trigger
cornwall wildlife trust
conservatory
compactification (mathematics)
cotangent space
cnidaria
conservative judaism
common desktop environment
children of dune
candide
chapterhouse dune
computer bus
cuttlefish
cadillac
chinese checkers
giant neotropical toad
cyrus ii of persia
croquet
curling
craven cottage
confederations of germanic tribes
constantine
list of composers
cedar falls, iowa
cleveland indians
cape town
chicago cubs
coldcut
cuisine
october 2003
codec
clyde tombaugh
christopher bathory