[CNBCfix Fast Money/Halftime Report Review Archive — May 2022]


Whoever was selling AMZN played an April Fools’ joke on Joe


Josh Brown observed on Tuesday's (5/31) Halftime Report that AMZN and UBER have been "absolutely annihilated" recently.

Brown said if there's a slowing in the economy, AMZN and UBER will probably take bigger shares of their markets, suggesting a slowing economy "puts less pressure on the cost structure of these companies."

Guest host Missy Lee asked Joe Terranova about his "really interesting comment" in her notes about being in a "really bad position" in AMZN. Joe said, "On April 1st, I bought it at 3,275. Can you pick a worse buy? Like I'm down like 35% on the stock," no matter what "fundamental assertion" (snicker) he can make.

"Awful call on my part, bad buy. Stuck in a bad position. It happens," Joe concluded.

"Yeah. It does," Mel said.

Josh Brown said the fintech revolution has been "substantially overplayed." Jim Lebenthal impressively said don't try to do the "Triple Lindy" (photo above), just stick with big money-center banks.

Jim saw "Top Gun: Maverick" over the weekend and found it "really fabulous." Josh Brown said he too saw it and it was "unbelievable."

Mel said, "I just watched 'Top Gun' the other day. Ready for 'Maverick' now."

Jim made PARA his Final Trade. On the 5 p.m. Fast Money, Karen Finerman said to sell the upside calls in PARA because the opening weekend of "Top Gun" is over.



Nothing about revising ‘Laugh-In’ this time


In a tepid, lukewarm, non-starter of a Halftime Report episode Tuesday (5/31) guest-hosted by Mel (Judge, curiously, still helmed the day's Overtime), the strongest call was to buy ... AT&T and Verizon.

At first, panelists sounded a little deadlocked over whether this week will be upward.

"Beautiful weather, but not a beautiful market," said Stephanie Link, who said she doesn't see a "soft landing" and that the "unknowns" will continue to wreak havoc on stocks.

But Joe Terranova said, "I do think there is further upside potential."

And Jim Lebenthal mentioned the Bostic "pause" comment again.

But Josh Brown insisted "it's a bear market rally" and advised getting rid of "metaverse trash" in your portfolio.

"Try to control your own emotions" (snicker), Brown added.

Brian Belski this time wasn't asked about his year-end S&P target but touted "traditional telecom stocks" as part of a barbell approach to communication services. Jim Lebenthal said he agrees with the call but thinks "almost half" of the sector is GOOGL and FB, so everything else will get "dragged along" with those names, so why not buy just those 2. Belski said people should put their FB money into T and VZ.




Trading 2023’s rate cuts


In his review of "American Graffiti," Gene Siskel observed, "Today's asininity quickly becomes tomorrow's nostalgia."

And so one wonders if the volume of complaints about Jerome Powell's Federal Reserve this year —omigod, the Nasdaq composite is NOT up every week — are destined for some kind of flip like the S&P overnight futures on Nov. 9, 2016, in which we have to spend all of 2023 hearing about the geniuses who were buying at the bottom.

On Friday's (5/27) Halftime Report, nobody was making any long-term pronouncements, but there sure were a lot of short-term ones.

Judge said Steve Weiss called him right before the show and said he bought the SMH, QQQ, Vanguard S&P, QCOM, Volkswagen, XPO, TGT and CLF.

Weiss, who was on the show, affirmed those purchases and explained that he's been at "a few conferences" in which everyone was "decidedly negative."

But "I'm not gonna be here very long," Weiss insisted, asserting that stocks may only run "for another few days."

Jon Najarian said "the volume definitely showed up" in options this week "on that huge selloff."

Brenda Vingiello said Fed notes about a possible "pause" gave the market a lift. Jim Lebenthal added on to that, stating Raphael Bostic's comments about being "ready to pause" in September was the "first hint" that the Fed's even thinking about thinking about a pivot.

Weiss said Bostic is "not a voting member," so take his comments "with a grain of salt."

Not exactly euphoric was Rich Saperstein, who said he's got a high cash position while he waits for "more clarity."



Judge opines on GPS not realizing the real-time price


On Friday's (5/27) Overtime, Adam Parker said there's "some chance" the Fed could "thread the needle without ruining everything." But he'll "lose all faith" if they "end up cutting rates next year."

We don't know why he'd be losing faith. If they announced they plan to cut rates in 2023, we'd probably see 4,700 in a week. (What does he think, that ZIRP is over?)

On Halftime earlier in the day, Rich Saperstein, who's not at all sold on the week's rally, said he sold DIS, citing streaming wars; he "didn't just want to own the stock anymore."

Saperstein offered, "A lot of money is needed to create a movie. And people are watching it once or twice. Maybe 'The Godfather' you watch 5 times."

A perfectly good point. (But one that could've been made 1, 3, 5 years ago.)

Saperstein said he bought Imperial Oil and Marathon, calling oil an "elegant" (snicker) way to hedge the S&P.

Jim Lebenthal said he unloaded PYPL. (This writer is long PYPL.) He said he bought it around 180 a couple quarters ago and, "I don't feel I know more about it today than I did when I got into it. ... I'm tired of looking at it."

Jon Najarian said he bought DELL; he didn't know the report would be so great but he thought its success from VMWare wasn't fully baked in.

Steve Weiss, who bought more CLF, said one reason he previously got out of it was because he thought it became a "momentum" stock, and "I didn't want to play a momentum stock because they don't end well," even though he announced several purchases Friday that sound like momentum trades based on negativity he's sensing at family-office conferences.

Judge asserted that GPS was "ugly." Then he said, "Take a look at the shares please," and when the graphic showed the stock up, Judge was floored. "Wow. They've come back."

Doc said he took a long position in GPS because he sensed "some sort of a washout." He said he jumped in around 9.50.

Julia Boorstin said the movie box office so far is 58% of what it was in 2019.

Jim Lebenthal said he's going to see "Top Gun: Maverick," because it "seems like it's gonna be great."

Jim cracked that the movie "Jackass" is a "biopic on Steve Weiss."



‘Amazing ... how the mood changes when there’s green on the screen’ (a/k/a NVDA as the ‘buy of the year’)


On Thursday's (5/26) Halftime Report, Jenny Harrington said she's getting "enthusiastic" about the market after the "ton of hard work" that's been done.

Judge said it's "amazing ... how the mood changes when there's green on the screen," but he's "not sure" what's changed in a week. (Well, there was Bill Ackman's tweet bottom.)

Jon Najarian said he thinks we're "probably within 2-5%" of the tradeable bottom.

Anastasia Amoroso contended this may not be a "late-cycle recession" but a "soft landing."

Judge pointed out that Jeremy Siegel's "done a 180" on how much the Fed needs to do.

Josh Brown said gasoline demand is at 2013 (non-pandemic) lows.

Jenny Harrington said her point last week about the consumer being "really strong" is "actually true," even though she got "beat up for that." (Apparently she's referring to Weiss "congratulating" Jenny for being able to predict AEO earnings that TGT and WMT can't, or the week prior, when Josh Brown said she didn't know the definition of "oversold.")

Doc said NVDA at 165 or 167 "was the buy of the year in the afterhours last night."

Doc said he bought TDOC because it "softened up" again and "virtually every target" on the stock is nearly double what it's at. He thinks this business is "here to stay." Josh Brown wondered if everything TDOC does can't be "replicated" by "every large insurance company" or AMZN. Doc countered, "They already have a big international footprint."



Why did Weiss sell DAL up 20% in 2-3 weeks if where a stock has come from doesn’t matter?


At the top of Wednesday's (5/25) Halftime Report, Pete Najarian said he bought NVDA and contended it has never been this cheap, "ever." But he said he's going to hold on to INTC also.

In a curious distinction, Joe Terranova said JOET is long NVDA, "so I'm long NVDA," even though "personally" he sold NVDA last week after choosing between exiting that one or AMD.

After letting others talk for a while, Judge said that he would turn to the "always upbeat and happy-go-lucky" Steve Weiss.

Weiss said a 20 P.E. now coming down is "immaterial" because the earnings path isn't known. Then he slammed buy-the-dip.

"It's always flawed, and it's the most flawed basis you could use, to say the stock's come down 40%, I gotta get involved now. It- it- I don't understand it. Where have earnings come? Where are earnings going?" Weiss said, adding we're in an environment we've "never seen."

"There's no playbook," and "every time is different," Weiss said.

Weiss then warned about one of those black-swan things (not China "goin' after" Taiwan this time), explaining that he's been "listening" to "a lot of" generals and found that "every general" will tell you that if Vladimir Putin uses chemical or nuclear weapons, "it's a world war."

Judge joked, "If that's the happy-go-lucky Weiss, where's the dour one."

"Scott- Scott- Scott if you want to revise (sic) 'Laugh In,' go to somebody else," Weiss said, referring to a TV show that no one under 55 or 60 ever saw. (At least he didn't say Jack Paar, or something like that.)

Weiss said to focus on the "big picture" rather than looking for "data points."

Weiss said rather than NVDA, in which you're "flying blind," he would've bought "some of the other semis that aren't trading at 45 times earnings," even though he said earlier that P.E. is "immaterial" because we don't know what earnings will be. Pete said NVDA is a great company in great industries and the stock has "taken a lot of pain" and he's being "selective" buying it now "at a dramatic discount," though he's not calling a "bottom." Pete added that he did "sell upside calls against it."

Weiss said, "You could've had the same conversation on Nvidia at 200."

Weiss mentioned "2000," when he said people were buying formerly $1,000 stocks at 500, 400, 50 ... "and guess what — you got a tin cup out because it went belly-up." (Actually we doubt very many stocks then actually traded at $1,000.)

Kari Firestone bought more SCHW, saying first "the stock's down 30% from its peak last year." (Ah, Weiss isn't gonna like that.) She also thinks worst case, SCHW trades at 13 times next year's earnings. (Ah, Weiss isn't gonna like that either.)



Gonna go listen to some generals, forecast the stock market


On Wednesday's (5/25) Halftime Report, Kari Firestone offered that "there are very few times in history where we have as much of a range between the average high and low of the day."

Ed Yardeni said he's being "realistic" in lowering his 2022 S&P target (which is actually about a 500-point range, which at least is better than the 1,200-point range) and raising his recession risk from 30% to 40%, but he thinks next year, "we're still gonna make a new high in the S&P 500."

Judge replayed the clip a day earlier of Jeremy Siegel, citing money supply, saying he's now concerned about "overreaction" from the Fed. Yardeni said M2 is still "about 3 trillion dollars above its pre-pandemic trend."

Joe Terranova asked Yardeni if we're in "stagflation." Yardeni said, "It's clearly stagflation," but he thinks we'll exit "a lot faster" than in the 1970s.

Judge said it "seems almost impossible" that Yardeni says yes it's stagflation, "and on the other hand, oh but we're gonna hit new highs in the S&P next year."

"It's a matter of timing," Yardeni shrugged.

Steve Weiss said he got stopped out of DKS "almost as soon as I put the trade on." He said it's a "cheap stock," but basically all retailers are. Joe said he got back into LULU, because "maybe a lot of the bad news" is priced into retail names.



The president has declared that his inflation strategy is to ask big companies not to price-gouge


Sometimes this page has to do the work for TV hosts, given that they seem reluctant to ask people on business television whether the stock market fears inflation or fears a recession.

On Tuesday's (5/24) Halftime Report, Rob Sechan asserted that we're in a "downturn" that's "being caused by Fed monetary tightening in response to the things that are going on environmentally related to inflation, the war, and, uh, shutdowns in China."

So this "downturn" is caused by the level of interest rates chosen by the Federal Reserve. But it's only choosing these particular rate levels because of the things "going on environmentally."

