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tv   After the Bell  FOX Business  October 27, 2016 4:00pm-5:01pm EDT

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haters, keep in mind, they are going to do very, very well this model 3. [closing bell rings] liz: ross gerber of gerber kawasaki. market closing lower ahead of numbers from google and amazon. for that i hand it to "after the bell." david asman, melissa francis pick it up here, guys. melissa: stocks ending the day lower. the dow crossing the flat line 71 times, a swing of more than 100 point today. what a day. david: incredible day. melissa: i'm melissa francis. david: this is melissa. i'm davi this is "after the bell." we have you covered on the big market movers but first here is what else we have for you this hour. so where do you shop? >> amazon. >> definitely amazon. >> amazon. >> amazon. >> amazon i think. >> amazon. >> amazon. >> amazon. prime. melissa: me too. me too. david: before anybody else, it is a big day for big earnings. we got you covered. e-commerce amazon primed for
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record quarter. we'll hear about alphabet. the parent company of google. we'll tell you why they changed their name. self-driving cars and new phone to compete with apple. a lot of competition between these go companies. the numbers you need to know out any moment now. melissa: back to the markets, the dow ending the day down 26 points driven lower by shares of boeing and caterpillar. ashley webster standing by at the new york stock exchange. ashley, everybody waiting for the big event. two of biggest names to report in few minutes. >> giants. we're waiting with bated breath, amazon and google. those stocks as you can see heading into the bell both moving down half a percent but it is all about the latest results. we'll find out any second. meanwhile, wanted to show, talking of tech, how about twitter? the latest report shows they beat on earnings and revenue. everything is great, right? not so much.
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they are cutting 9% of their global workforce. they're shutting down their video app vine which launched three years ago but really struggled with competition from facebook instagram. the stock itself flat on the day. it is about cost cutting at twitter. will anyone buy it? that is still the question. the biggest ever deal done in the semiconductor segment. qualcomm, buying nxp semiconductors for $39 billion. what is this all about? of course qualcomm has computer chips and nxp has auto chips. there you go. those two stocks moving higher. back to you guys. melissa: to cheryl casone. she has numbers. amazon getting slammed. >> we have a problem with amazon. the stock is down 6%. earnings per share the estimate was 78. it came in at 52. revenue slightly higher. you might as well call it a platinum per for revenue. estimate was 32.69.
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the stock is down, 6,% in after-hours trading. web services, liz claman talking to a guest about this, cloud services that looks like the numbers are pretty strong. operating income coming in stronger versus last year. also international net sales coming in stronger, internationally. fourth quarter operating income expected at 22 million versus 18 million last year. so that's another good number. that earnings per share at this point, guys. let me dig through the numbers. i want to see what they're spending on content acquisition. that is one of the concerns about the company that could be a factor what we're seeing in earnings for share right now. again the stock down, 6,%. it is volatile and there is heavy volume. send it back to you. melissa: web services are huge. keep pouring through the numbers and get back to us when you have headlines. david: scott martin, and kevin kelly. scott big drop after-hours.
