tv Varney Company FOX Business October 13, 2015 9:00am-12:01pm EDT
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the beer business, they've agreed on a bill. it would mean a gigantic company and the beer market. here come the regulators, something has to give. stocks will be down today, at least on the opening bell. but we had a pretty good run, we've gone up seven trading sessions in a row and the dow is going to be down about 100 points a half hour from now. and how about this? no retaliation, no bean brawling at the game, and the mets win big and i mean big. we cover it all and we'll even get to the chicago cubs as well. va"varney & company" is about t begin. ♪ top of the news, here is comes, first this, at least three israelis killed and 20 wounded in jerusalem today. a pair of near simultaneous attacks by palestinians.
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two attackers stabbed and shot people on a bus before one of those attackers was killed and the other captured. at about the same time, another attack at a bus stop in another part of the city. that killed at least one person before that attacker was shot and killed by the police. and the violence there in jerusalem continues today. let's get to iran. that country's parliament. the voter to support the nuclear deal. if you look closely in this video, you're going to see it in a moment. if you look closely, you'll see members of the iranian parliament laughing and approving the deal. and self-inspections of nuclear facilities and gives them billions of dollars. more with that on our military strategist chris harmon, in ten minutes. they think they won. a triple-digit loss for the dow industrials. we're coming off seven straight gains. of course, we ask the constant
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question, the dow closing at 17-1, will we hit 18-k by the end of the year? we'll answer the question, we promise. look at twitter, now we know how many jobs they're going to cut. the stock will be up and we'll have more of that one. how about this one, anheuser push inbev buying sabmiller for 400 million dollars, they're going to get together. the two largest beer companies, they agreed they're going to get together. they need regulatory approval. that's hard to get because together they will control 70% of the american beer market. by the way, bud will have to pay miller 3 million dollars if they cannot get the deal through. so, they're pretty confident of this and ab is down. the stock is down. look at the price of oil, the national agency warns the oil supply glut will stay with us all the way through next year. the price of oil is flat today.
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46 a barrel. the price of gasoline down more. not a reason to sound the trumpets, 2.30 per gallon, that's the national average for regular. let's get to politics, i know that's what you're waiting for. big debate for the democrats and hillary clinton will be center stage. listen to what she said about donald trump and said it outside of his building in las vegas. >> a lot of people think mr. trump is entertaining. i don't think that it's entertaining when somebody insults immigrants, insults welcome, that's unacceptable behavior. stuart: all right, welcome back to the show. >> good to see you always. stuart: what did you make of hillary's statement. having a go. >> i think she really cares about the workers. stuart: sarcasm is a low form of wit.
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ashley: it's an effective one. >> she's going for it. they didn't endorse her. she hopped out of an suv, and spoke for three minutes. hopped back in the suv. stuart: so scynical at you people. suppose hillary goes after president obama and puts space between her and him. if she doesn't do that, isn't she pushing obama to support a joe biden run? >> everybody wants a joe biden except for hillary. stuart: would you predict a widening split tonight in the debate between president obama and hillary clinton? >> i think so. i think definitely if we could pay attention to. i agree it's going to be boring. it's going to be super, super boring. i'm going to watch it, she's
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going to do the weird thing, pasted file and get frustrated and fizzle out. i can't stand watching her speak for more than a few minutes and it's going to be two hours. she's a terrible speaker. stuart: and cnn staging the debate. they have an extra podium lined up ready to go in case joe bide p jumps in. there it is. >> don't you love it? so needy, and if he did, he'd ride in. >> on a white horse. >> guitar riffs and fog machine, joe biden. air horns. stuart: you're terrible. >> everyone would be so excited. stuart: i think we've got the extra podium because cnn realizes they've got to drum up people to watch this thing and the way to do it, hey, maybe joe will show. ashley: well, there's five candidates, i guess most people in the country can probably name two.
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stuart: can you name them? >> it's hard, biden-- you want to go for biden. stuart: webb. >> chafy, o'malley, murray, lincoln. >> maybe mr. biden. >> the ghost of joe biden. stuart: if the parents of bud and miller get together they would control 70% of the beer market. that can't be, that's a monopoly. ashley: nine of the world's top 20 beers would be owned by this company. one in every three beers would be associated with the company. what would have to happen both would have to spin off-- sabmiller will have to spin off miller coors franchise they won in the u.s. you cannot have this behemoth. part of thing is, the independent breweries have
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taken a bite out of profits. they've responded by, a, trying to become bigger and they've been buying up some of these, both have. stuart: ab, anheuser-busch, agreed to pay the miller peopled 3 billion if they can get it through regulatory approval. it's a breakup fee? >> everyone is confident they'll go through. some of the spin-offs. >> the only beer i drink anymore tastes like banana bra he had and stuff like that. stuart: there she goes again. stuart: it's not that everything is getting together in one conglomerate, but it's true, it's got to split apart. >> they'll give themselves lot of fees by the time it's done. stuart: let's get to this, the markets, please. we're going to open lower,
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about a triple digit loss for the dow industries, 100 or 106 points. aforementioned hillary crikrame is here. i'll ask you, what i ask others. 18,000 by the end of the year? >> yes, it's 6% from here, we can totally get here and s&p we could get that and retest the high, 21.38. we have to watch the earnings. stuart: it wasn't a week or two ago, everybody was saying woe is mow. >> i was-- everything was a buying opportunity. everything is. >> you were saying a buying opportunity? >> very much so. >> the third quarter earnings are supposed to be rough and we kick them off today. >> there are so many, you know-- >> this is all based on the fed continuing not to raise rates and-- >> yes, absolutely. you have two opposing forces,
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you have weakness globally and then you have quantitative easing all over the world and may win. we may get to the rates here. >> twice she said quantitative easing and no buzzer. [buzzer] >> stick around, the opening bell is 20 minutes away and we want you there for that. we know now how many jobs twitter is going to cut. jo has that. >> ceo jack dorsey is cleaning house and trying to make a comeback. the newly returned jack dorsey says he will cut about 336 jobs. in a letter to employees, dorsey says we feel strongly that engineering will move much faster was a smaller team. and the a least at the high end of their forecast, if not better. and facebook wants to be a one stop shop for users.
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testing a shopping tab and helping the products on facebook and they're rolling out new ad for formats and you know about the buy button. and it's officially, ferrari will zoom into the public market. fiat chrysler is giving ferrari, and are you buying in? >> they don't make had a minivan version. stuart: alert the kids and grand kid, about the van, i need space. far too old for a prairie. iran's looking at the nuclear deal. if you look at the tape of the iranian parliament, a lot of smiles and laughter because they think they won.
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what you're looking at is the continuing violence in jerusalem, a difficult story this morning. >> and baseball players, the mets no retaliation for chase utl utley over the weekend. the bats do the talking, the mets could wrap it up tonight. don't forget the chicago cubs, haven't won a worrell series sips 1908. remember the back to the future movie. they're looking at 2015. they say the cubs win the world series. some guy opens up the new hampshire. ashley: fantastic. stuart: and that the cubs would beat miami. miami doesn't have a team. and even i know that. by the way, the cubs lead the cardinals 2-1. and they won 8-6 last night and the cubs hit six home runs. i watched them, how about that. not that i've deserted the mets.
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>> a correction, my apologies, miami does have a baseball team. ashley: forgettable. stuart: they've got a team, sorry about that. and fox business has learned that donald trump has been telling people if he wins the nomination, he wants john kasich to be his running mate. >> is that-- >> and trump in may was saying he wants to steal his, and attacking his business sentence and kasich didn't fight back, thinking, oh, i can be mean to this dude and he won't care. stuart: he comes from ohio which is a key swing state. ashley: it would give more legitimacy to the ticket. >> definitely would.
