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Featured Show

The Exchange

In-depth reporting around the most important and interesting stories to today’s markets and investors.

All times listed EST
Fast Money Halftime Report

Fast Money Halftime Report

Now Playing
1 hr

Once you have the strategy, it's time to execute your trade. Get your gameplan for the second half of the trading day with S

Once you have the strategy, it's time to execute your trade. Get your gameplan for the second half of the trading day with Scott Wapner and the Fast Money Halftime Report traders, the only show with real-traders trading in real-time.

The Exchange

The Exchange

Next Airs Today at 1 pm
1 hr

In-depth reporting around the most important and interesting stories to today’s markets and investors.

In-depth reporting around the most important and interesting stories to today’s markets and investors.

Power Lunch

Power Lunch

Next Airs Today at 2 pm
1 hr

CNBC's Tyler Mathisen, Michelle Caruso-Cabrera, Melissa Lee & Sara Eisen take you through the heart of the business day focu

CNBC's Tyler Mathisen, Michelle Caruso-Cabrera, Melissa Lee & Sara Eisen take you through the heart of the business day focusing on real-time market coverage, breaking news and up-to-the-instant stock moving information. "Power Lunch" delves into the economy, the markets, real estate, media and technology – any place where there’s money to be made.

Closing Bell

Closing Bell

Next Airs Today at 3 pm
1 hr

Kelly Evans & Wilfred Frost guide you through the most important hour of the trading day – the last hour – with a close-up l

Kelly Evans & Wilfred Frost guide you through the most important hour of the trading day – the last hour – with a close-up look at how the markets are moving and investors are reacting. Live reports include the Chicago Board of Trade, New York Mercantile Exchange, NASDAQ and the New York Stock Exchange.

Closing Bell: Overtime

Closing Bell: Overtime

Next Airs Today at 4 pm
1 hr

When the bell rings, the action does not end. During “Closing Bell: Overtime,” Scott Wapner takes you through all of the aft

When the bell rings, the action does not end. During “Closing Bell: Overtime,” Scott Wapner takes you through all of the after-hours moves including breaking news, corporate earnings and post-market trading. Big investors, smart strategists and top money managers debate actionable ideas and the big market themes of the day, and get viewers ready for tomorrow’s trading day.

Fast Money

Fast Money

Next Airs Today at 5 pm
1 hr

Faster than a New York minute, Melissa Lee & the Fast Money Traders give you the information normally reserved for the Wall

Faster than a New York minute, Melissa Lee & the Fast Money Traders give you the information normally reserved for the Wall Street trading floor, enabling you to make decisions that can make you money. The "Fast Money" five gives you the news, as only the savviest traders can, with an angle that you won't see until tomorrow's papers.

Mad Money with Jim Cramer

Mad Money with Jim Cramer

Next Airs Today at 6 pm
1 hr

Jim Cramer believes that there is always a bull market somewhere and he wants to try to help you find it. "Mad Money" takes

Jim Cramer believes that there is always a bull market somewhere and he wants to try to help you find it. "Mad Money" takes viewers inside the mind of one of Wall Street's most respected and successful money managers for free. Jim is your personal guide through the confusing jungle of Wall Street investing, navigating through both opportunities and pitfalls with one goal in mind -- to try to help you make money. "Mad Money" features lively guest interviews, viewer calls and, most importantly, the unmatched, fiery opinions of Jim Cramer.

Squawk Box

Squawk Box

Next Airs Today at 7 pm
2 hrs

"Squawk Box" is the ultimate "pre-market" morning news and talk program, where the biggest names in business and politics br

"Squawk Box" is the ultimate "pre-market" morning news and talk program, where the biggest names in business and politics bring their most important stories. Anchored by CNBC's Joe Kernen, Becky Quick & Andrew Ross Sorkin, CNBC's signature morning program features reports from Washington, Silicon Valley, London and Hong Kong. "Squawk Box" brings Wall Street to Main Street and is a \nmust see" for everyone from the professional trader to the casual investor.

