Media Appearance: CNBC’s Squawk on the Street (6/12/08)

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By Barry Ritholtz - June 12th, 2008, 9:00AM

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LET’S TRY THIS AGAIN: 

This morning, I am on CNBC’s  Squawk on the Street, at 9:35 am. Future markets are up significantly, while overseas markets traded down following the Dow’s 200 point dive yesterday.

Back in January, we discussed our outlook for 2008 — here’s how we saw the year in January, with actually mid year lows.

Index_________2008 Mid Year______2008 Final______Actual 2008 Low YTD
DJIA:_________11,900____________12,800___________11,740
S&P 500:_______1,275____________1,350____________1,273
NASDAQ:_______2,275____________2,400____________2,169
Russell 2000:___ 580______________639______________644
10-year yield:___3.75_____________4.10_____________3.33

Note we revisit our outlook on June 30th.



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Previously:
Media Appearance: CNBC’s Squawk on the Street (1/10/08)
http://bigpicture.typepad.com/comments/2008/01/media-appearanc.html

Squawk Video (1/10/08)
http://bigpicture.typepad.com/comments/2008/01/squawk-video.html

5 Responses to “Media Appearance: CNBC’s Squawk on the Street (6/12/08)”

  1. HCF Says:

    Good luck on your appearance Barry!

    Maybe you can discuss how Erin Callan losing her job bodes from LEH and the financial sector in general:

    http://www.cnbc.com/id/25116381

  2. Chief Tomahawk Says:

    Someone’s downside call on LEH of $20 is looking pretty good now. Didn’t take very long to unfold either.

  3. pablo Says:

    Please , dont forget to ask Charlie Gasparino how much longer we should trust DICK FULD ???

  4. brasil Says:

    nice job barry ..that poor other guy looked like his thoughts were in concrete

  5. Mike in NOLA Says:

    Had a disrupted night and took a nap this morning and woke up just in time to see you. It’s nice to see a sane, honest person first thing.

    Looks like you got more respect than usual. I guess continually being right eventually has it’s advantages.

    Maybe you’ll eventually be shown the same respect as Meredith Whitney. Nah, not pretty enough :)

    As for Lehman, we’ve seen from Citi that shuffling personnel is not magic. Gasparino is saying insiders want the company sold.