tv The Willis Report FOX Business September 2, 2014 5:00pm-6:01pm EDT
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cloud, their security laps their responsibility. liz: wayne says anything can be hacked eventually, even apple. david: cora says if you don't want your bare bottom out there, don't fake take the photos. liz: we're with cora. david: "willis report" next. gerry, another retailer hit with a data breach today. you're discussing that, right? gerri: home depot could face a data breach much bigger than the target customers experienced last year. also on the show, is big brother along for the ride when you get behind the wheel? we will have investigation. nude photos of some of hollywood's hottest stars found online. is your information safe on the cloud. clouds kick off september in the red. what are you expecting this month for your four owe condition k? our panel weighs in. the -- 401(k). "the willis report" starts right now. we begin with a hack job at
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home depot. according to reports, several banks are warning a massive amount of debit and credit cards went on sale in the cyber underground, the most likely source, home depot. several banks believe this breach could have started as early as april. if this true, are we looking at a breach bigger than target last year? joining me now, adam levin, chairman and founder of identity theft 911. adam, welcome back to the show. reports on grubs today, banks reporting this could be a massive, massive breach. why does the information come from the banks? >> because they usually see the activity before anybody else does because they will see activity with cards. the activity will look a little bit out of place. they then have systems that determine patterns. of and then they try to check back to where the patterns eminate from. it would appear a lot of patterns are eminating from what we hear, it is under investigation, from possibly
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home depot. gerri: we should say home depot is not saying this is a massive broken, not yet. they say they're investigating it. that is about all they're saying. according to krebbs, this could be bigger than target breach last year. that was a breach of 40 million payment card numbers. as many as 70 million americans affected with some amount of information, personal data at risk in the marketplace for people to steal. how can we go through this again and again and not do something to try to fix the situation? >> the problem they're trying to fix the situation. they're talking about chip and pin cards. that doesn't solve the problem when it comes to online. but this software is so pernicious and it has been so difficult to detect, this malware that they put on the point of sale system, question, target, it was put on their point of sale system through a vendor. gerri: that's what happened here? >> they don't know. they don't know how it got on. gerri: that is not reassuring. >> although know so far, if it
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happened this back off ends up on point of sale system an like a keystroke logging device. it basically gathers data. it is transmitted to the point where they get credit card data, they get debit card data. and ultimately it is transmitted back to russia. gerri: let me tell you what upsets me. this apparently happened back in april yet we're just hearing about it now. in most states, nearly all states have some kind of security breach law that requires companies to report these breaches much closer to when they happened. so to me, i find it unlikely that in all of this time home depot has had no idea that this problem existed. what is your reaction? >> well sometimes, it does take a while to actually determine that you have a problem. gerri: april? april? >> possibly so. sometimes also that there are situations where law enforcement says, you can not make announcement. we are investigating, if you look at all the breach laws, one of the exceptions is, if you're told by law enforcement, you are not to make announcement until
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they conclude their investigation. gerri: so home depot, thousands of stores. no doubt our viewers have been in home depot. i know i've been in home depot many times. so what should i be doing? >> well a number of things. one you should be checking your accounts daily, both your bank and credit card accounts. should be doing that anyway. you and i talk to people about that. gerri: we're talking about daily. i think adam has it exactly right. >> just a few minutes every day, people go that is too much time. really? how much time do you spend on email? how much do you, time do you spend on social networking? you need to do that. with your debit cards, change your pin numbers. >> change your pin on debit card. >> change your pin on the debit card to be safe, if you remember you used debit card at all at home depot store. this may not be the end of the story anyway. the federal authorities warned over 1,000 businesses and we're not talking about small business. we can be talking about massive businesses, that this back off software was going to prove a
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problem. that it was on point of sale systems. they weren't sure how many and where but their investigation has led them to believe over 1000 businesses were going to have the problem. >> i want to read a quick statement from home depot. here is what they're saying. we're looking into unusual activity and working with our banking partners in law enforcement to investigate. if we confirm a breach has occurred, we will make sure customers are notified immediate. so home, depot, looking into this. a lot of people looking into this. we'll tell you everything we know as soon as we know it. adam, thanks for being on the show. great to see you as always. >> thank you. gerri: also tonight, we have an important story about the mobile tracking device that you call a car. as of this week all cars sold in the u.s. must have a black box on board. but what is being recorded on this black box, just like an airplane black box and who has the rights to this information? we took to the road to find out. >> nothing like a great massage. we have six different massage programs. gerri: six?