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do you things will settle down? >> yeah, i think they will, david. we have to dig in what happened with the eps there. that is really the key. the revenue number was okay. the problem amazon has now it is becoming a victim of its own success. david: right. >> what you see, when they meet revenues that is not really good enough. remember this company that was notorious for really bad eps in the past. david: for years. they were negative, negative, negative. it was only year-and-a-half ago they turned that around. >> right. expectations -- david: kevin, all the other facilities going for them. they have got aws, their internet, helps you go with the cloud and the web. they have all of their services, their prime services. they're getting $6 billion a year in subscriptions alone for that. >> yeah, what is interesting to note we'll have to hear the guidance and i think that's really going to dictate the market action on the stock. we're seeing it rebound already. they want to see revenue grow because they're consistently
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reinvesting with the businesses as you mentioned, aws, backbone internet. they're trying to get more prime users. david: talking about web services. cheryl you have more info on that. go ahead. >> what i find interesting for the web service, operating income 861 million versus 428 last year. they doubled in web service operating income from last year. that's a positive. the bar would have been set so high with amazon in particular with cloud services that could be one of the things we're seeing in a selloff for the stock. david: it is coming back a little bit. maybe because they're going off the numbers you just mentioned. >> the numbers flashed so quickly. the press release is huge, six pages. a lot for you will of us a to gothrough. that's the thing. melissa: we're getting more information on amazon. look at e-commerce and retail business. amazon prime subscribers are on the rise since 2014. you all know this out there,
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amount of items listed on amazon prime increased by 10 million since last year. you can get on prime. kevin, do you use amazon prime? i live by it. i bought four or five things on the way to the studio today. >> love it to debt. they're doing great things with amazon prime. they're using other storefronts. they don't have to carry lot of inventory. they're the middleman. seeing a lot more items offer on prime and amazon doesn't need to hold inventory. it's a great service why people are i signing up even from music and video. they are competing and winning awards. amazon prime video space. melissa: scott, i wonder how great of a business for them? i'm a prime user. i will buy a roll of scotch tape on prime to deliver. you pay the one fee a year they keep raising but still not that much to a accommodate, i buy four or five things rat the house and not go out.
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they must be hosing me on margin? >> prime is the best deal on the planet. you buy scotch tape. i buy gum on amazon prime. that is add-on item you have to buy something else. years ago, not so much you and me, a lot of poo-pooers, amazon prime is not going to work. what is it doing? there are more prime members than no prime members. higher echelon of income earnings who spend more because they're prime members. prime is the best deal on planet. they're doing content too, keep that in mind. melissa: let me jump in we have so much going on. google parent alphabet reporting third quarter results. go to ashley webster. he has the numbers. what do they look like, ashley? >> they look pretty good to me, melissa. earnings per share coming at $9.06. the estimate was for 8.63. the revenue was around 22 billion. coming in at 22.45 billion. they beat on earnings and revenue. dig down a little bit, we're
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moving higher as you can see after-hours. paid clicks up 33%. add revenue up 18 percent. what else? cost per click down 11%. that doesn't sound good but less the cost to google per click the better it is. down 11% means more money for google. the only other thing that sticks out to me, so-called other bets, moon shots, those cars, those types of things, operating loss was 85 million. so that is quite high -- 865 million. revenue coming up in 20%, year-over-year. you're seeing this stock move higher after hours. melissa: 20 two .45, versus 22.05. thank you, ashley. david: i promised i tell you why they changed the name. google, scott martin is the real moneymaker. 80% of the money from alphabet comes from google advertising. they wanted to start all these
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other projects, self-driving car, new web services et cetera and they wanted to do that kind of separate from google. that is why they started alphabet as kind of an umbrella program to get independent operatives going and run them as new enterprises, exciting new enterprises but they're spending money like crazy. that's one of the concerns. is it a concern to you, scott? >> not so much, david. i mean numbers are looking pretty good to me. you have to spend money to make money. to borrow a lyric from billy joel, she is always google to me. that is what i think of i think this company, regardless what they do in the future. youtube looks really strong in these numbers. don't forget the pixel phone. that is brand new, in light of samsung's problems, yes some of the customers are thinking about going to apple. google will probably pick up some of those as well. that is a big moon shot that could work out as well. david: they have a chief financial officer and she is pulling in, she is cracking the
