tv Cavuto Coast to Coast FOX Business April 18, 2016 12:00pm-2:01pm EDT
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>> look only dow57 cents. >> a mere 57 cents. who cares it's at 39. >> yeah. >> the dow industrials. i'm trying to do the math. 21.9 points left to get to 18,000. i think that's pretty good. i can do the math. can you, neil cavuto? because the time is yours. neil: thank you, sir, very much. we'll keep a close eye on that. we're watching that closely because that could all set concerns about dropping oil prices. if the earnings come in better than expected. as we get the report cards, they're going to be awful, they're going to be down, and that would represent the fourth straight quarter they were down. if hasbro is any indication, don't ask why, for star wars-related merchandise. in the meantime all eyes are on the candidates across new york state trying to get ahead of the primary tomorrow. donald trump has already called some weakened results
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in wyoming pointless and indication that the system is rigged. ted cruz got all 14 wyoming delegates. as he got all 34 delegates from the state of colorado. so already he's looking at a 48-delegate net gain on donald trump ahead of new york. so it's anyone's guess how that will go. but to trump's point that the system is rigged, or he's behind on the count. gina, mark. mark, we begin with you. that is donald trump's argument that it's not the will of the people. and they're getting shortchanged. what do you think? >> well, the system is built by the party. for party loyalists. so trump absolutely has a point. yeah, the system is rigged because the party set up the system. but, look, neil, i think what trump is doing is rhetoric is largely looking ahead and not looking back. you know, he's got a string of primaries coming up where he can perform extremely well and potentially regain the momentum here to possibly get to the 1237 delegates by june 7th.
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i think he has a good chance of doing that. you know, there's a new poll out that says 52% of republican primary voters think the system is unfair. and they also think that trump is authentic and effective and think he cares about their needs. so he is really talking to his -- the people in his movement who can make a difference in these up coming primaries. neil: you know, say what you will will the system is well-known and it's been well telegraphed. if you look at this, sabrina, the fact of the matter is that ted cruz picks up, you know, 48 delegates going in to tomorrow's crucial new york primary. now, let's say donald trump were to win all 95 of those delegates and that could be a herculean task. it does somewhat take the mph out of his thunder, does it not? >> a little bit. he's threading a difficult needle here.
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oon the one hand the idea he's been wrong into this narrative that he's been grieved and many americans are being overlooked by the in new york. but that's a safe place for trump and at the same time he's going to have to move beyond this status and beyond all of these things that are wrong and bad and we've, you know, been passed over and start talking about what he's going to offer in the future. because i think all of these people who have really genuine concerns about our education system and our health care system and our economy and finding jobs. they want to know okay. now that we're all on the same side that we're victims here and things haven't gone the way, what are you going to do -- neil: no, i think you raised a good point. but, gina, i think he's making lemonade out of potential lemons. donald trump reminding people whether this is properly telegraphed or not. whether he was caught off guard or not. that the underlying system
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disallows people to vote and the delegate is something else. i think all of the guests are right talking about the fact that the rules were known, this was known. donald trump was caught unaware. but donald trump is trying to make a bigger point that the process itself is flawed. much that democrats argue about the roll disproportional role that super delegates play. what do you think of that? >> yeah. i think you're absolutely right about that, neil. i think inadvertently ted cruz handed perhaps something more important is that is a great, big outsider trophy. i think that this proves -- because now ted cruz has put himself in a place where he is working with the establishment and people who fought the establishment for all of these years thinking wait a minute you're either the person working with him, or you're the person working against him and we all know had. donald trump is the master brander. we will never say marco again without thinking little first. he's done this so masterfully and now he has successfully
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taken what has become a victory for ted cruz. and granted ted cruz is the establishment. and i don't know how ted cruz gets out of that. he's working with them and all about the rules. >> there's a codependent relationship there, neil, between ted cruz and the establishment elites. you know, codependent. and let me tell you that relationship turns very toxic -- if we hit the second ballot and they'll drop ted cruz like a hot coal. >> like a hot potato and the rules talking about right now will be the very rules they will be using to destroy ted cruz the second or third ballot. you're exactly right. neil: such rules. hot coal, hot potato, you drop it anyway because it's hot. meanwhile donald trump is trying to put out a fire at the other end of his campaign. the notion that he's a racist. so he's holding a meeting at trump tower. peter barns with the goal of that powwow. hey, peter. >> well, hey, neil, that's right. this is something called the national diversity coalition for trump and the leadership
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includes the ceo of it. and, in fact, pastor darrell scott of cleveland who's known trump for several years. bruce lavell, a former republican party chairman from georgia and on the apprentice of course. now, pastor scott told me the meeting was set up for trump to meet and greet additional members of the coalition. there were some 50 plus people in the trump lobe waiting to go into the meeting. i think we have video of that. and it's not just african-americans. it's also asian-americans, muslim americans, and hispanic-americans and other groups. but scott also said that the members want to talk to trump about quote concerns and initiatives for our communities. he added we are going to be mr. trump's eyes and ears on the ground during the campaigns. now, there's supposed to be a press event after this unclear although this moment whether or not donald trump will be
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participating if he does, we'll get that to you. trump heads to buffalo ahead of the new york primary. neil. neil: all right, peter, thank you very much. and then there's the democratic race. bernie sanders is down in the polls but that's not reflected in the huge crowds he draws. in brooklyn north of 28,000. 28,000. now, i know the weather was nice but come on. adam shapiro on how the candidate is trying to tap down expectations with crowds that big. >> yeah. well, it's all about the crowds. they keep turning out for mr. sanders but also turn out in some respects for hillary clinton who's going to be speaking here at the hillary clinton at 2:00 p.m. this afternoon. this is a get out the vote campaign organizing event. let me give you the latest real clear politics average of all the polls that are out there to show you that at this point according to the polls, clinton maintains a double-digit lead over sanders. neil, the democrats in favor of clinton 53.7%, sanders 40.9%.
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now, this is averaging polls between april 6th and april 15th. as for sanders, he did have that rally. prospect park and it was something like 28,000 people. that's larger than the crowd that was at washington square park last week. he's talking about this campaign going full force. and here's what he said on the today show. >> the bottom line is let's look at the real poll tomorrow. generally speaking, polling has under estimated how we do in elections 25 points down in michigan. we ended up winning. we have enthusiasm, we have energy, people understand it's too late for establishment. politics and economics, they want real change in this country. they want relationship to stand up to the billionaire class, that's what we are providing. . >> and, neil, one thing that's important different in new york than michigan, this is a closed primary. you had to be registered as a democrat or republican by the october deadline in order to vote in your party's primary.