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>> yep. and two of them actually are featuring a hot stone massage technology. gerri: when i think of women and cars i always think of safety. >> yeah. gerri: so what kind of safety features what kind of special technology do you have built into this? >> so we have a tremendous amount of safety and technology equipment in here. we have, basically all around the vehicle vary with us types of radar, both long-range, short-range, as well as ultrason i can or sound wave sensors. night view assist which is infrared radar. gerri: what. >> literally, obviously day time, not best use case, it is for a feature called night view assist plus, as you drive at night, detects a pedestrian or animal. it will bracket the pedestrian right on your screen. gerri: turns in front of you. don't have to look to the right. it is right in front of you. >> yeah. gerri: you may be stunned by the technology in six figure mercedes flagship you may be
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even more surprised what is coming to even the most basic cars sold in the united states. starting this month, all new cars sold here must have an event data recorder, often called a black box. the black box records a history of what you are doing or not doing behind the wheel. the theory being that the black box will capture the last moments leading up to a crash. the black box information includes how fast you were going, whether you were applying the gas or brakes and whether the airbag is inflated. unlike the black box in a jet liner, the one in your car does not record people's voices. gerri: look at that. wow, i feel like i'm in a discotheque. in case you were wondering the price on that 2014 mercedes? 12thousand. -- $128,000. we want to talk about black boxes today. here is one in my hand. this is in your car probably right now. who owns the information that this device records and how hard is it for law enforcement or
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insurance companies to get their hands on the data? for answers to that we're joined by the car coach, lauren fix. lauren, great to see you. >> great to see you. gerri: how much data is my car collecting on me? >> quite a bit. every 20 seconds it collects data. it knows how many times your vehicle started. it knows where you've gone. knows how many passengers. this is september 1st, the new regulations. all the data is being collected by every manufacturer. gerri: do you have brakes on, hands on steering wheel, what is your speed, are you wearing seatbelt, all these details, in case you have a crash, this is why the stuff was invented in the first place, right. >> right. gerri: we know what happened. but lauren, whose information is it. >> it belongs to you. you bought the car. however the car manufacturers use it when there is technical problem. in the last 20 starts we notice we had a problem with this data. we can get the vehicles back in the dealership. so it does collect good data but also access to the data can be for more people, you can't get
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it, other people can. gerri: apparently according to 14 states it is my data. nhtsa says it is my data. a lot of people say insurance companies want it. there is big fight, wild west for information coming out of this black box. one of my fears they will put, record more and more information. maybe not just 20 seconds. maybe 24 hours. >> right. gerri: talk about how think should have rights to this data, what reality is on the ground. does my insurer have rights to my black box date? if not this black box, another black box? >> insurance companies have been trying to people to put modules on onboard diagnostics to possibly get discount on insurance. that black box you showed will be on every single car. it has been on a lot of cars, since 2005. 62% of the cars on the road. what is interesting that data is used when there's an accident. let's say i hit you me. you say, no, i hit you. especially if there are injuries or severe crash, they can
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subpoena the information. information does belong to you. the 14 states do protect you you have to read the regulations, because if you read them carefully they can subpoena them. gerri: here is other thing i'm worried about. so i make a claim on my car insurance. something happened, i need something fixed. there is a gash in the front bummer, what do we do? so the insurance company says i have to see the black box because i want to see if you're going too fast where you were supposed to be. that is a possibility as well? >> that is possibility. they haven't gotten to that. when you have a crash, an investigator will come out, write it up. if it is something other than a gash they will say get a quote. as we get further and further along, they say, you know what, gerri, you got from point a to point b three times faster than our computers calculated and we'll send you a ticket. we'll raise your insurance rates. you tend to speed. you get from point a, to point b. listen all the smart tablets and devices we have, we are tracked consistently. think about the phone and your tablet of some type, they can