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whip on some free spending enterprises. a lot of people are quitting as a result. ceo of two of these sort of subcompanies, subdivisions have quit recently. is that a concern? because we now see actually it is trading in a bid below what it ended the day at? >> i don't think it is really a big concern. she has always been a good steward of capital. that is why the stock shot up when they brought her over. she knows what the street wants to see. they divided companies, focus how they're growing, youtube or whether mobile ads. getting back to the people quitting that is part of it. she wanted it separate so ceos could take over and silo and see who is performing, and not performing. so people are i have leaving because they're not performing and about to get axed and google fiber. good way to look at different business lines siloed whether they want to reinvest in those businesses or not. this is actually a good thing. david: scott, kevin, we'll be back with you shortly. alphabet's next bet, the
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company's self-driving project is becoming a stand-alone business according to a new report in "the wall street journal." fox business's jeff flock is in chicago with the details. they broke it out entirely, jeff reporter: totally. project x is the moon shot factory. when a business gets to the point they think it could be viable they break it out of project x. that is what they're doing with the self-driving car initiative. so that is a big step for them. this is a totally different vision on the part of google than their competitors on self-driving cars because everybody else wants to do it incrementally. they want to develop the technology, put them in the cars, have people take their hands off the wheel, that sort of thing. google says no, we'll not do it that way. we don't think that is safe. we'll make the car fully autonomous from day one. so your grandmother 92 years old, if she doesn't drive anymore. get a car, jump in and go wherever she wants to go. doesn't have to worry about the
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wheel in front of her, all that sort of thing. the guy heading this, john check, former ford executive and hyundai's u.s. business. this is guy folks in the industry say if silicon valley and detroit had a baby it would be john kraf check. that is pretty high praise. melissa: i bet. david: good stuff, jeff. melissa. melissa: sales of google's new pixel smartphone is not reflecting in the third quarter numbers. the company is pushing heavily into the hardware market to open hope to take on the iphone. how does the pixel stack up against the competition? we went out to the street to find out. >> what do you think about the google pixel. >> i don't know anything about the google pixel? >> i haven't heard of it. >> i don't know. >> oh, i haven't heard about that. >> i don't even know. >> i have no idea what the google pixel is. david: oh, boy. melissa: wow. david: maybe it was rain today.
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kind of a rainy day in new york. scott and kevin are back with us. kevin, nobody heard of the thing. >> if you go to california everybody heard of it. this proves positive about how important it is for the ecosystem and google play. they want to drive revenues into their storefront. so this is a thing that apple does as well. what ask nice to know android phones, which they provide the basically the operating system for, those are so important because it is 80% of the smartphone market globally. melissa: okay. >> they only get a small fraction of these phones in people's hands to make a dent in that. melissa: scott martin, i don't know if i buy that if i go to california, maybe stand in the google parking lot they know what google pixel is. i'm not sure i buy a lot of people have heard this thing. dangerous foray into hard way or a home run what do you think? >> hardware is always tough these days. melissa: it is. >> especially software. kevin is right, look at android operating system it is pretty awesome. to say they don't know phones is
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a little crazy. they use google calendar, google dots. there is a lot of google in the ecosystem. they need to the got message out a little better and i think that starts with q4. david: samsung, the problems with their android system they had one blow up on them. maybe they take advantage of that. >> they got good reviews across the board. every tech journalist looked at phone. david: and it doesn't blow up. melissa: that is a huge bonus. go back to cheryl. she has more on amazon. cheryl, what do you have? >> there is a couple of things really problem with amazon's quarterly report. first fourth quarter operating income forecast, zero to $1.25 billion. that is nothing. that is saying they don't know what the fourth quarter operating income is actually going to be. so that is a big negative for the company right now. that is obviously below analyst estimates. shipping costs. remember that july prime day that they had, melissa, they had like record sales? i'm wondering if that is part of the shipping costs issues.