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so democrats had to register as democrats, republicans had to register as republicans by the october deadline. independents, they're cut outta. they do not get to vote tomorrow in the primaries. and there are some within the sans camp who are saying, well, ifds lose tomorrow, it might be because the independents weren't allowed to weigh in. neil,. neil: well, that would certainly hurt of all people bernie sanders. so we'll have to watch that one very, very closely. thank you, adam, very much. back to the big board of what's going on at the corner of wall and broad. what started out as a morning on the heels of an asian european market selloff because of opec and otherproducs quotas have now been forgotten in the midst of at least united states. benefit of expected earnings. want the least coming from hasbro. the numbers that blew away even the most optimistic estimates. now, why mention that? because that could offset the higher -- of lower oil prices because the earnings were
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. neil: all right. well, iran fell to new age part and as widely expected, it did not play a team player when it comes to oil producers. iran wants to get as much oil as it can. post agreement with the united states and other leaders to produce up to 2 million barrels a day. it didn't want to licens limit that, it didn't want to cut that back, so we didn't. but how low do we go? i'm surprised not lower.
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what do you think? >> well, i think we're coming back right now, neil, because the shock of this agreement weren't off a little bit. but i'll tell you this. a lot of people are going to blame iran for this falling apart. i think russia is blaming saudi arabia. and it's true that this is not your grandfather's cartel anymore. it was very unsaudi like to actually have opec and non-opec members actually meet somewhere without having an agreement in place. and if they knew that they weren't going to make an agreement, they knew iran wasn't going to come on saturday. so they had time to cancel this meeting. but they didn't. the russians blame the is saudis then at the last minute they changed the deal and walked away from the table. and they're putting the blame on the russians. what this also says is that ali who used to be the man in the saudi arabiaian oil minister, he was the man, now looks like he's not making the decisions. it looks like these decisions
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are made from higher up. so that means we have a whole new dynamic when it comes to this cartel. it's not ali niemi making the shots, it may be king solomon. more about politics, and not about business and that's a big change for saudi arabia. neil: certainly what we've had with the saudis over this releasing a lot of the 9/11 material that seems to link some in the royal family and the government to the planners of those attacks. saudi arabia threatened the action on the tea bill and the like. could they go further than that when it comes to oil? i guess they would be shooting themselves in the foot. but what are you hearing? >> well, i think that's a real possibility and that may be another back story why the saudis walked away from this agreement. you know, they realized by dumping the oil market, they're hurting the usa. they're putting our oil producers out of business and
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this may be another way to kick some sand in the face of the obama administration by backing away from this agreement. the other thing is that the saudis also realize that the drop in the price of oil has really caused instability in the global marketplace. caused uncertainty. so this might be another sign that the saudi arabiaians, you know, really have a new leader in charge and a new way of looking things. and another way to tell us here in the united states to go take a hike. . neil: all right, buddy, thank you very much. phil flynn. do you remember when that was proposed the multitier price hike? the gist was people love it so much, they'll be happy to pay. along comes amazon with a counter strategy. i don't know about that anymore. after this
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disney ave very successful week for yet another reincarnation for the jungle book. made over $100 million over the weekend. this thing looked realistic. you really thought this kid was next to lions and tigers and all of that stuff. i later found out that was not the case. but by in large, well received, certainly by critics and certainly by fans. will all right. in the meantime this is going to be tough for fans of netflix if they had an either or proposition when it came to amazon and their respected streaming services. right now amazon is offering a two-teared deal that might be too good to reduce. lauren simonetti has all the details. hey, lauren. >> this is really good for consumers because more options come better prices. so what netflix is doing is their cheapest plan starts at $8. next month that goes to $10 a month for about 17 million subscribers. obviously folks are going to be angry that that's the higher price tag to watch "house of cards," narcose, and
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the like. amazon comes in and say, well, we have prime video. that's really compelling. transparent, red oaks, all of these great shows from amazon. so they say let's decouple it from our prime shipping service that cost $99 a year and let our customers just sign up for prime video and let's charge them $9 a month. so they're under cutting their bigger competitor netflix by a dollar a month. this is being called a positive for amazon and rbc capital markets saying a negative for netflix. and you can see that in the stock price reaction today. netflix down, amazon up. well, netflix reports the latest earnings after the closing bell today. look, this is going to be a great quarter for them. expect about $2 billion in revenue. but pay attention to anything that netflix says, especially on the call about they're having a saturated market, not being able to grow their subscription base. they've got 45 million users right here in the u.s., 30 million overseas.
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so they're at the point where they might be saturated. and now with more competition from the likes of amazon, it might be difficult for them. neil: yeah, and a lot of them overlap on some programming. >> yeah. neil: thank you, lauren, very much. >> thank you. neil: all right. you know, this being tax day, i don't want to bum you out. hopeful you paid your taxes. but we talked about a little bit more than $18 trillion debt. do you know that is the amount of taxes folks have paid since barack obama became president? now, it's a startling figure but the fact of the matter is it works out to more than 124,000 bucks per u.s. worker per job. and that's not the half of it. so you think about all of that money coming in, we would at least be able to take this debt and pay a little bit of it off. terry jeffries says that's not happening, though. why not, terry? >> well, neil, at the same time barack obama has taken in $18.7 trillion in taxes. as you say that' 124 000
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dollars for every person in the united states, but he's borrowed an additional $8.6 trillion for 57 000 dollars in the name of every person in the united states. so you're talking about $181,000 net for every single person in the country with a job and the directory to get even worse as we go ahead. neil: you know, terry, i've always said that we don't have a revenue problem here. in other words, we get a lot of money coming in. just off a record month for tax money that's come in to uncle sam and a record fiscal quarter. having said that, though, we find an unusual way of willingly spending all of that money and then demanding more. and i wish there could be both parties and accounting for that money before they talk about raising taxes a penny onsets. but they don't. >> well, i wish there could. historically over the last 50 years the federal government took in about 17.4% of gdp and taxes. and the next ten years, it's
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never going to be below 18%. yet spending's going to get up to 23% of gdp by ten years from now. and, neil, that's being driven by federal programs like medicare and social security that the politicians don't want to cut. medicaid, that was expended by obamacare. and what we're going to see in the future is interest on all of this money we have borrowed. right now a very low interest rate. average about 2% on the publically traded debt in the united states. that's going to go up as that publically traded debt goes up. eventually we're going to have a federal government that's paying about a trillion dollars a year in cash out the door just the interest on the debt. that's where we're going. neil: amazing. the argument is that very columnist who pointed out well, you know, it's a big deal. but we always get through it. and they just say it's money we owe ourselves, so everyone take a chill pill. when i hear people dismissing that larger figure, i get worried. i also get worried that an election that i think is going to be about government. do you want more it of? or less it of?
