On October 15, the latest challenge to General Electric (NYSE: GE)'s CNBC network dominance of business programming via cable television, the Fox Business Network, will sign on for the first time. And while CNBC President Mark Hoffman is taking the public stance that it is business as usual, he's not fooling anyone. As demonstrated by News Corp (NYSE: NWS)'s Fox News Network whomping of CNN, the newcomer can be a market changer. News Corp's recent acquisition of Dow Jones, including The Wall Street Journal, gives it yet more ammunition for its assault.At stake is a juicy demographic, viewers well above average in income and in their prime consumption years (25-54), according to Nielsen Media Research. TVWeek estimates CNBC's current take from advertising at $250 million per year.
Heading the assault on CNBC is Roger Ailes, the guiding force behind Fox News. In an interview with the Journal (subscription) today, Ailes dodged one of the most interesting questions: Can Fox find a way around the WSJ's current agreement to share content with CNBC, which won't expire until 2012? Integrating the WSJ content and brand into the new network could allow Fox to quickly leapfrog CNBC.
One message that seems clear from the Ailes interview: he doesn't intend FBN to bottom feed, but compete for the same demographic as CNBC. At the same time, when I look at some of CNBC's schlocky prime-time offerings, I have the impression that network has already undergone some Foxification.
FBN will launch with only one-third of CNBC's viewership, but its leverage should allow it to quickly bully its way into more cable packages. As the internet continues to steal away investors interested in timely business news, the race between the two may be decided on entertainment value, a coin both sides know how to employ. Check out the pretty people already on-board for Fox. Not a Paul Kangas (one of my favorites) among them.
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Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)
10-08-2007 @ 3:46PM
The_Village_Idiot said...
I'm rooting for FBN. CNBC lost a lot (in my eyes) when the Brooklyn Bimbo (Maria B.) was courting around in Citi's corporate jet. She (and others) should have been canned for that ethics breech. What made it more disgusting was that feeble (and staged) "tough" interview of Sandy W. It's time for some fresher business coverage as CNBC is now old & beat.
10-09-2007 @ 8:41AM
Tattletale said...
Thanks to Village Idiot...(username) a multitude of us who may not correspond with the GE Blog.....because of the association with TV ownerships.....(CNBC), agree to the nth with you. I was, I thought Ms. Bartiromo's biggest fan, until she fell off the white horse. Good Luck FBN
10-09-2007 @ 9:29AM
Tattletale said...
CNBC not worried about FOX?....is that right? Why then the juggling of programs beginning Oct 10? It won't matter that much.....they are not watched by that many....anyway. So let it be done.
10-10-2007 @ 3:32PM
Buckshot said...
I agree with "Village Idiot." It's tough to trust CNBC. And didn't Jim Cramer get in trouble for some kind of insider trading or ethics breach?
Either way, I think CNBC is too inside-the-bubble. They cover too much Wall Street mumbo-jumbo and too many inside-baseball scandals.
I like how Roger Ailes said Fox Business Network will cover Main Street and have more financial news-you-can-use. I'm for FBN all the way.