This article is about the business news channel in the United States. For its sister general news channel, see
MSNBC. For all international CNBC channels, see
List of CNBC channels. For other uses, see
CNBC (disambiguation).
CNBC traces its roots to the founding in 1979 of the
Satellite Program Network (SPN), showing a low-budget mix of old movies and instructional and entertainment programs. The channel later changed its name to Tempo Television. After initially signing a letter of intent to acquire Tempo,[7]NBC opted for a deal to lease the channel's
transponder in June 1988.[8] On this platform, and under the guidance of
Tom Rogers, the channel was relaunched on April 17, 1989, as the Consumer News and Business Channel. NBC and
Cablevision initially operated CNBC as a 50–50
joint venture,[9][10] and it was headquartered in
Fort Lee, New Jersey.
Sue Herera and Scott Cohn joined CNBC at its inception.[11][12][13]
CNBC had considerable difficulty getting cable carriage at first, as many providers were skeptical of placing it alongside the longer-established
Financial News Network. By the winter of 1990, CNBC was in only 17 million homes – less than half of FNN's potential reach – despite the size of NBC, its parent.[14]
After an
accounting scandal, FNN filed for
bankruptcy protection on March 2, 1991 and put itself up for sale. After a bidding war with a
Dow Jones & Company–
Westinghouse Broadcasting consortium, CNBC was awarded FNN by a bankruptcy judge for $154.3 million on May 21, 1991 and merged the two operations.[15] CNBC hired around 60 of FNN's 300-person workforce.
Bill Griffeth and
Joe Kernen, who are still with the channel, joined CNBC at that time.[16][17] Other former FNN's workforce were hired by
Bloomberg Television.[18] The deal increased the distribution of the network to over 40 million homes.[18] Cablevision sold its 49.5% stake in CNBC to NBC upon completion of the deal.[19]
Roger Ailes was hired as the president of CNBC in August 1993,[20][21] tasked by NBC CEO
Bob Wright with turning around the struggling network. Ailes resigned in January 1996 due to disagreements with management including the decision by NBC management to form a joint venture with
Microsoft that included the rebrand of "
America's Talking" as
MSNBC. Under the leadership of Ailes, annual revenue at CNBC rose from $43 million to $110 million.[22][23]
In December 1997, CNBC formed a strategic alliance with Dow Jones, including content sharing with
Dow Jones Newswires, The Wall Street Journal,
MarketWatch, and Barron's and the rebranding of the channel as "a service of NBC and Dow Jones" (later "a service of NBC Universal and Dow Jones" following the formation of
NBCUniversal in 2004).[27][28][29] Fox merged with Dow Jones in 2007 and
Fox Business later became a competitor to CNBC.
Also in December 1997, CNBC's international channels were merged into a 50–50 joint venture with their Dow Jones–owned rivals, London-based European Business News and Singapore-based Asia Business News.[30][31]
During the late 1990s and early 2000s, CNBC's ratings increased sharply along with the stock market, often beating those of
CNN during market hours.[32] The highest daytime viewership of the network in 2000 was 343,000.[33]
However, after the burst of the
dot-com bubble, CNBC's viewing figures declined in tandem. In 2002, CNBC's ratings fell 44% and were down another 5% in 2003.[34] The network's ratings steadily fell until bottoming in Q1 2005, with an average viewership of 134,000 during the day.[35]
NBC Universal reacquired full control of loss-making CNBC Europe and CNBC Asia from Dow Jones at the end of 2005. The licensing agreement between Dow and CNBC U.S. remained intact, until it expired in 2012.[43]
CNBC reported annual revenues of $510 million in 2006.[44]
Profits at CNBC exceeded $333 million in 2007, making CNBC the second most profitable of NBC Universal's thirteen cable channels in the United States, behind only the
USA Network.[46] Ratings hit an all-time high in 2007.[47][48]
On October 22, 2007, CNBC launched "CNBC Investor Network", a series of
webcam connections to the
trading rooms of various independent financial institutions across the United States, allowing traders to be interviewed instantaneously as news breaks.[50]
In December 2007, CNBC formed a content partnership with
Yahoo! Finance.[51]