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a lot of people are gla glamouring for a lot more. >> cultural and demographic dynamics under this. in 1930s america started moving from a country where people were self sufficient and individually residential. we started creating a welfare state. now the bill is coming deal on that welfare state as the baby boomer generation is retiring. social security and medicare roles are swelling, people who were in the nonretirement age brackets are going on food stamps, going on disability, we've created a mentality where people think, well, wait a minute i don't have to work. i can drop out of the labor force. neil: even wall street, rich one shall we say preached since it was the beneficiary of multiple bailouts. so i often think who are they to judge? having said all of the above, though, we are in a world of
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undebted hurt here and people whistling past the graveyard. >> it's a reality, we have to discuss it as a insinuation. and if we don't do something about it, we're headed toward a crisis. and when that crisis hits, not it's not going to be a fiscal crisis for the government, it's going to be a cultural crisis. because this debt and government is built on cultural changes that have been built in part by the proliferation of a federal welfare state. neil: you are absolutely right. and for all involved. and all parties have to start getting involved. very, very good insight on all of this, terry. thank you, very, very much. and i know this issue, but this election as we mentioned those on the left and right is really about accountability and government accountability. do you want more of it or less of it? if you want more of it, you keep raising taxes. if you want less of it, republicans and democrats, you've got to reign it in because we are a few years
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away of interest on our debt eclipsing. think about it. that would be the interest on your visa card. eclipsing and beating out all of your other expenses. that's weird. that's greece. that's troublesome. in the meantime the supreme court is taking up this idea that the president had for deportation of millions of illegals. yet deportations have been frozen for how long?
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>> we are back on "cavuto: coast-to-coast." i'm connell mcshane. terrible earthquake in ecuador. on saturday special you had two large earthquakes, boasts an unpleasant magnitude come is striking within hours of each other. obviously the human toll and all of this. some can be seen on the screen as we show it now. 350 dead in ecuador and 40 in japan with a thousand pleasantries get a market although you'll talk about in a second. some people start to ask his or any relation between the two in the short answer seems to be no me ask yours. 9000 miles apart. different types of earthquakes scientifically inexpert day because you have to earthquakes in a short period of time does not mean all for all activity is
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increasing in any way. for the market come as certainly as a senior today, there's an impact from a 3% to the downside in japan and other markets are although her. the other point about that is the sentiment in asia in particular it hasn't necessarily carried over because it was also affected by the meeting until half of the oil producers not working in the agreement so that was also sent in a played man in addition to the earthquakes or to the earthquake certainly not helping. not to you. neil: thank you very much. the administration's plan to delay the deportation for millions of illegals. the question is can they continue to do that. before we get in common the dallas level. right now the dow is up 50% are in its lowest reach in january. that is quite a haul back into positive territory. we will keep an eye on that.
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first, the blake burman on the supreme court and whether the eight justices there herein as well confuse or at least clarify. blake. reporter: hi, neil. the warmest day i fired for the supreme court and there are the passion to match this afternoon earlier this morning as well as thousands of supporters on both sides of the aisle have come to the supreme court. shoulder by shoulder earlier this morning as the oral arguments are happening here that ended about an hour ago. thousand on the front of the supreme court. justices take up the deferred deportation of some 45 million people here in the country i should say that the president and his administration made those executive actions at the end of 2014 among them to come out of the shadows and as it was described inside the courtroom earlier today. two completely different issues at play.
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the first whether or not the executive actions are illegal, whether they sat down good members of congress, republicans said that was the case. the president and that congress did not use their turn their turn to do something about it. sonja soda may or earlier questioning wrath about the solicitor general for the state of texas brought this case beard solicitor general said it was unlawful and president met with the administration did and jumped in and said how can you say any of this? samuel alito asked the question whether it is lawful to be here but not lawful to work here. it allows some folks to stay in the country and work. the complete other question is whether or not there is any standing or texas in the other 25 states to bring this case. one of the points justice breyer made is that the state they're going to sue an executive action like this, can states in the
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future sue over anything and whether or not that will allow a flood of litigation from there on out. chief justice john roberts said he felt there was indeed standing and of course political ramification in all of this. several mentions earlier inside of the court as to what might have been depending who was the election, especially if there is a fortune for a tie. hillary clinton put out a statement saying associate will go further than the president on this one. neil: thank you very, very much. what if you have the 444 on this issue? jessica bond i'm not. wouldn't it be a lower court to have kind of push the president to the edge, wouldn't the ruling stand the president overstepped himself in that event? >> that is what most legal analysts have said. in the event of a four to four split, the decision of the appeals court and allowing the injunction blocking the president's executive actions will stand.
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of course the ultimate referendum on the action is the election in november. but this is a very important case. neil: one of the things that is always learned me when people talk about the fortified alien supposedly being deported, that the numbers actually greater. we had slowed major deportations down to all of this stuff. it could be many millions more, could it not? >> well, it is true. deportations run at less than half the level there were a few years ago and the president has done everything he can to suppress immigration enforcement and slow deportations where most of the people covered by this work permit program that the president created were not really facing any realistic threat of deportation anyway even though the law clearly says they are deportable. the president has chosen not to
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enforce the law despite the problems this creates an incentive it creates for more illegal immigration. it will be interesting to see if the supreme court chooses to take up the question if the president is illegally advocating his responsibility to enforce the law. neil: caught up in the semantics of this, how far a president can go to executive orders. i'm no lawyer, i thought they were missing the trees then this is a very different for us and it's about overreach when it comes to enforcing policies on illegals. if they take a technical pass on not because it is some end they don't want to interfere with the presidencies of these orders regardless of whether it's a legitimate issue, and then the issue continues exploding. >> well, yes.
