On the afternoon of Monday, Sept. 10, 2001, Karen Lynn Seymour told her boss that she wanted to attend a conference the next morning. The 40-year-old technology specialist at a subsidiary of ICAP, a London-based bond broker, thought it could help her career. Her boss, Chris Ferreri, said he was less interested in the event, to be held at Windows on the World, a restaurant on the 106th floor of the World Trade Center’s North Tower.
NEW YORK (NewsNation Now) — The carnage inflicted by the 9/11 hijackers 20 years ago was felt nowhere more keenly or cruelly than at the New York brokerage firm Cantor Fitzgerald, which occupied the 101st through 105th floors of One World Trade Center. On the morning of Sept. 11, 2001, 659 Cantor employees were killed. That is every Cantor employee who came to work and was at the New York office at the time. Cantor CEO Howard Lutnick was not there because he was taking his son to his first day of kindergarten. Somehow, Cantor resumed its business, along with the rest of Wall Street, just two days later. Rebuilding though, however, took years. Biden highlights courage of 9/11 victims’ loved ones in recorded message For five years, Cantor Fitzgerald paid a quarter of its profits to the families of the workers who were killed and paid for their health care for 10 years. Now, on each 9/11 anniversary, the firm invites celebrities to work the phones and 100% of the revenues on that day go to charity. Along with his employees, Lutnick’s brother was also killed. He says every anniversary is painful — this one especially. But he, and the families of those lost, have found ways to cope. “To be together with the families of my friends and all of those that we lost … we read their names, we talk about them, we remember them,” he said. Now, Cantor Fitzgerald has 12,000 employees. Lutnick credits the employees he lost with the survival of the business. “I always felt that my way of communicating with families was really on standing on my brother’s shoulders,” he said. “It is his being part of that group that allowed me to talk to them, allowed me to build a community with them, allowed me to rebuild this company.” Lutnick believes one of the toughest things about every anniversary is rewatching the footage. Images difficult for an entire country to process became far worse to those who knew people inside the towers. “When I see those pictures, it just causes my insides to just sort of rip apart because when that first plane hit that first tower, those are, those are my friends … that’s my brother, that’s my best friend,” he said. He said one thing that does pick his spirit up on every anniversary is knowing his company has helped raise — on average — $12 million a year for 9/11-related charities. “I can’t figure out how otherwise to spend my day. Otherwise, I’d stick my head under the pillow,” he said. Cantor Fitzgerald, L.P. is an American financial services firm that was founded in 1945. It specializes in institutional equity, fixed income sales and trading, and serving the middle market with investment banking services, prime brokerage, and commercial real estate financing. It is also active in new businesses, including advisory and asset management services, gaming technology, and e-commerce. It has more than 5,000 institutional clients.
Key people Number of employees Cantor Fitzgerald is one of 24 primary dealers that are authorized to trade US government securities with the Federal Reserve Bank of New York.
Cantor Fitzgerald's 1,600 employees work in more than 30 locations, including financial centers in the Americas, Europe, Asia-Pacific, and the Middle East. Together with its affiliates, Cantor Fitzgerald operates in more than 60 offices in 20 countries and has more than 12,500 employees. In 2001, the firm's headquarters were destroyed in the September 11 attacks, killing every employee who reported to work that day. In 2011, Cantor's affiliate, BGC Partners, expanded into commercial real estate services by its purchase of Newmark Knight Frank and the assets of Grubb & Ellis, to form Newmark Grubb Knight Frank. Cantor Fitzgerald was formed in 1945 by Bernard Gerald Cantor and John Fitzgerald as an investment bank and brokerage business. It later became known for its computer-based bond brokerage, for the quality of its institutional distribution business model, and for being the market's premier dealer of government securities.[4] In 1965, Cantor Fitzgerald began "large block" sales/trading of equities for institutional customers. It became the world's first electronic marketplace for US government securities in 1972 and in 1983, it was the first to offer worldwide screen brokerage services in US government securities. In 1991, Howard Lutnick was named president and CEO of Cantor Fitzgerald; he became chairman of Cantor Fitzgerald, L.P., in 1996.