CNBC

CNBC

Next Airs Today at 9 pm
3 hrs

CNBC

CNBC

Worldwide Exchange

Worldwide Exchange

Next Airs Tomorrow at 5 am
1 hr

Broadcast from CNBC Global Headquarters in Englewood Cliffs, N.J., CNBC’s "Worldwide Exchange" will deliver essential, actio

Broadcast from CNBC Global Headquarters in Englewood Cliffs, N.J., CNBC’s "Worldwide Exchange" will deliver essential, actionable information and analysis for anyone who wants to be part of the global business conversation. Anchored by Brian Sullivan, the program will prepare CNBC's worldwide audience with a smart take on overnight U.S. news and live international market action.

Squawk on the Street

Squawk on the Street

Next Airs Tomorrow at 9 am
2 hrs

Anchored from the New York Stock Exchange Carl Quintanilla, David Faber, Jim Cramer, Sara Eisen, and Rick Santelli contribut

Anchored from the New York Stock Exchange Carl Quintanilla, David Faber, Jim Cramer, Sara Eisen, and Rick Santelli contribute award winning reporting from CNBC global headquarters providing listeners with all the up-to-the minute news they need from every major market around the world.

Money Movers

Money Movers

Next Airs Tomorrow at 11 am
1 hr

"Money Movers" is a highly active program focusing on what's moving the stock markets, and setting the agenda for the busine

"Money Movers" is a highly active program focusing on what's moving the stock markets, and setting the agenda for the business day, just 90 minutes after the Opening Bell.

Street Signs

Street Signs

Next Airs Thursday at 4 am
1 hr

One hour into Europe’s equity session, Street Signs provides price discovery, the street's view, instant analysis and a link

One hour into Europe’s equity session, Street Signs provides price discovery, the street's view, instant analysis and a link to the business stories trending online and on social.

All times listed EST
image of host becky quick

Becky Quick

Becky Quick is co-anchor of Squawk Box (Mon–Fri, 6–9 am ET). Quick is known for her hard-hitting interviews and profiles of some of the world’s richest and most influential investors, including Warren Buffett, Bill Gates, Alan Greenspan, T. Boone Pickens, Jamie Dimon, Charlie Munger, and many others. She also has interviewed three US presidents and has hosted panels at some of the most prestigious conferences in the world, such as the Microsoft CEO Conference, Fortune’s Most Powerful Women’s Conference, and the Allen & Co. Sun Valley Media Conference.Quick was formerly anchor of the nationally syndicated On the Money, which was produced by CNBC, and also authored a regular column for Fortune magazine. Prior to becoming an anchor, Quick covered the Wall Street beat for CNBC as part of the network’s partnership with Dow Jones. Before joining CNBC in February 2001, Quick covered various beats for The Wall Street Journal, including retail, e-commerce and the Internet. She also played a crucial role in the launch of The Wall Street Journal Online, while serving as the site’s international news editor.Quick graduated from Rutgers University in New Brunswick, NJ. She serves on the board of the Economic Club of New York and previously served on the board of The Robert Wood Johnson University Hospital.

Image of Kelly Evans

Kelly Evans

Kelly Evans is anchor of CNBC’s The Exchange (Mon–Fri, 1–2 pm ET), the newsroom-based program for today’s investor. She is also co-anchor of CNBC’s Power Lunch (Mon–Fri, 2–3 pm ET), which broadcasts from the network’s headquarters in Englewood Cliffs, NJ. She joined the network in February 2012 as an on-air correspondent, reporting across CNBC’s Business Day programming. Evans was most recently co-anchor of CNBC’s Closing Bell, and earlier, Squawk on the Street and Worldwide Exchange based in London.Prior to CNBC, Evans was an economics reporter and “Heard on the Street” columnist for The Wall Street Journal. She also hosted the daily News Hub program on WSJ.com. Evans joined the Journal in 2007 after graduating magna cum laude with a bachelor’s degree from Washington & Lee University in Lexington, VA.