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not because he has a good imagination. stuart: charlie gasparino broke this story and brings it to us. he's on the show today at 11:00. we'll get more on the story from charlie himself. to iran, laughing its way to approve the nuke deal. at the same time a surface to surface guidant missile with an 800 mile change. chris from the institute of study of war. chris, they are laughing at us. they're humiliating us and i don't think this is' anything week do about it, what say you? >> thank you for having me. and there's something we can do, but now that we some kind that, the option has sailed. there's nothing to do, we negotiated the deal. the problem is we're going to agree to the deal and follow the deal and live up to the obligations and one of the most frustrating of this, prior to
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the deal, iran was barred from conducting research and development on the long range ballist ballistic. and this lets the test of the long range ballistic missiles. i care about the fact that we've got national priorities and this cuts the authority on this. stuart: and doesn't this give ammunition to those who didn't want this in the first place? why haven't we heard more and those who supported the deal in the first place. they have to now defend what the eye -- the iranians are doing. the proponents of the deal said so long, this is ultimately in our national security interest. i think that americans have pm sensitized by it. if you want to go to the ten close, medium range range, but
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constantly researching, developing and deploying these to reach all of continental europe and then all of america. they don't need to hit us, just somebody in the middle east. stuart: something that hasn't gotten attention is that putin's military powered allied with iran and bringing in the ericies as well as. that's basically the control of a big churning of the world's oil supply. we haven't heard much about that, but surely, that's putin's strategic objective or at least one of them, isn't it? >> thank you for bringing that up. vladimir putin is laying a long game. in the short-term, yes, support of iran and syria and could he
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opted that we abandoned. once he has control the ability. now he has the ability for a counterpart of opec. it's the russian version. and the strategic location makes it important and he's going to affect oil prices in the future. i want to show you this and our viewers as well, a danish photographer tortured by isis, said it was jihadi john that forced him to dance and i don't think that anybody knew how bad that is. >> isis is deep into humiliated, they're not enough to attack us directly. they decided for the moment not to build the terrorist attacks because they're building up the caliphate. they'll humiliate us, whether
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it's live execution or making them dance the tango. stuart: there was no retaliation in the game against the dodgers. why not retaliation. there was strong fan reaction when chase utley was introduced. so loud, you couldn't hear the announcer. you've hear it all in a moment. the only way to get better is to challenge yourself,
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>> infielder chase utley. >> . stuart: well, you could tell there was a somewhat hostile reaction as chase utley was introduced at citi field. there's a 2-1 series lead. there was no retaliation for the slide which broke the second baseman's leg. why did they not retaliate? >> you have to look at the managers of the two baseball teams, don mattingly known as donny baseball and terry collins, oldest manager, they wanted it to be a regular game.
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they met with the baseball commission commissioner manfeld, let's just play baseball, if anyone was hit by an unintended pitch, you know what would happen. and now we focus on the game. >> if a mets pipper hit a dodger batter then that mets pitcher would be out for the rest of season? >> it's possible. the teams were not issued warnings before the games, but maybe given a leniency. i watched the cubs, the home one, that was terrific. the cubs could win this thing? >> they could win this, jake arrieta, 18 h-1. and most home runs for a team in a playoff game. 21 home run around baseball and 61 runs in one day, also a playoff record. ashley: we're not-- >> when the mets went up 10-3 at citi field all you could
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hear them chanting was utley, utley. stuart: and by the way, ron darling, a former pitcher, of course, the announcer, called the game with the controversial slide and he says he was outraged. he's on the show 10:15 this morning. by the way, the opening bell is next. proud of you, son. ge! a manufacturer. well that's why i dug this out for you.
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>> we're almost there. they're clapping and cheering and the bell will ring and trading for this tuesday morning. remember, please, we're coming off a seven-day winning streak that takes it above the 13,000 level. we're down at the opening bell which is where it started. we're down maybe 100 points. let's see how we go as it's opened up. we've opened up and in ten seconds we're down 45 points. ashley webster, hillary kramer, todd, to you first, as you know, stocks have been on a tear. do you think that we hit 18,000 on the dow industrials by the end of this year? >> no, absolutely not. i think there's no chance we'll hit 18,000 by the end of this year, i think we may make a run higher from here, but i think when it's all said and done, the highs are here for year and we end working lower from here. stuart: where is he wrong, hillary kramer? >> i think we go higher from
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here, stuart. the air has already been let out. a lot of good momentum behind us, quantitative easing. >> where. >> the fed -- expectation are so low, let's take a look at see what happens to general electric on friday and the big financials, if they can hold out even with maybe rates not tooing up. we could do well. stuart: you've got to get back into this, todd, shaking your head, what's wrong with that analysis. >> well, first of all, we're a-- the only growth we're seeing is company buybacks and free money, i don't want a buzz and i won't say it. and have we totally lost our mind that everything is only about free money and what we can get instead of wanting to grow this country where it should be, where we have actual growth and rejobs? are we happy with 8 1/2 an hour jobs? i don't get it. stuart: we hear you, both sides
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of that fence. i'll tell you what's happening now. almost two minutes into the trading session and the dow industrials are down 90 points. we thought maybe 100, but we're at 90 points on the down side. let me move on to-- i'm looking for the biggest percentage losers on the dow averages on the opening bell. there we are, j&j, united tech, caterpillar, visa, those are the biggest percentage losers, only j&j are on the down side earlier this morning. there's not huge declines there. come on, hillary, you think we'll be higher by the end of the year. >> we're down because of news out of china, exports dropped double digits and that's important. now, imports were-- imports dropped single digits, but that showed a lot of weakness and it's weighing on other countries is what-- australia and agents had a bad night. in europe, you know, it just looks bad in the u.k., no
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inflation, we didn't see a strong number out of germany on the confidence number. ashley: johnson & johnson is a huge consumer products, beat the expectations and raised the outlook and the stock is moving and i wonder because the bar is so low, people are not buying into it. stuart: what have you got, liz. >> credit rating agencies downgrading more companies like the most since the financial crisis, also, the three-month, what a red flag that was, zero for the first time in three months. that's out of equity funds into money morning. stuart: i'm at grave risk of getting the buzzer, but i've got to be in it about falling prices and deflation. news out of britain today, okay not terribly relevant for america, but news out of britain, prices are falling in britain. now, that's something to make a note of. that's not a positive for any stock market anywhere. you get deflation, you get stocks going down
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liz: what do you think, hillary, are we in a profits recession or what do you think? >> we're still the strongest of all the other-- of all the countries around the world and europe is just so weak right now. and then the oil news. ashley: you're very defensive. [laughter] companies that are dependent detectically will do well. stuart: todd is itching to get back into it. 20 seconds, go. >> the place is no good. the falling commodities-- [buzzer] >> you got it in and we hear what you've got to say. a look at this, a look at the share price of ab inbev and sabmiller. they've got a deal, they're going to get together. if they do get together, they will control 70% of america's beer market. 70%. liz, that's a monopoly the regulators are going to-- . it's a third of the world's beer market. even the craft brewers are
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hanging on strong. here is where the play could be. the u.s. anti-trust guys at the department of justice could say to this company, if you merge you've got to get rid of your miller coors venture. so that could help save the deal if they get busted up by the regulators. >> ab is confident they'll get it through because they pay miller, 3 billion if the deal doesn't go through. >> that's one point worth making, when the market went down, the anti-trust guys went silent. when you're in a market crackup, you don't hear about mergers. stuart: dow industrials down 80 points as we speak. check townshiper. how many jobs they're going to cut. 8% of the work force. they're working themselves up for a sale, aren't they, hillary? any comment on that? >> that's where it's headed, but it's a sale out of desperation. they're just losing and now we're seeing who the winners are, who the losers are, facebook is clearly the winner
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in the on-line social media world. stuart: isn't it extraordinary? everybody knows twitter. every news out let talks about twitter all the time. your he a getting tweets from this person, from that person, they can't make money out of it. >> that's the issue. >> and the stock is languishing for the cost cutting and the new ceo. a transportation company, ryder is the name, it cut its profit guidance, watch out. how bad is the stock? >> it's an economic indicator, too. stocks down about 7% right now. they have commercial vehicles, trucks, one of the reasons they didn't do so well. they didn't sell as many as expected and they also had an a lot of out of service vehicles and short-term rentals for businesses and they set up the demand for rentals, check the numbers as well. cut their guidance, number one loser in the s&p 500 and that transition index as well. >> a tough story for you, nicole.
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you got it out there. 5:00 every weekday morning, tune into the fox business network, lauren and nicole will take you to the very, very, very early part of the day. j.p. morgan, the biggest bank in the land, hoping to save a lot of money. they're making some employees pay for their own work phones. todd, have you got anything to say about that? >> well, i think that it's more showing how well everybody is doing and how the growth is. and the banks are in a lot of trouble because they can't make enough money. the banks are not able to loan out money because the low interest rates. because of the-- because of dodd frank, they're not able to loan out enough so they're not making as much as they were. taking out the trading desks and cutting profits. all they want to do is like everyone else, cutting corners and i think that's a true thing. let me show this out. is there a liability thing going on here? you cut costs boo i --
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by making some get their own phones. if they had work phones, maybe they've got a liability problem. you're ruffling your brow there liz: an interesting take and you maybe right. i think this is j.p. morgan facing $50 billion in annual operating costs and trying to make that bottom line look better in a beleaguered market. ashley: i think it's extreme to have your employees pay-- well, yes, i think it is, but just the idea that you have to pay for your own work phone. get your own plan. >> i agree with you stuart, there has to be something more coming up here. ashley: that's what they come up with. stuart: oil is in the mid to upper $40 a barrel range. the international energy says that the oil supply glut will
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stay with us through next year. come back with us, todd, you're there, are we going to get below $40 oil everybody is waiting for? >> no, i think that oil found $44 probably the bottom. people are trying to say they want to push it down and starting to buy oil. jp morning, goldman sachs, all of those goals are met to force people short so they can step in and buy oil. i think that oil is 44, 50, 55 for the next number of months. i don't think it's a major move down. stuart: before you go, give me 20 seconds on the end of the world, i think you believe is coming. >> i love the world. i don't think it's the end. i think we need to make some serious changes and some serious things that need to be done to make it better again, but i think the world is great. i love it, i'm glad to be here and glad to be talking to you before i get buzzed. stuart: well done, well done. not making light of it.
