David Asman,
Maria Bartiromo,
Cheryl Casone,
Dagen McDowell, and
Stuart Varney are anchors for Fox Business Network; they also appear on Fox News Channel. In addition,
Brenda Buttner was also on the roster on FBN until her death in 2017. Other anchors include
Peter Barnes,
Tom Sullivan,
Jenna Lee,
Nicole Petallides and
Cody Willard. Reporters include Jeff Flock (a
CNN "original"),
Shibani Joshi (from
News 12 Westchester), and
Connell McShane (from
Bloomberg Television). The network previously had former
Hewlett-Packard CEO
Carly Fiorina (a 2016 presidential candidate) as a contributor.
Dave Ramsey had a one-hour prime time show, similar in format to his syndicated radio show, until June 2010. Tom Sullivan broadcast his
Tom Sullivan Show on the radio, with plans to syndicate the show nationwide with the assistance of
Fox News Radio. Adam Shapiro (formerly with
Cleveland's
WEWS-TV and New York City's
WNBC) was added to the Fox Business Network to report from the Washington, D.C. bureau. On October 18, 2007, former
CNBC anchor
Liz Claman joined the Fox Business Network as co-anchor of the 2-3 p.m. portion of the dayside business news block with David Asman. Her first assignment for FBN was an interview with
Warren Buffett. In April 2008, Brian Sullivan (no relation to Tom) joined FBN, coming over from Bloomberg Television. Sullivan, who reunited with his Bloomberg colleague Connell McShane, anchored the 10 a.m.-12 p.m. portion of the business news block with Dagen McDowell. On May 12, 2008, Fox Business Network revamped its daytime lineup, which included the debut of two new programs,
Countdown to the Closing Bell and
Fox Business Bulls & Bears. On April 20, 2009,
Money for Breakfast,
The Opening Bell on Fox Business (both hosted by Alexis Glick),
The Noon Show with Tom Sullivan and Cheryl Casone,
Countdown to the Closing Bell,
Fox Business Bulls & Bears, and
Cavuto all moved to the network's new Studio G set. All six of those shows shared the same set in Studio G, which was unveiled on
Money for Breakfast the same day. In September 2009,
Don Imus and FBN reached an agreement to carry his show,
Imus in the Morning, on Fox Business. The show began airing on October 5, 2009. Fox had previously been in negotiations with Imus to bring his show to the network. In November 2007 (when Imus was just returning to radio, and Fox Business was just starting), negotiations fell through and Imus instead signed with rural-oriented network
RFD-TV. On December 23, 2009, Alexis Glick left FBN. Announcing that that day's episode of
The Opening Bell would be her last, she said "I know this is not the norm, but I don't believe in abrupt departures." The only reason given by Glick for her departure was that she was leaving to "embark on a new venture," but a number of sources have noted that Don Imus' new morning show had a significant effect upon Glick's screen time since he signed with the network. On November 10, 2010, FBN announced that former CNN anchor
Lou Dobbs would join the channel. His program,
Lou Dobbs Tonight, moved to FBN in March 2011. On February 24, 2014, former CNBC host
Maria Bartiromo moved to FBN, where she would host
Opening Bell with Maria Bartiromo, and become a Fox News contributor. In April 2015, it was reported that Fox Business would drop the
Imus in the Morning simulcast, as Imus was planning to move from New York City to Texas. On May 11, the network officially announced a new daytime lineup that would begin June 1;
FBN AM would air from 5-6 a.m. ET, and Bartiromo moved to the 6-9 a.m. ET timeslot formerly held by Imus to host
Mornings with Maria.
Varney & Company was moved up to 9 a.m. and expanded to three hours, Neil Cavuto would host the new midday program
Cavuto: Coast to Coast, and
Trish Regan (moving from
Bloomberg Television) would host the new afternoon program
The Intelligence Report, and Melissa Francis moved to co-anchor
After the Bell alongside David Asman. Former
UK Independence Party head
Nigel Farage was announced as a commentator on January 20, 2017, the day of
Donald Trump's
presidential inauguration. Farage will provide political analysis for both Fox Business and Fox News.
Sports programming Fox Business Network has occasionally served as an overflow channel for
Fox Sports telecasts in the event of programming conflicts across Fox,
Fox Sports 1, and
Fox Sports 2, particularly
college football. For instance in 2017, a game between
Baylor and
Oklahoma State aired on Fox Business due to a weather-delayed game on FS1. It was reported in May 2018 that, following a controversial decision in November 2017 to move the first quarter of a
Pac-12 football game between
Washington and
Stanford from FS1 to FS2 (which does not have wide carriage) due to a
NASCAR Camping World Truck Series overrun, that Fox would prefer the use of FBN for future Pac-12 overflow situations, as it has significantly wider distribution (if not slightly wider than FS1 in terms of total households) than FS2, and that it would carry minimal impact to programming. Occasional scheduled sports programming began airing on Fox Business in 2025. That year, Fox Business aired a
MotoGP race (the
Grand Prix of Argentina), second-round coverage of a
LIV Golf League event in Virginia, and
horse racing from
Saratoga Race Course on
Labor Day weekend. == On-air staff ==