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tv   Cavuto Coast to Coast  FOX Business  May 10, 2024 12:00pm-1:00pm EDT

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we have a lot of national -- it is all of the above. all of the above. gardening, number one, gardening. kelly:based on credit card statements it might be traveling but i think camping. stuart: has nobody considered cooking? lots of people are cooking. the answer is cooking. according to this monmouth paul, 68% of people say one of their hobbies is cooking, 37% of people said their top hobby was cooking. lauren: against the pole. lauren: it's a necessity and a chore. stuart: out of time. coast-to-coast starts now.
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neil: italian, we are not doing much in the corner of wall and broad but we are looking at gains on the week, if we have any gain in the dow we could be making it 5 days in a row. this optimism the things are slowing down enough to get the federal reserve to squeeze two by the end of the year. it might be a leap year but we are following how you feel about things, consumer confidence took a big dive in the latest month but what was interesting was expectations for inflation, that doesn't mean they will be stubbornly high, just that most americans seem to think that is a perennial problem around us for a while. if you fear that, it might affect what you do, whether you are concerned about interest rate staying high. those expectations feed this inflation juggernaut.
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it is an interesting juxtaposition. >> reporter: i have been saying this to you for a while, watch the 10 year yield, it dropped 4.7% to 4.5% and that has the market recovering a lot, when the market dropped yields were going up and what happened on that wednesday, j powell, banks lend to each other, they slowed the rate of printing money and the market sees that as quite nice, easing from where he was, thus we get the rally appropriate sticks. if we keep going lower the market stays in gear. field start backing up again it will be trouble and i am pretty sure the inflation numbers coming out next week will tell a big tail in the near-term.
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stuart: 20 neil: when i break down the numbers and what his family for the markets versus unfairly, there's more friendly news. we have a strong read on first-quarter earnings not across the board, looking at the future, it's a little great but by and large better-than-expected. we have a lot more companies buying back their shares, pretty considerable. then this consumer sentiment survey, we are still optimistic, not nearly as optimistic but we are worried about inflation which might put a damper on buying which in a perverse way could be good if that means the federal reserve is more inclined to cut rates. what do you make of that? >> perverse is the world, if the economy slows down but does not going to deep recession, that is actually probably good
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for the market and if anything has fueled market since 2008 when been burning he started the big experiment on ridiculous easy money, markets love interest rates, the fed being active in printing money and cooling all kinds of levers, earnings look fine. nothing spectacular but it was fine, they had the usual amount of blowups. there was some big blowups, than apple which 110 billion is like bigger than most s&p companies and that adds to $625 billion over the last we 10 years, that fuels earnings-per-share and helps the stock price with the stock price that has done nothing in 2.5 years so they need from their revenues and stocks stay dormant. neil: the dow is cool this month, out of the s&p 500, and
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trailing the s&p through this whole bull market, it certainly is captivating of the attention of a lot of traders and what do you make of it? >> it is better but the dow was 30 stocks, price waited so $400 stock is 40 and i can tell you names like cisco and verizon are dead money, they need to replace of those going forward, amazon gives it more high-octane and a good company if you ask me but overall we moved above some important resistance areas this week. if you stick that landing we have opportunity going forward. if we start breaking below you will be hearing from me that we may be getting in trouble again but so far so good. may i state for the record a
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really good recovery off of those low interest rates, direct correlation, pretty much 1-for-1. neil: do you see the fed going ahead with the cut by the end of the year? >> i'm one hundred% sure. by the time we get to the election the answer is no. he does not want to look to be political which is why he did what he did last week. without cutting rates, he eased monetary policy by lowering quantitative tightening and it has been a good move so far. neil: we are talking about other fast-moving developments which could indicate a little bit of a trade war or shall we say light more, president biden is considering some pretty sweeping tariffs on a number of chinese ev makers, all the major ones could extend to
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those that supply those, looks like it could be pretty broad, might look tougher than it is but edward lawrence is following it from the white house, including by the end of the week in seattle. what's the latest your hearing on this? >> it will be on the clean energy items coming out of china into the united states. we will get to that in a second. president biden is waking up to a slew of campaign fundraising events, two in san francisco one in seattle on the west coast swing, donald trump tied up in a new york courtroom, the biden campaign admitted while donald trump is stuck in a court case president biden will make campaign stops and visit battleground states as part of a coordinated effort to tilt close poll numbers in president biden's favor. biden's campaign said he plans to spend $14 million in campaign ad bys over the next 22 days in battleground states,
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president biden trying to message the economy because this is what people feel. since january 2021, we are paying 20% more for all food, 37% more for all energy, rent is up 20 one%. experts say the administration has heard its own economy. >> with the biden administration we had this incredible burst and unhealthy burst of federal spending that by supply constraints in the form of overregulation. that is why we keep getting these bursts of inflation. >> it will keep happening because president biden wants to keep spending, republicans have said this president is soft on china. we are hearing as neil was talking about there could possibly be tariffs coming on chinese ev products coming into the united states, talking
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about all the products for the green energy sector and he the components coming in, this is part of that review of section 301 tariffs, the white house is considering this move, no timeframe exactly on when this could happen. possibly as early as next week, donald trump added tariffs on chinese goods and that successfully got the chinese to sit down for phase 1 trade deal and the white house is trying to protect the growing ev industry, the president would like to see to do that, he's going to prevent china from dumping stuff on the market into our country. back to you. >> china does not like tariffs and that the one thing they have told secretary yellen, they want the tariffs gone and now they are talking about adding tariffs, possibly 400% on ev products.