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track that as well. they know where i've been all day and where you have been all day. just access it. gerri: what i think is interesting, you think when you get in the car you hear thud of doors closing, this is my world. this is where i live. this is my private space. but it is less and less so. >> you pretty much don't have the privacy anymore. i discuss that all the time with people, used to be that was your place to think, like being in the shower. that is only place they haven't invaded yet. when it comes to the car, it is yours. you make the payments. there is driver privacy act supposed to protect consumers t hasn't done. and fourth amendment you would think protect you as consumer. it is your information. it doesn't necessarily protect. >> there is another bill making its way through the senate, writes same thing specifically with edr data. we'll see what happens to that. what is interesting about, hey, i will turn off the edr, right? disable it. >> don't want to do that. first off illegal, number one. number two it could affect passive safety systems and
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airbags. seatbelts have load tensioners and would not operate as well amongst other things. gerri: don't be doing that. i guess we have to wait to see how t works out. i hate to be in the situation where i think it is my data. i don't want the car testifying against m law. >> a lot of things you can do to protect yourself. shut off bluetooth when you leave car with valet. weil you're having dinner. i made a copy of your nav screen. went to the home. if you take your valet keys with you, they don't have access. gerri: there are saved consideration. if you are in a brutal car accident, this little device could decide where you should go given the way the car was hit. >> onstar does that. every manufacturer. kia as uvo. hyundai has blue link. all the different systems tell you have an accident. this is speed of accident. we can send a ambulance or emergency vehicle. for that it does make sense.
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giving away data or selling data is where i have concern. gerri: lots of worries. we talk about you can't shut it down, that's for sure. be sure not to do that. a lot of people are worried about their private data. we'll continue to talk about this. lauren, thank you. >> thank you. gerri: we want to know what you think. here is our question tonight. who showed own data from your car's black box, you, your insurance company or the government? log on to gerriwillis.com. vote on the right-hand side of the screen. i will share the results at the end of tonight's show. still a lot more to come at this hour, include your voice. your voice is important to us much. during the show, facebook or tweet me @gerriwillisfbn. grow to the website, gerriwillis.com. at the bottom of the hour i will read your tweets and your emails. next one ceo speaks out on president obama's war on coal which is slashing jobs across the country. stay with us.
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musical chairs. fun, right? welllllllll, not when your travel rewards card makes it so hard to get a seat using your miles. that's their game. the flights you want are blacked out. or they ask for some ridiculous number of miles. honestly, it's time to switch to the venture card from capital one. with venture, use your miles on any airline, any flight, any time. no blackout dates. and with every purchase, you'll earn unlimited double miles. from now on, no one's taking your seat away. what's in your wallet? gerri: the colbies in this country has been dealt another set back -- colbies.
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amazing this country puts out coal business. the u.s. is importing coal. we're the saudi arabia of coal, we're importing coal. ceo of alpha natural resources, kevin crutchfield. great to have you on the show. we were chatting in the break. i'm a coal miner's granddaughter. i have a vested interest whether coal jobs in the u.s. you say you have to lay people off right now? >> absolutely. we laid off 4,000 people last couple years. that is very challenging to look at somebody who has done nothing wrong and tell them because of nothing they have done, we don't have anything more for you. that is function of the overt regulatory environment we find ourselves in as well as cheap natural gas. gerri: so you recently notified 11 mines and 1100 miners in west virginia alone, their mines may be idled. we've been talking about how coal imports are up something like 44%. how can these two things be happening? >> right. coal miners never run from free market competition. you know what has been
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challenging for us has been the overt regulatory environment that we talked about. it has driven our costs up, that make other nations coal here more competitive. colombians, the indonesians, the russians even. they don't have the same environmental standards, the same safety standards that we have but they can compete on costs and it is costing our folks jobs right now. gerri: in a big way. we keep hearing stories from appalachia, west virginia, you name it, loss of jobs and impact as a matter of fact the heritage foundation conducted a report looking impact going forward of obama's war on coal. 600,000 jobs will be lost in the next 10 years. gdp will be cut by 2.2 trillion. family income. incomes are already down but they will be cut by another 1200 bucks. electricity price, thank you very much, for all of us up 20%. so the impacts are real. the impacts are large. what should be done in your view? what are the regulations that the president put in place that are so onerous and costing you
