June 17, 2012

Financial journalist Dan Dorfman dies at 82




Financial journalist Dan Dorfman dies at 82
The Associated Press
June 17, 2012
Financial journalist Dan Dorfman, known for moving stock prices in the 1990s with his comments on CNBC, has died. He was 82.

According to the family, he died Saturday in New York of cardiogenic shock, a heart condition.

Dorfman's influential market comments on the cable financial news channel could propel and sink stocks. He worked there until 1996, when he suffered a stroke.

That same year, he was fired as a Money magazine columnist over an ethics controversy involving a stock promoter, but he was never charged by regulators.


The controversy stemmed from Dorfman's refusal to tell his editor at the magazine who his confidential sources were amid reports that authorities were investigating his relationship with stock promoter Donald Kessler. Kessler later pleaded guilty to two counts of securities fraud and one count of tax evasion.

With a print and TV career that spanned decades, Dorfman also penned the "Heard on the Street" column in The Wall Street Journal, reported for CNN and wrote for USA Today, New York magazine and Esquire. His column also appeared in the Herald-Tribune.

Dorfman turned to the Internet late in his career, first with a stock research company, JagNotes.com, in 1999. He blogged for the Huffington Post until last year.

The native New Yorker is survived by his wife, Harriet.
From heraldtribune.com


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