On February 3, 2006, Ted David, who had co-anchored
Morning Call with Liz Claman since 2003, left the program while being promoted to senior anchor at CNBC Business Radio. From to 2007-07-17, Claman was joined in the 10-11am hour by
Mark Haines (who reported from the
New York Stock Exchange), and in the 11am-noon hour by various anchors, including
Dylan Ratigan (see anchor roster below). On July 20, 2007, CNBC replaced the first hour of the two-hour program with an expanded
Squawk on the Street, due in part to Claman's departure from the network (which she joined
Fox News Channel's sister network financial unit three months later).
Dylan Ratigan and
Trish Regan served as interim anchors for the program, which was completely revamped on 2007-07-23. In addition to the aforementioned 2007-07-23 revamp, the anchors were joined on set by a guest contributor, very similar to
Squawk Box. On August 8, 2007, the show was renamed—and replaced—by
The Call. The name change to
The Call with Dylan Ratigan (who left the show in late 2008 and was replaced by
Larry Kudlow),
Melissa Francis, and Trish Regan on that date was due in part to avoid confusion with the early-morning
Bloomberg Television program of the same name. On March 23, 2026, CNBC brought back
Morning Call, this time as a one-hour early morning business news program, to replace
Worldwide Exchange, which ended its over 20-year run on March 20, 2026. Morgan Brennan, who previously anchored
Closing Bell Overtime before becoming the final anchor of
Worldwide Exchange, was carried over to the revived
Morning Call. ==Anchor roster==