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shipping costs for this quarter up 43% year-over-year. melissa: wow. >> they're trying to develop their ownershipping business. they're not there yet. they're still at whim of the postal service or ups. that is really where the hit is coming from. unfortunately the operating income and shipping cost, huge jump, 50% over the last year is hurting them. if you buy a toothbrush on amazon, you get it in 24 hours but hurting company's profits. >> what did it cost to ship it? that is where the conversation started. david: all scott and chewing gum. melissa: my scotch tape. a lot more to come on amazon and google. don't go anywhere. we're still drilling down on numbers. big, big day. david: 12 days before the election, that is a big day. another headache for hillary clinton, new leaked emails exposing turmoil inside of the campaign when staffers found out about quote, clinton's insane server setup. those are words from her own team, folks. melissa: absolutely. mainstream media siding with
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clinton. what "the donald" is saying. trump campaign is here to respond later this hour. david: new allegations of pay-to-play at you guessed it, the clinton foundation. a top aide claiming he was running bill clinton, incorporated. >> mr. band called the arrangement unauthorized. the rest of us call it outright corrupt.
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that's a big miss. revenue 37.2 billion. this stock is up 33% year-over-year but really getting cut in after-hours, down almost 6%. couple of things that we're going to point out here. cloud services, we're all watching that, amazon web services they were strong. the numbers, profits were strong there. spending on content, not a negative there. they continue to spend on content but not too much. operating income for the fourth quarter. forecast zero dollars to $1.25 billion. could you be more vague on that? that is hurting them. shipping costs finally up 43% year-over-year. that cat food i just ordered to get overnight to me is probably not good for amazon business or shareholders right now, melissa. melissa: the five pound bag that was $2.99 with free shipping not a great idea. cheryl, thank you.
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david: google, parent alphabet with rising third quarter profit up 2% after-hours extending a streak of strength. let's go back to ashley webster at the new york stock exchange. it's a "tale of two cities" here. >> really is, david, you're absolute right. google is it is all about advertising. you have the platform but can you monetize it? apparently they can. revenue up 20.2%. 22.45 billion. the stock has been up 2% or thereabouts. settling down 1 1/2% now. paid clicks up 33%. don't forget mobile is free, really fueling this surge. just looking before you came to me, net global ad revenue, 60% of that will come from mobile devices. so that's where google is reallying to rack up the ad dollars. ad revenue up 18%. that is down a document percent from the last quarter. ruth porat, ceo of alpha
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alphabet,. david: she is good cfo, ashley, thank you very much. >> thank you. melissa: apple unveiling new macbook pro earlier today. it is thinnest around lightest version. a lot faster. more than two times. graphics performance over the previous generation. apple also unveiling a new tv app that allows users to easily track shows across apple platform. i will be the judge of that. we have apple tv at home. david: i love the new stuff they come out with. melissa: okay. david: new wickly leaks emails -- wikileaks emails from the clinton camp. does this mean trump has been right all along about a rigged system? what did president obama really know about the private email server? we have more information now and it might be a whole lot more than we thought. >> president lied directly and pointedly to the american people on that. and the question becomes why?
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melissa: new wikileaks emails revealing inside conversations that the chin ton campaign had about -- hillary clinton campaign about the. ed, wow, what do you have now? reporter: melissa, interesting you're getting behind the scenes drama at critical moments in this campaign, such as beginning of march 2015 when "the new york times" late one evening decides to post a story saying well, hillary clinton used a personal. mail account for official business as secretary of state. shocking to a lot of people outside? yes, but also surprisingly to the top two officials in the campaign! there is an email exchange showing that hillary clinton apparently didn't even tell john podesta and robby mook. podesta writing quote, did you have any idea of the depth of this story? mook, the campaign manager responded, nope. we brought up existence of
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emails in research this summer but were told everything was taken care of. that gives you an idea how hillary clinton might govern as commander-in-chief. she keeps information to a small group of advisors, huma abedin, cheryl mills, and some of this was really frustrating to some of her top advisors, even neera tanden, a liberal activist who keeps popping up in a lot of wrote to podesta at one point, did we ever find out who actually put together this email deal? they should face heavy punishment. you can see right there, added quote, the whole thing is bleeping insane. that is a pretty candid comment that we wrap up what weave seen. think about you're talking about as well, bill clinton and clinton foundation and this memo leaked from 2011. doug band, clinton intimate, is on the outs, before he left he put the goods in there, that bill clinton had conflicts of interest. clintons say this is about doing good works around the world for the foundation but this pay for
