Billionaire financier Howard Lutnick, President Donald Trump's choice to lead the Commerce Department, said Wednesday that he would sell all of his business holdings within 90 days. “I will divest, I will sell all of my interests, my business interests, all of my assets, everything,'' Lutnick said in a confirmation hearing Wednesday before the Senate Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation. ”I made the decision I've made enough money in my life.''.
Lutnick, head of the investment firm Cantor Fitzgerald, has complicated business dealings. His financial disclosure statement showed that he had positions in more than 800 businesses and other private organizations. Lutnick was introduced by Vice President JD Vance, who called him "just a good dude.''.
Lutnick, who was head of the investment firm Cantor Fitzgerald, has emerged as an outspoken supporter of Trump's hardline trade policies. Trump has said he's planning to impose 25% import taxes — tariffs — Saturday on America's two biggest trading partners, Canada and Mexico. He also has threatened new tariffs on China and an across-the-board levy on everything imported into the United States.
“Tariffs are an amazing tool for the president to use — we need to protect the American worker,” Lutnick said in a CNBC interview last year. Lutnick was in the running to be Treasury secretary, but Trump decided to go with someone viewed as more palatable to Wall Street: wealthy investor Scott Bessent, who was confirmed by the Senate Monday. Elon Musk had backed Lutnick, publicly dismissing Bessent as "a business-as-usual'' choice.