CNBC is more than meets the eye. Not always, but enough times to make watching it worthwhile. Even Pisani, who a lot of times sounds like nothing but a market cheerleader stands by his own opinions sometimes, and a trader (yes a trader too, not just an investor) can get some useful insight into what the Wall St. is currently thinking. His bullishness going into September, and then just prior to last week's Fed decision, stressing that the market seems to be acting complacent is case in point. I wouldn't watch for guest analysts and fund managers though - they tend to be nothing but sales men looking to tout their babies.
Overall though, I just watch it between 8:00-9:30, and other times when econo. news come out (it's slower than mIRC FinancialChat I use, which is a bit slow itself but CNBC's useful as the secondary source), and sometimes tune in around 2 to stare at you-know-who (no, not Cramer).
Fast Money is interesting sometimes (for me at least), if just because traders run the show.
Overall though, I just watch it between 8:00-9:30, and other times when econo. news come out (it's slower than mIRC FinancialChat I use, which is a bit slow itself but CNBC's useful as the secondary source), and sometimes tune in around 2 to stare at you-know-who (no, not Cramer).
Fast Money is interesting sometimes (for me at least), if just because traders run the show.