why does everyone knock CNBC?

Discussion in 'Wall St. News' started by dac8555, Oct 13, 2006.

  1. Danulous

    Danulous

    when you're trading would you pay attention to tv anyway? or would you even listen to any reporter telling you about stocks? i'd rather pay attention to the tape or go to some TA. it's entertainment, and background noise. good stuff.
     
    #11     Oct 13, 2006
  2. B1010

    B1010

    It's worth getting a glimpse of Bianna before I take a break and go rub one out at lunchtime.
     
    #12     Oct 13, 2006
  3. Danulous

    Danulous

    mommy
     
    #13     Oct 13, 2006
  4. I like to watch it, in case there is a major breaking news event. Sometimes I even watch Fox, as they are kings of the news alert, lol. If I would have been trading during the small plane crash, I wouldn't have stood aside, not entering any new trades, until it was determined it wasn't terrorism. Newsstrkie is very fast, so fast that I can't hardly understand the guy though.
     
    #14     Oct 13, 2006
  5. S2007S

    S2007S


    hahaha, I thought I was the only one who noticed that. They have one every 15 mins....About 95% of the time Im like is this really a news alert....to funnnnny
     
    #15     Oct 13, 2006
  6. pv150

    pv150

    Did Fast Money get cancelled? No where on the lineup.. Strazzini was MIA last episode, did he quit? :confused:
     
    #16     Oct 13, 2006
  7. S2007S

    S2007S

    i dont think it was cancelled, i thought the same thing last wednesday when i tuned in to see deal or no deal on instead of FAST Money....Dont think it would be cancelled in such a powerful Bullmarket.
     
    #17     Oct 13, 2006
  8. John47

    John47

    exactly. Its on it our trading gallery all day, as background noise, if something blows up we have bloomberg. Cnbc gives us a visual of whatever's blowing up. Other than that, theres nothing else, and the chicks are hot.
     
    #18     Oct 13, 2006
  9. I will tell you how to play CNBC. If they really start hyping a certain market sector, then that sector is good when they first start hyping it. Every one of them to include Cramer, Greenberg, etc. always start pumping the same sectors at the same time.

    For example, staples. They started pumping staples in June and look. PG up 19% from when they first started desk pounding. Then they started pounding the desks for large cap and that sector started to rise. Now they are pounding the desks for small cap.

    If you watch CNBC religiously, you will see these transformations. You can tell when it starts, but it will end suddenly somewhere.

    I was at a party over the summer and there were many traders there from big name institutions. They all said that they have CNBC on all day long and all of the traders seemed young. So Im guessing that some of this stuff gets into their heads.

    When they have pumped a certain sector for about 2-3 months, then you know there will be a turnaround somewhere along the line. . .Example. They pumped short caps Fall 2005 and Spring 2006. I remember they even brought a retirement specialist on suggesting that everyone buy into small cap mutuals and forget about the large caps. This was clearly a contrarian sign.

    Some of the picks on CNBC can be outright *dangerous*. Example. Before Ford had its black trading day, they had a money manager on stating they are advising their clients to buy the stock in the 9s and they believed it will go much higher. Fast forward 2 days, it was early morning before the market open. All of the reporters started trashing Ford and they had another money manager on who said they were advising their clients to sell at these levels End result, Ford went from 9.5 to 7.8 in a day. If you had bought in on the first money manager, you would have had a huge loss to deal with...

    I have lost thousands of dollars listening to CNBC. Do not listen to what they suggest especially Cramer...Yes, sometimes the plays do work out, but other times they simply dont. Its a gamble. For every Cramer play that works well, I can show you one that went terribly wrong. You dont know what their agenda is or who they are in with.
     
    #19     Oct 13, 2006
  10. They don't report the news reports that traders care about. And when they do report the news it is invariably late, sometimes like minutes late, so no value there. Bloomberg's orange bulletins put CNBC to shame.
     
    #20     Oct 13, 2006