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i'm very interested in some of the stereos, here is a sign for you, maybe a sign of the time. now you have to read playboy for the articles, no more nude picture. hugh heffner says naked women are passe. ashley: he's right. if you want to look at such images it's one click away. stuart: now you've got to read it for the articles. liz, comment? >> i think that it's going to make playboy a boring magazine. i'm not surprised they didn't make the announcement during the pope's visit. i think they waited for the pope to leave town. do you read it for articles and the cartoons? good articles and cartoons about you let's face it, it's not a good sign for playboy. stuart: that's the last word. thank you, mary todd one and
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all, check the big board, we're down 63. after gains we've opened up down 63, not big drop. there are four tech companies we've followed very, very closely. apple, netflix, facebook, amazon. we haven't followed them lately because they're not moving much. later in the show, we'll ask one of our stock pickers whether any of those stocks we just saw are good buys at this point. now this, environmental protection agency spends more than 60 million on about. r. they have a bigger pr team than the kardashians, unbelievable.
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pretty close to that high. down 80 cents. how about this? the epa spends a whopping 158 million dollars of your money on its public relations budget and 15 million of that goes to people outside the epa itself. outside pr people. and liz harrington from the washington freebie con, you brought us a story, how many people does the epa people have on the inside before it goes outside? >> right, on the inside, they have 198 full-time employees, so, that's in-house and i think it's indicative of the size of these government bureaucracies that you're seeing. 200 full-time pr employees, plus, they spend a million dollars a year on outside consultants. that's a huge operation, that's a really-- you've seen how big the size of government has grown. >> if you ask them, how do they justify this? >> well, they say, you know, we
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do a lot of important work and it's important to share with the public, you know, what we're doing with regulations and public comment and getting the word out. but at the same time, i think they have a lot of press work when you, you know, see the cold keen mine spill and suing over water regulation and that's a lot of pr work to try to spin that. so, i think it's questionable to see, they're saying they're doing this positive work, it's just informing the public when they're really cleaning up a lot of messes of their own. do you think that they would ever cut that pr staff? i know, i'm asking a foolish question because no government worker ever gets cut period, but i'm just asking. what's the odds? >> i mean, honestly, once it grows to that size, and it's not really quick, either. i mean, every time i reach out to the epa for comment. they don't get back to me quickly and then it's a pretty boring statement, usually, so i
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don't really know what they're doing over there, but 200 employees, it's a huge number. i mean, like you said, it's bigger than the kardashians, so-- >> is this common in other government departments? 200 in-house people at epa? how many would it be in other government departments? that they should have a huge flanks of people in the media? >> and i have to imagine it be simil similar. a lot of these agencies do similar work in their scope and number of regulations that they issue, i mean, you're going to have a lot of people, so many subdivisions within every agency, the public affairs officials for every little program. i have to imagine that the numbers are comparable. stuart: i think it's the bureaucracy, that gets to people, it's not the number of 198 pr people, but it's such a
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vast bureaucracy and getting something really done, decisive action, it's just not going to see it. look, i'm putting out my own politics here, i know, but i'm preaching the choir with you. [laughter] >> no, i think you're right. i mean, i think, what is a public relations is usually either cleaning up a mess or putting up, you know, the information that they want to get out and what is that accomplishing all that much? >> it's hard to imagine that you need that many people to do the work that they're actually doing. i think, you know, open the books is the transparency group that has really dug into these numbers and they said that people think, they expect the epa working to protect the environment and then you see, they have 160 million dollar pr machine, a big part of what they do and spinning what they do. it's important for people to know about. >> i like to know where my money is going. liz, we appreciate it. >> thanks for having me. quickly to the big board.
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we're down 50 points, that's it. we thought we'd go down 100 at opening bell. we went down 90 and change and now 17,081. the associated press says hillary's private e-mail server was open to hack attacks. please remember, president obama said she did not put national security at risk. is that a contradiction? all rise because the judge is next. ♪ ♪ the law won. i fought the law and the law won ♪ ♪ i fought the law and the law won ♪ taken a hit lately. mmm hmm. just wanted to touch base. we came to manage over $800 billion in assets, through face time when you really need it. it's how edward jones makes sense of investing. to build something smarter. ♪ some come here to build something stronger. others come to build something faster...
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switch to liberty mutual and you could save up to $509 call today at see car insurance in a whole new light. liberty mutual insurance. >> how about this? we're down, but nowhere near as much as we thought we were going to be down. we're down 32 as we speak. 17,099 there. ge made an agreement to sell the remaining chunk of financial services business to wells fargo. i'm looking at chipotle stock, here is why. are you tired of the long lines at chipotle? i am told not being a general customer, but i'm told -- back to that one. so i'm told, what have they do? they've hired a starbucks exec
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to do something about the lines. ashley: curt garner, their first chief information officer, credited with working on the highly praised starbucks app. they're concerned nearly 2,000 stores, stuart, chipotle, i know you say it's expensive rice and beans, but they're packed in the lunchtime hour and trying to get people in and out so they can sell more. stuart: it's true, i don't know why the judge is laughing. expensive rice and beans. ashley: people like it and because of that they're a victim of their own success and trying to bring this guy in to come up with apps and technology to allow people in get in and out faster. stuart: you're waiting in line, already paid for, walk in, pick it up and walk out. ashley: what he did in at starbucks, they're crediting him with that. stuart: $9 for rice and beans, a steal in manhattan. and let's get to something serious. the ongoing e-mail issue for hillary. according to the ap the private
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server in the basement was in fact connecting it to the internet. making it vulnerable to attacks. however, on sunday, president obama said this. >> i don't think it was a national security problem. i think it's a mistake that she's acknowledged. as a general proposition, when we're in these offices, we have to be more sensitive and stay as far away from a line as possible when it comes to how we handle information. stuart: okay. i'm-- yeah, it does not pose a national security problem. look who is here, the aforementioned judge whose laugh broke into the chipotle story. >> and you think that everything is-- >> except mcdonald's which i rather like. the president says she did not cause a national security problem. now we find out her server was indeed connected to the internet just like everybody else's. ashley: this is a story,
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stuart, that keeps cascading upon her. it's every week there are new developments and it's almost every day, the fact that her server was directly connected to the internet, most respectfully, mr. president, means it could have been hacked without she or he knowing about it. i think he's expressing an aspiration, a wish, a hope that she wasn't hacked. we know a couple of things, we know that she e-mailed secured information, confidential secret, top secret to our friend sidney blumenthal. we know that mr. blumenthal was hacked by romanian intelligence agents and we know they were victimed in court of hacking mr. blumenthal and we know the chinese attempted to hack her and russians attempted to hack here and-- >> if it was a server connected
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to the internet, it's wide open. she failed to protect national security secrets, it's called espionage. stuart: why? >> i think you're going to find out when there was another wave comes out. she was protecting her husband's in the clinton foundation and terrified that the fbi, the president would find out about it. now we're all going to find out. stuart: if that gets out, forgive me the expression, she's toast. >> whether she's indicted or not, she would be out of the political picture forever. stuart: judge napitano, thank you, judge. breaking minutes from now, the latest rounds of polls from fox news on the democrats sidement find out who is leading the pack, which democrats would beat leading republicans head to head. two minutes from now, you will
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>> literally seconds from now, fox news will release its latest poll looking at the democrat's side of the 2016 presidential election race. remember, please, it's the first debate for the democrats tonight. it's 10:00. blake berman, what do we have? >> stuart, this is the good news, this part of it for hillary clinton. when matched up against the other potential democratic challengers in the primary according to the latest fox news poll, she is out ahead by some 20 points. clinton gets 45% of support from democratic voters in the primary compared to bernie sanders 25%. joe biden of course not yet in the race, but 19% of democrats potentially would vote for him. so, clinton out in front and when you add up sanders, along with biden, that matches pretty much the exact same total of support for hillary clinton. she's got a nice sized lead
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coming into the debate, those numbers down from the previous months earlier this year. stuart: now, what about hillary and joe biden when matched up directly against the g.o.p. frontrunners? what's the result there? this is where it's a mixed bag for sure for hillary clinton. here is the matchup. let's put this up on the screen. against ben carson, donald trump, jeb bush, carly fiorina, she loses every one of those, down to carson, down to trump, down to bush and fiorina. and joe biden running second in the primary. here is how he would run against republicans in the general. up against trump, up against bush, up four against fiorina and up fear dependence carson. you like golf, the analogy, in order to win on sunday you've
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got to make the cut on friday. that's the relationship problem for biden. he's got to get through the primary, the democrats want clinton, but if he would get to the general he has better numbers than clinton. stuart: i think i've got it. let me recap what i just heard there, i think this is the news. hillary in direct matchups with all the leading republican candidates, hillary loses against every single one of them. now, that's a shocker. ashley: it's stunning. stuart: that's the stunner in this one. ashley: it is. stuart: i think we've got the graphic, but, against trump, she loses. hold on a second. ashley: against trump she loses 45-40. she's-- she loses by the biggest margin to dr. ben carson on 50-39% liz: a sizable difference. so that's news there. stuart: that's the news. hillary clinton loses in a direct matchup with the four leading republican candidates.