Frankly, that sounds kinda odd.

It's like saying, "The Wildcats are throwing more incompletions because Coach has been calling more passing plays because time is running out and the team is trailing by 35 points."

It's certainly not the first time that a CNBCer has struggled with cause and effect.

Later in the program, Judge quoted Bill Ackman (who wasn't on the show) in a "series of tweets" addressing the downturn: "It ends when the Fed puts a line in the sand on inflation and says it will do whatever it takes and then demonstrates it is serious by immediately raising rates to neutral and committing to continue to raise rates until the inflation genie is back in the bottle. ... Markets will soar once investors can be confident that the days of runaway inflation are over. Let's hope the Fed gets it right."

Sechan said such a move would be a quick change from recent Jay Powell forecasts and "challenge his credibility."

And as for Ackman, Steve Liesman admitted being "kinda glad he's not runnin' the Fed I guess right now," suggesting Bill is "impatient with the process."

But here's what Judge didn't ask anyone: What, exactly, does Bill think the Federal Reserve should be accomplishing?

Is Bill trying to say that we'd be at 2% inflation, 3% unemployment and 4% growth forever if the Federal Reserve had simply hiked an interest rate 6 months ago?

Or even better, is Bill actually saying gasoline would be 2 bucks a gallon if the Federal Reserve had simply stopped buying bonds in the summer of 2021?

Or, most likely of all, is Bill simply demanding that the Nasdaq can never go down, not even after (basically) 13 straight years of gains, and if it does, it MUST be the Federal Reserve's fault!

Perhaps if Judge isn't going to tell viewers whether the stock market fears inflation or recession, he could at least explain what the "victory" envisioned by Fed critics such as Bill Ackman and Jeremy Siegel and Lawrence Summers is supposed to be.



The White House also said its inflation strategy is about confirming appointees to the Federal Reserve


On Tuesday's (5/24) Halftime Report, Josh Brown pointed out that stock market sentiment has been bad for months.

Judge pointed to a "rapid deterioration" in corporate outlook.

Stephanie Link though said that Jamie Dimon and Brian Moynihan were saying the economy is "quite strong."

Steve Liesman said nobody should've thought that when the Fed began this cycle that everything would be "hunky dory" right now.

Then, there was the magic "R" word, as Brown revealed, "Google searches for the term 'recession' have never been higher, even if you include previous recessions."



It was a ‘constructive’ conversation (i.e., nothing about Judge’s Twitter account)


Judge on Monday's (5/23) Halftime Report asserted that "the market has been oversold for a while." Guess he didn't clear that with Jenny Harrington, who argued May 12 that it's "incorrect" to say the market is "oversold."

But Jim Lebenthal said we are indeed "very oversold."

Jim pointed out that the problems with WMT and TGT earnings reports wasn't revenue, but "atrocious" margins.

Jim asserted that this is a "stock picker's market (snicker)," pointing to CSCO, which is only one of hundreds of stocks that's taken a big hit here or there during 2022, but whatever.

Jim said he was "taking comfort" from Jamie Dimon's remarks because Dimon's a "cautious guy" who, if he was seeing credit concerns, would've mentioned it.

Jim said he'd be most heartened by "tangible signs of inflation coming down."

But Bryn Talkington contended that the Fed's in a "really tough position" and may not have "the right tools" to fix ... whatever everyone's complaining about. (Oh yes, the fact they're paying $5.50 a gallon.)

In the show's most head-scratching comment, Joe Terranova claimed there won't be "capitulation" until the Fed not only talks "more aggressive," but "their actions are even more aggresive."

"I don't think they can talk any more aggressive than they have," Judge shrugged. (Yes, threatening to hike rates to 20% overnight probably won't lower the price of gasoline.)

Joe almost said "tradeable blounce (snicker)" but corrected himself in time.

Joe said JPM had a "double bottom" around 115, so he's "OK" buying it around 124 1/2 as he did Monday morning.

Joe said it was a "difficult decision" to choose between NVDA and AMD last week. (He sold NVDA, citing gaming headwinds.)

Bryn Talkington said MSFT's multiple of 26 vs. 20 for forward Nasdaq "could easily come down." Jim Lebenthal said he's underweight MSFT for "exactly" that reason.




Alert Elon: Judge accused of spreading misinformation on Twitter


Things got a little chippy on Thursday's (5/19) Halftime Report when Jim Lebenthal said the jobless claims number is "extraordinarily low" and that people in that situation will "easily" find other jobs.

Judge suggesetd WMT and AMZN may have put that theory to rest.

Jim responded, "We speak in quips on the show (actually it's more often mini-speeches) and you accuse me of being insensitive. I think you know me better than that."

Jim insisted airlines and hotels and restaurants are "dying for people." Judge protested that they've discussed on "numerous occasions" that looking to hospitality and travel for truths about the help-wanted market is "the wrong place to look" because of "all of the pent-up demand."

Jim followed, "You tweeted something today like, Lebenthal has no concerns in the world."

"I didn't say that," Judge protested. "I didn't say that. I didn't say you have no concerns in the world. I said, Do you still think that we're not getting- we shouldn't be worried about a recession or a slowdown or that earnings need to come down."

Well, the first thing we wondered is, What do these 2 individuals accomplish by spending time on Twitter? Then we wondered, what did Judge actually tweet? It was this: "is Farmer Jim @jlebenthal still bullish with no worries of consumer slowdown or earnings hit and recession?"

Well, Jim was more right than Judge, who actually tweeted that Jim may have "no worries" and then claimed on TV that he tweeted that Jim may think people "shouldn't be worried."




Judge says he wants to ‘foster’ conversations that are ‘constructive’


It was fall-off-the-chair-laughing day (seriously) on Thursday's (5/19) Halftime Report shortly after Judge announced at the top of the show, "A very. Big. Halftime. Headline for you today."

That headline was ... Jim Lebenthal cutting his 2022 S&P target from 5,030 to 4,850.

Oh boy.

Jim, who conceded that some people may wonder "What the heck is this guy smokin'?," pointed out his new target still represents 24% upside from here.

With a lengthy windup, Judge made a statement (that's correct, not an actual question) to Josh Brown about Jim's market outlook. Brown's response was the show's funniest line in weeks if not months: "OK."

After a moment of dead air, Judge said, "Yeah. ... Josh ... If you wanna be a smart-alec, I mean, then we can just do something else." That led Brown not to forfeit his allotted speech time but to embark on his most recent (probably since the afternoon of the day before) market outlook speech.

In another unnecessarily lengthy windup, Judge asked Steve Weiss about Jim's commentary. Weiss said, "I don't believe he's smoking something at all. I actually think he's on much stronger stuff."




Specialty retail to the rescue


Grandpa Steve Weiss spent every one of his soundbites on Wednesday's (5/18) Halftime Report pronouncing the U.S. economy DOA.

But at least one of those pronouncements provoked a chippy little argument with a fellow panelist.

Weiss said AMZN has "some issues," including the consumer, and that's why he sold it, declaring, "The consumer in the luxury segment will still do fine. But everybody else, the numbers just don't add up."

Jenny Harrington said she disagrees, affirming she bought AEO "for the dividend strategy 2 weeks ago" and asserting that the stock price forecasts a 50% cut to earnings.

"I don't think the consumer's going to stop spending at American Eagle by 50%. Maybe a little," Jenny said, bragging that she bought AEO "down 40%."

Judge was going to cut to a break, but Weiss said he wanted to "congratulate Jenny" because "she's able to predict earnings but Walmart, Home Depot, Target, they can't and they're right in it so kudos, kudos to Jenny."

"Give me a break, Weiss," Jenny said.

The thing we'd like to focus on there is the "down 40%." Why is it OK to buy some stocks down 40% and not others? (Ah, it's OK, as long as it's not Teledoc, Docusign, Crowdstrike, Snowflake or Peloton.)



If the bottom 70% is out of money, why aren’t more $2,000 checks going out?


On Wednesday's (5/18) Halftime Report, Steve Weiss scolded all of those stock market observers who've had "disbelief" that margins could plunge or that the consumer would stay strong.

Then he said investors haven't been living in the "real world" in which (his new favorite slogan, replacing China "goin' after" Taiwan) "60-70% of the country lives paycheck to paycheck."

Now that's interesting, because other people say that there's 2 job openings for every job-seeker. If there are plenty of jobs out there, why are people living paycheck to paycheck?

Weiss also predicted that the country's urge to travel is going to "dissipate fairly quickly."

He said business travel picked up because people haven't seen their customers or suppliers for 2 years, but that'll pass and it'll be back to Zoom. (A year or two ago, it was, they're never flying again now that they've got Zoom.) "Who wants to be on a plane more than they have to?" Weiss said, predicting this as the "last good quarter for the airlines."

Grandpa Weiss also said just-in-time inventory is not only "dead," but "we're not gonna see that again in our lifetime." That's one reason he likes GXO. (He cited so many reasons, we tend to be skeptical.)



What if the Fed did a rate cut?


Joe Terranova led off Wednesday's (5/18) Halftime Report saying "we have a problem now" because of TGT's miss, "completely negating" the bear-market bounce.

"We now have to have this concern about margin compression," Joe said.

Judge asked Jenny Harrington about repositioning from some stocks to other stocks; there were too many stocks for us to keep track of.

Bryn Talkington said it's "futile" to fight the Fed.

Returning to one of his favorite themes (kind of like Weiss regarding people living paycheck to paycheck), Joe said Joe Biden could, "for the good of the country," suspend or relax some tariffs. Judge said the problem is that it's a "political issue."

Joe claimed inflation is "rampantly out of control."

Judge can't get enough of Brian Belski, who could basically offset whatever Jonathan Krinsky says, but Krinsky for whatever reason didn't actually make Wednesday's show.




‘Oh, you’ve been taking furniture orders at a call center? How about piloting some 747s instead!!!!!’


Tuesday's (5/17) Halftime Report, much to our surprise, ended up with a splendid little debate NOT about interest rates and remarks by Federal Reserve officials ... but the real strength, or lack thereof, of the U.S. economy.

Josh Brown, in his opening monologue, said reported higher growth is basically offset by inflation, and he's not interested in "nominal gains."

Brown asserted, "This is not a great environment for the consumer."

"Well for services it is," insisted Stephanie Link. "Travel, leisure, hospitality, hotels."

"The comps are 2021!" Brown said. Link said to "listen" to what UAL said about business travel reaching 2019 levels.

Judge, evidently a financial analyst now, cut in, "You've gotta believe though ... that bounce-back in biz travel is not gonna last."

Judge then turned to Jim Lebenthal, who insisted there's strength outside of the services sector.

That prompted financial analyst Judge to state, "People like Jim have been way too optimistic on not only the environment but the consumer because they're looking in the wrong places (no, Judge didn't mention the Johnny Lee song)."

Or maybe the only place Judge is looking is the tape.

Mike Farr predicted recession at some point in the next couple years because he doubts a "soft landing" by the Fed.

Then things took a seriously intellectual turn higher as Jim made the type of observation rarely heard on the program, stating "nobody's gonna like" this particular point, but "The current inflationary environment is terrible for the consumer, and it's great for stocks."

That goes a long way toward answering, correctly or not, whether the market is afraid of inflation or recession, the question Judge hasn't had the brass to ask anyone this year or last.

Moments later, Judge reported that W is freezing hiring for 90 days. Jim said it's "great news" and made this statement: "You want the stay-at-home beneficiary companies to start letting people off so they can migrate to those sectors of the economy, namely the services sector, that are desperate for workers. That will help inflation. You want these people going from the Amazon warehouses and the Wayfair warehouses over to be baggage handlers at airports."

"It is good for the workers and it's good for the economy," Jim added, explaining he's sorry if anyone thinks he's a "jerk."

