David Faber Net Worth: Bio, Wiki, Early Life, Personal Life, Career, Family

 David Faber Net Worth

David Faber

David Faber is a financial journalist and television analyst who has a net worth of $16 million. David Faber is famous for being a financial journalist, market news analyst and host of CNBC's Squawk on the Street. His annual salary at CNBC is $4 million.


Bio And Wiki

David Faber is an American financial journalist and market news analyst for the television cable network CNBC. He is currently one of the co-hosts of CNBC's morning show Squawk on the Street.


Biography

Real Name:- David H. Faber

NickName:- David Faber

Birthplaces:- New York

Nationality:- United States

Famous for:- Journalist

Birthdate:- 1964


Family

Mother name:- Belle B. Faber

Father name:- Norman L. Faber

Brother name:- Don’t know

Sister name:- Rachel

Married Status:- Married (Jenny Harris)

Children:- Yes


Girlfriends, Affairs & More


Girlfriends:- Not know

Affairs:- Update Soon

Married Status:- Married

Wife Name:- Jenny Harris


 Career

 Faber joined CNBC in 1993 after seven years at Institutional Investor. He has been dubbed "The Brain" by CNBC co-workers, and has hosted several documentaries on corporations, such as Wal-Mart and eBay. The Age of Walmart earned Faber a 2005 Peabody Award and an Alfred I. duPont-Columbia University Award for Broadcast Journalism. In 2010, he shared the Gerald Loeb Award for Television Enterprise business journalism for "House of Cards."


In addition to Squawk on the Street, Faber hosts the network's monthly program, Business Nation, which debuted on January 24, 2007.

Faber is the author of three books; The Faber Report (2002), And Then the Roof Caved In (2009), and House of Cards: The Origins of the Collapse (2010).


Faber will serve as a guest host on Jeopardy! from August 2-6, 2021. Faber was the champion of Celebrity Jeopardy! in 2012.


Personal Life

In 2000, Faber married Jenny Harris,[5] who is a business journalist / television producer, daughter of lawyer Jay Harris (Hall Dickler Kent Goldstein & Wood) and As the World Turns actress Marie Masters, and fraternal twin sister of musician Jesse Harris. Faber is a 1985 cum laude graduate of Tufts University, where he earned a Bachelor of Arts degree in english. Faber is Jewish and was raised in Queens, New York.


Things To Know About Faber


He is a financial journalist

David Faber is a financial journalist and market news analyst who began working for CNBC in 1993. He currently co-hosts their morning show, Squawk on the Street, and the monthly program, Business Nation.

According to his bio on CNBC, Faber has broken many big financial stories over the last two decades, including Disney's deal to buy most of Twenty-First Century Fox's assets, the massive fraud at WorldCom and Rupert Murdoch's unsolicited bid for Dow Jones.Faber has done 10 documentaries for CNBC and has won Loeb, Emmy, Peabody and DuPont awards.

He was once a contestant on Jeopardy!


Not only was Faber a Jeopardy! contestant in 2012, but he won the Power Players tournament.In his introduction before Monday night's game, Faber mentioned that his time on the show helped him prepare for hosting.


"Having also played as a contestant with Alex ," he said, "I understand just how important it was to him that the players were able to perform at their very best. And I hope and intend to honor that standard as a guest host this week."


Faber defeated basketball star Kareem Abdul-Jabbar and Fox News' Dana Perino to win $50,000, which was donated to the charity of choice, New Visions for Public Schools.


He is a best-selling author

Faber has written three books, his first published by Little, Brown in 2002, titled The Faber Report: CNBC's 'The Brain' Tells You How Wall Street Really Works and How You Can Make It Work for You.His second book, And Then the Roof Caved In: How Wall Street's Greed and Stupidity Brought Capitalism to Its Knees, was published in the summer of 2009 and explores the credit crisis based on two years of research.


The book was expanded from a CNBC documentary that The New York Times called "broad, comprehensive, and compelling.


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