Image of David Faber

David Faber

An award-winning journalist and New York Times bestselling author, David Faber is a co-anchor of CNBC’s Squawk on the Street (Mon-Fri, 9–11 am ET) and an anchor and co-producer of CNBC’s acclaimed original documentaries and long-form programming.During the day, Faber breaks news and provides in-depth analysis on a range of business topics during the Faber Report. In his more than two decades with CNBC, Faber has broken many big financial stories, including Disney’s deal to buy most of Twenty-First Century Fox’s assets, the massive fraud at WorldCom, and Rupert Murdoch’s unsolicited bid for Dow Jones. Faber has reported 10 documentaries for CNBC for which he has received Loeb, Emmy, Peabody, and duPont awards.His book, The Faber Report, was published by Little, Brown in spring 2002; his second book, And Then the Roof Caved In, was published in the summer of 2009 by John Wiley. He holds a bachelor’s degree in English from Tufts University.

Image of Host Jim Cramer

Jim Cramer

Jim Cramer believes there is always a bull market somewhere, and he wants to help you find it. He is host of CNBC’s Mad Money (Mon–Fri, 6 pm ET), featuring lively guest interviews, viewer calls, and most important, the unmatched, fiery opinions of Cramer himself. He serves as the viewer’s personal guide through the confusing jungle of Wall Street investing—navigating through both opportunities and pitfalls with one goal in mind—to help them make money. Cramer is also co-anchor of the 9 am ET hour of CNBC’s Squawk on the Street (Mon–Fri, 9–11am ET) and the founder of TheStreet, a multimedia provider of financial commentary.He graduated from Harvard College where he was president and editor-in-chief of the prestigious daily, The Harvard Crimson. After graduation, he became a reporter for the Tallahassee Democrat and later for the Los Angeles Herald Examiner, where he covered stories ranging from homicides to sporting events. Cramer is a former hedge fund manager, and founder/owner and senior partner of Cramer Berkowitz. His compounded rate of return was 24 percent after all fees for 14 years at Cramer Berkowitz. He retired from his hedge fund in 2001, where he finished with one of the best records in the business, including having a 36 percent plus year in 2000.He helped Steve Brill launch American Lawyer magazine before attending Harvard Law School and earning a law degree. Upon graduating and passing the New York State Bar Examination and being admitted to the NY State Bar, Cramer joined Goldman Sachs in sales and trading. While at Goldman, Cramer wrote for The New Republic about stock market issues.In December 2013, he published the book Jim Cramer’s Get Rich Carefully in which he creates a guide to high-yield, low-risk investing. Cramer is also the author of Jim Cramer’s Getting Back to Even, Stay Mad for Life: Get Rich, Stay Rich, Mad Money: Watch TV, Get Rich, Jim Cramer’s RealMoney, and Confessions of a Street Addict.

Image of Andrew Ross Sorkin

Andrew Ross Sorkin

Andrew Ross Sorkin is co-anchor of Squawk Box (Mon–Fri, 6–9 am ET), CNBC’s signature morning program. Sorkin is also a financial columnist for The New York Times and the editor-at-large of DealBook, a news site he founded that is published by The Times.Sorkin is the author of the bestselling book, Too Big to Fail: The Inside Story of How Wall Street and Washington Fought to Save the Financial System—and Themselves, which chronicled the events of the 2008 financial crisis. The book won the 2010 Gerald Loeb Award for Best Business Book, and was shortlisted for the 2010 Samuel Johnson Prize and the 2010 Financial Times Business Book of the Year Award. The book was adapted as a movie by HBO Films in 2011. Sorkin was a co-producer of the film, which was nominated for 11 Emmy Awards. Sorkin is also co-creator of the drama series Billions on Showtime starring Paul Giamatti and Damien Lewis.Over the years, Sorkin has broken news on many major mergers and acquisitions, including Chase’s acquisition of J.P. Morgan and Hewlett-Packard’s acquisition of Compaq. He also led The Times’s coverage of Vodafone’s $183 billion hostile bid for Mannesmann, resulting in the world’s largest takeover ever.He won a Gerald Loeb Award in 2004 for breaking the news of IBM’s historic sale of its PC business to Lenovo. He was also a finalist in the commentary category for his DealBook column. He won a Society of American Business Editors and Writers Award for breaking news in 2005 and again in 2006. In 2007, the World Economic Forum named him a Young Global Leader. In 2008 and 2009, Vanity Fair named him to its “Next Establishment” list. He was also named to the “Directorship 100,” a list of the most influential people on the nation’s board of directors. He is a term member of the Council on Foreign Relations.Sorkin began writing for The New York Times in 1995 under unusual circumstances: He hadn’t yet graduated from high school. He graduated from Cornell University with a B.S. degree in May 1999.

