Kristina Partsinevelos Bio, Age, Height, Family, Husband, CNBC, Greek, Salary and Net worth

Kristina Partsinevelos
Kristina Partsinevelos

Kristina Partsinevelos Biography

Kristina Partsinevelos is an American business reporter. She currently works at CNBC based and also a business correspondent and economist at FOX News Network. Kristina joined CNBC in May 2021 as the general assignment reporter. She covers stocks, investment trends and the reopening of the American economy for Business Day. 

Kristina Partsinevelos Education

Kristina received her MBA from the University of Oxford’s Saȉd Business School. She also has her master’s in journalism from Carleton University.

Kristina Partsinevelos CNBC

Kristina Partsinevelos joined CNBC in May 2021 as the general assignment reporter. She is based at CNBC Global Headquarters, her reporting appears on television and CNBC’s digital platforms. Kristina covers stocks, investment trends around ESG and also the reopening of the American economy for Business Day.

Partsinevelos joined CNBC from Fox Business Network, where she used to serve as a business correspondent and economist for three years covering everything from technology, to the White House, to the Federal Reserve and also reporting in the field around New York City during the early days of the COVID-19 pandemic. She also reported from South Carolina a category 4 storm, in the eye of Hurricane Florence,  in September 2018.

Kristina worked for Global News in London, BNN Bloomberg , CTV News Channel and CBC Edmonton covering the latest financial news, including the retail, tech, and automotive sectors.

She is a  former reporter for Canada’s Business News Network (BNN)as well as a business correspondent for the CTV News Channel, Partsinevelos covered the latest financial news, including the retail, tech, and automotive sectors.

Kristina Partsinevelos Salary

Kristina receives an annual salary ranging between $40,000 – $ 110,500.

Kristina Partsinevelos Net worth

Kristina has an estimated net worth of $ 700,000 dollars.

Read: Monica Alba Bio, Age, Height, Family, Husband, Nationality, Salary and Net worth

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Kristina Partsinevelos Age

Kristina is 36 years old as of 2021. She was born on September 30, 1985, in Montreal, Canada.

Kristina Partsinevelos Height

She stands at an average height of 5 feet 7 inches tall.

Kristina Partsinevelos Family

Kristina has not revealed any details concerning her family.

Kristina Partsinevelos Husband

Kristina is currently not married she is however in a relationship with Mark Glaire. He works at the University of Oxford in DPhil Biomedical and Clinical Sciences.

Kristina Partsinevelos Greek

Kristina is American she is a native of Montreal, Quebec, Canada.

Kristina Partsinevelos Articles

How small-time traders flipped the script on investing

What was once left for Wall Street hedge funds has now turned into a mainstream investment tactic executed from homes across America. In 2021, cleared options contracts soared to a new record, up 35% since 2020. And retail investors, some who call themselves Apes, executed over 25% of those trades.

Corporate America’s borrowing outpaces pre-pandemic levels

Corporate America’s borrowing outpaces pre-pandemic levels CNBC’s Kristina Partsinevelos reports on what’s happening in the junk bond market.

The hollow promise of net-zero carbon pledges

Countries and corporations around the globe are talking up their climate credentials, pledging to achieve “net-zero” carbon emissions or become “carbon neutral” in the next few decades. But when we delve into the details, those pledges seldom live up to their promises. “I think there’s an increasing momentum behind genuine commitments to getting to net zero.

The Hollow Promise of Net-Zero Carbon Pledges

Countries and corporations around the globe are talking up their climate credentials, pledging to achieve “net-zero” carbon or become “carbon neutral” in the next few decades. Unfortunately, there are no standard guidelines for achieving net zero or carbon neutral emissions. That means companies and countries can create their own definitions. Research from the Voluntary Carbon Markets Integrity Initiative shows less than 5% of carbon offsets actually remove carbon dioxide from the atmosphere.

Here’s how much inflation is increasing the cost of daily life

Here’s how much inflation is increasing the cost of daily lifeFrom Wall Street to Main Street to Washington, everyone is talking about inflation, which is having a real-life impact on all of our wallets. CNBC’s Kristina Partsinevelos reports.

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