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so much? >> well there have been several. the most recent aimed at control of carbon dioxide. the most damaging one, regulation they're in the process of promulgating is the amount of carbon dioxide, emitted in a new electricity source. interestingly they set the threshold at a level that coal can not meet without technology -- gerri: by definition of regulations, coal was left out of the picture? >> coal can't comply with this new regulation. so it is effectively a defacto moratorium on any new coal-fired power plant construction in the united states. gerri: so no new plants will be built. >> no new plants. gerri: no new plants. you can't compete with coal coming from south america. you told me russia, for goodness sakes. i can't imagine why we would accept imports from russia? why would that be? we're at war with them. >> small amount went into the northeast. we don't know much about it. it is a very challenging environment, what we would ask, have a balanced debate around
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the costs and perceived benefits of these regulations to make sure that we're making smart decisions because what we see coming for sure is higher electricity prices. we saw that -- gerri: nobody wants that. it is burden on the american people. now you talked to people at the white house, you talk to people on the let, people like you, the coal industry, you're against any kind of efficiency standards, you're opposing them on every level. do you favor some kind of cleaner energy production? >> what we favor is a balanced approach to our energy needs as a nation. all of the above. we say all of the above and we actually mean it. when you look where our energy sources in the united states come from, 85% of it are fossil fuels. so we support a diversified portfolio over the long term on the basis of what makes sense from an economic and physics point of view. that's all we ask. not that hard. gerri: all those resources. we should use them. >> absolutely. we have more coal than anybody else in the world and yet we're trying to turn our backs on very
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industry that got us to this point as a nation to start with. gerri: kevin crutchfield, thanks so much for being on the show. >> thank you for having me. gerri: later in the show, celebrities, hacked, nude photos of some of the biggest stars are leaked. your information safe on the cloud? and next, a big moneymaker for cities across the country. but as usual chicago taking things too far? we'll have the latest on this scandal surrounding its red light cameras. you're not going to believe this. stay with us.
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points to a targeted attack. while apple maintains the icloud systems are secure, should consumers be cautious? with more on this joe lummis, the founder and ceo of cyber response. joe, what is the theory how this happened? how is it that people got in the icloud and able to get people's private pictures? >> weak password will be your culprit on that one. if you've got a password that is a word found in the english dictionary, using that in more than one location, chances are you're vulnerable. doesn't matter what system you're using, icloud, dropbox, going guesstimate you have to learn the methodology of understanding that you can not use simple passwords in today's day. gerri: everything is backed up to the cloud these days. if you think you're safe because, you got your phone in your hand and you haven't lost it, forget about that. because it is somewhere up on the cloud and people get a hold of it. 70% of online adults use at least one cloud service. that is one of the numbers we've
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seen. what else can be stolen from the cloud, joe? >> pretty much anything, whether it is your financial information, your identity, your personal files, your legal documents, your accounting files. anything that relatively depend on for a backup source can be taken. that is where you have to understand that, simple passwords and complex passwords are going to be need to be required in today's day. there are free tools out there that do that. gerri: absolutely right. lots of different apps you can do to store passwords. apps you can use to put together a password difficult to hack. should we not put things on the cloud? should you check the no box when filling out those forms about what is on the cloud and what isn't? >> i think that the conclude is okay if you take the right precautions. a strong password, insure that the vendor use as multilevel authentication, like two factor. when you send in, get a text message with special number and put in the ought then at thiscation number, awe then
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thecation number. understand what security measures the vendor is taking. do your homework out there. consumer smart shopping. gerri: apple is apparently teaming up with some of the biggest credit card issuers in the country and visa, american express. because of this icloud story, they want to make a mobile wallet, use your phone as credit card. but now i'm super worried about that because what happened with these pictures. is it going to be safe? >> that is for time to tell. i think when you come up with a new method of doing commerce we have to give it time for security measures to catch up with innovation. that is always the downside, right? everybody wants latest and great etf. security measures are often most difficult thing to catch up. we'll always be behind the eight ball. i think we need to give it time to adopt to a different method of commerce and using credit cards. let alone the credit cards today need to be changed because of what happened with target.