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one of the questions is did they follow the rules in place for changing regulation and that is one of the questions the lower corporal donna founded the administration did not. the big issue here is really who gets to make immigration law? the constituconstitu tion says that responsibility and authority lies with congress and the constitution is clear i'm not. but the president was frustrated that congress didn't enact his immigration agenda and the things he wanted. and they impose the executive action. that's the fundamental issue that could affect lots of other issues is there any break on executive authority at all because if there isn't in this issue, the skies the limit as far as that a president can do. that's really the biggest
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question. certainly the immigration implications are huge as well. neil: i'm sorry. those who just want to a presumably to see whether another democratic administration would do. hillary clinton says she would do more than he's done on this issue. so maybe i am being cynical here. an attempt to cited on the course. a new president would come in and finish what he started. >> it's possible. let's not forget that congress still has a role to play and said things that could do. congress could step up and make it clear in immigration law exactly what kinds of discretion the executive ranch has. >> i'm not holding my breath. >> we will see. i have my doubts. thank you very much. the turnaround of the dow not only today, but remember we were
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looking at the potential of the bear market brise 20%. we at 14% for those ties. that was then. this is now. the doubt these levels a little bit more 300 points to all-time highs. go figure. they say that in life, we shouldn't sweat the small stuff. but when you're building a mercedes-benz, there really is no small stuff. every decision... every component... is an integral part of what makes the 2016 c-class
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we are seeing right now 999. we did cross over the market and the s&p 500 up 11 points. nasdaq up 16. down about 50 points. also oil under pressure early this morning. comments from new york president bill dudley. all these things have to turnaround. oil has been down 3990. toy maker hasbro doing so well. the quarterly profit goes to an all-time high. that is up 5.5% at this moment. up about 30% for the year. right now the dow was up 100 points. this is the dow 15,000. the doubt 18,000. you are watching fox business. more coming up.
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neil: i don't know if it will be reflected in your voting for the big primary. bernie sanders and hillary clinton national "wall street journal" confirming last week that nationally he's imposing to the point of it being a statistical time. 48% that is eroded consistently over the weeks from a double-digit lead of 9.1 as recently. i was then. this is now. we will keep an eye on it for
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you. she does hold hillary clinton 10.8 going into the primary tomorrow. meanwhile, we warned you again and again about the prospect of a drone hitting a commercial airline. it happened in britain. happily it could've been worse, but it was scary. jo ling kent with more on that. reporter: that happen on sunday carried 182 passengers actually collided with a drone according to authorities in what we see with the plane was labeled safely. no one was harmed by their product the larger question of what actually happened when it hits an airplane and it seems the british authority is not prepared for the eventuality. if you look in the united states, there's a lot of trend showing this may happen here relatively soon. right now faa regulations do not allow people to fly drums higher than 500 feet are within 500 miles of an airport. that hasn't stopped sightings
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from tripoli in over 100 sightings per month commercial planes. this is definitely a growing trend. 325,000 people are actually registering under the new program. what we see here is a dangerous but safe outcome of the british airways flight but an ongoing challenge here in the united states. >> we were lucky this didn't go into a jet engine. i'm telling you, and there's so many things it's only a matter of time. much has been devoted about the prospect of money and politics. but george clooney? take a listen. >> where some protesters last night when we pulled up in san francisco. they are right to protest. they are absolutely right. it's an obscene amount of money. the sanders campaign is absolutely right.
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it is ridiculous we should have this money in politics. i agree. >> what is odd is george clooney might be part of the problem. he raised money for hillary clinton benefit over the weekend at his home i believe. so many were protesting it that they were throwing dollar bills at hillary clinton's motorcade that she was making her way to mr. clooney's home. i don't know, but it doesn't control. dagen mcdowell, that is where. >> neil, this is what happens when an actor works without a script. it sounds completely insane. he is essentially saying that money we are part of the problem, but we are also going to be somehow part of the solution. there is some sort of twisted logic that he tries to come up with. by the way, a competing fundraiser for bernie sanders at clooney's neighbors house hosted by howard gold at the 99-cent stores. it was $27 a ticket.
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george clooney is saying we need to raise money for the democrat. the democrats can take back congress and the senate. then we can appoint a were justices who will ban overturned citizens united and that is the reason there's big money including my money and politics. neil: what is buried inside understand where he's coming from. if we cease and desist and i mean republicans, conservatives, the other guys, we are at a disadvantage. we need mutual disarmament which is not going to happen. mr. clooney has been a big critic of big money, and one of the biggest contributors to the big money. >> exactly, neil. he might be able to make that argument in some years past, but not this year. the incredible amounts of money he's raising from small
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donations, but also the fact he's refused super pac money. on the right, donald trump is self funding his campaign. they do accept donations from small donors on the website, but donald trump is not out there soliciting them. i don't know how you make the argument of what is essentially saying that he discussed himself, which i agree with. he discussed me too. neil: be nice. >> either way, he doesn't look that good. all the women out there going here showing a little age. he's got some years on end now. neil: we all get old, kiddo. you are resisting now. doesn't mean we all are. >> good doctors is all i have to say. neil: your credible. thank you very much. do you know what a lot of americans are during the summer? staying home.
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>> it is likely we will have a local outbreak. right now we have over 350 imported cases. people that travel to the region and came back. the concern is once one comes back, with a mosquito which you saw on that map by someone and locally transmitted to someone who's never left the country? neil: i think what the doctor is saying is the zika virus will hit here. the prospect of foreign exposure
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is still higher than it is here. if you add that to the fact that events abroad have not been encouraging when you talk about collapse in brazil and a whole new government taking over with impeachment of its president to growing economic discourse and the terror attacks we've seen abroad in brussels and europe. does that give american travelers pause and keep them are close to home? let's talk to mark murphy on that. what are you hearing? >> it's definitely affecting travel with the zika virus to south america as well as the caribbean. people take her cautions and be concerned about travel that they have to realize we been had from a terrorism standpoint in the last year. wrong place, wrong time is really a big part of what you have to be watching out for. there are things you can do but i don't think you shut down and don't travel. they see an eight to 10 drop
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specifically after brussels. neil: not that long ago brussels was considered one of the safer airports and missile it happened a few weeks ago. would you tell clients when they ask you i'm traveling abroad, help me out on this. are there any other safer places? it's always a crapshoot, is the neck? >> life is a crapshoot. what you tell people when you've got this influx of refugees in the situation taken place today, you make sure you don't go to these large events will be inviting targets potentially. i would look at various places like i love to go to paris and wouldn't have any issues with staying in a boutique they are. encourage people to do that. you find that the values are great and that's one of the things starting to stir a little bit of demand back. you could have a bit of a lack of three to six months. the thing that would drive
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people back to the opportunity to visit these places on a really great value. for whatever reason is the price goes down, so does the fear of terrorism. it's ironic, but in many cases it does come down to dollars and cents. neil: people ahead of the olympics because of all the other problems. >> i'm not so concerned about the unrest there. a place like rio you've got to be careful if you walk around, you're a target on the beach. you have to be concerned about that. the zika virus from everything we've from everything we stand and the cdc has reported the impact of animal but it's very name. if you get it by a mosquito, the first thing as have i been up to and the odds are slim to none. he is a certified. we are going to see it in this country anyway was spring and summer coming.
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neil: welcome back to "cavuto: coast-to-coast." you're looking live in side the trump tower by central park. that is donald trump ground zero with a big diversity congress today she criticism of racial remarks that is not meant to be bad. way out of context. we are getting a little bit more on this, but first you connell mcshane with the latest on the delicate count. >> 95 delegates at stake but the magic number is 1237.