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ashley: even fiorina liz: even fiorina. stuart: the other side of the coin, a direct matchup between joe biden and the four leading candidates, he beats them all. >> he's got november deadlines. that's the news here. four states have ballot deadlines, if he wants to run shall the clock ticking, it's arkansas, michigan, and alabama are in there. stuart: that adds fuel to the fire for people saying, well, please, joe. ashley: say, hey, joe, look at the latest poll from fox news, he's got to be tempted. stuart: he's got to be. the calculation is, who can win? >> right. stuart: and that poll says very clearly, biden can win and hillary clinton cannot. i realize it's a long way to go, but that's what the poll says and the calculation made. who can win. ashley: president obama, i think, is giving mr. biden the poll right now saying, come on. stuart: by the way, there's a debate tonight, the democrat's first debate.
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cnn is running the debate and they have a sixth podium ready. there are five candidates on the stage and they do have a sixth podium ready just in case joe biden jumps into it. if he doesn't show up, we could be-- it could be a snooze fest, but after that poll, that is a real incentive to joe biden to come in. i don't think he'll showup tonight. >> he was blowing off the reporters and even at this hour it says no. ashley: what does it say to hillary clinton and bernie sand e ers, that somebody who is not even a contender-- >> that's true, it's a huge impetus for joe biden to run. the director erica knute, i know you listened to this, in a direct matchup hillary clinton loses to the four leading republican candidates and a
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similar direct matchup. joe biden beats all the four leading republican candidates. that's a bombshell, ask not? >> yeah, i mean, i think it shows exactly how frustrated the american populous is that you have somebody that they barely know like ben carson or carly fiorina. they haven't really been vetted in the public eye. so tough to compare them what would actually happen with someone vetted for 20 years, but the fact they're competing with somebody who has competed for 20 years, says something loud and clear. stuart: sure, this is a huge encouragement for joe biden to run. and a huge encouragement for president obama to encourage joe biden to run, surely it is, isn't it? >> i absolutely think it is. joe biden, as i said before on your show, is a beloved member of the democratic party. he has his own base of support he's had for decades. a lot of people like him. he kind of appeals to the everyman.
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it's a genuine person who shared a lot of personal tragedy with this country and people who have gun through similar things. he's a likeable person. stuart: what was that time frame? he's got to get in in a certain time. what is it? >> november 1st starts in alabama and then it's arkansas, florida and michigan, if he wants to get on the ballot, he has to register on the ballots northing november-- for november. stuart: he's right up to the wire, today is october the 13th. >> if i were him, i would take it to the drop dead deadline because the anticipation, having people want to build and look for him, that only helps him. i mean, once you become a candidate, you lose a little bit of the luster of just being a genuine public servants which joe biden is right now. if i were him, i'd delay as
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much as i could-- >> will you stay up all night long to watch the democratic debate? i watch all of them, i'm a junky. stuart: what do you expect? i'm assuming joe biden will not jump in and make use of the sixth podium. >> no, you don't go from your granddaughter's track meet to las vegas. but i'd expect martin o'malley to make a play for name recognition. he's not going anywhere if you it would be a time to show policy chops and not attack hillary and hopes she picks you up as the vp. stuart: martin o'malley has to explain how come he had that gravelling apology for saying all lives matter. he's got to get over that. >> in baltimore he's going to be under a microscope.
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a lot of the freddy gray attribute to o'malley's policies, as an official. stuart: you might see fireworks from jim webb. he might try to break out and hear what he has to say. thank you for joining us, and i hope you manage to stay awake for the entire event today. >> i'll be up. stuart: i'm not going to sleep. on the g.o.p. side, fox business learned that donald trump has been telling people that if he wins the nomination he wants ohio governor john kasich as his running mate. what do you make of that? >> it's stunning-- well, it's not stung, but it's interesting. charlie gasparino broke that, a quinnipiac shows in his home state that he places third. and he's done great in ohio,
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turned that state around he falls behind trump and carson in a recent quinnipiac poll. stuart: kasich hasn't attacked trump. >> he's been question quiet. stuart: you've got to winnowo to win the white house liz: it's a heck after turn around. the government bailout for the auto industry, but kasich is winning-- applauded for his work in possible. stuart: and the trump-kasich tie-in if that's the case. more on this with clairol gasparino on our show at 11:30 this morning. interesting story. in the next hour, rick santorum has a 20% flat tax across the board. i'm going to ask him. 20% across the board. what deductions would you get rid of. 11:16, to the big board we're pairly on the down side.
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a 13 point loss on a 17 index, interesting, that's a mariner league lost. johnson & johnson will announce a stock buy back, the stock is down 1/2%. can't work that out. gold twitter, is that the game of it? no, no, i'm sorry, this is a misprint on the prompter. you saw it fool me. i just renamed it. twitter, okay, twitter are cutting 336 jobs, that's 8% of the work force. now it's back above $30 a share. ab as in ab inbev buying sabmiller, the this-- they're both beer companies. pending approval of regulators. both stocks are up. oil, a big drop and today at 47.66, it's back up only 50 cents. gas, down a little overnight. $2.30. that's your national average as of right now. we have peak capital management, mike burly, he is
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with us this morning. hi, mike. we've been asking everybody in the dow will hit 18 k by the end of the year. i think, however, you think it's going the other way, we're going down. make your case. >> i do. i don't think we're going to see 18-- i believe we probably topped out in may. you know, you look at these earnings reports. a lot of these companies have reduced earnings estimates just to meet earnings. you know, to me, that's kind of sort of like giving every kid a trophy for dressing for the game, kidding there-- >> and i don't believe you're saying this, i believe you're writing this, we may get down to 11,000 on the dow. that's a worst case scenario? >> i think it's possible. i think that sometimes investors have short-term memories. we had two selloffs in the past decade. 50 and 54% respectively. we're up from the march '09 lows. i think that things are
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starting to slow down now. i think we may be going in the other direction. >> you would be one of those people in your mid 60's and done quite well in the stock market, you'd be one of those people who say sell some of those stocks and sleep well at night? >> absolutely, i'd be taking risk off the table at this point and maybe going into something more bond-like or bond-like instruments. if the money is in a pension plan or 401(k). that's an added incentive. isn't it? >> absolutely. all right, mike, thanks very much for joining us and sorry you have a negative scenario, but you tell it how you see it and we appreciate that. mike burly everyone. >> thank you. stuart: then we have twitter announcing big layoffs that are coming. and jo ling kent has the story in case you missed. >> twitter is perfecting 8% of work force, laying off 336 people.
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newly returned jack dorsey saying that the company will cut costs and streamline the firm across the board and global operations. and dorsey shade, woo he will feefl longer with a much more nim bler team. and chipotle going to reduce the long lines at lunch. curt garner joins as chief information officer, tasked with the increase of mobile technology. while he was over at starbucks, mobile grew 20% of all u.s. sales. the end of an era at playboy. starting next year, playboy will no longer produce nude photographs of women. and it takes from 5.6 of million in the 70's to about 800,000 today. stuart: it good. thanks very much, jo ling, for that.
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cme group can help you navigate risks and capture opportunities. we enable you to reach global markets and drive forward with broader possibilities. cme group: how the world advances. >> that's not much of a loss, is it? down 21 points, all you've got. 17-1 is where we stand. a look at the dow 30's, most in red, that means they're down. kind of a split decision at the moment. ryder's trucks guidance hitting trucks all of them. ryder, swift, and werner, all of them are down. got it. check this out. before the mets and dodgers played last night. the injured short stop came out
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on the field and had a cane and came out on the field and he got a huge ovation. tejada suffered a broken leg in game two after chase utley made a controversial slide. you our next guest is one of the broadcaster who called the game. >> and didn't start to slide until he was even with the bag. >> and madden was on the field he might challenge to see if tejada touched the bag or not. >> and the former new york mets pitcher the guy who called the play, rod darling, what a pleasure to have a star object on the show. >> thanks for having me. stuart: was that a slide that deserved punishment? >> it was egregious, the issue you have-- i'm one of those guys who watched chase utley play for a 100 or so game.