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before we make more change we need to fix what is currently out there. gerri: one of these actress, one solution to the problem, don't take pictures of yourself naked. we said that. >> good point. gerri: one of the act tests said she deleted photos. you tell me i deleted photo and it is not really gone? what is up with that? >> a lot of cloud users allow to you undelete. god forbid you delete something accidentally, your kids get ahold of it. they make it convenient to recover this that is again the downside of understanding what you do put up there and how you actually, truly delete it. it is again, a educational perspective. blind assumptions will always be the culprit in this type of conversation as well as type of threats. gerri: blind assumptions. joe, thank you for explaining. appreciate it. >> thank you. >> coming up, will this be a september to remember on wall street? and, red light, green light, is one of america's largest cities gaming, gaming the traffic control system to make money for
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gerri: chicago's red plight cameras are at the center of a major scandal, a top city official, and his accomplices are targets of a federal investigation and criminal prosecution, our next guest is the first to break the story on the suspicious spikes in ticket issues, david kid wel for chicago tr tribune, you are the reporter who broke this story. so, start us at the beginning, what are the issues with the cameras? >> well, we manageed to obtain
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fought the city for, obtained a database of more than 4 million tickets that had been issued by this program since 2007, we balloted them on a chart, tickets by day, an ekg of every camera, we found suspicious spikes at specific intersections in the city, tens of thousands, where cameras would normally issue 3 tickets a day were suddenly issueing to 56 tickets a day, then. all of a sudden back to normal again. so we presented this findings to the city, all the way in january, they to this day, have been unable to explain why, woo have spend -- we have spent last 6 months investigating. gerri: why, why. but also, how much dough is the city bringing in with this. >> since it began in 2003, nearly $500 million in traffic
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fines. gerri: and this is not usual, this is not what most cities do. they are not makeing that kind of money out of red light cameras, which i know our viewers don't like that much. tell me how this came to be? what does your investigation show? >> well, it started with as you said, this bribery investigation, we got tips about some cozy relationships between the company that had this contract, red flicks traffic systems ink out of arizona, and a city official who oversaw and helped bring them to the city into 2003. and just today, that city official was arraigned on federal charges, 17 counts, involving what federal government has said is a $2 million bribery scheme between him, another one of his chicago friends who was high -- hired as a consultant of the company, and the ceo of the company who has
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been charged and will be arraigned next week. in the course of covering that. we thought, if the contract is corrupt what about the program? that is when we went after the tickets. we have been investigating reasons for these things, we been pulling the tickets, we have found cases where what they are enforcing at the intersections suddenly changes, for instance, all of the -- for weeks and days, they are not charging or not captures right turns on red, then during this spike all right turns on red. we found cases where the yellow light times have fluctuateed. during the spike. going from 4 seconds to 3 seconds, we talked with experts about this. that is what they say is not fair, you can't change the rules. gerri: you can't change the rules. nobody likes that but what you have also found, in this whole scenario is that, the see
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manager accused of taking -- city manager accused of taking bribes, company in center of this road flicks hired former campaign manager of rahm emanuel, they are tight as a tick. what is wrong with -- what is wrong with this town? why is there -- this looks like blatant corruption to me, am i right? >> when rahm emanuel first took office. hoo he was pushing the expansion of red light camera to speed cameras. we're now dealing with that program here in this city of chicago as well. it is pr proliferates, much like the red light camera did in daily administration. but there is a great deal of secrecy in government here in chicago and the state of illinois. a great deal of career poletitions -- politicians and so my job, is never going to go away here.