Judge added, "Well nobody wishes job losses on anybody."

Jim said there's 11 million openings and 5 million unemployed workers.

"Yep. Um, I'm not gonna argue with you," Judge shrugged.

OK. Jim's got things twisted if he thinks online retailers should be "letting people off" so that they'll all immediately pursue sectors that people want to see filled, such as airlines and restaurants and nursing homes and car repairs.

See, there is something we've heard of that still (supposedly) exists and it's called a free market, which is supposed to allocate capital and labor and resources to places where it's in demand and away from places where it's not.

Jim's wrong to make that particular point about one specific company, one that's been highly debated on Wall Street for many years, while ignoring that even in the best of times, economies don't work perfectly for the consumer; lots of folks who might be good at busing tables or mowing fairways prefer to try their luck at law school or original Hollywood series.

For whatever reason, that permanent disconnect seems heightened amid/since the pandemic, probably because a lot of industries were disrupted.

Theoretically, it should work itself out.

The alternative is to let folks like the Soviet Union pick which jobs we should have.

In other matters, Judge said Joe Terranova, who wasn't on the show, "bailed" and sold WMT on the market open Tuesday at 136.26; Joe had owned it for about 3 weeks, and Judge said Joe declared it in the "penalty box" for a "very very long time." Joe surfaced at Post 9 on Overtime and first asked if Judge got "rid of" the Halftime tape because Joe doesn't want to see it anymore, then Joe said WMT had an "idiosyncratic, abysmal report."

In a numerical stumble, Judge suggested on Overtime that Joe sold WMT "at 132" after correctly giving the price on Halftime, which Joe affirmed.

Josh Brown on Halftime said that as long as major averages are under the 200-day, "every single rally is guilty until proven innocent," so "this one'll likely fall apart."




An even bigger operational misstep is simply greenlighting awful movies


At first, we cringed when Judge seemed to ask Jim Lebenthal about Paramount Plus (the streaming service with 500 "Star Treks," or something like that) on Monday's (5/16) Halftime Report.

But then Jim said something interesting — about a different company.

Jim said letting "literally 1/3 of its subscriber base just hang out, paying nothing, freeloading" is a "very big operational misstep" for NFLX.

Well, while some on CNBC have asserted that it should be an easy problem for computers to fix, this page isn't so sure. If a person subscribes to NFLX and goes to a friend's house, it seems like that person should be able to watch NFLX; differentiating between that and someone simply telling a friend about a password seems problematic.

We don't know. That's what Reed Hastings and Ted Sarandos get the big bucks for.

(We do know that if Netflix keeps churning out garbage like "The Lost Daughter," there's no bottom to this stock.)

Meanwhile, even the presence of Joe Terranova and Liz Young at Englewood Cliffs couldn't buoy a decidedly sleepy installment of the Halftime Report on Monday.

There may be a rally, but "I don't think it's going to last," said Liz.

"You absolutely wanna own energy," Joe said.

Judge said Joe sold IBKR and CMG. "I always have a risk-management process in place," Joe said, and in the understatement of the week, "I know that gets boring to the viewers."

Joe assured he's never going to take an "exorbitant" loss. #whoopdedo

Liz actually expressed warnings about ... yes, hard to believe ... the consumer, asserting, "There's been a huge growth in consumer credit, and people have spent down their savings, now they're starting to spend on credit cards."

Steve Weiss called in and said he's "still very bearish on the market," even though he's buying DAL again. He said he sold DAL recently because it was up 20% in "2-3 weeks," and he doesn't expect another trade that good, but he said there's "no seats anywhere" on upcoming flights.




‘Get real’ — IBM, CSCO, PFE to lead the stock market into a new era


Thursday's (5/12) Halftime Report was marked by a spirited debate over a ... definition.

Josh Brown had something about the "oversold" market getting ready to "rip."

When Jenny Harrington got a chance, she said, "To think about a market that's going to rip is really applying yesteryear's playbook to today. ... To say that we're oversold I think is incorrect."

Jenny's tired of the old leaders and said she wants Pfizer, Cisco, IBM (seriously, that's what she said) instead.

Jenny also twice said we should "get real" and realize AAPL is a "mature tech company," and those companies don't trade at 23 times.

Josh Brown though said it's "impossible" for the major averages to turn up if AAPL continues sliding 2-3% a day. Jenny cut in to say "It's only 7% of the index." Brown clamored for Jenny to "hold on" and let him speak.

"You also don't know what the word 'oversold' means. It's a technical term. It has nothing to do with the P.E. multiple," Brown asserted, saying an RSI of 31 is "statistically" the definition of "oversold."

"We're not arguing with each other, we're literally talking about 2 different things," Brown assured.

"OK. I'll give you that on the oversold part. I'm gonna stick with my definition of oversold," Jenny said, before Brown interrupted her.




‘Massive rip brewing’


Folks looking for optimism might've been heartened by some of the commentary at the top of Thursday's (5/12) Halftime Report.

Jim Lebenthal began by contending the market is "trading on emotions and not rational logic."

But Josh Brown ramped it up, stating, "I think there's a massive rip brewing right now."

Judge, in his scripted pushback, stated, "Some of the smartest investors that I talk to are now calling this 'The No Mas Market.' No more."

Jon Najarian agreed with Josh Brown that only the "junk" was ripping on Thursday morning.

Doc said he thinks there could indeed be a rally ahead, but, "I don't know that we're there yet."

Jim said he got out of TWLO, he's tired of it, "It's an eyesore."




Bill Miller in bitcoin hat


Maybe not everyone on Thursday's (5/12) Halftime Report thinks the stock market is "oversold," but Chris Hyzy seems to be one who does.

Hyzy observed that, "When 70% of the Nasdaq is down, uh, more- in a bear market, down more than 20% from their all-time high, and 52 weeks, and 60% of the S&P is at like (sic grammar), I think you can say there's a good portion of the market that's oversold."

Judge demanded that Jim Lebenthal concede that the world feels a little more "unsettled" than Jim's been "willing to admit to." Jim said yes but that it doesn't feel much different than 2-3 months ago. "I think it does," Judge insisted.

Josh Brown called GM "a broken stock in a broken sector in a broken market." Jim said that characterization "frankly applies to almost all of the stock market right now." Then Jim, in the theme of the day, assured, "We're not arguing."

Judge asked Josh Brown about BROS. Brown said "this chain is on fire," but dairy prices are up 25% in a quarter, and, "We're in a crashing market for growth stocks."



Joe Biden said during the Halftime Report he’s going to fight inflation by asking big companies not to gouge


Jeremy Siegel, the star guest of Wednesday's (5/11) Halftime Report and the world's greatest inflation worrywart (Then again, we've got Josh Brown saying, "The consumer has no choice but to spend, or they won't eat"), insisted there's "inflation built in," and it'll be "in the works for the next 6 to 9 to 12 months."

Jeremy really wants Jerome Powell to say, Sorry we didn't send Fed staffers to semiconductor factories or oil rigs in 2020 "We really did make a mistake."

Nevertheless, "What's strange about this bear market is there's still no signs of a recession," Siegel said.

Of course Judge didn't ask, and Siegel didn't volunteer, whether stocks are down because of inflation, or recession.

But Judge did ask one decent question. "Do you think the Fed wants the market to crash?" Siegel said, rather clumsily, "I think, no, I mean I, I don't think the Fed wants the market to crash. But they're not gonna step in ..."

Jeremy said long-term investors should be happy because the market's returning to "the way stocks should be valued." Yes, those long-term investors sure had a big problem with the Nasdaq's return from 2009-2021.

Judge had been relentlessly hyping Lee Cooperman's appearance on Overtime Tuesday (5/10); there were so many beeps, blips and buzzes, it sounded like Judge was in an arcade.




How many soft landings has the White House pulled off?


The ongoing CNBC Original Series, "Inflation Voodoo," aired again during Tuesday's (5/10) Halftime Report, this time in the form of a live speech by President Joe Biden, who happened to say some interesting things about Wall Street's favorite subject.

We took note.

"I want every American to know that I'm taking inflation, uh, very seriously, and it's my top domestic priority," said Mr. Biden. "And I'm here today to talk about solutions."

Interesting. He knows solutions to inflation. (So he's going to say that he's sending National Guard types to oil wells and semiconductor factories.)

"There are 2 leading causes of inflation we're seeing today," Mr. Biden explained. "The first cause of inflation is a once-in-a-century pandemic ... it threw the supply chains and demand completely out of whack."

Ah. In other words, IT CAUSED A BUNCH OF SHORTAGES.

"And this year we have a 2nd cause," Mr. Biden continued. "A 2nd cause. Mr. Putin's war in Ukraine. You saw- we saw in March that 60% of inflation that month was due to price increases at the pump, for gasoline. Putin's war has raised food prices as well."

OK. So there's not enough oil sloshing around. Not the first time that's ever happened.

But then, there was this: "Some of the roots of the inflation are outside of our control."

Ah. The perfect time for Mr. Biden to say, "So we're going to rely on the free market to straighten out its own problems."

But no.

Instead, "But there are things we can do ... That starts with the Federal Reserve, which plays a primary role in fighting inflation in our country (sic last 3 words redundant). I put forward a holly qual- highly qualified nominees (sic singular/plural) to lead that institution. ... The Fed has dual responsibilities: First is achieving maximum employment. And 2nd is stable prices."

OK. It's the Fed's job/fault (emphasis on latter).

Because when your defense is giving up 5 touchdowns in one quarter (that would be the Denver Broncos in Super Bowl XXII), the logical remedy is to not 1) play a different defense or 2) get some better players, but demand the referees start calling more penalties.

Finally, things got laughable, as we heard about lowering the deficit amid a problem that we all know is going to be somehow attacked with more debt.

"My plan is to lower employer- lower everyday costs- everyday costs for hard-working Americans, and lower the deficit by asking large corporations and the wealthiest Americans to not engage in price-gouging and to pay their fair share in taxes."

Eventually, Judge cut off the speech, even bluntly declaring, "His options, frankly, are, are somewhat limited ... certainly laying the solution at the feet of the Fed."




‘Shaking my head’ at Cathie’s curious GM purchase


Tuesday's (5/10) Halftime Report featured what Judge called a first in 2 years — Josh Brown taking a seat at the Englewood Cliffs table.

Jim Lebenthal conceded "it's a bear market in the Nasdaq," but "it's not the broad market overall." Jim, who favors the outlook of a correction for the broader market, said a "correction" is different than a bear market, a correction being done within a year.

Jim said he hates to say it, but Wednesday's CPI report is "the Super Bowl of economic statistics." (Usually, they just say that the upcoming month's jobs report is the most important one of all time.)

Josh Brown, on the other hand, insisted, "We have to understand the technicals" about this market.

Brown wasn't impressed by apparent strength in the consumer, resorting to hyperbole. "The consumer has no choice but to spend, or they won't eat. The consumer is on a treadmill from hell," Brown said.

"Don't interpret them spending more as them being fine."

Brown also didn't think much of Dave Tepper covering his Nasdaq short. "David could put it back on in an hour," Brown said.

Judge said Cathie Wood is buying GM. Jim Lebenthal said there's "reason" to buy the name.

Jon Najarian, though, said of Cathie's buy, "I was really taken with this one and sort of, uh, shaking my head," questioning investing in a "secondary player" in the lithium market. "Cathie didn't call me and ask," Doc admitted.

Josh Brown suggested Cathie is "lowering the beta in her ETF."

Brown observed that "Starbucks is ground zero for inflation and labor issues."

Judge revealed about SOFI, "There are some who are frankly taking issue with my characterization of the guidance as being quote-unquote bad." (Wasn't this page. Must be folks on Twitter.)

