Asia Squawk Box
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''Asia Squawk Box'' is a television business news program on CNBC Asia, aired Monday through Friday from 6:00 a.m.-9:00 a.m. (
Hong Kong Hong Kong ( (US) or (UK); , ), officially the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region of the People's Republic of China (abbr. Hong Kong SAR or HKSAR), is a city and special administrative region of China on the eastern Pearl River Delta i ...
/
Singapore Singapore (), officially the Republic of Singapore, is a sovereign island country and city-state in maritime Southeast Asia. It lies about one degree of latitude () north of the equator, off the southern tip of the Malay Peninsula, bor ...
time). This programme is also aired on
CNBC World CNBC World is an American pay television business news channel operated by the NBCUniversal News Group which provides coverage of world markets alongside the domestic CNBC service, using programmes from CNBC's international networks based in Euro ...
in the United States at the respective time (5:00 p.m. - 8:00 p.m. Sunday through Thursday without
daylight saving time Daylight saving time (DST), also referred to as daylight savings time or simply daylight time (United States, Canada, and Australia), and summer time (United Kingdom, European Union, and others), is the practice of advancing clocks (typicall ...
, 6:00 p.m. - 9:00 p.m. with DST), and on
CNBC Europe Consumer News and Business Channel Europe (referred to on air simply as CNBC) is a business and financial news television channel which airs across Europe. The station is based in London, where it shares the Adrian Smith (architect), Adrian S ...
from 11:00 p.m.-2:00 a.m. although only the Monday edition of the programme is broadcast in its entirety on CNBC Europe.


Format

''Asia Squawk Box'' (''ASB'') covers the opening of the Asian markets and is anchored by
Sri Jegarajah Shri (; , ) is a Sanskrit term denoting resplendence, wealth and prosperity, primarily used as an honorific. The word is widely used in South and Southeast Asian languages such as Marathi, Malay (including Indonesian and Malaysian), Javanes ...
and
Martin Soong Martin Soong (born 1959 in Hong Kong) is a CNBC business presenter based in Singapore. He is now a co-anchor with Oriel Morrison on CNBC Asia's ''Street Signs''. Before that, he was previously a longtime co-anchor of CNBC's trademark morning pro ...
. There is occasionally a guest host who joins in on the second and third hour of the programme. Regular contributors include
Emily Tan Emily may refer to: * Emily (given name), including a list of people with the name Music * "Emily" (1964 song), title song by Johnny Mandel and Johnny Mercer to the film ''The Americanization of Emily'' * "Emily" (Dave Koz song), a 1990 song ...
, Chery Kang (
Hong Kong Hong Kong ( (US) or (UK); , ), officially the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region of the People's Republic of China (abbr. Hong Kong SAR or HKSAR), is a city and special administrative region of China on the eastern Pearl River Delta i ...
), Samantha Vadas (Singapore) and Eunice Yoon (China). Interviews with other analysts and C-level executives are also an essential part of the show.


History

''Asia Squawk Box'' debuted in February 1998 at 8.00 Singapore time in February 1998 when CNBC Asia merged with Asia Business News and it was presented by former CNBC Asia Morning Call personalities Rico Hizon (now with BBC World) and Geoff Cutmore (currently the main presenter of the show's counterpart in Europe, ''Squawk Box Europe''). Bernard Lo and Cecilia Zecha came in to eventually replace Cutmore and Hizon respectively. In October 1998, ''Asia Squawk Box'' was extended to 90 minutes and in late 1999, the show started at 7.30 SIN time. In April 2000, ''Asia Squawk Box'' moved to 7.00 SIN time.
Christine Tan Christine Tan (pronounced Tahn) (born 1970) is a Singaporean financial journalist with CNBC Asia and is the Singapore based anchor for CNBC Asia's award-winning and longest-running feature programme, "''Managing Asia,''" where she interviews key ...
assumed anchoring duties in July 2000 and on 30 October 2000, the show was extended to two hours with the last half-hour being named Squawk Plus. In July 2001, ''Asia Squawk Box'' aired for a full three hours like its US counterpart from 7am to 10am SIN time. Around this time, Steven Engel was added to the team as a stockwatcher. In late 2002, Bettina Chua took over as anchor as Christine Tan was reassigned to the evening hours. As a result of the cancellation of '' Asia Wake Up Call'', ''ASB'' moved to the 6 to 9am SIN time timeslot. In April 2005,
Martin Soong Martin Soong (born 1959 in Hong Kong) is a CNBC business presenter based in Singapore. He is now a co-anchor with Oriel Morrison on CNBC Asia's ''Street Signs''. Before that, he was previously a longtime co-anchor of CNBC's trademark morning pro ...
assumed the anchoring duties for the program after Chua's departure from the network. Since 2006, the Asian version of ''Squawk Box'' has been guided editorially by Senior Producer Derrick McElheron, who also helped launch CNBC's ''
Worldwide Exchange ''Worldwide Exchange'' is a television business news program on CNBC channels around the world. It used to be broadcast live from studios on three continents until May 11, 2012. The programme is anchored by Brian Sullivan and is produced at CN ...
''. As of 2006-10-30 (the same day the Asia network debuted a new graphics package similar to its US and European siblings), the show began using the titles in use by its US counterpart since late 2005, replacing the previous one that was used from 2004-2006.