Image of Joe Kernen

Joe Kernen

Joe Kernen is co-anchor of Squawk Box (Mon–Fri, 6–9 am ET), CNBC’s signature morning program. It is a fast-paced, irreverent look at the world of Wall Street, and the longest running show on the network. Kernen is based in CNBC’s global headquarters in Englewood Cliffs, NJ. Prior to his anchoring duties, Kernen was CNBC’s on-air Stock Editor and was featured throughout the business day on CNBC.Kernen came to CNBC in the 1991 merger with Financial News Network, having joined FNN after a 10-year career as a stockbroker. After training at Merrill Lynch, he rose to the level of vice president at both EF Hutton and Smith Barney. Focusing on small-to-medium-sized corporations, he managed corporate cash accounts and qualified retirement plans in addition to key employees’ personal assets.Kernen holds a bachelor’s degree from the University of Colorado in molecular, cellular, and developmental biology as well as a master’s degree from Massachusetts Institute of Technology. During his graduate studies, he worked at the MIT Center for Cancer Research, one of the world’s premier institutions. His work focused on mouse erythroleukemia cells and resulted in a series of publications in well-known scientific journals including CELLDevelopmental Biology, and Cold Spring Harbor Symposia on Quantitative Biology.

Image of Carl Quintanilla

Carl Quintanilla

Carl Quintanilla is a principal anchor of CNBC’s Squawk on the Street (Mon–Fri, 9–11 am ET) and Squawk Alley (Mon–Fri, 11–12 pm ET), both of which broadcast live from the New York Stock Exchange.Since joining NBCUniversal in 1999, Quintanilla has covered a wide range of stories for both CNBC and NBC News, where he was a New York- and Chicago-based correspondent for Today and NBC Nightly News. He has covered five Olympic Games, the 2004 US presidential campaign, and international military conflicts from Israel to Iraq. In 2005, he spent weeks in New Orleans as part of NBC’s team coverage of Hurricane Katrina, for which he shared a national Emmy, a DuPont Award, a RTNDA Edward R. Murrow Award, and broadcast’s highest honor, the Peabody Award.The one-hour documentaries Quintanilla has reported for CNBC include: The New High: Extreme Sports, #TwitterRevolution, The Costco Craze: Inside the Warehouse Giant, BMW: A Driving Obsession, Big Mac: Inside the McDonald’s Empire, Trash Inc: The Secret Life of Garbage, and The Money Chase: Inside Harvard Business School.Prior to joining NBC, Quintanilla spent six years as a reporter for The Wall Street Journal. He earned a bachelor’s degree in political science from the University of Colorado.