Doc said he'd only do options on SOFI. Josh Brown said, "The stadium they own the naming rights to is worth more than the market cap."



If someone has a 3- to 5-year time horizon, and they bought their stocks in 2017 ...


Despite the fact Monday's (5/9) Halftime Report veered into more of the same where's-the-bottom dialogue, guest host Mel elicited a little bit of intriguing commentary and trades.

Grandpa Steve Weiss, whose bearish case has been re-realized in the last 2 weeks (though he did miss that relief rally in early March), insisted it's "not a normal environment still," because nearly 15 years of liquidity will be "dissipating" in "less than 6 months."

Again expressing frustration, basically, that we haven't had the big whoosh down yet, Weiss again mocked the notion of "dipping our toe in the water" and asserted, "We're not at a bottom," and he'd just "stay in cash."

A little more enthusiastic was Bryn Talkington, who said she focuses on how many stocks are above their 200-day. Bryn said that, going back to 2009, it gets "really interesting" when that percentage gets under 30, a level we're around right now.

But after Kate Rooney reported on crypto trends and revealed that "about 40% of bitcoin investors are underwater," Bryn Talkington said she's long GBTC.

Weiss, however, said he shorted GBTC. "I still don't know what a store of value means. Uh, nobody can really explain it to me. What is it exactly."

Well, he's on to something there. We're still waiting for a CNBCer to explain whether it's A) software or B) a computer program or C) a storage locker or D) something else.

Bryn, though, said "there's a decent probability that it turns into an ETF."

Meanwhile, Bryn said, "I do think you have to get out your 2000, 2002 playbook."

"I do think the Fed has a limit on how much they can raise rates," Bryn added, predicting they won't get to "above 2" before they have to stop.

Meanwhile, Joe Terranova, who had a quiet show, made the case again for buybacks as companies are "exiting the blackout window."

Kourtney Gibson said people with a long-term horizon aren't panicking. (We're not sure why a stock cares whether someone has owned it for 6 months or 6 years, but whatever.)

Jonathan Krinsky said "there's a lot of history at 3,900" in terms of "volume-based support."

But he said "until we actually get there," it's "a little hard to predict" where the bottom might be.

Kourtney Gibson said she bought DIS. "You're not going to lose for the long term in this name."

Kourtney said she's "shocked" that UBER was taking a hit on Monday; she said she's buying more. (This writer is long UBER.)



OMG! S&P down 8 points in a week!


On Friday (5/6), we were all set to post a humdrum account of a fairly humdrum episode of CNBC's Halftime Report.

Then we caught the beginning of Overtime, in which Judge said David Tepper told him, "Central banks have a little bit of a credibility problem," and that supposedly taking a 75-point move "off the table" was an "unforced error."

Of course. Because the stock market has to go up every single day.

Dan Greenhaus, who was actually on the program, agreed that the sentence from Jay Powell was "absolutely a mistake" (snicker) because Powell supposedly took a "tool" off the table.

Honestly, we don't know whether to chuckle, or turn this stuff off. A bunch of folks who literally have had nothing to do in the markets this year are mad that it costs $20 more to fill up the tank and $200 more to fly to L.A., and they want the Fed to curb other people from trying to purchase those same $65 tanks of gas and $800 air tickets so that those things can go back to those perfect prices they loved in 2019.

And then if the stock market doesn't immediately resume delivering good returns for them, they'll go on CNBC and complain that "The Fed never nails a soft landing."

Honestly, the dialogue about this topic is some of the biggest bunch of voodoo we've ever heard.

Steve Liesman was on Overtime and was mostly the voice of reason, but even Steve said, "If Powell really does move to take care of this inflation problem, this is not gonna be pretty for stocks."

Saying that Jay Powell can "take care of this inflation problem" is like saying the groundskeepers at Augusta can rein in -20 or better scores. Sure, they can let the rough grow longer and put more wax on the greens, and the number of strokes will increase. News flash: The leaderboard is still going to look the same.

It's long past time Judge had the brass to ask some of these inflation/Fed critics 1) What happened to the free market and why are you clamoring for a command economy and 2) What are you so afraid of, Do you really think this is Venezuela or 1921 Germany?




Taylor, Hornung got old


On Friday's (5/6) Halftime Report, Jenny Harrington, citing "The Big Short," said "Your previous playbook is over" and "Get into new companies" and don't think you have to make back the money you've lost in the same stocks you lost it in.

Steve Weiss said if there was only "1 minute of airtime," Jenny's comment would be the comment to air.

Tyler Mathisen, who delivered the News Update, evidently noticed, as he brought this up on the 5 p.m. Fast Money while guest-hosting for Mel. (But he didn't mention the name of the person who brought it up.)

For whatever reason, that prompted Guy Adami to say Bart Starr won "a lot" (actually 2) of Super Bowls by just "running basically 4 plays."

"The league caught up to him," Adami claimed, but actually it didn't; the fading, rapidly aging Packers still won Super Bowl II before the bottom fell out on offense.

"The most memorable teams of my lifetime, I've gotta say," Tyler said.

Steve Grasso bluntly stated that for Democrats to win November elections, "the price of gasoline has to be lower."



From what we could tell, Judge did not ‘applaud’ Mike Wilson on Overtime


One guy doing a lot of talking on Friday's (5/6) Halftime Report was reality TV star Kevin O'Leary, who repeatedly stressed that it's P.E. ratios, not company growth, that have been plunging.

O'Leary said there's "zero probability" of recession this year.

He said that 20% growth stocks are being sold at "80% off retail," and he contended that Meta's "cash flows haven't changed at all."

Judge asked Steve Weiss what he thought of that. Weiss chuckled and said there are "untruths" to what O'Leary was saying, Facebook has "been decimated by Apple's policies. It has slowed. Period."

Weiss noted how many people on the show sounded bullish. Weiss said O'Leary is "so notoriously cheap."

Weiss offered, "I think we're overdue for, for a short-term rally, but, but I'm not gonna participate in it." Then he stated, "I was bearish in '08, and I made money. But I missed a major part of the upcycle in '09."

But Weiss seemed to think that a lot of people still just don't get it. "You've still got those lemmings putting in money with Cathie Woods (sic plural)," Weiss said.

Tom Lee dialed in to the program and said the recent market has "been very painful," but he thinks risk/reward for equities has "improved this week."

Weiss' Final Trade Friday was, "I actually think there's a pretty good chance the market goes green, stays green today," but he's "staying in cash." (Actually, that didn't happen, unlike his Wednesday call.)

Savita Subramanian actually told Tyler Mathisen on Power Lunch that we're in a "really pivotal time in terms of kind of a massive regime change" in the stock market.




Weiss jacked one out of the park


Judge decided, for reasons we can't quite fathom, to give Halftime Report viewers a commercial-free episode on Thursday (5/5).

Even during Final Trade time, the program was still in stump-speech mode. (Zzzzzzzzzzz.)

When we finally got done watching/listening, we were most struck by something said a day earlier — Steve Weiss' suggestion to buy the SPY and QQQ right after the show ended and before the Fed Q&A, "and only stay there for the afternoon or through tomorrow morning."

Holy. Moly.

Now, you may be wondering, why wasn't this trade trumpeted on this page when it could actually do people some good.

Well, A) We can't often do this page in real-time, so posting a trade idea that's already elapsed by the time of the post isn't particularly helpful, B) Weiss didn't fully specify this trade until the end-of-show Final Trade, which is typically where people mention stocks that have been in their portfolios for 3 years, and C) Others had predicted a rally once the statement was out, but ... (Gulp) ... We figured such a rally would at least linger into the weekend, and Weiss' advice to unload late Wednesday or early Thursday wouldn't be necessary.

For a one-day trade, it'll be hard for anyone to top this.



Bond market is being ‘disrespectful’ to the Federal Reserve


On Thursday's (5/5) revenue-lite (i.e., commercial-free) Halftime Report, Josh Brown said there could've been follow-through from Wednesday's rally if led by Big Tech, but Big Tech went down.

"This is what a bear market rally looks like ... in a bull market, you don't have +1,000-point days," Brown asserted.

Brown said the "only real way" to survive this market is to "not allow your emotions to, to swing back and forth."

Judge claimed the Nasdaq's decline Thursday is "nothing short of stunning."

Pete Najarian said it's "amazing selling that we are seeing right now."

Judge sounded incredulous complaining to Steve Liesman that Jerome Powell put himself "in a box," as if they're not just reacting to the last 3 days' worth of data regardless.

Kari Firestone made us chuckle insisting to Judge that "waste companies" can predict earnings in this environment because they have inflation clauses (snicker).

Judge joked that it's the kind of day where we have to look through "literal garbage" for stocks to buy. (Actually, people can probably make a decision on whether to buy those stocks without actually sifting through the materials those trucks are picking up ... but whatever.)

Brian Belski, who seems to be on either Halftime or Overtime about once every 3 days, said the market needs to flush out "some of this every-other-day negativity/positivity." Belski even said the bond market is being "disrespectful" to the Federal Reserve, which Belski called "the smartest person in the room."

Judge wondered "how are they the smartest people in the room" given that "inflation was screaming in their face, and they ignored it."

Belski insisted the bond market is "ahead of its skis."

Viewers got a rare revelation about inflation and whether this is some kind of phantom exercise by financial leaders courtesy of Josh Brown, who explained, "The Fed has no control over the inflation. They can control the demand situation." (Sure, they can make people not want to buy those $17 Big Macs that everyone fears.)

Jim Lebenthal made a surprise appearance and said it's probably too soon for a rally, but "there's indications that inflation has peaked."




The question Judge hasn’t asked about the 2022 stock market


This page, in coming days, is going to direct some praise at some of the things Judge has been accomplishing in his joint Halftime-Overtime gigs.

For now, though, we're still wondering about questions unanswered.

Specifically, the question we haven't heard on the Halftime Report: Have stocks been falling in 2022 because of inflation ... or because of recession?

Since we're not getting much help on that one from Judge's panel, we've been trying to figure it out on our own (snicker), which isn't easy, given that most nights, we're just trying to achieve a hot meal.

See, this is what got our attention ...

On April 27, Joe Terranova complained, "People are not having any regard what they're paying for a hotel room, or a flight, or the price of a, a tank of gas."

And it made this page wonder, could inflation be like a tree falling in a forest?

Judge has never asked any of the inflation hawks on his panel, "What are you so afraid of — $17 Big Macs?"

You know how Jessep in "A Few Good Men" had to be asked, if he gave an order not to touch Santiago and his orders are always followed, why would Santiago have to be transferred off the base?

And we gotta wonder, if they gave an inflation, and consumers didn't care ... why would the Federal Reserve have to do something about it?

It sounds like what's happening is, if a person gets a toothache, the Federal Reserve doesn't fix the toothache, no filling or crown. Instead, the Fed lessens the amount of food the person can eat ... until, theoretically, someone else fixes the tooth. But the person's probably already eating less food anyway because he/she has a toothache.

And so we couldn't help but wonder ... what if the Fed did NOT hike rates or taper or whatever.

The issue of exactly what level the Fed's overnight lending rate should be is a hotly debated Wall Street topic, all the time, forever.

We have no clue what, exactly, that rate should be, at this moment or any other time.

Interest-rate conversations on CNBC often tend to fall along political or idealogical lines, in other words, a lot of folks seem to think of the overnight lending rate as a barometer of welfare, i.e., the lower it is, the more welfare we're doling out.

And it seems like those types of conversations are not leaving any room for the free market to speak.

Last month, Politico reported that Lawrence Summers is taking an I-told-you-so victory lap on inflation. But in another interview, it sounds like his biggest beef with inflation is shamelessly political: "I think that if inflation had better been controlled, there's a real possibility that the election of Richard Nixon in 1968 and Ronald Reagan in 1980 would not have happened."