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neil: the man who wants to get back into that building, donald trump, knee-deep in the third week of testimony, a cash trial going on right now, details are a little sketchy because the former president is hearing a lot from financial types, accountants, those who were processing records of major phone companies. eric china 6 better alex blaney this than i will ever be. is outside the courthouse. what are we learning? >> reporter: you need a weed wacker. >> the big news here, michael cohen, the so-called pitbull will testify, take the stand monday. prosecutors called him to begin his testimony here and that's highly anticipated.
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cohen, trump's longtime lawyer will appear on the stand to lay out the case against his former boss, expected to explain his conversations with trump and how they hatch their plans to by stormy daniels's silent so voters would not find out about her tryst with trump during the presidential election. it was cohen who said he laid out the $130,000 to -- from his home equity line of credit to pay the former president, who was a not at all. paying him back with those checks falsely disguised as legal fees. the basis of the 34 counts against trump are filing false business records. the most recent witnesses have been called to a claim the process of how trump wrote checks when he was in the white house. former executive assistant testifying the trump would sign hundreds of document today, often sign checks when doing other things like being on the phone or meetings. the defense want to show the
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trump was not paying attention to those checks so he might hot have known what they were. trump's lawyers want to subpoena the former prosecutor mark pomerantz to testify. he is a prominent white shoe lawyer of new york us is whether you're working for the da investigating trump before he quit, blasting the manhattan district attorney alvin bragg, because he dragged his feet and refused to bring charges against trump. one of the buses testifying is a paralegal whose job for the last almost two years has been to monitor every two, every true social post, everything the former president says about this trial, the witnesses entering into evidence, old tweets of the former president attacking michael cohen to set up for cohen's expected testimony, which what he says will be quite a bombshell week in manhattan criminal court.
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neil: he will be on the stand at least a couple days. >> monday, tuesday, wednesday is a day off for the trial, the judge preside over mental health court on wednesdays. could be all week, monday, tuesday, thursday, friday. >> reporter: thank you very much. stuart: neil: guy lewis, what is at stake here with the michael cohen testimony? that is the epicenter, isn't it? >> this is the fourth quarter, it is due or die for the prosecution team, they, in my view, come up short in the first three quarters, the last few witnesses are basically records where they are trying to corroborate some testimony.
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you see the trump team get out, good nuggets, pieces of information that hurt the government's case which i think frankly is apparent because it is built on political quick things. neil: hard to read our trial is going without vote prosecutor, getting stormy daniels up there was a good idea. in the eye of the beholder. i'm trying to get your sense of what you are hearing and where this could be going and if it looks like the prosecution overreached, going into comments we didn't want to or need to hear. what do you think? >> one piece of evidence to support this idea that even the prosecution agrees stormy daniels's testimony was a disaster is last night they pulled carrie mcdougall as a witness, the other woman who was paid off in this alleged
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scheme and she will no longer fear the prosecution to recognize stormy daniels went after trump so hard she perhaps made a mess a pathetic figure. and in this trial prosecutors have done a good job of making trump look like a sleazy guy, but they spent a lot, very little time trying to make him look guilty of the crime he is accused of. almost no evidence connecting him to these payments. one could make the argument the payments themselves, legal extensors to trump's lawyers weren't even improperly classified in the first place, extremely weak case and even a conviction would be hard for people to -- for that to dent trump's support. neil: you are a great lawyer. really great lawyers, the goal is not so much to make the case in the courthouse, if you have an agenda you never do, and rough up donald trump and do some serious damage and say he lied about stormy daniels.