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he's one of the toughest-nosed players you'll want. you want him on your ball club and it was the perfect storm. he was standing on first, he had to take the guy out at second, he did, but it resulted in a broken leg, it's an awful sort of circumstance. stuart: would you be in favor of changing the rules to make it no contact on a slide into second? would you have any change in the rules at all? >> i would not. i know that it sounds harsh, but there's no rules-- we've seen with replay and the things that baseball tried to do the more rules they make the more issues they have. the game has been around for 140 years. baseball players usually can police themselves. like i said, it was the perfect storm of this and it's an awful injury. stuart: you often police yourself in baseball by getting revenge, you retaliate. there was no retaliation last
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night, how do you explain that? >> post-season, every out is so important, you're trying to win the final prize which is going to happen in november this year. baseball players, for the most part, have a really good memory about these kinds of things and those kinds of retaliation usually happen at some later date. stuart: okay, who do you favor-- who is more likely to win the world series, the mets or the cubs? >> that's one -- that's a great question. i think if you look at the ball club, the mets against the cubs this year were 0-7. so, they haven't figured out the cubs all season long, so if it's mets and cubs, i don't know how you beat against the cubbys, they proved it all year long. stuart: a pleasure to have you on the show, we appreciate it. >> sure thing. stuart: and then we have the nobel prize winner for economics and specializes in
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the study of poverty. he made some comments on climate change in his acceptance speech. >> i think that the inequality makes the climate change thing difficult to handle both across countries and within countries and because so many of the people who have so much money are opposed to climate change. stuart: all right. liz, what do you make of that? >> it's not the first time we heard this, the pope was saying the same thing. essentially saying dial back. and the president is pushing forward 3 billion in climate change to help the poor in developing country and the world bank says you need 100 billion a year to protect-- >> president obama has committed to that? he wants to be part of the pool that contributes 100 billion a year. ashley: the u.s. will pay the
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most. >> republicans are fighting it, it would going to a u.n. climate change fund. a lot of prupgs we know at the united nations. 100 million a year, the u.s. has given 13 billion-- >> unless we forget, a billion people have been taken out of abject poverty. ashley: to less than 10% for the first time ever in history liz: we never who who r uns -- runs. stuart: he won a nobel prize because he's on economic change. i've been called a bad granddad for letting my grandchildren play with ipads. turns out i might be okay. my take is next. >> they're not learning all the time with it, you're killed yourself-- >> can you be entertained?
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>> the company that makes a lot of paper tissue, wausau paper, is being bought by a swedish paper company and paying $513 million in cash for it. it's therefore a winner, it's a big offer. up 38% and wausau paper. iran, well, they've got the new deal and they're laughing all the way to the bank. this is a win for iran and i'm saying it's a humiliation for the united states. bridgette gabriel is coming up on that one. and right now, yes, it is illegal in america to gamble on the outcome of elections. suppose it were not illegal, where would you put your money? we will discuss. for 15 years the american academy of pediatricians has
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held onto an official policy, no screen time at all for children under two. no ipads, tablets or smartphones at all. now, they've changed. limited screen time is okay. good. this blanket prohibition was just a reaction to a new technology. ban it for toddlers and be safe, that was the thinking. remember when videos first emerged in the '70s. parents back then were advised it was a bad thing. don't put the kids in front of a tv, you are neglecting them. it was not too long ago that i was called a bad granddad because i have no problem with very young children adapting to and using new technology. i watched frozen on the big tv screen wheel three of my grandchildren watched with me and followed the lyrics to the songs on their devices, a good time was had by all. what's wrong with that? no, i don't want them to bringing texting to the dinner
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table and don't want them to spend every moment engrossed in an iphone. same with pediatricians opposed to any screen for children at bedtime or meal time. what they've done is adjust to the new reality. screens are everywhere. it's not such a bad thing if little ones use them as a learning and socialization tool. of course, parents and grandparents should know what the youngsters are watching and who they're communicated with. unlimited unsupervised screen time is obviously done. so next time i see my six-month-old twin granddaughters, twin granddaughters, six-month-old i'll be seeing them on face time. seeing granddad on the small screen as well as the big screen and doing good.
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actually, knowing the kind of srisk that you're comfortable sure thiwith,ight? i'd steer clear. really? really. straight talk. now based on your strategy i do have some other thoughts... multiplied by 13,000 financial advisors it's a big deal. and it's how edward jones makes sense of investing. . stuart: look at this.
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exactly one hour ago we were down almost 100 points. fast-forward one hour, and we're up nearly 5. the dow is at 17,136. brand news polls just released. they came out at the top of the hour. now, in a direct matchup, hillary clinton loses to all of the leading republican candidates, that is a shocker, that's a big headline. and here's another. take a look at this. in that same fox news poll, vice president joe biden beats all the leading gop candidates. here's democrat strategist from earlier on this program today. >> i think it shows exactly how frustrated the american populous is that you can have somebody that they barrel know like ben carson or carly fiorina, they haven't really been vetted in the public eye, so it's tough to compare them what would actually happen for somebody who has been vetted for 20 years but they fact that they're competing with someone who has been around for 20 years in recognition
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and protest vote does say something loud and clear. stuart: repeat this. in a matchup head-to-head, hillary clinton loses against all four leading republican candidates and this came out. >> yes. stuart: the day of the first democrat debate. >> and losing, the candidate that's not a candidate beats all of the gop contenders or front runners whereas hillary who we've seen slide in these polls now over the last weeks and months, i think that says it all. >> right. >> what does that to joe biden now? how much pressure is he under now because they want to keep the white house. stuart: right. >> and the poll finding beating clinton. and this started in the summer. so this started in the summer quarterback this trend. stuart: if there was ever a push for joe biden to get into this thing, that's it surely. boy, tonight's debate, they do have an extra podium available in just case joe biden shows up at the last minute and debates. highly unlikely but the podium is there if he wants it.
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i think it's fair to say that the next republican debate will not be a snooze fest. tonight's democratic debate will be a snooze fest, but this one will not be because it's going to be on fox business, and it is november the 10th. watch out, gang, here we come. serious stuff. the iran parliament announcing this morning they've approved the nuke deal, there's members smiling and laughing just after the deal of that site. come in. i find this hard to take, they're laughing at us and we're humiliated, how do you feel about this? >> well, it's embarrassing and of course they're going to laugh, they've got every reason to laugh, they got everything they wanted, they signed a peace treaty yet broke it at least three times. for example, they had a guard to russia immediately. that was the first breakage of
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the deal. second the ballistic missiles just yesterday, again, broke the deal. also yesterday they convicted an american journalist who is in their prisons and every single step they're telling us we don't care about you or pleasing you. yes, he signed a deal with you, we get $150 billion in cash and then we get to do whatever we want to do. why not laugh? . stuart: hold 'em on one second. the brother of the american journalist who was indeed convicted on espionage charges, now, his brother spoke to fox last night. listen to what the brother had to say. >> how did you hear your brother had been convicted. >> you know, actually got an e-mail from somebody in iran telling me that they had heard about it. >> all these hearings you had all closed to the public; right? >> every single one. the only person who is not part of the iranian government that's been in there is his lawyer. >> do you know what he's convicted on.
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>> no. and neither does he right now. stuart: that's an interesting court system they have over there. the question right now, what happens to him? any ideas? >> well, we already that's an in one of the toughest prisons in iran where they really treat them very harshly. we have not been able to communicate him or see him. our government failed miserable, not only by him, but. stuart: they have four americans in the jails, there are some iranians i believe who have been convicted of sanctions buffeting. i mean you can see maybe a prisoner exchange here? >> i hope so. but it doesn't look like iran has any reason to exchange any prisoners at this point. they can do anything they want because the white house is not pushing for the exchange.