Ah. Now we're getting somewhere. (Perhaps instead of asking about inflation, interviewers might ask Summers, What exactly did you mean by those comments in January 2005? #AndpeoplethinkPowellhastothreadtheneedle)

A lot of CNBC viewers (let's be real, it's nearly ALL CNBC viewers) lived through stark inflation numbers of the 1970s.

We're still here.




Still wondering when China’s ‘goin’ after’ Taiwan


Normally the pre-Fed-meeting version of the Halftime Report has a shelf life of about, oh, 45 minutes.

But on Wednesday (5/4), Joe Terranova posed a question that has sort of been posed on this page, albeit differently.

"Why is it that when we introduce emergency measures, we could cut interest rates 100 basis points on a Monday morning ... but yet when we take away the interest rate cuts, we do it very slowly," Joe told Judge, getting no answer.

Well, one curious element to that question is the notion of "take away interest rate cuts" ... as though 3%, 4%, 5% is the "real" level they should be at, and the current levels are just "artificial."

Is Joe afraid of Denny's charging $12 for a Grand Slam®? That wasn't made clear.

In any case, "A hawkish Fed is a credible Fed. I want more," Joe said.

Liz Young later responded to Joe's question, stating, "Falling into a crisis is much different than coming out of one."

Judge told Joe that Liz "very eloquently answered your question," because "you keep the patient alive," but when they're better, "You don't tell 'em to go run a marathon right away."

Joe said May should be a rally, in part because companies can restart buybacks.

Steve Weiss, live from the Milken conference, said he's talked to old friends and new friends in California, famous people and non-famous people, and, "I can tell you that there's a buyer's strike" in the stock market. (At least, there was until 2 hours later.)

"You've been right to be negative," Judge told Weiss, wondering if there's coming a point where the market isn't so negative anymore.

"I'm very, very worried about the consumer (snicker),” Weiss said, uncorking a comment we'll gladly take the other side of, as he cited "70% of the country living paycheck to paycheck" (which is basically always true) (and if there are record job openings ...).

Weiss grumbled about "the Belskis" who keep saying "Buy, let's buy, buy, buy, buy, buy."

Joe Terranova said he'd pick UBER over LYFT if he had to, but he doesn't think we're in a "more normalized environment" for that type of service, so he wouldn't buy here. Weiss said he disagrees with Joe's skepticism of Lyft management, stating that Lyft has "excellent" management, and as for ride-hailing names in general, "I think they're puttin' the Yellow Cabs out of business, for all intents and purposes," so they should make money, but "I can't own them now" because of "elusive" profitability.

On the plus side, some elements of the pandemic are fading as fewer people end up in hospitals, and conferences are starting to come back. Weiss called the Milken event the "best conference I've been to in 30 years."



EXPE must have given a couple of earnings reports


On Tuesday's (5/3) Halftime Report, Judge reported that Jonathan Krinsky says the market is "getting closer" to a bottom, but not "quite there yet." (Translation: We still haven't had the big whoosh down yet.)

That might've been the headline, except that star guest Brad Gerstner was asked to define Cathie Wood's ARK concept.

"I know it's effectively an index fund on stuff that I view as, you know, part of the highest-risk component of the growth sector," Gerstner explained.

Hmmmm. Basically, a risk-on index fund.

Gerstner said some high-growth Nasdaq stocks have corrected more than he suggested last October, so now, "You have to find opportunities to buy."

"I think inflation has already rolled over," he said.

"We already see growth rolling over," Gerstner added.

Jim Lebenthal affirmed that he and Gerstner have a similar outlook; Jim suggested that price stability may be "closer than we think."

Josh Brown said downdrafts toy with people's "psychology." Brown indicated travel and consumer discretionary were sinking Tuesday, which is not a good sign for avoiding recession.

Brown said EXPE's revenue doubled, and the company had "all good things to say," and the company is "crushing it."

Jon Najarian, though, said EXPE earnings were "horrible."

For those wondering if people are going to volunteer free labor for TWTR now that Elon Musk is going to be in charge, Brad Gerstner revealed that Bill Gurley "sent out this tweet" stating that you can't "anchor yourself" to prices that the "most risky companies" were trading at in 2021. We think that probably means Bill doesn't necessarily think Peloton and Teladoc and Zoom are heading back to old highs.



Jim’s right — all Judge does is ‘applaud’ Mike Wilson


Monday's (5/2) Halftime Report started out as another painful example that Joe Terranova can find a win-win for ... everything.

Jim Lebenthal had been insisting to Judge that the bull case is the right case, and that now is a good time to buy stocks.

Joe claimed Jim would "ultimately" be right but is "early." While continuing, Judge cut in and said, "Come on now. When?," saying he doesn't want this too-early "nonsense."

"It's either right or it's wrong," Judge demanded.

But instead of Joe defending his own comment, Jim jumped in, stating that bears don't time things perfectly either. "Mike Wilson's been calling a bear market for a year and a half, and you applaud him. I mean, give me a break," Jim said, one of the show's greatest comments of all time, so good that Judge immediately became defensive.

"Applaud him?? What do you mean I applaud him, I've told him he's wrong! What do you mean? That's what I- that's my exact criticism of Mike Wilson, is that if you tell me it's gonna rain every day and then it's sunny and then 6 months later it finally rains, you can't claim you're right."

But Judge does generally tell Mr. Wilson "You've been right" or "It really is a rolling bear market" or "Yep, fire and ice."

But let's not lose track of things. If Joe were asked about pro football, we'd hear, "The Los Angeles Rams could have a good season, or they could take a step back, in which case they might be rebuilding for a really great 2023 season. The Kansas City Chiefs might have a good year or a year of consolidation. Both the Steelers and Ravens could have a good year and maybe position themselves to contend ..."

Meanwhile, Pete Najarian, who had a quiet show, said it's a jittery market with a lot of "weak hands."

Jim said a VIX of 40 would be an "extraordinary level." He said he "totally" disagrees with Judge's contention that earnings estimates are too high.

Brian Belski, who was the star guest, admitted "We're wrong right now" and "this is a correction," but he's maintaining his "very aggressive" S&P year-end target of 5,300.

"We think the bottom is coming very, very soon," Belski said.

Belski predicted a "rally on Wednesday."




Judge didn’t say a word about the NFL Draft


On Friday's (4/29) Halftime Report, Jon Najarian noted that AMZN's operating income "fell 58%," and he stressed the number a second time.

Then he got interrupted by Josh Brown, who claimed it's "staffing" and "they're doing it on purpose" and whose early 4-minute speech and previous interruptions weren't enough to make his point (why doesn't he just take over the show and get rid of the host and all the other panelists?)

Doc asked, "Can I finish?" and said that kind of drop is "not a small move."

Doc said it wasn't so much Warren Buffett who invested in AAPL but Warren's "team" that "pushed him" into the stock.

Brown said one bright spot for bulls is that the AAII survey this week is "more bearish than anything we've seen outside of the great financial crisis."

Doc suggested Elon Musk took an "inefficient" route to financing his TWTR buy; basically, Doc implied that he could've helped Elon borrow money for TWTR against his own holdings "without incurring that taxable event of selling those shares." Josh Brown insisted that Musk's TWTR buy is "not a financial decision" but a move of "passion" (snicker).

Doc said the Fed will "have blood on their hands" if they try more than 2 hikes of 50 basis points, "if they hit it too hard."

Brown said the first "Godfather" movie is "3 hours, 20 minutes." (That's actually the 2nd one. The first one is just 3 hours.)



Looks like we made it through a show without either ‘75 basis points’ or ‘50 basis points’ coming up


Thursday's (4/28) Halftime Report was choppy and cumbersome from the get-go as Judge badgered panelists about AAPL's upcoming report.

Steve Weiss kept saying AAPL's results are "ground zero" for ... something or other.

Judge and Weiss butted heads when Weiss argued that the market won't "fall apart" if AAPL hits 150 or lower. Judge insisted the market won't be "in a good spot" if AAPL falls below 150. Weiss pointed to Google. Judge said "Google's not Apple" about 3 or 4 times. Weiss said he disagrees with Judge's argument.

Meanwhile, Jon Najarian said he started nibbling at TDOC around 29. Weiss shrugged that TDOC's product is "completely commoditized."

Doc called PYPL in the 80s a "great opportunity." (This writer is long PYPL.)

Aside from a promo to CNBC's "Stock Draft," an annual "event" that seems like a fun idea but actually 1) makes no sense (stocks aren't "drafted"; anyone can own the No. 1 pick) and 2) is extremely tedious to watch, Judge didn't opine at all on the quality of the first round or whom certain teams might select.



Joe wants people to start being alarmed about what they’re paying for a hotel room


Aside from giving most of Wednesday's (4/27) Halftime Report to Jim Cramer, Judge turned to Joe Terranova for a market call and in the process got an interesting observation about inflation.

Judge said he's calling Joe "Joey Negative" and said Joe is shorting S&P and Nasdaq futures. Joe didn't seem to want to talk about short positions, insisting he's "fully invested" in his portfolio.

Rather, Joe's concern was, "The economy is on fire, and the Federal Reserve is way behind."

OK, fair enough, that's what people have been saying on CNBC for a year.

But Joe continued. "I think the economy's on fire, and it's on fire in a bad way ... we need the water to cool it down," Joe said, before uncorking this curious social study conclusion: "People are not having any regard what they're paying for a hotel room, or a flight, or the price of a, a tank of gas."

That set off the Spider Sense around here, as we wondered where Joe is collecting his information that people have no "regard" for prices they're paying.

Pete Najarian, for one, offered that we're "starting to see" people not as interested in flying at elevated fares — again, not really sure how he arrived at that conclusion — but also pointing out (this is more relevant) that airlines have cut back the number of flights, which helps explain why so many flights are full.

One of the reasons Joe's comment raised eyebrows is because we often hear oil watchers say on CNBC, "The remedy for higher prices is higher prices."

In the movies, there's an occasional theme about characters with problems who don't really want to be saved. And so we gotta wonder, if — according to Joe — consumers don't care about inflation, then why does inflation need to be cooled down?.

Joe demanded to know when residential real estate will correct. Judge, who's evidently now forecasting realty markets, explained, "It's gonna correct when the Fed starts unloading the mortgage-backed securities it was buying." "Exactly!," Joe said. Jim Cramer said DHI is selling at 4 times earnings. Joe insisted "the economy and the stock market are 2 totally different things right now."

Meanwhile, Bryn Talkington argued that the glory days of FANG/FAANG are over, predicting a "new group of names" for the next few years. Bryn called FANG a "clever acronym" that "I think someone at Goldman created, or whoever." Judge and Jim Cramer set Bryn straight.

Asking Pete about FB, Judge tried to make a funny comment about a "pile of rocks," then felt compelled to interrupt Pete to explain the line while Pete was trying to make a point, another example of Judge's interruptions into people's often-time-delayed web connections (Pete's connection wasn't delayed, he appeared to be in real time) in recent months that only ends in people talking over each other and having to pause through the dead air while they sort it out; meanwhile, some people are regularly given 2-3 minutes to make speeches.



Jim suggests FAA wants ‘Calhoun’s head on a platter’


On Wednesday's (4/27) Halftime Report, Judge and co-host Jim Cramer took turns bashing the BA report.

"This may be some of the worst execution I've ever seen," Cramer said.

Moments later, they brought in BA long Jim Lebenthal, who said, referring to Pete Najarian's comment above, "I'm not gonna qualify this as a pile of rocks because I don't want to be insulting to rocks. This is a terrible report."