Image of Shepard Smith

Shepard Smith

Shepard Smith is Anchor and Executive Editor of The News with Shepard Smith (Mon–Fri, 7–8 pm ET), a nightly newscast providing deep, nonpartisan coverage and perspective on the day’s most important stories. Smith also serves as CNBC’s Chief General News Anchor and Chief Breaking General News Anchor, which was announced when he joined the network in July 2020. He is based at CNBC Global Headquarters in Englewood Cliffs, NJ.Most recently, Smith served as FOX News Channel’s Chief News Anchor as well as Managing Editor of the breaking news division. From 2013–2019, he also anchored the news program Shepard Smith Reporting. Prior to that, Smith anchored The FOX Report and Studio B. During his time at FOX News Channel, Smith covered major news events including presidential elections, Hurricane Katrina, the BP oil spill, the Middle East conflict from the Israel-Lebanon border, the attacks of 9/11, the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq, and mass shootings from Columbine to Las Vegas. Early in his career at FOX News Channel, Smith was a New York-based general assignment reporter before being promoted to senior correspondent.Before joining FOX News Channel, Smith was a FOX News Edge correspondent based in Los Angeles and covered a range of stories for the FOX affiliate news service, including the crash of TWA Flight 800 and the Oklahoma City bombing.He began his broadcast career as a reporter at local stations across the state of Florida including WSVN-TV (FOX) in Miami, the former WCPX-TV (CBS) in Orlando, WBBH-TV (NBC) in Fort Myers, and WJHG-TV (NBC) in Panama City. Smith studied journalism at the University of Mississippi and is a native of Holly Springs, MS.

Image of Scott Wapner

Scott Wapner

Scott Wapner is host of Fast Money Halftime Report (weekdays, 12–1 pm ET). He is also the author of When the Wolves Bite, which documents the battle between billionaire investors Bill Ackman and Carl Icahn over Herbalife. Wapner has reported live from the floor of the New York Stock Exchange and the Nasdaq MarketSite, covering the real-time action of the global financial markets. He was reporting live from the New York Stock Exchange during the May 2010 “flash crash.”Wapner has also reported several documentaries for the network, including Hotel: Behind Closed Doors at Marriott, Ultimate Fighting: From Blood Sport to Big Time (which earned him an Emmy nomination,) and One Nation, Overweight, which documents the impact of the nation’s obesity epidemic. In 2011, Wapner received an award from the Society of American Business Editors and Writers, as well as a Sigma Delta Chi Award from the Society of Professional Journalists, for One Nation, Overweight. Before joining CNBC, Wapner served as the franchise business reporter for KDFW-TV in Dallas and was a reporter for Associated Press Television News based in New York City. Wapner earned a bachelor’s degree in history from the University of South Florida.

Image of Brian Sullivan

Brian Sullivan

Brian Sullivan is anchor of CNBC’s Worldwide Exchange (Mon–Fri, 5–6 am ET), which broadcasts from CNBC global headquarters in Englewood Cliffs, NJ. He is also senior national correspondent for the network, covering some of the nation’s biggest stories. Most recently, Sullivan was co-anchor of CNBC’s Power Lunch (Mon–Fri, 1–3 pm ET). In his 20 years of financial journalism and television experience, Sullivan has reported from five continents. He has been nominated twice for the prestigious Loeb Award: one as recognition for being among the first financial journalists to highlight the risks of the housing bubble in 2007, and the other for the 2013 CNBC documentary America’s Gun: The Rise of the AR-15. Prior to his time at CNBC, Sullivan served as an anchor at Fox Business News, as well as a producer, reporter, and anchor for Bloomberg Television.Sullivan has a BA in political science from Virginia Tech (where he serves on the alumni board), as well as a law degree from Brooklyn Law School. In his free time, he is an avid race car driver with two SCCA divisional championships.

Image of Michael Santoli

Michael Santoli

Michael Santoli joined CNBC in October 2015 as a senior markets commentator, based at the network’s global headquarters in Englewood Cliffs, N.J. Santoli brings his extensive markets expertise to CNBC’s Business Day programming, with a regular appearance on CNBC’s Closing Bell (Mon–Fri, 3–5 pm ET). In addition, he is the host of Trading Nation, and contributes to CNBC.com and CNBC PRO, writing regular articles and creating original digital videos.Previously, Santoli was a senior columnist at Yahoo Finance, where he wrote analysis and commentary on the stock market, corporate news, and the economy. He also appeared on Yahoo Finance video programs, where he offered insights on the most important business stories of the day, and was a regular contributor to CNBC and other networks.Santoli has covered the Wall Street beat for more than 20 years. Prior to joining Yahoo in 2012, he spent 15 years as a columnist and feature writer for Barron’s magazine. From 1993 to 1997, Santoli was a reporter at Dow Jones Newswires, covering the securities industry, and was awarded two Dow Jones Newswire Awards for distinguished real time journalism. He began his journalism career in 1992 as a reporter and editor at Investment Dealers’ Digest. Santoli is a graduate of Wesleyan University and lives in New York City.