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we had an opportunity while we were negotiating the deal. we had cards that we were playing yet we failed to play our cards right in order to release the prisoners. what's going to make iran release now? what have we given iran that we haven't given them yet? we don't see kerry or the president doing anything and this is where the american public needs to call the white house, the state department. stuart: it won't do any good. it's a done deal. that you know. >> yeah. it is a done deal. stuart: thank you very much for joining us, we'll see you again real soon. thank you. >> thank you. stuart: let me break away briefly because we now have a dead flat market okay? now i say dead flat, i mean absolutely dead flat. we are down 1 point on a 17,000 index, i think i can safely say that is dead flat. >> very disgraceful, yeah, thank you. do you remember when i was called a bad granddad for letting my grandchildren play with an ipad? well, listen to this. pediatricians are once again
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revising guidelines when it comes to children and electronics. they are now saying screens are okay for kids two years and younger. that's a change in policy. melissa francis is here. you're the one that said i'm a bad gran dad. >> i did not. what do you care what they say about anything? the same type of group of people who is you can't have coffee while you're pregnant, oh, now you can, what do any of these people know anyway? they're constantly changing their mind. stuart: so am i right in saying that you are totally opposed to youngsters two and under. >> you're totally wrong. no. no. i have said that. stuart: so why am i a bad gran dad because i let my kids do it. >> there's probably myriad reasons but i'm not. [laughter] . stuart: don't touch me. >> i would say this. my kids are not allowed to
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have electronics in their bedroom at all ever for any reason, there's no ipads going back there, nothing, nothing, nothing, you have to keep a close eye on what's going on. stuart: of course you do. of course. >> loves to code, has drones, he's very into robotics and technology and math and science, we love all these kinds of things, but he can quickly dive down the vortex of getting addicted to the ipad, i've seen when he gets lost in it and you have to rip it out of their hand. i've been guilty of that when i'm exhausted and let them go at their ipad, there's educational uses but, stuart, you're going to blindly follow the recommendations of a -- that doesn't sound like you. stuart: no. >> party. certainly not. stuart: i've always been in favor with a limited amount of screen time for whatever age. i don't see anything wrong with it. >> very suspicious of any group recommendations. stuart: okay. >> make your own decisions, everyone,. stuart: first she called calls
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me a bad gran dad now says be suspicious. >> you're a wonderful human being,. >> that's all he wanted. stuart: leave it at that. if you want more of this, you can have it. melissa francis, 4:00 p.m. after the bell right here on the fox business network. >> yeah. stuart: you done enough? >> i'm good. i'm good. stuart: how about this? gambling. obviously a billion-dollar operation in the united states, we know that, we can bet on anything like horse raises, fantasy sports, we got it. so we cannot wager on political elections. we're not allowed to do it in america. you can do it in europe but not here. >> you can. stuart: ashley, some people want to make election betting a real thing. >> they do. of course the guys in vegas have been trying to push this through. it used to be legal in this country now it's illegal across the country. they used to use it as a polling mechanism so you could get a sense. >> it was a good one. >> the uk has done it forever and the standpoint people are going to bet on this and
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they'll just send their money overseas or to an illegal bookie, why not regulate it and tax it? >> hillary clinton continues to be the ringer over in ireland, biden a close second, bush tops trump czar are the odds on hillary? >> the odds on hillary, i'll get it for you, looks like 4-11. stuart: we used to say 11-4 on. >> on. stuart: you bet $11, you win 4. >> great odds. stuart: melissa, you've got to teach your kids how to gamble. >> i love this all brit show. do you feel out numbered? >> no. i'm an irish potato head. i can say that because i'm irish. stuart: you're taking away time from the sector report. tell us what you're watching. >> this is fun. yeah, a whole hour with stew and ashley. loads of fun. stuart: whoa. whoa. >> looking it he sector
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report. hello, dear friend. looking at energy, looking at oil, obviously oil is a huge story yesterday, and very volatile day and look at all the energy company and kind of mixed but overall most of these guys are higher, this is going to be your market story maybe for the next few sessions but your exxon, chevron, at these you guys are higher. that's all i've got. back to you. >> that was plenty. stuart: on chevron. [laughter] that was very good. some new yorkers may have found a way around the state's fracking ban. waterless fracking. i like the sound of that. there's a new website as well. nd save.com. you search for the treatment you want. gives you a list of doctors who can fix you up with it, and it will tell you how much each of them charges. how about that? more varney in a moment you wouldn't haul a load without checking your clearance. so why would you invest without checking brokercheck? check your broker with brokercheck.
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you can't breathed. through your nose. suddenly, you're a mouthbreather. well, just put on a breathe right strip which instantly opens your nose up to 38% more than cold medicine alone. shut your mouth and say goodnight mouthbreathers. breathe right >> i'm nicole petallides with your fox business brief. watched the dow industrial average go back and forth today, the seven-day winning streak, its best winning streak of the year, 2015, right now just about four points, 17,135, the s&p down and slightly the nasdaq, oil gaining after getting hit hard about 5% yesterday and denouncing back just a little bit today. and united health, and dow jones industrial, walmart and united technologies under pressure. twitter on the move to the upside announcing it's going to be cutting 8% of its global
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stuart: sap is a european software maker, good profits, the stock is up 6.5%. how about this one? a statewide bang on fracking, it's been in the law in new york state since last year, but i believe they got a way around this. liz, you've got more. >> instead of water, propane jell to get the oil put. it's highly flammable and could be explosive. but remember earlier in the year you were reporting 15 towns wanted to see, they wanted to leave new york state because they were losing out of the economic benefits of fracking, less jobs in that area than in the year 2000. they're in dire straights in this part of new york. >> didn't they come out with study saying it didn't contaminate water. stuart: yes no knowledge that
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it contaminated groundwater, that's from the epa. and nonetheless in new york state, no fracking. can't do it maybe this is a way around it. >> yeah. maybe it is. we'll see. stuart: if you pay out of pocket for medical procedures, if that's you, how do you know you're getting a decent deal? well, you don't really, do you? that's why my next guest is created what's being called the expedia health care. for different medical procedures, the founder and ceo there joins us now. all right, paul, let me get this right. i need a new hip, for example, and i'm paying for it myself. i go on to your website, and you will show me the doctors and their charges for a new hip. that's it? >> that's exactly right, stuart, what we're doing many d save is you can look at search and medical procedure based on your location and see the fully bundled cost of that procedure, compare that cost across different providers in your area and receive a very substantial savings for that
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service up front. so you can pay out of pocket or pay and file that towards your insurance deductible after the fact. stuart: now, what's your liability? because if you've connected me to a doctor did you go a procedure, and it turns bad, what's your liability in that transaction? >> we're really a transaction arm of that. so it's between the provider and the patient on those treatments. we're really providing a link to those -- a lot like amazon.com is a reseller, we're a seller of those services but they're choosing the. stuart: correct. now, when i get my range of choice for the different doctors doing the same procedure, i am told a little bit about each doctor presumably but do you verify the information in which the doctor is providing to me through you? >> that's correct. so our providers are credentialed, we've done those checks on the background and most of the providers, you'll see they're with major health care systems.
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so a lot of the largest health care companies in america bring cost and value to their consumers have contracted with us to put their providers on. so a lot of the same names and providers that you would know in your community to start out with. so it's not the quality issue there, just giving patients really transparency to the system. stuart: well, that's what the internet is for, thanks for being with us today. appreciate it. >> thank you. stuart: new technology being used to fight fires in california. we're going to show it to you. that's interesting. and the big beer deal, we have some beer trivia for you today. what is the oldest operating brewing company in the united states of america? answer after the break. [laughter] they say that in life,
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so call now and discover how an aarp medicare supplement plan could go long™ for you. these are the only medicare supplement insurance plans endorsed by aarp, an organization serving the needs of people 50 and over for generations. plus, nine out of ten plan members surveyed say they would recommend their plan to a friend. remember, medicare doesn't cover everything. the rest is up to you. call now, request your free decision guide and start gathering the information you need to help you keep rolling with confidence. go long™. ♪ >> well, before the break, stew asked you what is the oldest operating brewing company in the united states? well, let's go to the answer.
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there you go. yingling, established in 1869 in potsville, pennsylvania, still the largest brewers in america today. 2.5billion barrels per year. california firefighters have a new tool for detecting fires early. it's cameras. fox news claudia is in california to show us how these cameras can change how firefighters tackle what can be devastating wildfires. claudia. >> really great tool, ashley. you know, when first responders study the worst-case scenario, they pull out the map for marine county just north of san francisco home to a quarter million people and a lot of open space at high risk for catastrophic wildfire. but now these first responders have new eyes in the sky spotting for smoke 24/7. >> each one of these frames represents a view from a camera from one of the different sites. >> mounted at fire department lookouts and equipped with
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special software, the cameras can detect smoke in places people can't easily see. the computer technology developed in south africa analyzes every four minutes. >> we need to know when there's a fire, the sooner we can get resources on that fire, the sooner we can keep it from spreading. >> it's been 20 years since scorched 20,000 acres and this summer dozens of wildfires caused death and destruction across the midwest. some were done by sparked electrical lines, which is why california's may let utility, pg and e spent two million dollars, along with servers. ready to alert dispatchers at the first sign of smoke. >> if we get that spoke on a windy day, it's going to be disastrous and hopefully we won't need them, but we're ready. >> and because the whole
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system is internet-based, these first responders can see the fire on their smartphones as they're driving to it. just a huge advantage that didn't exist a year ago. >> great stuff, claudia in california, thank you so much. hour three of varney is straight ahead can a business have a mind? a subconscious. a knack for predicting the future. reflexes faster than the speed of thought. can a business have a spirit? can a business have a soul? can a business be...alive?
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stuart: tonight the democrats voted debate. it will be boring. they do not have successful businesspeople or brilliant doctors. just politicians that have been peddling talking points for decades. it will also be irrelevant. do not expect serious discussion about the gigantic albums president obama will leave behind. do expect a lot of political posturing. bernie sanders will rail against the billionaire class. hillary clinton will tax the rich. produce the growth we so desperately need? no, it will not.
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how about spending, hillary, free community college for all, free pre-k. more free government run healthcare. what that produce healthcare? no, it will not. it will certainly explode the dead. it might get interesting if there is a discussion about the president that our entrance failures with isis, putin, china or the nuke deal. do not expect much. they will blame bush. sitting through hours of identity politics. women's, gays, minorities, immigrants. bernie sanders will work him itself into a lather. nothingew. ju even more oh wh we have ha47 wted yrs. ta spe andgnorthe deb notef hor wh a ll f
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a metrics system. interesting to see how martin o'malley handles his apology. jim webb, he is a dark horse. it could break out. this debate does not seem to have the entertainment and the stark. we have got news. dynamic, engaging discussion. same old, same old talking points does not make it these days. ♪ we will have more politics for you in a moment. the dow was deathly off its lows. twenty-four points higher. up seven straight days. 17157. look at anheuser-busch.