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obviously he remains as the front runner with 700 delegates. when you are mr. trump then you add a 2756 you are getting their. no matter who models the dow, it is going to be very close at 481 needed. he will have to do well beginning with the mars 95 in new york to get to the mark. read through the other candidates. the math is much more difficult. ted cruz at 559 to get to the 1237 and 678 is likely not going to happen. the governor pio will definitely not happen. 144 delegate the marker would be out of the race. we have to have a convention on the floor. we know all of that already. let's go to the map and talk about the big state and the passive state of new york in the 95 delegates at stake tomorrow. looked at the 27 congressional districts and real quick when
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your quirks we break it down by districts. 14 delegates statewide. 81 a new yorker by district. that's what donald trump continues to campaign here so hard. when they look ahead come a few interesting things here. a lot of northeastern states talking about next week or pennsylvania down, rhode island and maryland. we can jump ahead until may and start thinking about the state of indiana. that is a big one in a lot of people's view because their profiles as a state that ted cruz would do well. 57 delegates to state. can trump pick up some magic at 1237 in a state like indiana? we will see. thank neil: thank you very much. by the time of the convention, right now this whole diversity
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for him he is hosting at his headquarters in new york, part of the process to square things right so there's nothing that gets in the way of that. an interesting read on this that went one event at a time in one primary at a time to savor this could go and how donald trump could amass the delegates. before we go, let's listen to this trump diversity event. >> the outside world and right now you see what's going on. there's so many problems. we will solve problems and we are going to solve the problems of jobs and the economy because that is really big. [applause] i want to thank all of you for being here. i think it's going to be an incredible evening. this has been an amazing campaign. i do want to believe the polls because the polls are what they are. they are beyond anything anybody sees. look at the other folks running. they couldn't care less about
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new york. we care about new york a lot. we care about new york values. so i want to thank everybody for being here. we let the wall. see you later. neil: we are having a diversity of foreign what's all this criticism in the mainstream media that is somehow racist but the fact is i have many minorities, offered jobs to thousands over the years and he has been asleep at the minorities as friend. we will see how that sorts out. we do know that he's trying not to hedge his bets into cleveland and at delegate to need the nomination at-bat, even his own campaign if he messes on the first shot it could be problematic. jackie kucinich joining us right now. you know jackie, senior political shabby pants.
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we have laid out how races could go in the weeks to come from a tap in at all for california and the percentage is donald trump would have to get to do very well. they even admit the possibility you could feel video with the primary that he won and the popular vote and get the 12 delegates very late in the game and close the deal. >> i do. the one thing that is can just enter a lot of these delegate count stories as we are not going to be done until june for this thing. i think your correspondent rightly pointed out indiana will be the next bigger battleground because trump seems to be doing well in the states go to about next week. indiana demographically good for ted cruz and some are ted cruz is laid in rows. you know, that will keep the race go in. a little bit longer. >> in the interim between
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wisconsin were ted cruz did very well in new york where he did not do nearly so well, he did potentially stagger the ball a little bit by picking up to 48 delegates in colorado and wyoming over the weekend. that of course has been popular to say be that as it may, that means is donald trump were to win 90 delegates tomorrow, ted cruz cut that lead by 45. >> is why you have a trump campaign so upset and talking about challenging some of these results. places like colorado day or that they don't feel it had cruz is playing the game when in fact had cruz is playing the game. it has to be noted that although donald trump keeps saying the system is rigged, he is winning right now. only if they have to go to the second ballot that he might run into some trouble.
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he's able to get 1237, all of this work is off or not. neil: the system produced for a guy that won a little bit over 37% of the vote. more than 43% of the delegates, something like that. >> yeah, absolutely. you are so right. the president is not helping someone like a john kasich. neil: jackie, thank you so much. take a listen to this new one. >> the only person that crooked hillary clinton doesn't want to run against is donald trump. neil: crooked hillary might not roll off the tongue, but you might be off to the races. i have no idea. whether this particular label will stick to what he say? >> hi, neil. looks like you just created one on your own.
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neil: although why you'd ted never came rolling off the tongue. >> or little marco. orwell energy for jeb bush. neil: they do in a weird way stake. >> i wouldn't want him to label me. this is what it does. it is work so far this election cycle. especially the low energy one. that's been particularly damaging to him. ted cruz started putting trust that in the banners in the background as part of this. with hillary clinton there is truth to the crooked hillary thing. if you look among the democratic contest, one third of voters listed trust as their top concern, their top issue in only 16% believe hillary clinton is. look at new hampshire out of voters, trustworthiness is a top issue. they went for bernie sanders 92% to 6%.
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this is a big issue hunting hillary clinton brought the process so far. neil: when i talk to people who might not be as into this stuff as i am because i am a nerd. >> so am i. neil: you are just a more savvy nerd. there is a lying ted or low-energy bush. i'm always thinking that high school thing that is fixed. >> it is sort of a schoolyard holy mentality. it has worked so far and he successfully labeled people. there's more to general election than sticking hillary clinton saying something that's really arty stack if you look at the majority of americans, hillary clinton is dishonest because of her e-mail server and even now with her failure and refusal to release the wall street transcript turning the primary. sort of a little bit more to there and what hillary clinton will do is take everything donald trump has said either
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about different religious groups, different minorities or women voters. this is what donald trump says about you. there's more elements to a general election then perhaps mislabeling donald trump has been doing. he's got to get there which is a big question mark with a contested convention. neil: real quickly. he's got to win on that ballot. >> mainly because the behind-the-scenes work he's doing when it never delegates. neil: good seeing you. thank you very much. >> always good to see you. thank you, neil. neil: russia getting close to her plans. u.s. reconnaissance plane. are we noticing a pattern here? here's my next guest.