Image of Mathisen

Tyler Mathisen

Tyler Mathisen co-anchors CNBC’s Power Lunch (Mon–Fri, 2–3 pm ET), one of the network’s longest running program franchises. He is also vice president of events strategy for CNBC, working closely with the network’s events team to grow the rapidly expanding business. Previously, Mathisen was co-anchor of Nightly Business Report, an award-winning evening business news program produced by CNBC for US public television. In 2014, NBR was named best radio/TV show by the Society of American Business Editors and Writers (SABEW). Since joining CNBC in 1997, Mathisen has held a number of positions, including managing editor of CNBC Business News, which entail directing the network’s daily content and coverage. He was also co-anchor of CNBC’s Closing Bell. Mathisen has reported one-hour documentaries for the network, including Best Buy: The Big Box Fights Back, Supermarkets Inc: Inside a $500 Billion Money Machine, and Death: It’s a Living. Mathisen was also host of the CNBC series How I Made My Millions.Prior to his time at CNBC, Mathisen spent 15 years as a writer, senior editor, and top editor for Money magazine. Among other duties, he supervised the magazine’s mutual funds coverage, its annual investment forecast issue, and its expansion into electronic journalism, for which it won the first-ever National Magazine Award for New Media in 1997. In 1993, Mathisen won the American University-Investment Company Institute Award for Personal Finance Journalism for the televised series, Caring for Aging Parents, which aired on ABC’s Good Morning America. Mathisen served as money editor of GMA from 1991 to 1997. He also won an Emmy Award for a report on the 1987 stock market crash that aired on New York’s WCBS-TV. A native of Arlington, VA, Mathisen graduated with distinction from the University of Virginia.

Image of Melissa Lee

Melissa Lee

Melissa Lee is the host of CNBC’s Fast Money (Mon–Thu, 5–6 pm ET; Fri, 5–5:30 pm ET), which originates from the Nasdaq’s MarketSite studio in New York’s Times Square. Fast Money gives you the information normally reserved for the Wall Street trading floor, enabling you to make decisions that can make you money. She is also the host of Options Action (Fri, 5:30 pm ET), a weekly half-hour program that explains the advantages of options trading. In addition, Lee is a member of the ensemble cast of CNBC’s Power Lunch (Mon–Fri, 2–3 pm ET). Previously, Lee was co-anchor of CNBC’s Squawk on the Street and host of Money in Motion Currency Trading. She also covered investment banking, hedge funds, and private equity for the network.Lee has reported one-hour documentaries for the network, including Rise of the Machines (2013), Code Wars: America’s Cyber Threat (2011), Coca-Cola: The Real Story Behind the Real Thing (2009), and Porn: Business of Pleasure (2009). In 2008, Lee reported and anchored the one-hour documentary Made in China: People’s Republic of Profit from Beijing and Shanghai. She reported extensively on China, covering matters from the country’s growth and challenges to opportunities for US businesses.Lee received a 2010 Gracie Award for Outstanding Host–News and a 2009 Gerald Loeb Award nomination for the CNBC Special Report, Is Your Money Safe? The Fall of Lehman Brothers, which she co-anchored. Lee has also been nominated for two Emmy awards in Business News. In 2007, she was recognized for The $50M Con, her report about a college student-turned-scammer who ran a fake hedge fund and was ultimately caught by the FBI. And in 2003, she was nominated for her reporting on the proxy voting of mutual funds.Prior to joining CNBC in 2004, Lee worked for Bloomberg Television and CNN Financial News. Before her career in television, she was a consultant at Mercer Management Consulting. Her cases focused on the banking and credit card sectors. Lee graduated with honors from Harvard College with a BA in government. She also served as assistant managing editor of the Harvard Crimson.

