I've talked about this before.
CNBC has challenges with "turning on a dime."
When big stories break,
CNBC reacts, but it's takes a few days or even weeks to flesh out the story.
For example, today, without question, the big story is WTI dropping below $43. But yet, the network is spending an inordinate amount of time on the "tax story" and "manufacturing in the US." Apparently, today's
CNBC theme is "Manufacturing in the US."
Like any network show, the producers need time to put it together. The deadline is a "rolling deadline." The general theme for any day is being developed one to two weeks before the day the show is aired. About a week before the program is to be aired, interviews are set up, and 48 hours to 72 hours those interviews are finalized. Finally, on the date the program airs, the interviews go live. The journalists are on-scene -- locations were scouted out one to two weeks earlier. That's why networks "love" hurricanes, not tornadoes. The former provide one to two weeks for networks to prepare; tornadoes allow no preparation.
So, today a lot of time is spent on stories that are the old, old stories: tax reform, Tesla, REITs, infrastructure, manufacturing, etc.
But, in fact, the big story is WTI going below $43. That story trumps (no pun intended) every other network story right now. No one really believes we will see any meaningful tax reform this year (although "no one" could be really, really long). But regardless of what any talking head says about "tax reform" the fact is WTI below $43 is the big story of the day.
One talking head said oil below $43 is a mixed bag: some manufacturers will love it; their raw material costs much less. Others -- those in the E & P and shipment of oil will be hit hard.
But this is the rub: it may be a "mixed bag" but some parts of the sector will be hit harder than others. Users of crude oil / energy will see little change with $43-oil vs $50 oil. Contracts for $48 oil were made months ago.
On the other hand, E & P and oil shippers will see cash flows change fairly quickly; yes, contracts are already in place, but contracts only cover part of their commitments.
My hunch: next week about this time, we will start seeing stories on $40-oil.
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First World Problems
Illinois may lose contract with Powerball and Mega Millions lotteries. The state needs to pay the lottery upfront, every June 30th -- and with literally no money for discretionary spending, Illinois may have no other choice but to end its association with the regional and national lotteries.
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So Out Of Touch
White trash.