"I think the President ought to get off the campaign bus and get into the conference room with the Speaker and the other Congressional leaders and work out a deal," said Rep. Jim Gerlach, (R-PA), commenting on the President's trip to his home state without a "fiscal cliff" deal.
"It's confusing to me as to why they want to raise taxes on the one hand this year and then take a tax code overhaul next year," said Lawrence Bossidy, former Honeywell chairman & CEO, discussing tax reform.
Gordon Charlop, Rosenblatt Securities; Mark Tepper, Strategic Wealth Partners; and CNBC's Rick Santelli discuss where to put your money ahead of the fiscal cliff.
House Speaker John Boehner tells reporters that negative comments from the GOP about the "fiscal cliff" talks aren't just public posturing for negotiating purposes.
A look at Burberry's largest flagship store in the U.S. and the outlook on luxury sales this holiday season, with CNBC's Courtney Reagan and Angela Ahrendts, Burberry CEO.
Is it time to get back into gold? Making the case for the precious metal, with Bank of America Merrill Lynch's MacNeil Curry, CNBC's Melissa Lee and the Money In Motion traders.
Mad Money host Jim Cramer says next week kicks off on Sunday when Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner is set to appear on "Meet the Press," and explains what to watch in next week's trading.
CNBC's Melissa Lee and the Options Action traders look at the past week's activity in the options markets, and discuss what they'll be watching next week.
Mike's genius Apple trade. Can the company's strength continue? Discussing whether it's time to bite into the Apple rally, with CNBC's Melissa Lee and the Options Action traders.
White House Press Secretary finds spending cuts deeply irresponsible, with Katie Pavlich, Townhall.com; Peter S. Goodman, Huffington Post; Rep. Nan Hayworth (R-NY); and Hadley Heath, Independent Women's forum senior policy analyst.
CNBC's Kayla Tausche reports the House passed a bill to create permanent residence visas for foreign graduates of U.S. universities who have earned advanced degrees in science, technology, engineering and medicine.
Congress is tossing around the idea of swapping out the paper dollar bill for a hard coin, and a government report finds the move could save taxpayers nearly $4.5 billion over 30 years, with Sean Fieler, American Principles; and Don Luskin of Trend Macro and Jim LaCamp of UBS, check the stock market.
Discussing reports that companies are scrambling to offer special dividends as the January 1 tax threat of the fiscal cliff nears, with Steve Moore, author of "Return to Prosperity," and CNBC Contributor Howard Dean.