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gerri: investigative reporter for the chicago tribune, david kidwel thank you so much. >> thank you great to be here. gerri: now we want to hear from you, we told you this week all cars sold in u.s. must have what is called a black box like planes, who should own that data? you? your insurance company? the government. here is what some of you are tweeting me. let me tell you, you are on fire. jack, it should be yours but should be subject to search pursuant to a court order, in a criminal or civil case. the driver of an insurance company should own it. keep the government out of it. >> and why ask. it is a given that government will have access to the data. just like cell phone records, and seizing your computer, gary, said does not matter what we think, government will get it
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anyway, a lot of anger about this, i feel your pain. >> when we come back, good news regarding america's fight against obesity, next, will stocks sink or soar in september, we cover our assets with forecasts about your 401(k). and advice on what you should do next with your money. here is your consumer gauge with the numbers you need to know, stock market up 8% this year. we'll be right back.
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time of the year for returns, today the dow and s&p 500 ended down, do i have that right? yes, down from friday. so should investors brace for a correction? recovering your assets with greg millia. president of millia advisory group, tim spease, and liz miller, president of summit place, financial advisors. last week was like 1999. i mean it fell great, stocks were moving higher. now reports that september is water month, i will start with greg. what is you make of that, do we look forward to a bad september? is that what you forecast? >> i don't know about september. i am concerned about the market as a whole. i think we're sitting at top -- some real highs as far as where markets come from.
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looking back, i know that morgan stanley released number numbers. s&p 3,000 32020,000, by 2020. that almost made me chuckle. >> where are we going then? >> down, sideways to down. >> sideways to down. well, liz, you, only losers over the last year were people who were not you know opting into the market, right? if you done play, you done -- if you didn't play, you don you dit gain, what is your outlook now? >> i think we could have a correction, but it is unpredictable, only unique i thing about september, is the next month, you need a several year outlook, if you are going to be in the equity market, there will be corrects on the way, you have to stay in the market through the corrections. gerri: stay in. would not pull a little bit of money aside, put it in cash to you know just in case?
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>> i would never do that just in case. what i would say in today's market, is you have a number of individual positions that are short-term highs, i always encourage our investors to take profit off the table, and perhaps in this environment, you would keep that in cash. but you could keep that in cash for three more years. we don't know that there is any particular reasons for a correction. corrections have come every 36 months or every 50 months, i am bullish, i would not be surprised. gerri: tim. the hard question for you. we'll move from tapering, which is an easy way of getting away from excess, juice that federal reserve has been puting into the system. to a pain they will raise rates on us, what does that transition look like in the equity market. >> i think investors that are looking for long-term, they will see some perhaps more attractive yields on short side, on other hand, looking at global economy
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growth, forecasted to between 3 3.7, and 3.9% this year, that would tell you that could be buoyant for stocks in the world. >> say, even in europe, is not having a great year economically you should invest offshore? >> no, i would say, globally, a well diversified portfolio, which is exposeed to global equit positions, and -- equity positions and even fixed income is most prudent for those investors with more than a 5 year horizon, and proper risk tolerance. gerri: greg bought up this idea that morgan stanley is super bullish so on goldman sachs forecasting big numbers for s&p by year end, greg, you don't see that i'm curious about, a lot of those professionalining mr.s hae missed much -- managers have missed. the the bull market circumstance this late day gamesmanship,
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we'll keep the doors open, and advise people to buy? >> yes, in the short. i look at, again, from 2000, if you have a different philosophy of being in the stock market. but the reality is right now today, 14 years later, the s&p 500 return is below 1.5%, that is awful. gerri: where is a better place to be? >> fixed income. if you have been 5 to 7 percent range, the entire time you have outperformed market. gerri: okay, quickly to liz. one more round. are stocks overvalued here? robert schuller said, so overvalued, and expensive? >> i disagree, the ratio has brought a tool to us. gerri: robert schullerp schedulo based on a ton of reseen.