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neil: not tipping under 18,000, the dow up 84 points or thereabouts. lower oil prices after a failed opec production. other nations that produce oil failed to come up with an accord to boost its price that led to its price not nearly as much as expect it. in the meantime oil prices to slide further. the fallout from all of this right now with jeff flock has been following this and where we go from here. >> week out way down about 7%. the deal in doha not as big of a deal as we thought. look at the numbers up there. see lk sixes in a contract we talk about right now recovered
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almost $40 right below that is the june contract -- the data went down and came all the way back out. take a look at a bunch of them. chesapeake energy was down 7% at the outset this morning. it is now pretty flat. marathon was down 6%. it is now up about 3% last i checked. these oil stocks have really recovered with the rest of the market. gas prices, oil kind of bouncing around. gas prices are on the rise right now. 211 for a gallon. this time last month we were below $2. i have a feeling those days are over. neil. neil: bummer, dude or jeff flock
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in chicago. all of this when it would have skyrocketed this is the provocative act we've seen in more than a week here at the it was a u.s. warship in the balkans need. the potential fallout from all of this. what do you think? >> well, someone said it best is putin marking his territory like a cowboy. what he is saying is when you come up in the black sea or up into the baltics, that is my territory and i don't like it and i'm going to express my dislike. what we should do is they get used to it in every day the ship to go to the baltics and set up exercises with the swedes, poles, germans in the baltics rather than their one-year
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standard nato exercise. we should just flood the zone. neil: you do understand the urgency. we are told, by the way, report and that president putin and president obama spoke by telephone on this whole issue. i don't know what was discussed here. the leader the russian leaders take not only in the balkans, certainly in the area as well and other countries are doing. i ran in the strait of hormuz, in my neck of the woods and china and the south china sea and elsewhere on the militarized items. what the heck has happened? >> the same thing throwing the north koreans as well. the united states right now -- one of the things that happen in it in 79, quick side story. the revolution in iran.
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after that, several years later the mullahs got together and said what happened to the soviet union and he said well, they started looking at it themselves and started exporting revolution and a type. they decided they are going to keep exporting the revolution. if you look at that today, we've united states have withdrawn from the world. we're focused on ourselves in this election is taken on a greater focus. we've taken our eye off the ball and when we do, and players like north korea, china, russia will take advantage of that just as isis has. >> good talking to you again. thank you. neil: if you don't mind my debating politics dominate romney has just said donald trump will likely win on the first ballot if it remains a three-man race, which it is. the argument has been john kasich makes it less likely that would have been that the former republican mayor disagreed saying it makes it more likely
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that donald trump will be the nominee on the first ballot in 26 teen. he's already said he could not for mr. trump under any circumstances. we will have more after this. month here. you should have quit while you were ahead. 32 years at this place and i've got 9 days left before retirement. look jim, we've been planning for this for a long time. and we'll keep evolving things. so don't worry. knowing what's on your mind and acting accordingly. multiplied by 13,000 financial advisors. it's a big deal. and it's how edward jones makes sense of investing.
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>> welcome back. i am transfixed business headlines from "cavuto: coast-to-coast." live-action remake generated $103.6 million in north america, making it one of the biggest tape opening fanfare. close to $300 million for disney, both soaring today. this one is for you. a new report suggests an apple will debut an all-black iphone next year with a curved display. apple analyst says it is expected to pull out all the stops of the iphone. next year, the 10th anniversary of the iphone. apple's dock right now down
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about 2%. today, go pro launching the omnicare macramé virtual-reality camera with a way to watch the content online. the 360-degree online goes for a cool $5000. go pro stock sinking on the news down about 3.5% today. neil. neil: i'm kidding. do they advertise? jo ling kent, thank you very much. all the staff about the position they are banned. that doesn't go down well in china. china's finance minister calling a lot of remarks silly. wouldn't be entitled if any of trump's proposals were followed a period almost any across-the-board tariffs would violate u.s. obligations.
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not only do they say that, but trade economists say that because any tariffs mr. trump would propose would be essentially paid by u.s. consumers. charles payne on.and the prospect when it comes to dealing with the chinese. >> the rattling is good. i don't think the average american particularly the voter understands the pain. i'm not saying they can't win, but it would be a victory. it would be that kind of a big jury. >> not necessarily saying you could do better with other good. we are not going to deal with this. >> you can. one of the things we talk about is how wages are vaccinated. when ford announced their car factory, there are 10 other car
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manufacturers that said they are going to open a carfax jury. if ford doesn't move this plant to mexico, will you be willing to pay 1500 to $2000? do you make that are being patriotic and not being competitive with rivals? that's what you're going to have to do. neil: china will deal fairly and justly or we will not deal at all. time for some very tough negotiations. neil: they need us more than we need them. >> they probably do but we both need each other to a degree. we are going to put up workers around the country and we're talking 6% population not selling products to the rest of the world. 300 million versus 5 billion people. that's a tough proposition for small businesses and large
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businesses. caterpillar, and ibm you can kiss that bad boy to buy because that's when the makeup process. indianapolis so forth. it's a delicate situation. we have not played well. they've gotten the better of us. i tell people we could win. what does victory look like? understand the real collateral damage of a trade war that involves 45% tariffs. it's ugly, millions of jobs lost and we jobs lost them when they come out better than china or later one of us be a winner? neil: when you stick to your guns come the same thing with a $50 minimum wage. would you pay more for an item? >> at another we can even afford to. talking about jobs lost. i read about this this morning. from the farming has come in last month china's commodities demand refuge including soybeans. our soybean market has doubled because of china.
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we will subsidize farmers almost $14 billion. i went back. i couldn't find a number that high. so farmers can tell this stuff to foreigners, particularly china, we have to pay them even more money. it'll come out of taxpayers money and a lot of different ways that are very complicated. i say we push the issue and get better deals with the notion of a massive trade war. maybe we will win. neil: the threat is good not to change the behavior. >> i don't think so. not with china. tree into thank you very, very much. audio mac in the meantime, big developments to tell you on the supreme court hearings going on. the issue is the president by executive fiat to decide on
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holding deportations of millions of illegals who are here. but what if they get so caught up in the semantics of executive order that they lose sight of what triggered the outrage on this one? the sheriff fred at the border. borderline billing not. after this. fidelity -- where smarter investors will always be. if only the signs were as obvious when you trade. fidelity's active trader pro can help you find smarter entry and exit points and can help protect your potential profits. fidelity -- where smarter investors will always be.
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you know, you-- you have money saved up so you're lookin' for that car to drive around in, and usaa actually makes that process so much easier. you can find the car and you can find it to your liking by using their app. i'm definitely able to see savings, uh, through using the car buying on usaa. i mean, amazing savings. i was like, wow. if i can save this much, then i could actually maybe upgrade a little bit. (announcer) save on your next car with usaa car buying service, powered by truecar. exclusively for usaa members. neil: the supreme court as we speak is listening to argue
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amends back and forth whether the president went too far with his plan to hold off and indeed stop millions of deportation. many suspect more. we have not been busy deporting anyone. sheriff paul babeu knows first-hand. sheriff, what is at stake for you? >> the law. the president has gone back from what he said at very beginning, 20 plus times, i don't have the authority to do this by myself unilaterally. congress has to be part of it. he has gone ahead and taken the executive action. it undermines the essence of who we are as americans. the foundation of our entire republic is rule of law. when the president alone can unilaterally take this action by a wave of his hand, that corrupts our entire process. sends a wrong message to millions and millions of future illegals that just make it to
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the border and you're home free. because he is giving them a complete pass. deferred action just doesn't mean they're not being deported. it also means they're entitled to social security, to medicaid, to welfare, to all these other benefits at a time our economy is struggling. neil: you know what's interesting, you talk about the four or five millions not deported right away because they have family members or long term connections here. >> yes. neil: but now i'm hearing deportation in general are way, way down because of this cloud or whatever you want to talk it. what is the real truth? >> that is the real truth. this number of 11 or 12 million illegals, that number has been used five to 10 years now. clearly the number, and it has been put out by credible sources that it is closing in on 20 million plus. so.