Jim Lebenthal started to say the report indicated "frankly, the worst execution I've ever seen in my life" before Judge cut him off to demand to know what he's doing with the stock. Jim said the bottom line is that he's sticking with the stock because "Planes are needed."

But, "Calhoun has to go," Jim added. "This is an F-minus. ... There's no more runway left."

Then, adding in stark terms, "Calhoun's head on a platter would frankly, probably satisfy the FAA and get the 787 delivered again," Jim contended.

Invoking a cult movie that nobody really talks about anymore, Jim Cramer said, "Bring me the head of Alfredo Garcia," which doesn't really have anything to do with anything.

Cramer opined, "Calhoun is part of the downfall of a great business," then referenced "the documentary about Boeing," which was briefly reviewed on this page; we noted that a clip of Joe Terranova opining on the BA share price was included in it, which Cramer didn't mention.

At the end of the show, Cramer twice said it's "astonishing" that Jim Lebenthal referred to the "head" of Calhoun.

Falling for one of the show's long-running red herrings, the notion that a person's basis determines where a stock is going, Judge dodged that and said, "I don't know where his basis is ... it's questionable that he said what he did and he is still holding onto the stock, maybe, unless his basis is much lower."

Bryn Talkington said she's growing weary of PYPL and would be inclined to cut and run. "You don't have to make it back the same way you lost it," Bryn said. (This writer is long PYPL.)



Judge actually wondering about a 50-basis-point between meetings


Another insufferable Fed-watching episode of the Halftime Report took place Monday (4/25), although at least Jim Lebenthal punched back at Judge Austerity's typical hectoring.

In a long-winded opening statement, Judge told Jim he keeps waiting for Jim to say, "You know what, Judge, I was wrong."

Jim said that was a "compound statement with many clauses." Jim said there's been "no capitulation" yet, so he indeed has been early.

But Jim pointed out that the stock market's been down 7% in just a couple days, so "This feels a lot like capitulation to me."

Bryn Talkington offered, "I think we're getting really close to a tradeable bottom," but, "I think it's just a trade," because the Fed has only "engineered" a soft landing about 10% of the time.

Judge wondered about the Fed doing a 50-basis-point hike between (snicker) meetings of separate 50-point hikes. What's really ludicrous about that is that, if everyone agrees that's what should happen (and that's not necessarily the case), why don't they just go to 3% right now and get it over with so we can stop listening to this nonsense on TV?

Steve Weiss said the market would react negatively if the Fed did do a 50-bp hike between meetings.

Weiss said he would "sell any rallies" and that "the odds are that we do go into recession" and it's "risk-management time" (snicker).

Joe Terranova, equivocating once again like Hank Kimball on "Green Acres," promised "bad news for the bears" and "bad news for the bulls," the former being that stocks aren't going to drop another 5-10% from the February low, the latter being that in "presidential cycles" (snicker), "this is the worst quarter."

In another tiresome but regular feature of the program, Jim did his usual argument about CLF's $6 billion free cash flow and $13 billion market cap.

Jim insisted CLF is not one of those tech "fanboy stocks that nobody did their homework on."

Weiss said there's sometimes when earnings matter "quite a bit," sometimes when they don't, and sometimes when they matter a little.

In some sort of breaking news, Judge said Marko Kolanovic sees "risks" (a curious term) skewing toward a "near-term equity rally."

Judge also said that someone "who I really respect" just sent him a text about technicals, that the 200-week moving average is 3,462, and if the market goes there, it's 58% higher than the March 2020 low, and the market went to the 200-day in December 2018, as well as in 2015 and 2011. Judge pointed out that that's "considerably lower" than where we're at now. (And it's also probably below the level where Joe (not Terranova, the one in D.C.) and Nancy and Donald start shoveling out $2,000 checks.)

Bryn Talkington said she bought 85 calls in the money in ADM, then as the stock ran, "I just took profit."

Bryn advised buying the dip in energy; she said China headwinds can't last. Jim agreed the China headwinds are "temporary."

On Overtime, Tom Lee conceded the first half has been a bit rougher than he thought.




Is the government taxing us on our losses too?


On Friday's (4/22) Halftime Report, another insufferable episode of worrying about what the Federal Reserve might do (convert to a once-a-week show, Judge), viewers heard Grandpa Steve Weiss' typical bear case update, which was going fine ... but then Steve managed to trip himself up with a bit too much information.

Weiss said his equity exposure is "just below 30%," but he "can't go to zero," because ... (this is the juicy part) ... "I just don't wanna pay taxes, I hate paying taxes, and that'd be generating a big loss as well."

OK.

Later in the show, Weiss said he sold DAL after being up 17% in just a couple weeks: "It's a great time to take profits."

We tried to reconcile all that ... but aren't sure we made much headway.

If it's a "great time" to take profits, why doesn't he go from 30% equity exposure to zero?

And if he's "generating a big loss," why is he worried about his taxes?

And if he's so concerned about paying taxes, why is he shorting the S&P and the Q's and long SARK, which are bound to be trades that he'll be out of (up or down) in the near future?

Then there's the bigger picture — if a person is convinced, as Weiss has claimed to be, that stocks are going lower ... why wouldn't you sell your stocks now and buy them back at a lower price?

(Here's where we could launch into a previous theme on this page ... that Weiss' problem here, and many people's problem, is that he's looking at the market value of his stocks as money that's "his" without subtracting the estimated tax liability, and thus he feels like he's getting taken on tax day ... like if someone calculates their hourly wages and expects to see their paycheck for that gross amount without remembering the withholding for taxes, health plan, 401(k), etc. ... but we won't.)

Sigh ... Weiss suggested a moment of silence for the loss of "TINA," because Weiss says there are Treasury alternatives now. (Sure. That'll last about 3 weeks.)

Weiss said "the Fed is the most aggressive I recall in decades." What if we wait until they actually do something before we make pronouncements like that, given that the Fed simply trades the last 3 hours of data.

Weiss knocked "risk management" of some people who he said are like "Pavlov's dogs," who hear the opening bell and have to buy, "and if they sell something, they buy something else." (Translation: He wants the big whoosh down so that he can buy Microsoft for a hundred dollars!!, a trade that literally the whole world is waiting for.)

Josh Brown said he's been saying since January, when the VIX gets to 28-30, "find something to buy," and when it's 20 or 19, "take something off." He's right that it's been working; the only thing is, when the whole world is aware of it, at some point, trades like that stop working.

Steve Liesman said he thinks "the market is too far out over its skis on this 75 stuff."

Jim Lebenthal shrugged off the "dingbat" market's earnings reaction to CLF. "You should be buying this," Jim insisted. Weiss though insisted that CLF is a "steel company" and "cyclical" and "it is not a growth company."



For such a ‘maybe not much conviction’ trade, Josh sure made a strenuous defense of NFLX


Thursday's (4/21) Halftime Report picked up where Wednesday's left off — with NFLX.

This time, Josh Brown appeared on the show to discuss his buy-NFLX-at-the-open trade a day earlier.

"I saw the clip of you guys talking about me," Brown cracked, adding, "I thought like a lot was made out of something that maybe I don't have that much conviction in." But he does think the stock has been "de-risked."

Brown's argument began with the chart, the fact it was around 700 not too long ago, and that the multiple has come down.

Judge said he talked to Bill Ackman and Ackman told him he can't "wait around" for a Netflix turnaround. Brown said Ackman is a "2 and 20" with a "different investment time horizon."

Jon Najarian said he bought NFLX with an eye on 6 to 12 months, while selling upside calls against it, a kind of wishy-washy trade that we didn't know what to make of.

No matter what Najarian or Judge talked about, Brown kept cutting in to talk about how promising the stock is.

Brown and others touting the stock at this point may well be right. But it's one thing if this crash happened in late 2020. Buying such a name in a risk-off market, that's what this page would question.

Meanwhile, Judge jabbed Jim Lebenthal about trading ROKU several times a few years ago. Jim called that "pure momentum trading."

Doc said PLTR is melting like a "sno-cone or ice cube."

Joe Terranova said he bought WMT and predicted it tops 200 because of his concerns over food inflation, arguing for increased market share and seeing a "multiyear breakout" in the shares.




Blame ‘The Lost Daughter’


Few subjects have garnered as much all-day attention on CNBC in recent years as the Netflix Subscriber Debacle.

Judge opened Wednesday's (4/20) Halftime Report by stating that Josh Brown, who wasn't on the show or dialing in, had bought NFLX on the open.

Judge read a statement from Brown that claimed whenever NFLX crashes, it's "always a buying opportunity in the end."

Pete Najarian wasn't so eager, explaining that in situations like this, it's best to "wait a couple of days" before plunging in.

(Actually, that advice is offered by Karen Finerman and Steve Grasso all the time. From what we can tell, it's true more often than not. But sometimes, the opening trade immediately after the drop is the bottom.)

Pete said things "need to change" at Netflix, including password-sharing, which has been occurring for many years but is just now being trumpeted by Reed Hastings.

That's a very interesting point. We read some analysis on this subject, and it seems this ship may have sailed. Netflix could probably write up some algorithms to block account usage at multiple locations. But it may be difficult to enforce without playing the heavy. And if Joe Doe, who has an account, goes to John & Jane Roe's house, and they don't have an account, shouldn't Joe Doe be able to watch his account with them?

Kari Firestone was even more pessimistic than Pete, revealing she sold NFLX at the open. "Maybe Josh bought some of our shares," Kari said, saying the model's "broken" and the "party's over."

Kari said there's "too many platforms" in the U.S. that are hurling money at content.

"There aren't that many great shows or movies," not now or in the golden age of TV, Kari concluded.

Judge reported that Brown is "literally on an airplane."

Joe Terranova offered that Brown ultimately will be "OK" with his NFLX position, and so will Bill Ackman. (Later it was revealed Ackman dumped his stake.)

Joe pointed to FB's stumble in early February and struggle to regain institutional interest, and "the same applies here to Netflix."

Liz Young said the streaming space has "matured," and streaming companies have to be viewed that way.

Judge said Degas Wright sold NFLX on Monday. Degas called in and said he got out because NFLX doesn't have "pricing power" and he wanted "higher-quality companies," also there's concern about recessionary headwinds in Europe and elsewhere in the world.

Judge hectored Jim Lebenthal for being long PARA, but Jim said it's up since he bought it a couple months ago. Jim said "recent history" suggests what's happening to NFLX is a "Netflix-specific problem."

Jim claimed there's a "world" or "ocean" of difference between NFLX and PARA.

One thing nobody mentioned, though Kari Firestone got close, is that Netflix is commissioning way too many "movies" and is throwing cash at them and trying to hire whatever Hollywood names it can get and not editing them but giving them endless capital to make movies designed to gain street cred at the Oscars that, frankly, often suck.

Meanwhile, in other news, Liz Young said it'd be a surprise to see bonds and stocks both negative for Q2 as they were in Q1.

Pete Najarian said IBM is a "very solid name" (snicker) to have in your portfolio. Kari Firestone corrected Judge for saying that Kari called IBM "dead money," Kari clarified that she said "it's BEEN dead money." Judge agreed that's "exactly" what she said.

Kari said she wouldn't own IBM, but it could work out for people like buying GM and F a few years ago.



Weiss: Someone buying a bunch of options ‘could be the biggest dope in the world’


The Najarii love to gush about trades that have already happened the big options buys they detect with their HeatSeeker program.

On Monday's (4/18) Halftime Report, Steve Weiss indicated that not everyone is impressed with this type of information.

Pete announced that he bought some calls in TWTR, which was "so intriguing" because on Thursday, someone bought 10,000 October 55 TWTR calls "in one print."

Weiss scoffed, saying, "I don't buy any of it. And nor am I following somebody in who bought 3,000 calls because, I have no idea who they are. They could be the biggest dope in the world, and, and lost 10,000 calls in something else."

