logo
Meet car loan billionaire Don Hankey's glam daughter-in-law Skye: she spent Easter at The White House with Donald Trump and just wore Giambattista Valli to the Cannes Film Festival

Meet car loan billionaire Don Hankey's glam daughter-in-law Skye: she spent Easter at The White House with Donald Trump and just wore Giambattista Valli to the Cannes Film Festival

Car-loan billionaire Don Hankey, also known as 'the king of the subprime car loan,' is selling his extravagant Florida residence for US$44 million, per the New York Post.
Skye Hankey is married to billionaire Don Hankey's son Rufus. Photo: @skyehankey/Instagram
Luckily for Hankey, who made headlines for providing a US$175 million appeal bond for
President Donald Trump's New York civil fraud case in 2024, he can take real estate advice from his daughter-in-law Skye Hankey, who has experience selling
luxurious properties
Advertisement
In 2022, Skye's husband, Don Rufus Hankey, enlisted her help to sell a US$28.5 million Beverly Hills estate that once belonged to actor
Mark Wahlberg
Skye Hankey in Giambattista Valli haute couture at the Cannes Film Festival last weekend.
Real estate aside, Skye is also a fashion-savvy socialite who dresses almost exclusively in designer clothes and spent her Easter at the White House. Most recently, she was spotted wearing a Giambattista Valli haute couture gown on the red carpet at the Cannes Film Festival.
Here's everything you need to know about Don Hankey's daughter-in-law.
She's a fashionista
Skye Hankey regularly travels to prime holiday hotspots. Photo: @skyehankey/Instagram
A frequent jet-setter, Skye's Instagram is full of snaps of her holidaying in Ibiza, Monaco, Dubai, and more.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Beach Boys founder Brian Wilson, surf rock poet, dies at 82
Beach Boys founder Brian Wilson, surf rock poet, dies at 82

South China Morning Post

time5 hours ago

  • South China Morning Post

Beach Boys founder Brian Wilson, surf rock poet, dies at 82

Brian Wilson, the Beach Boys co-founder who masterminded the group's wild popularity and soundtracked the California dream, has died, his family announced on Wednesday. He was 82. Advertisement 'We are heartbroken to announce that our beloved father Brian Wilson has passed away. We are at a loss for words right now,' said the statement published on Wilson's social media accounts. 'We realise that we are sharing our grief with the world.' The pop visionary crafted hits whose success rivalled The Beatles throughout the 1960s: between 1962 and 1966 a seemingly inexhaustible string of feel-good hits including 'Surfin' USA', 'I Get Around', 'Fun, Fun, Fun' and 'Surfer Girl' made the Beach Boys into America's biggest-selling band. But after five years of prodigious songwriting, in which he produced 200 odes to sun, surfing and sun-tanned girls, Wilson sank into a deep, drug-fuelled depression for decades. Advertisement He would emerge 35 years later to complete the Beach Boys' unfinished album, Smile, widely regarded as his masterpiece.

US Treasury chief slams ‘unreliable' China at House hearing on Trump trade policy
US Treasury chief slams ‘unreliable' China at House hearing on Trump trade policy

South China Morning Post

time5 hours ago

  • South China Morning Post

US Treasury chief slams ‘unreliable' China at House hearing on Trump trade policy

US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent slammed Beijing on Wednesday for its aggressive export policies, urged it to be a more dependable partner and depicted China's disjointed economic structure as hurting not only the US but the entire globe. 'China currently has the most unbalanced economy in the history of the world,' Bessent, a former hedge fund manager, told the powerful House Ways and Means Committee. 'They cannot be allowed to export their way back to prosperity, not only for working Americans but for working citizens around the world.' Noting his return hours earlier from two days of negotiating with China in London, Bessent said this week's bilateral agreement offered Beijing a chance to become a more balanced economic player. The deal could also help China boost its domestic consumption rather than extend a long-standing pattern of excessive production distorting the global economy, according to the Treasury secretary. But Bessent urged vigilance. 'China has proven an unreliable partner,' he testified before adding that 'we will see' if it is more reliable this time.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store