Image of Wilfred Frost

Wilfred Frost

Wilfred Frost is co-anchor of CNBC’s Closing Bell (Mon–Fri, 3–5 pm ET), which broadcasts from Post 9 on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange. Frost also covers banking and finance for the network’s Business Day programming. Frost joined CNBC in 2014 as co-anchor of Worldwide Exchange in London and moved to the US when the program began broadcasting from CNBC Global Headquarters in 2015.Frost graduated from Oxford University with a degree in politics, philosophy, and economics, and worked for five years as a fund manager with Newton Investment Management in the City of London before opting to pursue a full-time career in journalism. Frost manages a TV production firm and completed a number of on-screen assignments for broadcast networks including ITV and CNN. He also founded The Miles Frost Fund, which works to raise awareness and funds for inherited heart conditions. Find out more about Wilfred at: wilfredfrost.com.

Image of Jon Fortt

Jon Fortt

Jon Fortt is co-anchor of CNBC’s Squawk Alley (Mon–Fri, 11 am–12 pm ET) broadcast live from the New York Stock Exchange. Previously, he was an on-air editor based at CNBC’s global headquarters in Englewood Cliffs, NJ. Fortt joined CNBC as technology correspondent in July 2010, working from CNBC’s Silicon Valley bureau where he covered the companies, start-ups, and trends that are driving innovation in the industry. He also contributes to CNBC.com.Fortt came to CNBC from Fortune magazine, where, as a senior writer, he covered both large technology companies—such as Cisco, Hewlett-Packard, and Microsoft—and trends, including cloud computing and the smartphone revolution. Before joining Fortune in 2007, Fortt was a senior editor at Business 2.0 magazine, where he produced the “What Works” section.From 1999 to 2006, Fortt wrote and edited at the San Jose Mercury News, Silicon Valley’s hometown newspaper. There he contributed to several efforts that won awards from the Society of American Business Editors and Writers. As a personal technology writer, his coverage duties included Apple, Palm, and Adobe. He also served in roles outside the business department covering education, editing local news, and developing technology strategy. As the newspaper’s senior web editor, he helped develop a blog and podcast network, managed the creation of multimedia projects, and served on the board of the Associated Press Managing Editors. Fortt graduated from DePauw University as a media fellow, with a BA in English. Listen to his podcast, Fortt Knox.

Image of Sara Eisen

Sara Eisen

Sara Eisen is co-anchor of CNBC’s Closing Bell (Mon–Fri, 3–5 pm ET). She is known for her deep expertise in financial markets and the global economy, as well as regular news, conducting interviews with some of the most prominent names in the financial world, including Phil Knight, Leon Black, Janet Yellen, Christine Lagarde, and others. Previously, Eisen was co-anchor of the 10 am ET hour of CNBC’s Squawk on the Street (Mon–Fri, 9–11 am ET), which broadcasts from Post 9 at the New York Stock Exchange. Before that, she was co-anchor of CNBC’s Power Lunch (Mon–Fri, 2–3 pm ET) and co-anchor of CNBC’s Worldwide Exchange (Mon–Fri, 5–6 am ET), both of which broadcast from CNBC Global Headquarters in Englewood Cliffs, NJ. She joined CNBC in December 2013 as a correspondent focused on the global consumer.Prior to CNBC, Eisen was co-anchor of Bloomberg Surveillance as well as a correspondent for Bloomberg Television, where she covered global macroeconomics, policy, and business. During that time, she covered the European debt crisis, the tsunami aftermath, and the Fukushima nuclear crisis in Japan. Eisen also hosted the Bloomberg Radio program On the Economy.She is the editor of Currencies After the Crash: The Uncertain Future of the Global Paper-Based Currency System (published by McGraw-Hill, January 2013). Eisen holds a master’s degree in broadcast journalism with a concentration in business reporting from the Medill School of Journalism at Northwestern University.