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>> it is but, also, we have super high p/es from 09 making it lest -- look different. gerri: tim. >> this year has been a lowest volatility in the equity market. as of friday up 8.22%, hitting new highs long-term investors, telling us they are comfortable in this environment. gerri: stop worrying tim says. you this so much, greg, tim and liz. >> thank you. >> thanks. gerri: now to some shocking footage, switching gears to mention, eye change of gears, shocking footage released by isis, terroristing or saingingis that have beheaded steven sotloff. >> officials say they are still studying this internet video that purports to show beheading of american journalist steve
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sotloff by isis, but they have not been able to confirm it is authentic. >> if it is genuine, we're sickened by this brutal act, taking the life of another american citizen. our hearts go out to the sotloff family, we'll provide more information as it becomes available. >> the execution of sotloff if confirmed would be the second killing of an american journalist in over two weeks by isis, isis beheaded james foley last month as you recall, new video out today is titled eye a second message to america. the excursioner appears to be the same person said i am back obama. and condemns american bombings against isis in iraq, saying we take this opportunity to warn the government who entered into the evil alliance of america against the islamic state to
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back off and leave us alone, it closes with another man believeed to be british hostage, david haynes an aide worker and inflies he is next. gerri: has president obama weighed in on this. >> no, he left for his trip to europe. to air force one a reporter shouted him a question, he ignored it he has a press conference in estonia in 11 hours from now, and this will be the first question he gets asked about. gerri: well no doubt about that. peter thank you. >> you bet. gerri: and still to come, my two cents more, next turns out americans are getting it right with our eating habits, we have details about how you are doing it better, after the break. we've never sold a house before.
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gerri: health expert say that obesity breaks nearly 80 million adults in u.s., good nuzzo that americans are eating better, new data shows that eating habits in u.s. issue improving, with more on the findings registers dietitian, all right, what is the silver lining in this? explain result. >> study found that americans are doing better. okay? they did a study back in 1999. gerri: give us credit. >> i will, we were at a 40 out of 110. now they looked at 10 years
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later up to 47. so, yes, we're not half way there. bubut we did make some improvement. >> are hard-core. i'm trying to give people credit for doing the right thing, 92 choosing a salad over a hamburger. >> we don't need to be 100% but we should be higher. gerri: the big issue is cost of obesity, something likes there are within 47 billion. >47-- $147 billion.>> it could t is expensive. if we take better care of ourselves hopefully it would not cost everyone else so much money. gerri: talk about improvement noted by the study. how do we improve? >> they felt it was by default, there were less transfats in the diet. they actually felt that people
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were consuming less tran fats, whether or not it because they have been taken away from a lot of foods or maybe, they made healthier choices. like, they were not eating as much fast-food perhaps or not as many cakes and candy and that stuff that might have transfats. gerri: i prefer to think we're all doing the right thing, and making our own food, and chopping up our veggies, cary thank you. >> you're welcome. gerri: we'll be right back. get , they think salmon and energy. but the energy bp produces up here creates something else as well: jobs all over america. engineering and innovation jobs. advanced safety systems & technology. shipping and manufacturing. across the united states, bp supports more than a quarter million jobs. when we set up operation in one part of the country, people in other parts go to work. that's not a coincidence. it's one more part of our commitment to america.
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whenwork with equity experts who work with regional experts who work with portfolio management experts that's when expertise happens. mfs. because there is no expertise without collaboration. gerri: nhtsa requires all cars to have an even data recorder, a black box, the controversy goes on who should own the black boxes, we asked you, 95% of you said, we should. i agree, 4% said insurance company. 1% the government. and tonight, forget the tea
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party, internal revenue service has a new target, lunch. that is right, taxman said that freebie gourmet lunches doled out by cafeterias are fair game, but irs is not going after individuals but about the companys that serve them up, google, facebook and twitter, high view this is small potatos that irs should be ignoring there are bigger fish to fry. like fixing culture that wiped clean lois lerner's government issued blackberry after congress began investigating irs's targeting of conservative nonprofits, stick to your knitting, is what my mom said, that is my two cents more, coming up it could, latest on debate over who owns the information in your car, we will talk with the sense to ever whom wants to help you protect the data that is being recorded in that little black box. that is it for tonight's willis
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report, thank you for joining us, remember to dvr the show if you can't catch us live, have a good night, "making money" with charles payne is next. charles: tonight on "making money," celebrity having a hard time getting to us buy music and go to movies. a massive breach of their privacy may bring security to the cloud. cloud will know everything i in and must be more secure than a cracker jack box. wei explore the disconnect, your rage and fear about this economy. and a list of what a call, an income list recovery. and criminalization of american business, we're talking extortion racket that keeps executives out of prison. and the true victims getting crumbss. how do we get real
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