"Bought 10,000," Pete cut in, as if that makes a difference to Weiss' point.

"They could also be hedging a short bet in the stock," Weiss continued, adding the SEC is "not done with Musk," as if they're actually going to do something to him.

Judge asked Joe Terranova for his "perspective" (snicker) on Elon Musk and Twitter. Joe said his perspective is that if Musk wants to buy TWTR, "He will."

Well, Musk has managed to stay on the good side of Congress with Tesla and SpaceX; that will change if he's running Twitter.

Judge opened the program by asking panelists if the notion of "peak inflation" is over. As she does in literally every show, Jenny Harrington used the opportunity to complain about stocks with "extended multiples" again.

Weiss is long the SARK. "The Fed's gonna keep tightening," Weiss insisted, because "Putin" is also scaring the market. (But nothing this time about China "goin' after" Taiwan.)

In what otherwise might've been the day's headline, Joe Terranova bought NTR and BG, predicting the ag trade will "go parabolic."

CNBC's Phil LeBeau reported on Rivian's financials. Pete admitted his RIVN calls "absolutely disintegrated" shortly after he bought them. Judge didn't mention how Pete was regularly trumpeting the "Amazon backstop" as some kind of floor in RIVN.



Companies that rely on their customers working for free for them (cont’d) ...


If you enjoy hearing the sound of people clapping, then the Masters is for you.

If you enjoy observing people making fun of each other, then Twitter might be for you.

Josh Brown on Thursday's (4/14) Halftime Report seemed to inadvertently arrive at the truth behind Twitter when declaring that Elon Musk is "one of the only people of any note that are still actively creating content and bringing people to the platform."

And that's the whole story.

Tweets are not made by Jack Dorsey, Evan Williams, Anthony Noto or Dick Costolo.

They're made by folks volunteering their time and labor to accomplish ... what, we're not sure.

If people brought patties to McDonald's and volunteered to grill the meat, then that would give MCD a price-to-sales multiple also.

Facebook is different than Twitter. (This writer is long FB.) Facebook at least is a hub for organizations, businesses, families, an easy way to set up meetings or share photos.

Twitter, as Steve Weiss put it Thursday, is a "cesspool."

After his opening statement, Brown got another chance to finish his assessment of Twitter and concluded, "The big problem here is that people don't tweet."

Around here at CNBCfix HQ, we occasionally look up CNBCers' tweets. They're generally worthless. Shout-outs that either 1) trumpet articles posted by the tweeter or 2) obligatory cheers for friends doing something that utterly no one cares about. Often, the only thing that catches one's eye is the nastiness of some of the responses.

"The paradox of Twitter is that the bigger your account gets, the more risk incrementally you're adding to your life or your corporation or organization's life, vs. whatever potential upside, which can only shrink," Brown continued. "It's almost like an existential problem. So, big accounts go dormant as soon as there's more risk than reward."

Correct. It's a virtually useless service that should probably be applauded for gaining as much of a presence in pop culture as it somehow has.

Brown gets credit for humor in identifying the "power users" of Twitter as "progressive political activists, alt-right people, uh bitcoin psychos."

Brown also scoffed at Prince Alwaleed's reaction about intrinsic value; "There is no value; it's a nothing iceberg."

Brown said it shouldn't be a "1-bidder situation" and that Google could "instantly double or triple the productivity of the ad business" (almost certainly not true), though he's not sure Google has the "guts" to wade into a bidding war here.

Brown concluded that TWTR shares are not a "buying opportunity."

Jon Najarian said while Google buying TWTR makes "a ton of sense," there's "not a chance" for Google or Facebook to acquire Twitter "regulatorily."

Doc said he doubted Microsoft could get a bid through for Twitter either (as if it wants it) given its ownership of LinkedIn.

Doc pointed out Yahoo's rejection of MSFT and how the stock "tanked" forever after.

Weiss predicted the board will reject Musk's offer and that the board believes it has a "credible" plan.

But Weiss said the only challenge to the board's decision would be "ambulance chasers" asking for $200,000 to go away. "That's all that's gonna happen," Weiss said, stating Delaware courts don't even care about companies being sold for $50 a share that are worth $100, an interesting topic that Judge, of course, didn't latch onto.

Weiss said, "Twitter remains a cesspool. It's always gonna be a cesspool. It's a waste of time."



The BBEF — what a catchy slogan


On Thursday's (4/14) Halftime Report, Judge called Grandpa Steve Weiss a "market hater."

Weiss confirmed, "I hate the market, and I'm beginning to hate all of the bulls, because the bulls are keeping the market from bottoming."

Ah!! See, there it is ... he's waiting for the big whoosh down.

Now that we're in a global-tightening phase, "The market's not gonna go up, period," Weiss declared.

Then Judge got Weiss going again on what "the market knows."

Weiss called the AAII "useless," even though the Morgan Stanley guy (whom Weiss tends to agree with) has invoked it when making market calls.

Judge questioned the notion that there are a bunch of vocal bulls. "Who's positive?"

Jon Najarian chipped in, "I don't know where these positive people are."

Weiss insisted, ignoring the fact the show hasn't had on many "strategist" types, "Name one strategist, name one member of this panel, aside from me, and one strategist aside from Mike Wilson who's come on the show and is not bullish. Name one."

Actually, only Jim Lebenthal has been demonstrably "bullish." The others are all cautious, sitting on their hands while waiting for the big whoosh down.

Doc said September NKE 135 calls were being bought, and he's got some. (It's always nice to get a trade instead of Closet Indexing, except for the trades that have already been performed by the options sharks.)

Josh Brown said try to think of IBM as a convertible bond, but otherwise, "it's boring."

At one point, while someeone else was talking, viewers heard, "Hi this is Shannon from Halftime, I just got disconnected."

At the end of the show, Judge said Tom Lee has come up with a new acronym. The acronym is supposed to be BEEF. The words constituting that acronym are actually bitcoin, bitcoin equities, energy and FAANG.

Josh Brown shrugged that "Bitcoin is every bit as boring as the stock market right now."




The problem with Judge’s show


You know that famous TV commercial from way back when in which the woman wonders, "Where's the beef?"

Presumably, people watching CNBC's Halftime Report have to be wondering, "Where's the trades?"

The show is basically a guide to Closet Indexing.

Of course, the Halftime Report has far too many panelists, all speaking from their living rooms and getting tripped up by the 1-second video delays, to gain or regain any sort of rhythm. Knowing that everyone's cautiously optimistic or reducing exposure to this sector or that sector or managing their risk, and hearing their daily Federal Reserve speculation, great.

At its current pace in this range-bound market, the show only needs to air once a week, like Options Action.

The Final Trades are delivered with so little conviction, it's embarrassing.

We gotta think everyone recommending increasing exposure to, say, energy and decreasing exposure to, say, cyclicals could save themselves a buncha time and effort by simply buying the SPY or QQQ.

The show originally was about traders looking for daily flips.

Where. Are. The. Trades.



‘Shrinking ATM withdrawals’ in Vegas


A very interesting, concise discussion of the airline sector took place on Wednesday's (4/13) Halftime Report. (This writer is long AAL and UAL.)

Endorsing DAL, Jim Lebenthal said Ed Bastian was "positively giddy" in comments about recent Delta bookings. Jim said Delta is a noticeable cut above other airlines in customer service.

Kourtney Gibson said DAL is "definitely a name that you want to hold."

But Pete Najarian suggested that a lot of people may have already been releasing their pent-up eagerness to travel and this may be as good as it gets for airlines.

"My last 3 flights on Delta have been half-full," Pete revealed. But Jim countered, "International travel is still 55% of what it was in 2019."

CNBC's Contessa Brewer articulated the situation with Vegas/gambling stocks, explaining that one CEO sees "shrinking ATM withdrawals," which he calls a "leading indicator." (This writer is long LVS.)

Nevertheless, Jim Lebenthal said casinos should be owned now. But Pete Najarian, with Judge's prompting, said the Macau portion of casinos' revenue is "huge" and he thinks those stocks will "struggle" until China gets turned around.



OMG!!!! Lael Brainard talked!!!!!


The star guest of Wednesday's (4/13) Halftime Report wasn't Brian Belski or even anyone who was on the show.

Rather, it was Scott Minerd, who spoke to Judge at length a day earlier on Overtime and stated, "Every time I hear another Fed member talking, uh, extremely hawkish about action ... the more bullish I get."

Belski noted Minerd is a bond guy and agreed there's a "very good chance" the 10-year has topped.

Rob Sechan said, "It's clear that the market's trying to make a bottom right now."

Jim Lebenthal said he just doesn't see a recession "on the horizon," stressing he sees more positives than negatives.

Kourtney Gibson said "Less bad is good" and that she bought more SQ.

Pete Najarian kind of hemmed and hawed but said "It's great to be cautiously optimistic" (Zzzzzzzzzz).

Joe Terranova, who coats virtually every trade announcement with so many rationales, buffers and qualifiers that would embarrass even presidential nominees at a Jim Lehrer debate, said "the near term is still very clouded (Zzzzzzzzz)"; he trimmed ABBV because it recently experienced "range expansion" but used that to add CMG for its growth.

Joe was talking up owning one of his favorite names of the past, PANW.

Pete spoke of people buying AAPL calls and HOW IT WAS ALL SHORT TERM IN NATURE!!!!!!!



Jeffrey Gundlach gives Judge cover to suggest inflation may be peaking (a/k/a why doesn’t the Fed just go immediately to 3% AND GET THIS STALE STORY OVER WITH?)


Tuesday's (4/12) Halftime Report continued a trend of, oh, about 6 months or so, in which everyone insists inflation can be bad for a while — but no need to short the stock market.

Jon Najarian said corn prices have doubled from 2 years ago, "and they're gonna go significantly higher."

Doc said people want to take away energy and food when calculating inflation and by Fed standards, it may be peaking, but "Joe and Jane" (i.e., regular, non-Wall Street people, not Joe Terranova) are going to feel those things, and "we have not peaked, by a long stretch."

Josh Brown made a funny Eagles reference ("since 1969") in reference to used car prices while saying prices across the economy don't have to plummet, but the rate of increase needs to slow.

Brown, who was practically shouting into his microphone, kinda seemed to be all over the place in his recommendations, stating that it's too hard to make short-term directional stock-market calls (a fine point) but with "sub-3-year money," he would "buy the snot out of the 2-year Treasury." But money that's 3-10 years, "you have no choice but to accept the volatility of stocks."

Jeremy Siegel continued his Fed-behind-the-curve-thing (it wasn't the Fed, but Donald Trump and Joe Biden and Nancy Pelosi, who wanted to send everyone a free $2,000 a year ago) but suggested the economy remains strong regardless. He said 8.5% may be the inflation peak, but, "I think there's gonna be 6, 7% year-over-year for a long time," stating the Fed has to do "at least 50 basis points" for a "number of meetings."

Steve Liesman mentioned the latest comments by Lael Brainard, "the first positive if very guarded comments on inflation from a Fed official in a long time." But Liesman eventually told Judge, "I'd say it would be premature to declare peak inflation at this point."




Jim stiff-arms Judge Austerity’s stale pushback routine


On Monday's (4/11) Halftime Report, Grandpa Steve Weiss said the "issue" is that "they're coming for the stalwarts."

Bulls may say they're aware of the bad news, but, "All the good news is also priced in the market," Weiss said.

Jim Lebenthal affirmed his ongoing view, "This economy is very strong," and there's an "opinion" as to what is and isn't priced in to the market. Jim said the market in the last week has been pricing in that earnings estimates are going down, while there isn't a "hint" of a "crack in the labor market."