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play allegation is out there, melissa. melissa: no, it is. it has been going on some days other net are picking up on it. looking at headline out of nbc news. these emails reinforce everyone's worse perceptions of clintons. you think? wow. finally penetrating. david: late in the campaign. melissa: yeah. thank you so much, ed henry. always great stuff. we appreciate. david: about time they caught on. all about public and private. in public, former dnc chairwoman debbie wasserman schultz pushed the idea that the dnc was completely neutral but new wikileaks emails revealing otherwise. an email from robby mook to cheryl mills before hillary clinton launched her campaign reads, he wants to get debbie and amy, amy was the dnc ceo, on the same page and loop back with me to discuss how to proceed. donald shea is trump campaign diversity outreach vice-chair. brunell, there was a time when
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you liked bernie sanders. this just shows even before the first primary the democrats had all sort of conspired to put hillary in at the top spot, even before the voters decided. >> yes, and that's exactly what they're trying to do right now. they're trying to force a corrupt, 30-year politician down the throats of the american people. let me tell you something. the people who supported bernie sanders, we supported him because we felt that he was not, you know a part of the corruption. that he was a political outsider for the democratic party. it was our way of still trying to be loyal to the democratic party. i know, and this is a fact, i don't believe, not one bernie sanders supporter, over our dead bodies to vote for hillary clinton. i'm telling you if you don't know. david: let me ask, do you think that bernie would have actually won had the dnc not been conspiring with or at least colluding with the dnc?
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>> well he had a lot of momentum. he had a lot of people coming to his rallies. david: he sure did. >> a lot of people loving on him. let me tell you, i cried as well as the people that were at the convention, i saw the tears in their eyes. i saw the hurt. their boards being torn up, they were thrown out, treated like trash. now you're turning around saying, oh, we didn't mean it bernie sanders supporters. can you please get behind this nominee. the answer is no. david: have you found a home for yourself in the donald trump campaign? do you feel it is a natural transition from bernie to donald trump? >> i'm actually a part of the national diversity coalition for trump. what i will tell you is, it's, many i'm so excited to vote. i haven't been this excited to vote since i voted for barack obama the first time. david: wow. >> that is how excited i am to vote for donald trump. david: because trump represents the same kind of anti-establishment flavor that bernie did? >> anti-establishment.
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imagine when you have the democratic establishment trying to keep him out. the republican establishment trying to keep him out. that is our guy. i will say this to the republican party. you don't see the democratic party telling hillary to step down with all of this corruption, pay for play and wikileaks. david: absolutely true. >> follow congressman chaffetz and get behind donald trump like never before, so we get those republican senators and representatives back in office. and we can get the presidency for a republican candidate which would be donald trump. and we can start making some change in the nation. we can drain the swamp. get behind a mitt romney, love you, but got to get behind donald j. trump. kiss and make up. the people have chosen him. get behind our nominee like never before. david: donald trump is lucky to have you. you have a lot of energy to give to the campaign. melissa: wow. david: brunell, thank you so much for being here. >> thank you so much. god bless you and god bless america. david: thank you very much.
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melissa: there you go. amazon falling nearly 5% in after hours but coming back off earlier lows of more than 7% down. this is after the e-commerce giant missed earnings estimates for third quarter. revenue was in line with consensus. here is what is pulling the stock lower right now. amazon expects fourth quarter operating income, somewhere between zero and 1 and a quarter billion dollars. nothing like a nice big range. that is way below estimates of near $2 billion. they have huge shipping costs. david: both amazon and google we reported on, they deal with such huge numbers. kind of hard to get your head around it. the stakes couldn't get any higher politically. the latest "fox news poll" showing even tighter presidential race and what that means for the days ahead to come. melissa: plus donald trump doubling down on his claim of mainstream media bias. trump's national campaign spokesperson sounds off. that is coming up. >> donald trump got off the campaign trail.