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what else is he lying about, embarrass and humiliate him and down the road this is something that could be appealed if it doesn't go your way doesn't matter, you did your damage. what do you think of that? >> fascinating commentary. the thing i tried to keep my eye on is the government needs all 12 jurors, they have to say guilty beyond reasonable doubt. one person to raise their hands, i've listened to stormy daniels, i listen to michael cohen, the convicted liar, former lawyer, disbarred. i don't buy that and i'm not seeing the kind of evidence that would convince me as a juror and the instructions that would lead you in the most
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important of your own affairs to make a decision for the government. i don't see the kind of conversation, the co-conspirator evidence, the tweets, the documents, anything when i was prosecuting get cases especially public corruption cases, at the top of the list. neil: what about you on this whole thing? political damage done or no political damage done? >> the political damage is minimal because the fact that trump was a philanderer with women is baked in. we litigated this in 2016 with access hollywood. we litigated in the court of public opinion the stormy daniels affair. that came in 2018. none of this is shocking to anyone. the widespread perception of this case is that it is political, the most political of all four so everything we
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are learning about donald trump, voters are already factoring into their decisions on whether to vote for him. . 20 i want to thank you both. that could be the one to watch next week when he takes the stand. we have a fight joining us, former fcc chairman, i wonder what his thoughts are right now in this push tube band tiktok and tiktok coming back to say you do that got to go a step too far, exhausting free-speech, a chinese company concerned about free speech. ♪ ♪
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neil: you can use tiktok in china. >> the sister apps is incredibly revealing. when you compare the way they operate those platforms. neil: when they make a free-speech argument that the us is being unfair and not allowing other voices to get through, that seems to be alive and well in china. >> lack of hypocrisy when it comes to tiktok but their main
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argument this is a free-speech platform are trying to ban it, you can take a pen and write the most salacious anti-american propaganda you want but when you take the same pen and use it to pick a lock and steal something the government gets to take the pen. neil: when it comes to republicans sitting on the fcc they are not keen on any efforts to let tiktok to continue to exist in its present form. making tiktok essentially illegal but unless by chance, chinese and parent company divest itself of it and conclude there is no connection with china which is a big leak. the former fcc chairman from 2017-21. you have strong views how far you can or cannot go, what tiktok is saying, the american government is fond of criticizing the chinese government, what do you think?
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>> i do think what is at stake is not the first amendment right of tiktok but a national security concern. it doesn't identify tiktok and doesn't restrict speech. it says any online platform subject to the parole of a foreign adversary like china and iran, north korea, there is a divestiture within a year or the platform will be banned. i don't think the first amendment holds sway here. safeguard as much as any american does the first amendment that we have -- >> i have sons in college, no big fans of taking down tiktok. they cynically say to me, an
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american company, what is the difference? what should i tell them? >> the difference between social media companies are using that to send you individualized ads, what tiktok is shown to be doing is using consumer sensitive information to china, manipulating algorithms so americans see different content and serious can security concerns given the tiktok has been found to be subject control of foreign adversary, the chinese communist party. at the case of apples and oranges when it comes to national security. neil: the united states government to take over banning a company or practice in the united states, different, the president going after china,
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china ev makers, 100% tariffs on them and the rest, different sides of the same coin. what do you make of that? >> so long as the action is being taken on the basis of objective criteria. if the presidential cabinet secretary or member of congress putting a finger in the wind, and the determination whether the platform is subject to the control of foreign adversary, and we take national security action based on objective criteria. this is no different. from the chinese making similar determination and facing an arbitrary decision they don't want foreign-based companies entering the market. the us government is making the
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determination based on control of the party over tiktok. neil: if donald trump were to get back into the white house, the sec? >> would be a change in control of the agency. beyond that, there would be a shift, more deregulatory approach with respect to domestic telethon at broadcast, more of a regulatory impulse the last few years and the changes it does when there's a few changes in control of the party, national security issues, and she supported the legislation that led to tiktok the vested by bike dance. the security issues are a fair degree. neil: good catching up with you. it has been a while. apple has some explaining to do
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mac ♪ all i ever need is you ♪ neil: it came and went for apple to promote the new ipad line. it's a very high-tech line. the idea is they would have the ability to do so much in a single device that you don't need all the per referral stuff but it was iconic and created, stashing it to smithereens and that didn't go over well. tim cook says it was a mistake. steve jobs would never approve such an ad, he was all about embracing creativity, this is literally about smashing it. sometimes people go too far with this stuff but it is what it is. they are trying to dig out of that hole but what do you make of it?