Image of Morgan Brennan

Morgan Brennan

Morgan Brennan is co-anchor of the 10 am ET hour of CNBC’s Squawk on the Street (Mon–Fri, 9–11 am ET), which broadcasts live from the New York Stock Exchange. Previously, she was co-anchor of CNBC’s Squawk Alley (Mon–Fri, 11 am–12 pm ET). She joined the network in December 2013 as a general assignment reporter based at CNBC Global Headquarters in Englewood Cliffs, NJ, and continues to cover a variety of sectors, including manufacturing, and defense and space.Prior to joining CNBC, Brennan was a staff writer and reporter for Forbes Media where she reported for Forbes magazine, ForbesLife magazine, and Forbes.com. She began her career at Forbes in 2009, holding several positions, including anchor/reporter and producer for the Forbes Video Network, covering a wide range of business and finance topics. Previously, Brennan was a regular guest on a variety of networks where she discussed business and economic stories. She also interned at Newsweek International, where she was a fact-checker and contributing writer.Brennan has interviewed billionaires, heads of state, thought leaders, and chief executives of multibillion-dollar corporations. Her profile story on Equity Group Investments Chairman Sam Zell was one of five magazine covers featured on the 2013 Forbes 400 issue. Brennan graduated summa cum laude from New York University, having majored in social science with a double concentration in anthropology and media studies.

All times listed EST
12 pm

Now Playing

Fast Money Halftime ReportOnce you have the strategy, it's time to execute your trade. Get your gameplan for the second half of the trading day with Scott Wapner and the Fast Money Halftime Report traders, the only show with real-traders trading in real-time.
1 pm

Now Playing

The ExchangeIn-depth reporting around the most important and interesting stories to today’s markets and investors.
2 pm

Now Playing

Power LunchCNBC's Tyler Mathisen, Michelle Caruso-Cabrera, Melissa Lee & Sara Eisen take you through the heart of the business day focusing on real-time market coverage, breaking news and up-to-the-instant stock moving information. "Power Lunch" delves into the economy, the markets, real estate, media and technology – any place where there’s money to be made.
3 pm

Now Playing

Closing BellKelly Evans & Wilfred Frost guide you through the most important hour of the trading day – the last hour – with a close-up look at how the markets are moving and investors are reacting. Live reports include the Chicago Board of Trade, New York Mercantile Exchange, NASDAQ and the New York Stock Exchange.
4 pm

Now Playing

Closing Bell: OvertimeWhen the bell rings, the action does not end. During “Closing Bell: Overtime,” Scott Wapner takes you through all of the after-hours moves including breaking news, corporate earnings and post-market trading. Big investors, smart strategists and top money managers debate actionable ideas and the big market themes of the day, and get viewers ready for tomorrow’s trading day.
5 pm

Now Playing

Fast MoneyFaster than a New York minute, Melissa Lee & the Fast Money Traders give you the information normally reserved for the Wall Street trading floor, enabling you to make decisions that can make you money. The "Fast Money" five gives you the news, as only the savviest traders can, with an angle that you won't see until tomorrow's papers.
6 pm

Now Playing

Mad Money with Jim CramerJim Cramer believes that there is always a bull market somewhere and he wants to try to help you find it. "Mad Money" takes viewers inside the mind of one of Wall Street's most respected and successful money managers for free. Jim is your personal guide through the confusing jungle of Wall Street investing, navigating through both opportunities and pitfalls with one goal in mind -- to try to help you make money. "Mad Money" features lively guest interviews, viewer calls and, most importantly, the unmatched, fiery opinions of Jim Cramer.
7 pm

Now Playing

Squawk Box"Squawk Box" is the ultimate "pre-market" morning news and talk program, where the biggest names in business and politics bring their most important stories. Anchored by CNBC's Joe Kernen, Becky Quick & Andrew Ross Sorkin, CNBC's signature morning program features reports from Washington, Silicon Valley, London and Hong Kong. "Squawk Box" brings Wall Street to Main Street and is a \nmust see" for everyone from the professional trader to the casual investor.
9 pm

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