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it is not just the five million president is giving what is referred to as defacto amnesty because the law doesn't apply to them. literally because of jeh johnson issued an executive memo to all of his subagencies deferred action will take place. that is the rule of the day. to mean not just president promised if you're here for five years or longer you're entitled to this deferred action. reality of it is anybody since january of 2012. reality, nearly all of these illegals are entitled to deferred action by this executive action of president, poll at this construction and guys that run i.c.e. and border patrol, our guys and gals heroes in the border patrol and i.c.e. are literally handcuffed of doing their job of enforcing immigration law. neil: might be all the more so by hillary clinton or bernie
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sanders, both of whom the said president has not gone far enough on this. >> shocking. neil: sheriff, thank you very, very much. >> thank you so much. neil: this is being heard by an eight member supreme court. keep in mind if they vote 4-4, the lower court's ruling saying the president went too far on this would have to be honored and deportations would have to continue. but they haven't been continuing. so stay tuned. then there is a separate issue of helping the illegals already here. tax credits and whole bunch of other stuff. gerri willis on that. gerri? reporter: that's right, gerri, there is something called the additional child tax credit. additional child tax credit. it es refunnable tax credit, even if you don't pay federal income taxes, you get money, a check in your mailbox. this was meant to help working american families. and in fact, what is going on it is going to illegal aliens and why? because to get this credit you don't have to show a social security number on your tax filing. all you have to show is
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something called an itin. individual taxpayer identification number. this requires no proof of residency, nothing. so lots of people are filing for this who shouldn't get it, largely illegal aliens. i want to tell you whattic today had to say about this. tigta. payment of federal funds through the tax benefit appears to provide additional incentive for aliens to enter, reside, work in the u.s. without authorization, which contradicts federal law. so there you have it. tic at that calling out -- tigta calling out irs. some folks are filing tax credits for going back years and years. so 9,000 or so people looking to get maybe $10,000 back from the federal government. maybe they're illegal, maybe they're not. we just don't know. we have no control over this and
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the irs certainly isn't helping. neil: is this a great country or what! gerri willis, thank you very, very much. meantime anybody put in your bid for yahoo!? might as well join them. they had like a gazillion bidders. some dropping out. today is the deadline today. i think they will entertain any offers. a guy down here put his in. the fallout after this. these guys represent blood cells. if you have afib not caused by a heart valve problem,
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>> very good afternoon live from the floor of the new york stock exchange. i'm lori rothman with the fox business report. headline of the day, the dow flirting with 18,000. already crossed that milestone mark earlier in the session. as you can see we faded off. still a nice rally underway. the dow is up 78 points. look at the volatility in the dow. a rally underway today, despite falling oil prices. that is important. oil and stocks rise in tandem, not so much today. you can see chevron is up 1.25% despite falling oil. off the price of crude down 1%. walt disney leading the dow today up more than 2 1/2%. jungle book, everyone was wild about jungle book. that is lifetime high for disney. some winners, visa with nice price target increase to 93. that could be a good buy.
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from virtually anywhere. it's been smashed and driven. it's perceptive enough to detect other vehicles on the road. it's been shaken and pummeled. it's innovative enough to brake by itself, park itself and help you steer. it's been in the rain... and dragged through the mud. the 2016 gle. it's where brains meet brawn. lease the gle350 for $599 a month at your local mercedes-benz dealer. neil: when they first talked about selling all or part of yahoo! a lot of people shrugged said who would be interested in it? it had fallen far from glory yet given number of bids out there you would think it is the coolest thing going. deirdre bolton on the upside of acquiring this company. >> yeah, neil, it is actually at first glance a little bit hard to see the upside to your point because if you look at all
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online traffic in the u.s., facebook has about 40% share, google, alphabet, whatever you want to call it, has about 40% share and yahoo! has 5%. you may say why is this company even thinking about that it could get bids around $6 billion but its stake in yahoo! japan is a big reason, for as much as yahoo! here is beleaguered, yahoo! japan is pretty successful. it's growing and it actually kicks off 3% a year to the u.s. division. so for a lot of companies this is a pretty attractive asset. it is a way to buy into asia. for example, yahoo! japan, sort of like ebay and google combined over there. a very big presence. even a credit card business. but, neil, you said it. at first there were something like 40 companies interested in yahoo!. i think we're down with a handful with verizon being the most likely. neil: the one who is skipped out or said, well, maybe not, at&t was among them, comcast,
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obviously, they get a chance to ck the tires a little bit but not as if yahoo! has been forthcoming on its financials, right? that gives them the heebie-jeebies, right? >> it gives them the heebie-jeebies. a few years ago yahoo! put in poison pill or to prevent, to make it pretty difficult for i yahoo! microsoft was pretty interested but they made it tough for them. verizon has a lot of cash, $200 billion market cap and about 4 billion cash on hand ready to go. and you know it, wants to make a change. we saw verizon buy aol last year. seems like they want to get into more of an on line ad platform. they want another digital property. they think it is good match for aol. verizon has the money and really can do it. the only companies listed, neil, are these private equity firms,
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as you know. perhaps kkr. but they still have bain, another one, tpg, they still have to justify whatever purchase price to their shareholders who may not appreciate a high bid. neil: 40,000 verizon strikers. wonder what they would think of that too, right? >> i guess management is saying, listen if we do this is part of our way forward. the landline business is decreasing. this is a way for to us bet on the future. but i'm sure to your point the strikers don't feel so good about that. neil: we'll see how that goes. deirdre, "risk & reward," very cool show, very cool subjects. 5:00 p.m. eastern time. a little bit more than -- talking a little more than three hours from now. talking minutes away from a ted cruz event in maryland. donald trump is eyeing a big win new york tomorrow, which could explain why mr. cruz is almost anywhere but after this.