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>> reporter: for a company that it is well and good, celebrating innovation and things that came from the past, i just wonder what marketing committee let this out the door to put out there? the good news is tim cook recognized it, acted quickly. the story really goes apple came out and said you don't need anything, just have an ipad on the stage and kids don't need a trombone or a tar or any of the other things, how dare they crush a space invaders game that i was great at. apple made a mistake, mistakes happen, they will move forward and have new marketing people in their next ads. neil: this went through a lot of change of command. is this a budweiser moment?
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>> i don't think so. apple is a gargantuan ecosystem, going 315, they have to be careful. look companies out there do one thing very well. they are paranoid and they are paranoid when they are doing their best. for a company, there are a lot of companies that would like a piece of that who need to look over their shoulders every day and that's how they market themselves. it's a lesson learned, celebrate innovation, don't put them down for the sake of a new ipad. neil: i wasn't offended by was confused by it. i said that seems like an odd
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way to promote a product. in retrospect it is about the simple are ipad and how it can do things with numerous devices to do but i didn't get it until after the fact but maybe it goes away. >> the ad should have been a 13-year-old going through his homework. in 18-year-old baby, you could play a piano on it or somebody studying on it. the things that matter most. they went for the negative. advertising should definitively be to the positive and move forward. i gather the next ad will wash this out and be something different going forward. neil: we shall see. we help make mistakes and sometimes it is good to know you make mistakes. a lot of people see every mistake you are making.
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grady trimble reporting on boeing. a lot of people going through what the company new and how the securities and exchange commission is getting involved. >> reporter: the sec is getting involved because they are looking into whether the company or its executives might have misled investors in a way that's a violation of sec rules. in bloomberg news cites 3 unnamed -- the sec probe is focused on statements just before and after the door plug blue off the alaska airlines flight in january and an investigation like this could lead to fines for boeing, the sec is not confirming it is happening at all and boeing didn't respond to our requests for comment. you followed a number of blowing whistleblowers have come forward, two recently
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died. lawmakers have heard from some of those whistleblowers who claim the airplanemaker tried to silence their safety concerns, the latest to speak out is in a former employee of spirit aerosystems, he says his boss tried to sweep his concerns. >> like i said before, a constant bottle to try to do my job which was to identify and document defect. it was a constant battle to do that. >> the door plug blue out. the company stock has lost a third of its value since the beginning of the year and now there's a pile on from all sorts of federal agencies most notably the faa and department of justice are still conducting their probes into problems at
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boeing. neil: the war continues to drag on between israel and hamas, benjamin netanyahu is ready to go it alone. the fallout from that after this.
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neil: a couple develop its in israel, one from benjamin netanyahu admitting failures on october 7th but ducking any personal responsibility. this was an article focused on how he is responding to the biden administration as revealed to provide certain weaponry, the read on this is interesting, a lot of republican say you can't do that. other presidents have. this is sending a clear message to israel that we are not buying their campaign to a lemonade hamas and we learned that might be the case. retired navy seal commander, seal tim 6 commander. i always like it when i have dave on remote because i can ask questions, if he was in the
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studio for me he would kill me for just thinking. good to have you, don't mean to kid but the message you're getting from benjamin netanyahu is i will do what i have to do whether you help us or not. what did you make of that? >> it is what strategic mistake on the part of the biden administration. they are in a fight for their very existence against an adversary who says we want to wipe out israel and we will do october 7th again and again and again. israel of course is not going to bow down to the united states. they will continue to fight and why we would alienate them is beyond me. neil: i'm wondering where it goes. you know military history. other presidents have done this sort of thing, dwight eisenhower, jimmy carter. we had this with barack obama. there is some history to it but
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i believe the distinction, we didn't do it on an international stage in real time to humiliate the israelis. that's the difference here? >> he's blatantly trying to send a message. in reality, is he posturing more towards domestic audience with this and if there was an election coming in november, can't discount that at all. there's lots of back channel communications and things that can be done without calling them out on the world stage. and forcing each other's hands. how do you backout from this? very difficult. neil: how do you see this going? netanyahu wants to go on with his rafah campaign and every step is greeted with protest around the world and college campuses here. it feeds the narrative that is
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real is a bully. how does he deal with that? >> he ignores a lot. he is truly in this excess essential threat. he knows he has to defeat hamas. he is going to have to go into rafah where they are hold up. he knows how they operate and israel, even opposing parties to him realize they have no choice or they will deal with this again and again. neil: hamas is celebrating this divide. hamas is all over this. >> they want to last this out. the longer they can negotiate and keep israel out of rafah the more international sympathy they try to generate, the more they can get their information campaign out there, they see that as a win.