In January 2008, CNBC formed a content partnership with The New York Times, which was seen as an attempt by both parties to take on increased competition from News Corporation.[52][53][54]
In May 2008, CNBC formed a content partnership with
AOL.[55]
Average daytime viewership (6:00 a.m. to 6:00 p.m.) reached a seven-year high of 310,000 viewers in the first quarter of 2008.[46]
Ratings plummeted in 2009 as the network aired bad economic news resulting from the
Great Recession.[56]
In January 2010, the launch of the
Korean language channel
SBS-CNBC marked the fifteenth CNBC-branded channel worldwide.[6]
In July 2010, BT signed a five-year contract with CNBC Europe to distribute content from its London headquarters to sister sites in Europe and the US.[57]
In 2011, CNBC won an award at the
International Broadcasting Convention for its CNBC 4D: Interactive motion tracking that allows CNBC presenters to interact with 3D graphics, using technology from Unreel, Brainstorm, Motion Analysis.[58]
In June 2012, CNBC expanded its partnership with Yahoo! Finance in an effort to reach more online viewers. That month, CNBC.com had 6.5 million unique visitors in the United States while Yahoo! Finance had 37.5 million.[59]
In 2013, host
Maria Bartiromo left CNBC for
Fox Business in part because Fox offered her $5–6 million per year compared to the $4 million per year that she made at CNBC.[60][61][62][63]
On January 6, 2015, CNBC changed the way it calculates ratings, switching from
Nielsen ratings to a system by Cogent Research to calculate the viewership of its business day programming by surveying financial advisers and investors, with the goal of providing a more accurate measurement of the network's out-of-home viewership; Nielsen is still used to track the viewership of its entertainment programming.[64]
By 2017, Fox Business had overtaken CNBC as the most watched daytime business news network.[68][69]
CNBC's online video operations generated an all-time high of 1.92 billion total digital video starts across platforms in 2020.[70]
In 2020, CNBC hired
Shepard Smith from
Fox News to be its primary news anchor, providing a salary of approximately $10 million. However, viewers did not follow him from Fox.[71]
In 2021, CNBC signed a new multi-platform deal with
Jim Cramer.[72]
In 2021, CNBC moved their Singapore HQ to Mapletree Business City
CNBC has a licensing partnership with
Paradies Lagardère to operate retail locations in
United States airports branded as CNBC News, CNBC Express, and CNBC SmartShop. The stores sell CNBC-branded merchandise as well as snacks and drinks.[73]
CNBC has been criticized for allegedly amplifying
bull and
bear markets, particularly in the run-up to the
dot-com bubble and the
subprime mortgage crisis a decade later.[34][74][75] In response to these criticisms, CNBC anchors have pointed to the size of the market and noted that influencing it is "a little out of our reach."[74]
Jon Stewart on
Comedy Central's The Daily Show has been a vocal critic of CNBC and some of its personalities, beginning after comments were made by
Rick Santelli.[76][77] Despite the lack of direct comments by the network, several personalities have defended their predictions and comments.[78][79]
CNBC was accused by the Obama administration of "cable chatter"—the excessive and sometimes brutal discussion on a particular topic, often one-sided.[80][81]
Performance of Jim Cramer's stock picks
Regarding CNBC's Mad Money host
Jim Cramer, an August 20, 2007 article in Barron's stated that "his picks haven't beaten the market. Over the past two years, viewers holding Cramer's stocks would be up 12% while the Dow rose 22% and the S&P 500 16%."[82]
On October 13, 2014, coincidentally the 11th anniversary of CNBC's relocation to its current facilities in Englewood Cliffs, NJ, CNBC switched to a full 16:9 letterbox presentation, in line with
CNBC Asia and
CNBC Europe.[84]
Business Nation, anchored by award-winning journalist
David Faber. Each edition of the program covers three stories; a mixture of profiles, investigative pieces and features. The format of the show is structured similarly to
HBO's Real Sports.[86]
Nightly Business Report, a 30-minute weeknight business newscast hosted by
Sue Herera and
Bill Griffeth and distributed to U.S.
public television stations. Launched in 1979, CNBC assumed production of the series in 2013 and ended production in December 2019.