[5] 1 World Trade Center (North Tower), the building with the antenna to the left, included the corporate headquarters of Cantor Fitzgerald. Cantor Fitzgerald's corporate headquarters and New York City office,[6][7] on the 101st to the 105th floors of One World Trade Center in Lower Manhattan (2 to 6 floors above the impact zone of American Airlines Flight 11), were destroyed during the September 11, 2001 attacks. At 8:46:46 a.m., six seconds after the tower was struck by the plane, a Goldman Sachs server issued an alert saying that its trading system had gone offline because it was unable to connect with the server.[8][9][10] Since all stairwells leading past the impact zone were destroyed by the initial crash or blocked with smoke, fire, or debris, every employee who reported for work that morning was killed in the attacks; 658 of its 960 New York employees were killed or missing,[11] or 68.5% of its total workforce, which was considerably more than any of the other World Trade Center tenants, the New York City Police Department, the Port Authority Police Department, the New York City Fire Department, or the Department of Defense. CEO Howard Lutnick himself was not present because he was taking his son to his first day of kindergarten, but his younger brother, Gary, was among those killed. Lutnick vowed to keep the company alive, and the company was able to bring its trading markets back online within a week.[12][13] On September 19, Cantor Fitzgerald made a pledge to distribute 25% of the firm's profits for the next five years, and it committed to paying for ten years of health care for the benefit of the families of its 658 former Cantor Fitzgerald, eSpeed, and TradeSpark employees (profits that would otherwise have been distributed to the Cantor Fitzgerald partners).[14] In 2006, the company had completed its promise, having paid a total of $180 million (and an additional $17 million from a relief fund run by Lutnick's sister, Edie).[15] Until the attacks, Cantor had handled about a quarter of the daily transactions in the multi-trillion dollar treasury security market. Cantor Fitzgerald has since rebuilt its infrastructure, partly by the efforts of its London office,[16] and it now has its headquarters in Midtown Manhattan. The company's effort to regain its footing was the subject of Tom Barbash's 2003 book On Top of the World: Cantor Fitzgerald, Howard Lutnick, and 9/11: A Story of Loss and Renewal as well as a 2012 documentary, Out of the Clear Blue Sky. On September 2, 2004, Cantor and other organizations filed a civil lawsuit against Saudi Arabia for allegedly providing money to the hijackers and Al Qaeda.[17] It was later joined in the suit by the Port Authority of New York.[18] Most of the claims against Saudi Arabia were dismissed on January 18, 2005.[19] In December 2013, Cantor Fitzgerald settled its lawsuit against American Airlines for $135 million. Cantor Fitzgerald had been suing for loss of property and interruption of business by alleging the airline to have been negligent by allowing hijackers to board Flight 11.[20] In 2003, the firm launched its fixed income sales and trading group. In 2006, the Federal Reserve added Cantor Fitzgerald & Co. to its list of primary dealers. In 2009, the firm launched Cantor Prime Services, a provider of multi-asset, perimeter brokerage prime brokerage platforms to exploit its clearing, financing, and execution capabilities. Cantor Fitzgerald began building its real estate business with the launch of CCRE in 2010. On December 5, 2014, two Cantor Fitzgerald analysts were said to be in the top 25 analysts on TipRanks.[21] Cantor Fitzgerald has a prolific special-purpose acquisition company underwriting practice, having led all banks in SPAC underwriting activity in both 2018 and 2019.[22] Edie wrote An Unbroken Bond: The Untold Story of How the 658 Cantor Fitzgerald Families Faced the Tragedy of 9/11 and Beyond. All proceeds from the sale of the book benefit the Cantor Fitzgerald Relief Fund and the charities that it assists.[23] The Cantor Fitzgerald Relief Fund provided $10 million to families affected by Hurricane Sandy. Howard Lutnick and the Relief Fund "adopted" 19 elementary schools in impacted areas by distributing $1,000 prepaid debit cards to each family from the schools.[24] A total of $10 million in funds was given to families affected by the storm.[25] Two days after the 2013 Moore tornado struck Moore, Oklahoma, killing 24 people and injuring hundreds, Lutnick pledged to donate $2 million to families affected by the tornado. The donation was given out in the form of $1,000 debit cards given out to families.[26][27] Each year, on September 11, Cantor Fitzgerald and its affiliate, BGC Partners, donate 100% of their revenue to charitable causes on their annual Charity Day, which was originally established to raise money to assist the families of the Cantor employees who died in the World Trade Center attacks.[28] Since its inception, Charity Day has raised $110 million for charities globally.[29] The firm has many subsidiaries and affiliates such as the following:
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