2007 relaunch

On 2007-03-26, with McElheron at the helm, ''Asia Squawk Box'' was relaunched with a new live set, replacing the virtual set it had used since its creation, and a new co-presenter in Amanda Drury. On that day, the show started using the then-current US music package and returned to the 7 to 10am timeslot and being preceded to give way to a then-new programme, ''
Squawk Australia ''Squawk Australia'' was a television business news program that aired every weekday at 6:00am Singapore/Hong Kong/Taiwan time on CNBC Asia. It was broadcast live from CNBC Asia's Australia studio in Sydney, and anchored by Amanda Drury. It ...
''.


2009-2014

In 2009, Karen Tso took over anchoring duties from Amanda Drury, who moved back to Sydney and later to the US after the cancellation of ''Squawk Australia'' on June 11, 2010. Former Bloomberg anchor Bernard Lo re-joined the network in early 2010, based out of Hong Kong. He can now be seen regularly co-anchoring Squawk Box. Additionally, ''Asia Squawk Box'' moved back to its new/old time slot (6am-9am Singapore/Hong Kong Time) on June 14, 2010. In late-2011, it was announced that Tso was moving to CNBC Europe in London. Lisa Oake re-joined the network as co-anchor of ''Asia Squawk Box'' in January 2012. In early 2014, former Bloomberg anchor Susan Li joined CNBC Asia and replaced Lisa Oake (who left CNBC Asia at the end of 2013) as co-anchor of ''Asia Squawk Box.''


2014-present

On 31 March 2014, the show launched with a new live set in Hong Kong and moved back to the 7-10am SIN/HK timeslot. Susan Li and Bernard Lo became the new co-anchors of ''Asia Squawk Box,'' which is now based in Hong Kong. Martin Soong, who had been co-anchor from 2005–14, moved to a new program, ''Street Signs'' (which also shares the same name as its now-defunct US counterpart). That program is co-anchored by Soong and
Oriel Morrison Oriel may refer to: Places Canada * Oriel, a community in the municipality of Norwich, Ontario, Canada Ireland * Oriel Park, Dundalk, the home ground of Dundalk FC * Oriel House, Ballincollig, County Cork * Kingdom of Oriel (''Airgíalla'' in Ir ...
(the latter who herself had previously been anchor of ''Cash Flow'', which was cancelled 28 March 2014). On 9 February 2015, ''Asia Squawk Box'' debuted a new logo that is used by its US counterpart since 13 October 2014, but the theme music was originally not the same as its US and Europe versions. That changed 27 April 2015, when the Asia version started using the same theme music as its US and Europe versions. In mid-August 2015, the show briefly launched again in the Singapore Exchange studio after Susan Li left CNBC Asia to join its sister network in Europe as co-anchor of ''
Worldwide Exchange ''Worldwide Exchange'' is a television business news program on CNBC channels around the world. It used to be broadcast live from studios on three continents until May 11, 2012. The programme is anchored by Brian Sullivan and is produced at CN ...
''. On 26 October 2015, Lo became the sole anchor of ''Asia Squawk Box'', which is once again based in Hong Kong. On 8 February 2016, both the Asian and European versions started using the remastered ''Squawk Box'' logo that has been used by their US counterpart since 4 January 2016. On 3 July 2017, Singapore-based anchor Oriel Morrison joined ''Asia Squawk Box'' as co-anchor of the show's third hour. In February 2018, Akiko Fujita (formerly of ''
The Rundown ''The Rundown'' (known internationally as ''Welcome to the Jungle'') is a 2003 American buddy action comedy film directed by Peter Berg and written by James Vanderbilt and R.J. Stewart. It stars Dwayne Johnson (credited as The Rock), Seann Will ...
'', which was based in Singapore) joined Lo in Hong Kong as co-anchor. On 29 October 2018, ''Asia Squawk Box'' once again moved back to the previous 6-9am SIN/HK timeslot following the cancellation of ''The Rundown'' three days prior. In February 2019, Nancy Hungerford (formerly of ''
Capital Connection The Capital Connection is a long-distance commuter train operated by KiwiRail between Palmerston North and the capital city of Wellington on the North Island Main Trunk. In 2018 the service faced funding issues, but the Government ensured that ...
'') replaced the departed Akiko Fujita as co-anchor. On 2 December 2019, Sri Jegarajah and Martin Soong became the new anchor team for ''Asia Squawk Box'', which also marked the latter's return to the show as co-anchor, a role in which he previously served from 2005-2014. Soong had previously co-anchored the Asian version of ''Street Signs'' since its 31 March 2014 debut following his first stint as anchor of ''Asia Squawk Box''.


