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Sue Herera (née Susan McMahon, born November 15, 1957) is an American journalist and business news television anchor. Early life and education.
Sue Herera, who joined FNN at age 21 and quickly became an anchor, had moved to NBC and the newly launched CNBC before FNN's demise. Griffeth and Herera were later reunited at CNBC, co-anchoring Power Lunch until 2011 and subsequently anchoring Nightly Business Report from 2018 until its closure in 2019. [11]
Sue Herera (Market Wrap, Business Tonight, The Money Wheel, Business Center, and Power Lunch; retired from day-to-day broadcasting in February 2021) Simon Hobbs (Squawk on the Street; left in July 2016. [5]) Nicolas Hulot (now a French environmentalist and is no longer active in the cable news industry)
Gharib left NBR at the end of 2014 and was replaced with Sue Herera, who was previously Mathisen's co-anchor on CNBC's Power Lunch; Herera would remain with the program until a few weeks before it ended. On March 12, 2018, Bill Griffeth, formerly co-anchor of CNBC's Closing Bell, joined NBR to replace Tyler Mathisen.
Caruso-Cabrera joined as Griffeth's original co-presenter from February 4, 2002 to December 5, 2003, before being replaced by Sue Herera, who debuted three days later. Caruso-Cabrera and Dennis Kneale appeared regularly in their respective analyst capacities until both became full co-presenters in 2009.
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The Money Wheel was hosted by many anchors of CNBC, including Ted David, Felicia Taylor, Bill Griffeth, Sue Herera, Ron Insana, Terry Keenan, John Stehr and Kevin McCullough. Regular segments included Taking Stock where viewers could phone-in and ask the guest analysts' recommendations on certain stocks.
Business Center is business network CNBC's flagship primetime show that aired in 5 to 7 pm ET timeslot, hosted by Ron Insana and Sue Herera, and it was replaced by Bullseye on December 5, 2003. History