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so i know how important that is. neil: you have a lot of choices where to watch tomorrow's primary coverage. we think here at fox business you have only one choice, it's us and our coverage of wisconsin, the last big one proves it. look what you missed if you missed. ♪ got an easy task ahead of us tonight because just one state. >> thank you, wisconsin. i love you. >> thank you, milwaukee! neil: so if you win wisconsin tonight you have got a lot of attention, notoriety. if you lose it well, you got a lot of attention and know ryety. >> thank you very much. >> thank you, the bronx. >> god bless the great state of wisconsin. >> there is potentially record turnout all across the state. >> look at these lines, they keep going and going. >> there are the wow counties. washington, osauku and waukesha.
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>> let me let go out on a limb, donald trump will win tonight. >> anybody thinking that trump will win is drinking vodka. >> never happen. i only drink mow heat toes. >> i'm trying to ply her with vodka in the past. neil: i bet you have. we know he ran into buzzsaw of criticism and negative interviewers and fumbles in the last week. >> there has to be some form of punishment. >> for the woman? >> there has to be some form. >> 10 years or what. >> that i don't know. >> mr. trump, before you can called into my show did you know i'm a #nevertrump guy? >> that i didn't know. neil: do you think he is one and done deal? >> he gets crushed, if ted cruz doesn't crush him a win for trump. after all the negativity and millions of dollars.
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>> he is up by 30 points. is it 20 or 30? very good. the point is -- neil: who are you talking to? imaginary friend? >> neil, that is bell linda. she is so thin she is almost invisible. i would love her thy gap. if trump wins tonight that is why that is make-or-break state. neil: polls are just five minutes away from closing here. we could have idea whether liz claman went out on a limb be is right and donald trump wins or she is horribly, horribly wrong. >> here we come. [cheers and applause] >> senator ted cruz pulling off a win on the republican side. >> god bless the great state of wisconsin. >> we're burying the lead here. lou and i agree. what did big red predict. >> big red? often wrong, never in doubt. >> fox projects bernie sanders will beat hillary clinton in the
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wisconsin democratic primary. >> thank you all very much. >> 18-44-year-olds, sanders coming away with a huge win, winning 73%. clear cheer. >> dkids know what the cult room revolution is? do they know about the gulagses? >> they don't know history. they don't know these kinds of things. >> have they reads today das capital. >> they haven't seen "rocky iv." neil: kennedy, thank you for chasing away the young demo. we appreciate that. >> he is digging. he is egging on here. >> he has to be very subtle or he gets accused of being sexist which is so ridiculous. charlie made an interesting point earlier -- neil: that is such a chick comment. i love the lady rothschild.
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she is one -- ♪ >> this is about being really angry with the establishment. neil: she is the establishment. your candidate is the establishment. lady, you're the establishment. >> lady, this is kennedy. i have a question. >> i have royal robe. neil: can't get get official until you talk to pat caddell, made jimmy carter president of the united states. would you treat the next president with anymore respect than the last one you worked for? this is famous shot of pat caddell, with jimmy carter and here is the famous one where jimmy carter wants to shake your hand. you're not even looking at him. i admire in a way. you're such a dig deal. you are in the oval office and got him elected and can't even look at him to shake your hand to thank you. why? >> obviously the arrogance of youth.
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today i would be humbled. >> i had this dream the other night of donald trump where his head was bald but it was long hair and flipping it over. >> this is the way you spend your evenings? >> i'm telling you. neil: any other station you're not getting this analysis. i'm done. i'm done. i want to thank all of these guys. see you again. so we have fun with this, i'm a little biased, i think best and brightest in the business and talking to best news maker in the business. also concurrently, foreign market reaction as it is happening live. find me another business network, another network that does it so consistently. that means us. we mean business. when we say we got your back when it comes to money issues, because a lot more of you pay taxes than might own stocks. we take stock of you and america. every single time. i think we'll do it again
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>> all right. netflix down, we've got amazon up and they do have a link here. connell mcshane focusing on both. hey, connell. >> netflix reports earnings tonight. and it will be could i have interesting because amazon came out with an announcement today that seems timed to the netflix earnings release, and that they're going to start pricing their monthly service in monthly increments. >> had you paid the annual monthlily, it would be more. >> well, it's 99 bucks for the year. so you're still getting a good deal $99 an entire year. but a lot of people don't want to pay that 100 bucks up front. so their idea is to open it up to people who want to try it out for a few months and don't want to coit to some sort of annual membership. but the point is they're going in the same direction as
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netflix. so competing services on a month to month basis. they're competing in other ways too. in some ways they overlap, but it's interesting they came out with this announcement on the same day that netflix come out with its earnings. and earnings report -- when you look at netflix, you'll look at a few things. how many subscribers are they adding? and subscriber edition that they're expected to. and the call going forward now that they're raising prices. >> especially since they said they wouldn't. >> right. >> and now their existing customers finding out, yeah, you are. >> well, that whole idea supposed to be grandfathered in. >> apparently not. >> yeah. well, not exactly. and then a couple of years later it was 7.99, up to 9.99 for new customers. so even if you've had it forever, 9.99. they would argue, hey, this is a good deal. >> yeah. netflix, a lot more bang for the buck. >> "house of cards" has been one of the pop shows. i think amazon has trailed in that regard. otherwise it would be a much easier competition on a head-to- have not been able to come up
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with the same types of shows as netflix has. and the other thing analysts will tell you about amazon prime, even though we know it exists, a lot of people associate it just with shopping. >> right. >> otherwise they might have an account, they don't even know they get video. so i think they're trying to get attention some people think by going to this pricing model by saying, hey, we have video. you can pay your $10 a month and video only even if you're not getting the shopping, which is cheaper at the end of the day. it's just another way to get them out there to show people they have this video service. which is a pretty good service, they just want people to know. >> that's all they know. >> it is. youtube just came out and said they're going to have this 360 streaming. 360 degrees streaming. so this whole idea of all of these streaming services, you put these two together, youtube apple tv, on down the line, yeah, that is all they know. >> thank you for watching fox business in 360. and 3d. >> gasparino will come out to
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the screen. >> all right. thanks, buddy, see you tomorrow. connell mcshane, a busy, bids guy. all right, trish regan, take it away. trish: we've got a lot today the candidates making their push toward the primary. donald trump saying he needs a big win to counter ted cruz's ground game and stop republicans from denying him the nomination. i am trish regan. welcome, everyone, to the intelligence report. good to see you on this monday. for donald trump, you know, you've got stakes that couldn't be higher. if he can win over 50% of the vote, he's going to take home all of new york's 95 delegates. that would put him closer to that magic delegate number of 1237. >> we have to win by big numbers because we have a system that's absolutely rigged. it's rigged. trish: there he goes. meanwhile ted cruz picking up more delegates this weekend as a power struggle breaks out in the party which is now just three months away. former campaign manager ed rollins is here to break it
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