Facts

*Maria Bartiromo, who was part of the original ''US Squawk Box'' team until the mid-2000s, was a guest co-anchor on ''ASB'' in 2006. She was also a regular on ''ASB'' from late 2000 to early 2002 when the U.S. reverts to standard time from daylight saving time (late-October to March of the following year) to recap the US trading day. At other times of the year, she appeared on the now canceled ''CNBC Today'' and ''Asia Wake Up Call''. Bartiromo left CNBC at the end of November 2013.


Anchors

*
Rico Hizon Rico Hizon (; born March 24, 1966) is a Filipino broadcast journalist. He is currently a senior anchor and director for news content development at CNN Philippines. During his time with BBC World News, he anchored ''Newsday'' and Asia Business ...
(1998) * Andrew Stevens (1998) * Cecilia Zecha (1998–2000) *
Bernard Lo Bernard Lo is a Canadian television anchor who was a longtime host for CNBC Asia and Bloomberg Television. Biography Bernard Lo was a Hong Kong-based anchor for CNBC Asia and also hosted news and talk show programs for Bloomberg Television for ma ...
(1998-2004, 2010–2019) *
Christine Tan Christine Tan (pronounced Tahn) (born 1970) is a Singaporean financial journalist with CNBC Asia and is the Singapore based anchor for CNBC Asia's award-winning and longest-running feature programme, "''Managing Asia,''" where she interviews key ...
(2000–2002) * Bettina Chua (2002–2005) *
Martin Soong Martin Soong (born 1959 in Hong Kong) is a CNBC business presenter based in Singapore. He is now a co-anchor with Oriel Morrison on CNBC Asia's ''Street Signs''. Before that, he was previously a longtime co-anchor of CNBC's trademark morning pro ...
(2005–2014, 2019–present) *
Amanda Drury Amanda Drury (born 5 May 1973) is an Australian journalist and news anchor for CNBC, hosting finance and business programming from New York City. She was the co-host of the US version of '' Street Signs'' until its end on February 6, 2015 and h ...
(2007–2010), occasionally acts as relief anchor from Sydney *
Karen Tso Karen Tso (born 13 September 1977) is an Australian television journalist and anchor at CNBC Europe. Tso began her career as a general news reporter for the AAP after graduating with a commerce degree from Griffith University in Queensland. S ...
(2010–2011) * Lisa Oake (2012–2014) * Susan Li (2014–2015) * Oriel Morrison (2015–2019), relief anchor from Singapore; also anchored the third hour of the show * Geoff Cutmore (2015–present), occasional relief anchor from Hong Kong * Akiko Fujita (2018–2019) * Nancy Hungerford (2019) * Sri Jegarajah (2019–present)


See also

* ''
Squawk Box ''Squawk Box'' is an American business news television program that airs from 6 to 9 a.m. Eastern time on CNBC. The program is co-hosted by Joe Kernen, Becky Quick, and Andrew Ross Sorkin. Since debuting in 1995, the show has spawned a number ...
'' * ''
Squawk Box Europe ''Squawk Box Europe'' (since May 2011, billed on-screen as just Squawk Box) is a television business news programme on CNBC Europe, aired from 7-10am CET (6-9am WET) each weekday. It also airs on CNBC Asia between 2.00 p.m.-5.00 p.m. Hong Kong / ...
'' * ''
Squawk Australia ''Squawk Australia'' was a television business news program that aired every weekday at 6:00am Singapore/Hong Kong/Taiwan time on CNBC Asia. It was broadcast live from CNBC Asia's Australia studio in Sydney, and anchored by Amanda Drury. It ...
''


External links


''Asia Squawk Box'' official website
{{CNBC Asia Business Day CNBC Asia original programming Business-related television series 1998 Hong Kong television series debuts 1998 Singaporean television series debuts 1998 Taiwanese television series debuts 2014 Singaporean television series endings Television news shows 1990s Hong Kong television series 1990s Singaporean television series 1990s Taiwanese television series 2000s Hong Kong television series 2000s Singaporean television series 2000s Taiwanese television series 2010s Hong Kong television series 2010s Singaporean television series 2010s Taiwanese television series Hong Kong television news shows Singaporean television news shows Taiwanese television news shows