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later this hour, judge napolitano on whether it will create a monopoly in america. 70% will be with the one conglomerate company if they get together. something has to give on that one. jpmorgan reporting earnings this afternoon. they say that they are going to try to save some money. look at the four big technology stocks that we follow very closely on this program. april, -- apple, facebook netflix, amazon. big news this hour. brand-new fox news poll show hillary clinton would lose to the gop front runners. all of them would beat hillary in a head to head matchup. now, look at this.
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even more astonishing. joe biden would beat those for republicans and they had to head matchup. joe biden has not declared that he is running. that is a six podium. cnn has it ready just in case joe biden shows up for tonight's democratic race in las vegas. look who else is here. this is tamara holder who abuse to the left. >> i showed up. i am sending a message to mister biden. i showed up to be on set. your crazy right wing views. you can show up for the debate tonight. i know he is watching. stuart: you do? >> air watching. stuart: that was a terrible poll result for hillary clinton.
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>> with all due respect for fox news which i love and adore, but it is a fox news poll. it maybe does leave a little right. [laughter] i do not think that they are that skewed. it is a fox news poll. i am a democrat. hillary will not lose to any front runner. we do not even know who that is going to be. i do not like hillary clinton. stuart: what is wrong with her? >> the rules do not apply to her. it is not just e-mail. we just learned about somebody working on campaign working for her not getting paid. the foundation questions. i don't think that she thinks that the rules apply. stuart: bill clinton will be in las vegas.
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he will not be in the hole where the debate is taking place. >> bill checking out the staffers or whatever. stuart: do you think that joe biden is going to run? i think that those polls, that is a big push. >> his behavior have him acting as if he is already on the campaign trail. also the super packs that have been built up. very endearing to him. i think that he is. it looks like he is. there is also the question, why are you holding out. at what point does that drop. at what point is it too late. i do not think that it is too late now. i do not think it will be too late if he does not show up tonight. why does he need to show up?
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maybe he will watch. >> people are saying it will not be the chronicle and snap of the republican debate which really move things along. do you agree with that? >> the democrats don't have the excitement that the republicans have. donald trump is to get viewers. stuart: it will not beat hillary. let's listen to what hillary would have to say. she was in las vegas. some people think that mister trump is entertaining. i do not think that it is entertaining that he insults immigrants, insults women. that is unacceptable behavior.
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anti-worker. anti-immigration. he is anti-women. for him to say things like i love women. i love my mom. we all love our mom. stuart: no man can stand up and say i love women. it is all lyrically incorrect. >> i would not be offended if a guy said i love women. the problem is he is running for presidency and we do not want someone that loves us. we want someone that will take us seriously and do better things for us. stuart: will you be watching tonight? >> i will be off of the air. i will watch the play-by-play. >> you are honest. thank you for joining us, tamara. save the date.
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the date is november 10. fox business alongside the "wall street journal." it will be november the 10th. in a few minutes, presidential candidate rick santorum on his tax plan. he wants a flat tax. 20% across the board. he will join us shortly. i think i've got this right. coca-cola. number one quarterback in the nfl. a link between tom brady and coca-cola. >> he decides to say, basically, coca-cola is poison for children, horrible for kids. frosted flakes are not a real food. he goes on with healthy eating drinking binge on the radio. coca-cola and more important, pepsico when it comes to the nfl. big sponsorship of sports.
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he has some other deals. he does not have the endorsement deals himself. the nfl does. a very crucial relationship. the reason why the nfl is a most valuable sports franchise in the world. stuart: what do you think about him saying coke is poison for kids? >> those are his believes. he is a father. he is saying that it is poison. coca-cola came out and issued a statement saying we support our product. stuart: 200 no calorie beverages in the usa and canada. tamara holder, am i a bad granddaddy if i go out and buy a coke for one of my young grandchildren as a special treat? >> as a special treat. people that take the big cokes and are a dick did, we have an ob city problem.
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tom brady has a big issue with the nfl. of course he will blast the sponsorship. >> i don't know. stuart: enough. stuart: deflate. the democrats like to say the gop is in chaos. get this. debbie walter mensch holds. the all party members from the debate. we will tell you who she kicked out next. republican presidential candidate rick santorum. he said time to read back the tax code. a flat tax proposal and he will join us. awe believe active management can protect capital long term. active management can tap global insights.
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of them at this point at these prices. jared, first of all, i want to start with apple. $100 a share. would you buy it? >> i think that now is the time to buy. they are stuck in a never never land. a great company. innovative product. they believe that tim cook and company cannot deliver what steve jobs did for so long. getting into autos. i think it is safe to say you could easily get to 120-125 over the next six months. stuart: how about facebook? the upper 90s. do you buy there? >> you know, facebook. it feels like myspace. a lot more meddling. i think that it will grow. i think facebook, i think that
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they will be when they report on the fourth of november. i would be really careful. stuart: how about netflix? would you buy it now. 112. >> it definitely does have some upside here. 435 times earnings. they will make only half of what they made last year. what you want to watch for is the subscriber growth. both here and abroad. i would be careful. it is a volatile stock. there is some upside. use caution. stuart: i have to get to amazon. use caution. would you buy it? >> this company is changing the way we do business. they are walmart back in 1988. stuart: fascinating. you got through it real fast. we appreciate that. the republican race. rick santorum.
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what a pleasure. great to have you on the show. >> it is a possible credit. it would stay in place. a deduction for interest. limited to 25,000. the deduction for charity. that is it. nothing else. no limit on charitable productions. on the corporate side, every tax revision goes away. a 20% flat tax. you can extend everything.
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we do illuminate the duct ability on the corporate side. stuart: you are sticking to it. 20% across the board. very limited seductions. okay. it is clean cut. i say it will be very difficult to implement it. you may be the president, but getting that kind of tax plan through would be difficult. >> i do not think so. we get rid of all the obamacare taxes for example. we get rid of obamacare. if you get rid of them under the plan i put forward, it is more neutral. this is, this will be a very responsible tax plan. 20% is a rate that some people
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say too low on some. people who are not paying taxes now will not be paying taxes in the future. corporate income, i just think really it is really going for it. stuart: you have to hit that threshold. >> if you are a family of four, $50,000 a year, you are paying $10,000 in taxes. your credit is $11,000. you would get a refund of $1000. actually, more than that, you
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get the child credit on top of that. sixty-five, $75,000 a year. stuart: flat tax gives us growth. use a 5% growth fairly quickly. >> yes. if you combine the tax plan we have according to the tax code, without the obamacare, 3.3% growth which is 1% above what the target is right now. if you add obama care in, that is another .7. we are at 4% growth. over 3 million jobs in addition to the proposed baseline which is about 15, 16 million right now. it is a very strong addition to the growth of our country. it particularly helps. it also manufacturing sector. stuart: rick santorum, i am sure you will be pushing that flat tax, 20%, very hard, pushing the
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growth very hard on november 10. it will be in the walkie. we expect to see you there, rick santorum. november 10. >> i look forward to it. thank you, sir. stuart: it is not even halloween yet. many stores already have their christmas decorations out. they want more experiences than stuff. we will do that in a moment. >> i want stuff. ♪ climbed down the chimney ♪ ♪ why should over two hundred years of citi history matter to you? well, because it tells us something powerful about progress: that whether times are good or bad, people and their ideas will continue to move the world forward.
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as long as they have someone to believe in them. citi financed the transatlantic cable that connected continents. and the panama canal, that made our world a smaller place. we backed the marshall plan that helped europe regain its strength. and pioneered the atm, for cash, anytime. for over two centuries we've supported dreams like these, and the people and companies behind them. so why should that matter to you? because, today, we are still helping progress makers turn their ideas into reality. and the next great idea could be yours. sometimes they just drop in. always obvious. cme group can help you navigate risks and capture opportunities.
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stuart: the democrats like to say that it is the gop that is in chaos. try this. disinvited congresswoman from hawaii to tonight's debate. she called all candidates to appear on stage. what is this all about? >> she went on to another network. she gave an interview that you wanted to see more debate. more candidates on the stage from the democratic party. the dnc came out and said we asked her and her staff to keep
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the focus on the candidate itself. so america gets to know the candidate. she kind of went against the party basically. stuart: debbie waterman scholz went to get the party. >> you should not say that. she does not say she was disinvited. she was disinvited. stuart: they are imposing discipline within the democrat party. imposing that discipline. >> you one on went on tv and did not give the right talking point. do not bother coming to las vegas tonight. that is the gist of the story. in a nutshell. stuart: okay. try this one. the holidays are about two and a half months away. a new study that shows holiday
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spending will be down this year. gerri willis will be here. >> they asked people what they did with their monthly budget. i am spending less. monthly they are spending less. a shocker if you have been following consumer spending over the last few years. 28% say my income is not growing. i am being forced to do this. another 18% say i'm worried about the economy. 10% say too much debt. stuart: we were saying this last holiday season. people want experiences as a gift. >> i think that you are onto something here. people are not into the printed good day like they used to be. now we have credit card companies saying we are seeing this subtle shift in spending.