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this is helping hamas. neil: it is a long way, people forget that. retired navy seal commander. we are following other developments like protests we told you about. a lot of kids, graduation has been canceled and reducing small affairs. the fact of the matter is my next guest is a new york congressman who said we've got to do something in his district to make it special for those columbia kids aren't getting that opportunity. it is happening all over. the republican of new york, congressman, explain what you want to do. >> i made it very simple. i sent a letter the last couple
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days to the president of columbia and stated she has failed in her duty to keep kids safe her. she did not have the ability to keep that campus safe. she allow the campus to be overrun by hate filled human beings. it is necessary to have that commencement and sent a letter to the president of the school asking for names of individuals who are due to graduate, and i worked to put on a graduation they can be proud of that they can feel safe at. neil: have you heard anything back? >> i am hoping the president after the mistakes she made over the last weeks and the
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inability to keep the university safe, she sees a moment of clarity before she resigned and gets those names to us so we can get what matters to these kids. neil: where would you do it? >> we have plenty of options. i spoke to bruce blakemann and don claman all willing to help whether it is in a park, we were the ones who during the covid 19 pandemic helped utilize drive-through graduations to make sure these kids had a way to celebrate their successes. i know this district, people who are invested, find a way to make sure kids have their proper graduation and most importantly that they feel safe at it. that's what columbia university felt at. neil: we will see protests with the continued radon rafah. and columbia as well.
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>> the only thing we should be calling for is the surrender of hamas and the release of the hostages. i can't seem to understand these protesters throughout the country who are claiming this is about humanitarian efforts. i am harassed daily on capitol hill, individuals from code pink telling me they are about peace. it's a humanitarian disaster. they humanitarian disaster happened in october when hamas entered israel and slaughtered and raped and pillaged. that's where the issue lies. i called for the eradication of hamas and to provide the resources israel needs to do that. if they want a humanitarian result they should be calling for the surrender of hamas and all the hostages. neil: novel idea to help those
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kids out. keep us posted. very good seeing you. in the meantime, getting kids up to speed when it comes to money matters, as young as middle school. an interesting push. ♪ ♪ there are many ways to do things. at old dominion freight line, we do them this way. this way has people who start early. people who care and inspire each other to do things the way they should be done. this way uses technology (♪) and goes the extra mile
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(♪) to deliver your promises on-time, every time. this way is why we're the number one national ltl carrier for quality. for us, this way is the right way which is why it's the only way we go. ♪ in any business, you ride the line between numbers and people. what's right for the business and what's best for everyone who depends on it. solving today's challenges while creating future opportunities. it takes balance. cla - cpas, consultants, and wealth advisors. we'll get you there.
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neil: on novel campaign to teach middle schoolers about financing. if it works they will move on to congress. what is going on here? >> reporter: this is a story for your geeky financial heart. i am at i asked 281 in brooklyn.
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this is dedicated to financial literacy. we will talk to their teacher. >> the foundation stock market, kids bring them to groups, to trade in stocks. when we walk in, they are going up or down. >> i bought 100 shares. >> you got to tell me why this is so important to this community. >> are schoolers represented by 42 countries. as a first-generation american i was told to save save save. we like to teach people to invest invest invest. >> reporter: i spoke to one of your students. here's what she had to say. >> little to no money, little english and i saw how hard they struggle. i never want that to happen to
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me or my parents ever again. >> reporter: we wanted to ask the classroom do you like this class? is a good class? what do you think? neil, back to you. neil: i don't want to end on a sad note but we are getting word the billionaire investor jim simmons has died. he founded winner sans technologies. speaking to this quantitative analysis, he gave a lot back to society, taught people how to invest in cycles, looking at research much more closely, and data in a way to do it in english. one of the legends of this business. he is here with peter lynches, and make this a lot of money, dead at 86. to "the big money show". didn't want to go into it that way but this is a big loss

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