"What if that's the next sorta hitch-" Judge Austerity started to say.

"You've been saying that for weeks, my friend," Jim said.

"I'm not makin' it up," Judge Austerity protested.

"I can name that tune in 5 notes, Scott," Jim said. "You're gonna say that's where the puck is, where is the puck going."

"That's not what I'm saying," Judge Austerity insisted, citing BofA's consumer sentiment analysis and Liz Ann Sonders on transports.

Weiss insisted "there has been more than a hint of the economy slowing down," citing freight "pricing" as well as the freight stocks.

Weiss said analysts are "notoriously bullish" and are the "wrong bet" for guidance on where the economy is going.

"Freight costs are coming down because supply chain bottlenecks are easing," Jim countered. "Freight costs were too high. ... That's a headwind for inflation that will knock inflation down."

Weiss asked Jim if the "majority" of the economy isn't "under siege" from higher energy and food prices. Jim said, "Don't tell me what happened in March ... skate to where the puck is going, not where it's been (sic last 4 words redundant)."

Joe Terranova, who had a quiet show, said, "I think for Jimmy to be right, he should hope that earnings estimates are too high," otherwise it's a 2-steps-forward, 2-steps-backward kind of market.

Judge Austerity wasn't giving up at the end of the show, saying Truist is warning about inflation and downgrading equities. Jim said, "Does it feel like you've heard that exact statement before, like maybe 500 times in the last month." Judge Austerity said, "Maybe they have to repeat that over and over to convince people like you who are advising people to be all fully invested, all in." Jim said his advice is good "if you're able to look past your own feet" while going for a run. Judge Austerity said the danger is "running off a cliff."

Sara's Closing Bell got the Tom Lee booking for Monday. Don't tell Weiss, but Tom said, "We think a lot of bad news is priced in," and that "in some ways, some of the worst of the inflation is behind us."



0% would be ‘wonderful’


"The market's been screaming defense," Judge Austerity told Bryn Talkington on Monday's (4/11) Halftime Report.

In one of the more provocative comments on the show recently, Bryn predicted more "fits and starts" this year and that a 2022 return of 0% would be "wonderful."

As far as the QQQ, "It looks like we're gonna, you know, retest," Bryn said.

Joe Terranova said this market is "maximum frustration."

Bryn holds GS but isn't excited about it; she thinks banks are in an environment of a "confluence of pluses and minuses."

Bryn added ABBV and GDXJ. Jim said DIS could be "out of the penalty box" with a good Q1 report. Judge protested that the "issue" for DIS is how much it may have to spend to keep the streaming growth going. Jim said "that's not new news," something that's been discussed since December 2020. Joe said he'd rather go with NFLX in the streaming space.

Steve Weiss said he got out of CLF "too early" and it was a "great call by Jim."

Weiss predicted the yield curve will steepen again.



Steve Liesman: ‘Maybe the bad news is out’


For those thinking Lael Brainard has just crashed the 2022 stock market, take note of what CNBC Fed expert Steve Liesman said on Wednesday's (4/6) Halftime Report.

"I do think at this point, maybe the bad news is out," Liesman said. "I don't expect much more from here."

That got our attention, and apparently other people's too, because moments later, Liesman said he wanted "to clarify," that "I think the bad news of what the Fed is gonna do is out. I think we still have to talk a lot about the potential bad news of the effects of what the Fed is doing."

Well if that isn't a parse ...

Steve Weiss interpreted it this way: "If you really think about what Steve Liesman said is that, the Fed is using the market as a tightening tool. So they're not going to come to the rescue. And I've said, and others have said, that Fed put doesn't exist anymore (snicker)."

We don't know if the rest of this week will be up or down. But perhaps the show's best call came from Jenny Harrington, who articulated a fine argument for why someone with a $1 million portfolio at maybe a $500,000 cost basis shouldn't be selling today, racking up a large capital gain just to maybe prevent another 10% short-term downside.



What if Congress demanded payback of the $2,000 checks that Donald Trump and Joe Biden and Nancy Pelosi shoveled out last February?


After 2 days of a bad stock market, Steve Weiss was back on the warpath on Wednesday's (4/6) Halftime Report.

Weiss said, "I've got a bone to pick with all the bulls who told me, repeatedly, that the rate hikes are already in the market."

"I guess it wasn't," Weiss added.

"Bear markets could last for more than a month or two, and I believe that's what we're in," Weiss continued.

Joe Terranova opined, "Steve's right. The hawkishness from Brainard was not priced into the market," and then seemed to resort to hyperbole, referring twice to the "adversarial Federal Reserve" and saying it wants to use "wealth destruction as a weapon" to curb inflation.

(We were wondering if Jay Powell was one of those people who told Joe Biden to tell Georgia voters in January 2021 that if they just vote for Raphael Warnock and Jon Ossoff, everyone gets $2,000 checks, as part of the new president's $1.9 trillion inauguration day COVID relief plan.)

Capping the hyperbole, Joe said "this is as challenged an environment as you are gonna find whether you are an investor or trader. You're in the ring with Mike Tyson in 2022," just trying not to get "knocked out."



‘An extra year of stimulus that was way unnecessary’


On Wednesday's (4/6) Halftime Report, Jenny Harrington praised JetBlue's offer for Spirit as a "terrific, terrific thing for their business," adding, "This makes JetBlue a stronger business in 3, 4, 5, 10 years." Sarat Sethi said "it's better for the whole airline industry if it happens," but the concern is that the government doesn't approve the consolidation.

Sarat made the case for "cheaper value cyclicals."

He said he's going to look to convert his C shares into something else after earnings season. Judge spent some time on that stock without mentioning the 1-for-10 split of about a decade ago that was necessary because the stock could never get or stay above $5 (and, financial engineering aside, maybe still can't).

Joe Terranova said he sold PYPL at 230 and SQ at 250 because "they began to lose momentum significantly."

On Overtime, Tom Lee a couple times affirmed he thinks the February bottom (he kept saying "4,000") is the first-half bottom and possibly the full 2022 bottom. Josh Brown said, "We did an extra year of stimulus that was way unnecessary."




The real amusing part was the ‘Lael Brainard’s on a mission from God’ part


Fireworks (by business television standards) erupted during Tuesday's (4/5) Halftime Report when Jim Lebenthal got tangled up with Josh Brown over inflation and Ukraine.

Jim, the most optimistic/bullish panelist, said that a few months ago, Josh was claiming "inflation was set to roll over."

Brown cut in, "Did something happen." Lebenthal said, "Yes something happened, and it's over."

"What's over, genocide?" Josh demanded.

"Oh stop it Josh," Jim said.

"This is crazy," Josh said.

"Don't bring up genocide, we're talking about stocks, and we're talking about the economy right now," Jim said, adding, "Let's leave the moral overtones aside."

"Don't lecture me sir. Don't lecture me sir," Brown said, insisting commodity prices are affecting the economy, "and with all due respect, nothing is over."

"I find it amusing for you to tell anyone to stop lecturing," Jim said.

"Nothing's amusing about this. Nothing's amusing," Josh said.

"You are, my friend," Jim said.

Doc was either laughing or cringing during the exchange, caught on the 6-way camera below a couple times.




If the S&P 500 is going to plunge 500 points, what difference does it make if it happens in April or July?


Judge Austerity spent the opening minutes of Tuesday's (4/5) Halftime Report trumpeting Lael Brainard's comments and the call Judge had with "some of the smartest money I know" (he made that reference again on Overtime), who apparently doesn't think the stock market is sinking enough. (You see, the big money managers are still desperate for that BIG WHOOSH DOWN so they can buy Nvidia for a hundred dollars!!!!!!!)

Jim Lebenthal said he's "still bullish," predicting a continuing "chop around the 4,600 level."

Judge Austerity then turned to Steve Liesman, demanding, "How in the world are stocks hanging in the way they are." Steve said Tuesday's market suggests not all of the Fed's plan had been priced in.

In a howler of a line that evidently wasn't intended to be a howler, Josh Brown offered, "I would say Lael Brainard's on a mission from God to rescue Joe Biden's, uh, midterms. It's going to be very, very difficult for the Democrats to put up any sort of a showing behind a president whom most of the country will look at and blame — whether it's his fault or not is another debate — they will blame him if we're still talking about inflation at 40-year highs."

Moments later, Jon Najarian, who had an awesome show, articulated how higher rates/tightening will hit a lot of people who aren't rich. "This is not something that helps Joe Biden," said Doc. "This is something that crushes him in the midterms."

"I didn't say it was," Brown said, even though he basically did say that (otherwise why is he saying she's on a "mission from God to rescue Joe Biden's midterms" ... did he really mean mission to sink Joe Biden's midterms and just misspoke?). "I agree with you."

Lee Cooperman on Overtime said, "I think we've had the most irresponsible package of fiscal and monetary policies in the history of the country" and there's a "price to be paid." Lee made a biblical reference to "7 lean years following 7 fat years" (so much for the "Roarin' 20s"). Lee, like Josh Brown at Halftime, mentioned that inflation historically has been a "friend of common stocks."



Um, they make a new plan every week based on the data, Judge


Judge Austerity on Tuesday's (4/5) Halftime Report mocked the notion of a "dovish pivot" and took issue with Stephanie Link's suggestion that we don't know exactly what the Fed is going to do, telling Link, "Why are we debating what they're gonna do? They're telling you what they're gonna do."

Steve Liesman said later, "I think what, what Brainard might've been doing was front-running what's gonna be in the minutes tomorrow at 2 o'clock." (OMIGOD!!!!! WE MIGHT GET THE BIG WHOOSH DOWN!!!!)

Judge Austerity badgered Jim Lebenthal about trimming UNP. Jim said Judge is "incorrigible in how you frame things." Jim said he added to HD as well as trimming UNP.

Jon Najarian had the most interesting stock call of the day, saying of TWTR, "I think this stock hits 75, 80 by year-end." He said he "certainly" applauds Twitter and Elon Musk for "basically opening this thing back up, hopefully, for more freer speech on the platform."

Joe Terranova said on Overtime, "We have an adversarial Fed."



What happened to that SARK-higher-than-the-ARKK thing ...


It took until the 11th minute of Monday's (4/4) Halftime Report for Judge to say "retest" (which will be his favorite word for the next 4 weeks), trying to goad Jonathan Krinsky into doing the same. Krinsky said such a scenario is "still in the cards."

But Liz Young said "We still have time," because "the economy isn't gonna go into a recession with a very, very tight labor market."

Young said it's not the time to "pull a bunch of risk off the table."

But then again, Steve Weiss insisted the Fed has indicated that it's going to do a "series of 50-bp hikes" and only Weiss and not the rest of the market is listening.

Judge tried to push the notion that Jamie Dimon is calling an "F5 (sic) tornado" for the market, ignoring that the most important thing in the letter was Dimon's statement that the government's coronavirus relief aid was too much and lasted too long (and OMIGOD DONALD TRUMP AND JOE BIDEN AND NANCY PELOSI THINK EVERYONE SHOULD GET $2,000 CHECKS!!!).

Obviously feeling not enough octane in the bear camp, Judge wondered if COIN, SPOT, TWLO, TDOC, SQ, U are "ground zero" for stocks to get out of right now. Of course, Steve Weiss agreed with that. Neither one actually told anyone to buy those stocks a month ago (but it's not really a trading show, is it). And we didn't hear any calls to short those names.

Judge stated, "I feel like the Fed would be all right with getting the economy into a mild recession if it got inflation under control."

Joe Terranova said he doesn't think the market will sprint to new highs because there are "so many challenges ahead here for this Federal Reserve."

Josh Brown was brought in to discuss Elon Musk's TWTR buy. Brown stressed that TWTR's board is "filled with people who don't even use the product."






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