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restaurants, vacations rather than quote things, the $1000 purse. etc. etc. >> baby boomers. >> they are saving the lease. they are 48% on this list. meanwhile, boomers are doing everything. 73% say they are limiting each month. boomers are up against it. the kids are paying for themselves. trying to boost that concern. [laughter] >> i am sitting right in there. trump wants basic as his running mate. could this be the dream tea chare -- n ri lite.
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writer trucking company. guidance cut. that affects all the companies. all of them on the downside. gastown ever such a fraction. 230. how about this. republican presidential front runner donald trump has been telling people if he wins the nomination, he wants john k sick as his running buddy. charlie is with us. i know you cannot name your sources. >> donald wears it kind of like this. >> trying to get me to wear that. i told him i would only wear it
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after you did. [laughter] >> people that are close to trump. will he name someone that he was like as vice president. the trump camp officially says he is not naming anybody just to have. there apparently would be an ap report today. he would name a vice president. behind the scenes trump says nice things about a few people, not a lot of people, john k sick is one of those people. >> that is how you, in the modern air of donald trump run for president. we should point out, john k sick is running for president as well. they have no comment. >> they have no comment.
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>> they would not touch it. kind of a thank you. they did not deny they have been saying nice things. they just deny the fact that he is ready to pick up vp. you need to to tango. he is not a particularly big fan. >> donald apparently likes him. >> the tickets. the position. >> i should have wore a red tie. >> talking to cavuto later. >> get the judge. [laughter] we have republican strategist with us. no well, what was your take on this?
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>> gossiping? >> what do you say. >> everybody wants him. i do not think it is about being nice. i think it is about what donald trump thinks is a bigger picture. whatever governor would have been from ohio, i think that the republicans know. even a part-time amateur strategist. they need ohio and florida. >> there is value on the position if you are the governor of ohio. >> right. >> noah, i have to get to this. new polls just release. listen to this. a direct match up. hillary clinton loses to all of the leading republican candidates.
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in that same fox news poll, vice president joe biden beats all the leading gop candidates. tamara holder, democrat, earlier in the show. listen to this. >> i do not like hillary clinton. the rules do not apply to her. it is not just e-mail. we just learned about somebody on the campaign working for her not being paid. also an employee. the foundation question. i do not think that she thinks that the rules apply. it is a narcissistic review. stuart: at that poll shows hillary clinton loses to all four of the leading candidates. >> she has a really bad brand.
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if you watch and snl, that is about what america thinks about her. this is not a surprise. her poll numbers are dropping. >> he beats the four republicans. >> this is a battle cry to get out there and run. i think with joe biden in the race, it is a real race. stuart: i am sorry to cut this short did thank you for joining us. we appreciate it. the democratic debate was a little bit boring. the next republican debate will not be. it is on fox business. november the 10th. check the share price. if they get together, and they are supposed to get together,
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they will control 70% of the peer markets. they've got to do so. judge napolitano is here. >> they would clearly interfere with this. they would require either to stop it or require the restructuring of these two corporations in a way that you would not recognize. >> does it have a definition of when it is a monopoly? >> no. it could be as low as 40. clearly up of 50. enough for the justice department to look in on it. unless there is another provision. protecting the acquisition. if the company were and, like our bosses are, that first amendment business.
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it trumps. this is use. the sale of a commodity that is not protected. stuart: as i recall, there was a change in the constitution. >> a terrible, terrible disaster. london school economics. [laughter] stuart: you think that that was a terrible disaster? >> i think that prohibition was a terrible disaster. back to this, this is such a huge monopoly. if people do not like this, they do not like the company that makes it, they will buy it elsewhere. >> i think that this is an excuse to rearrange. >> i agree with you. lots of brands within america to
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get that 70% market share down. >> let's talk about their global beer sales. they do not want australia, they want africa. >> i think that that -- the lower the barriers to entry, the weaker the government's case that this is a monopoly. if the cases tried, that will be the defense. >> low barrier. >> charlie could make beer in his basement. >> he probably does. >> charlie, thank you very much. stuart: 50 tons of guns and ammo airdropped by our military force theory and rubbles. two days after the defense
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opportunities aren't always obvious. sometimes they just drop in. cme group can help you navigate risks and capture opportunities. we enable you to reach global markets and drive forward with broader possibilities. cme group: how the world advances. stuart: i am nicole petallides with your fox business brief. the dow jones industrial average. since march of 2013. right now, the dow is up four points. s&p down one.
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stuart: the u.s. military airdropped 50 tons of small arms, ammo and mandates. today's earlier, the defense department announced it was ending the trading program over there. come on in mike baker. is it possible that they really do have a covert operation going on under the radar there? >> it would not seem to be covert now would it. maybe it is a really over strategy. look, there is not.
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the syrian kurds. we have putting it out the back. trying to help them out to some degree. a covert action program with a strategy, no. >> president obama does not seem to want to do anything in syria. it seems like total retreat. >> i believe that he wants to do something. i do not buy the idea that he is completely disengaged and has no interest. i just don't think he knows what the right thing is. this is the most complicated layered complex process that we have had in a long time. nobody has had a clear idea on how to deal with this. we could ask for stronger leadership. i can sympathize with them.
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all we are looking at is that possible solutions. >> you do not know who will get the guns and the ammo and the grenades. you do not know who will get them and who will use them. >> that was the problem at the beginning. this has been going on for years now. that was the problem at the beginning. we did not know how to do this. we are the new and past history. start handing out guns and gear to these folks, they are shifting alliances constantly. we did not step in. we talked about things. arming oppositions to cyber. whatever it may be. never behind a single strategy that we felt could have any
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success. stuart: thank you very much for joining us, as always. appreciate it. the stock is up $30 a share. they are cutting jobs. 80% of the workforce. are they setting themselves up for a fail? >> it is more possible if they have a little less fat. it is an open secret around silicon valley. they have looked at twitter in the past. this seems like the price decreases over time and maybe it would be attractive. why is twitter cutting when they should be growing lots of different product? the other ideas, can that even attract in a significant way. look at google. they have integrated a plot of technologies. they do not have to buy twitter.
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the technology, even though it is extremely important for a lot of live news events is not necessarily exclusive to just twitter. stuart: we know how to make money out of that. >> exactly. they have not been able to do that. jack dorsey is back. a lot of moves i expect to see him make before anything big happens. stuart: the mets could clinch their series with the dodgers tonight. ticket prices are soaring. >> they are sold out. standing room only. $180. going to third base. cost to about $10,000. >> for a baseball?
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>> that does not mean that people will actually pay it. >> we will wait and see. it will fluctuate a lot. >> can mets fans even afford those prices? [laughter] stuart: you are in trouble, cheryl. big changes to the magazine. no more naked women. they want you to read the article. scroll up, please. i want to see what is next. facebook, they are creating an app. after the break. ♪
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newsfeed. you see an ad from banana republic. you click on that at. it would open up a native catalog shopping experience. take into that other site to shop. it is all within facebook. they want you to stay on facebook for as long as possible. >> going to that banana republic site. it just cuts one step out. >> it is a little trickier than that. you shop within the facebook user experience. you go to banana republic to check out. people were trying to click and then go to mobile sites that were not responsive. people were not actually completing a purchase. you cannot charge as much for an ad if they are not purchasing from that at. >> a piece from the transaction.
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>> currently, they will not right now. they will probably be able to get higher prices for those ads because people are completing transactions. the price will go up. >> i appreciate you having me. thank you. >> i have another headline for you. playboy getting rid of new pictures in the magazine. >> they are getting rid of full nudity and playboy. everything is on the internet that you want to see. this is a magazine that had more than 5 million circulation back in the 70s. changing baritone. getting rid of full nudity for the women. it will still be provocative. that is the thing. once they took full nudity off
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the website, they are online hidden. stuart: more varney after this. ♪ ♪ i built my business with passion. but i keep it growing by making every dollar count. that's why i have the spark cash card from capital one. i earn unlimited 2% cash back on everything i buy for my studio. ♪ and that unlimited 2% cash back from spark means thousands of dollars each year going back into my business... . what's in your wallet?
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. stuart: my time is completely up. so i will hand tout very capable hands of neil cavuto. neil: thank you very much, stuart, there is another dramatic story developing, we might get confirmation within the next couple of hours. it is this, sheldon adelson is about, we are told to put his chips behind one marco rubio. politico and a host of other sites including bloomberg reporting what we have been intimating that adelson set his sights on the young republican as the best bet for the republicans to reclaim the white house. this guy claims considerable weight. he spent better than $100 million in the last presen
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