Wednesday, March 25, 2009

Jon Stewart's Slightly Different Take


While my hypothesis was that the constant noise of CNBC led traders to scream "sell" when it came to Bear and others who have found less worse fates, Jon Stewart posits that it was CNBC's complicity that led to our current financial mess.  He, now famously, grilled Jim Cramer about the, well--to put it kindly-- lack of investigative, reporting or even questioning skills possessed by CNBC "journalists", their all too cozy relationships with CEO's and their siren call to Americans who watched faithfully, invested accordingly and are now in the poorhouse, or as it were, no house.  

Maybe Stewart's outrage that CNBC didn't see Bear Sterns or the current crisis coming actually fits in nicely with my idea that the hysteria surrounding the early days of the banking crisis was set off and paraded around by CNBC's pundits and reporters alike because, in their ineptitude, they were just as shocked and hysterical as everyone else?

Wednesday, March 4, 2009

Was Bear's demise CNBC's fault?

I recently watched a very informative and compelling special on CNBC called "House of Cards"  where David Faber, anchor of the CNBC show "Squawk on the Street" analyzes the current economic problems in the U.S. and exactly how we got here.  

When the program ended, I felt like I actually had a handle on credit-default swaps and mortgage-backed securities.  It was also clear to me that there isn't one person or group who can escape blame in this ordeal. From the individuals who deluded themselves into thinking they could afford a $700,000 house because someone they never met told them they could, to the bankers who took bad mortgages and spread them around the world, to the Congress who decided people must and should own their own homes...no matter what.  

But there was one strange thing about the show.  Much of the B-roll-- the trading floors and the desks at Lehman Brothers--showed televisions with CNBC on in the background, or in some cases, foreground.  At first I thought this was just shameless self promotion. I always assumed brokers and traders watched Bloomberg.  But, as we were taken through the nitty-gritty of the Bear Stearns collapse, and then the failure of Lehman, it became clear by watching the people on the floor of the Stock Exchange watching the television screens, that where the hyped-up coverage ended and the sell-offs began was difficult to distinguish.  I couldn't help but wonder how things might have turned out differently had CNBC not been on, had they not had an anchor booth on the floor of the stock exchange or had the business networks let the events occur and then reported on them.  

"House of Cards" squarely and, I think, fairly, implicated many people and players in this economic downturn. The only one left out--at least by name--was the media, in particular 24-hour business news shows. 
 
When you read something, you are told to be sure to read between the lines.  I would add: when you watch something, you should really pay attention to the B-roll.