CNBC - Cramer's Mad Money

In the history of CNBC there were only 3 anchors that were worth watching.. Dan Dorfman ( the guy who really did move markets), current anchor Ron Insana, and of course, former anchor Emma Crosby.. sigh.



Quote from AAAintheBeltway:

I'll never understand the geniuses who run CNBC. Their daytime format is so tired it's a joke. Does anyone actually watch it. Of course, it looks like Masterpiece Theater when compared to their night time shows. Why can't they just run the pretty decent Asia and Europe feeds? Most people don't get those at all, yet they compare favorably with Bloomberg TV. The old K&C show was pretty decent, but then they took it off the evening lineup, when anyone could actually watch it. Now they have ruined it. Even I find it hard to watch Kudlow's endless shilling for supply-side tax cuts to the exclusion of all relevant stock market news. Cramer's show sounds like a joke. "Hey Jimbo, what do you think about CSCO here?" There are a thousand sponsored shows on radio like that. who cares?

I haven't seen Cramer's show yet, but the old K&C format where they had exec's and analysts on and actually asked them tough questions was not half bad. Why screw with it?
 
They aren't anchors, but whenever Rick Santeli or Art Cashin are speaking I actually listen to the TV. Art is a huge player and knows just about everything about all the different markets, freinds who know him say he is brilliant when it comes to what is going on in the financial markets. Rick seems to be very knowledgeable and astute at what is going on in Chicago and in the Treasuries. Most of the others I see on CNBC are reading que cards.
 
LOLOL .....

Chest-Beating Trades Will Bring Trouble
By James J. Cramer
03/15/2005 09:12

We saw it again Monday, that incredible lack of liquidity after hours . It showed up in the ridiculous buying in Genentech DNA , taking the stock up 13 points in after hours trade. That was a totally gratuitous run by someone with a lot of firepower who used the lack of liquidity to move the stock up to where he wanted it to go.

This kind of behavior, where some institution or institutions just take matters into their own hands, happens because no one at a Lehman Brothers or a Goldman Sachs or a Morgan Stanley wants to make a market in the darned thing. No one wants to offer 200,000 shares of Genentech up 4 to work it down lower because everyone knows the game now. The brokers know that the institutions don't trade like they did in the old days. They think nothing of getting Goldman short on a print and then walking across the street to Smith Barney and doing the same thing. In the old days, that was bad form; these days, anything goes.

What's so different now? First, it is no longer a relationship business. People trade through machines and the machines mask anyone. Second, when the Justice Department cracked down on the collusive ways of the brokers, the brokers no longer had a way to enforce their wrath. In the old days, they could punish an account for acting out like this. Not anymore; there's no club out there to enforce things.

So we get this kind of maniacal, illiquid move. The institutions tend to know they can get away with it because they can then work the phones and get an upgrade from a couple of places as the biotech analysts on the Street seem particularly susceptible to what the accounts are saying and doing.

Suffice it to say, I miss the old days. This chest-beating, I'm-taking-it-higher-myself stuff just makes for bigger downfalls down the road.

Random musings: Thanks so much to all of you great callers last night to "Mad Money," my new show on CNBC . (Missed it last night? We're doing it again tonight at 6 p.m. EST.) I already get so many great calls for my radio show , it's terrific that there are so many to go around. ... Don't forget, I am taking questions about the Internet sector on radio today, so call me from 3-4 p.m. EST at 1-800-862-8686. How awfully does that group act?

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

BTW, if anyone would like to call and question him, please use your ET username – so we all know you’re our true hero :p
 
Quote from Cre8UrF8:

They aren't anchors, but whenever Rick Santeli or Art Cashin are speaking I actually listen to the TV. Art is a huge player and knows just about everything about all the different markets, freinds who know him say he is brilliant when it comes to what is going on in the financial markets. Rick seems to be very knowledgeable and astute at what is going on in Chicago and in the Treasuries. Most of the others I see on CNBC are reading que cards.

only 2 i listen to.
 
Quote from chartie:
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

BTW, if anyone would like to call and question him, please use your ET username – so we all know you’re our true hero :p [/B]

That won't work. They'll censor the call if you tell them you're "inandlong"...
 
Quote from vhehn:

cramers talent:
around the end of december cramer was hyping his newest must own stock group. he called the group GERQY. if you had followed his advice where would be today? keep in mind cramer doesnt believe in stops so you would still be long:
JAN1 PRICE AND TODAYS PRICE

G = GOOG 202 TODAY 175 -27 POINTS
E= EBAY 57 36 -21
R = RIMM 79 66 -14
Q = QCOM 42 37 -5
Y = YHOO 38 31 -7

if you followed cramer you are down a painful 74 points.
just listened to it. funny show. i did catch him say he doesnt like ebay now. oops, loved it 20 points higher and now he doesnt like it.
he gets to hype every pos he owns. he should beat the market this year with an easy way to hype his picks.
he had tough questions for the SBL ceo. good job getting the facts.
 
Quote from vhehn:

just listened to it. funny show. i did catch him say he doesnt like ebay now. oops, loved it 20 points higher and now he doesnt like it.
he gets to hype every pos he owns. he should beat the market this year with an easy way to hype his picks.
he had tough questions for the SBL ceo. good job getting the facts.

Even Stock777 cant defend this horse**** program.

Senor Zen
 
Quote from chartie:

.........................BTW, if anyone would like to call and question him, please use your ET username – so we all know you’re our true hero :p

kinda doubt Ratboy would make it through his screeners.
 
Quote from yenzen:

Even Stock777 cant defend this horse**** program.

Senor Zen

I found the voiceover reference to CMGI's performance today most amusing. It's time to party like it's 1999!

Now we know what Kudlow contributed to the old K&C show - a sense of decorum.

I need to shut this crap off. I can't write code with that noise.
 
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