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blast the media for their bias in the race. >> well i think it is so unfair because you know hillary clinton goes to see an adele concert last night everybody says, isn't that nice, isn't it wonderful. i did eight stops yesterday. three major rallies. i told you 25, 15, 20, thousands of people. but i can't take one hour off to cut a ribbon at one of the great hotels of the world? i think i'm entitled to it. david: trump national spokesperson katrina pierson joins now to weigh in on trump claims of bias in the media. thank you for being here. ironic person questioning trump, george stephanopoulos, was bill clinton's closest aide, is contributor to the clinton foundation, and he is questioning whether there is bias in the media? >> it is quite astounding. this is what we expected from the media today. i think we've actually, we are past bias here with the media. we are now looking at double-standards in the media
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with what mr. trump is speaking about coverage of him attending a couple of hours to praise his children for doing a great job. david: on a day when he had eight other appearances as he mentioned. >> rallies and speeches. david: there was a message, political message in the hotel opening itself, it was ahead of schedule and under budget. what government project can say as much? >> absolutely. that is a part of mr. trump's campaign. he knows how to fix things. he knows how to get things done unlike government. we've seen that happen on number of occasions here in new york. he has been able to do things the government couldn't get done ahead of schedule and under budget. this is what he is fighting. this is the batt trump fighting from the beginning. mainstream media have been piling on with number of attacks, completely frivolous attacks when we have very serious issues in the country. mr. trump is still out there making his case to the american public and criticism is terrible. david: not necessarily talking about, he is not taking the bait. unfortunately a lot of people
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thought instead of talking about problems of the country, so often hillary said you did this and he would try to defend himself rather than shift. today he is all over ohio. he is giving several speeches in ohio. how does it look? that is really a key state in this election. >> it's a key state. they toured florida. just left ohio. there is lot of excitement for anybody like mr. trump. when have you heard presidential candidate go out to the crowd to say i love you? he loves this country. he loves the people of this country. he knows what it takes to get things done. a lot is just common sense. that resonates with the average person. david: specifically on these states, critical states, there is ohio. pennsylvania, at one time it was a tossup, looks now i think latest clear average poll have hillary ahead by 5% ann points. that will be tough to beat. >> they all will be tough. we knew this was tough race but
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momentum is on mr. trump's side. we're closing gap even nationally. under current of voters going out there to support mr. trump. additional four million voters in the primary came out for mr. trump. we'll see exact sail thing in november. david: katrina pierson, good to see you. thank you very much for being here. melissa. melissa: fight for florida, the senate race in the sunshine state is tightening after a tough final debate between republican senator marco rubio and democratic congressman patrick murphy. our own adam shapiro is standing by in miami with the latest on this adam, what was it like? reporter: well the debate last night got heated. patrick murphy issued or used donald trump's name and he is the democrat, 19 times. you think he is trying to rile up senator marco rubio? but let's get into what is going on with the poll numbers. while the "real clear politics" average in the senate race shows it is tightening, there was a poll we were talking about yesterday in regards to the presidential election, the bloomberg poll. it also took a look at senate race, it was very good news for
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senator marco rubio. he is leading according to the bloomberg poll 51% of the respondents favor him over patrick murphy. the congressman, democrat got 41%. now issues that you see mr. trump and hillary clinton talking about are the same issues they're talking about at the senate level in this very crucial state and this key senate race but another issue very key here is cuba. marco rubio, the senator of cuban descent, opposed to what the obama administration has done, opening up relations with cuba, normalizing relations. patrick murphy is in favor of that. that was a key issue last night. here's patrick murphy trying to get under marco rubio's skin. >> the person you chose to be our next president has basically admitted he violated the embargo. you continue to stand by his side despite this one of your core initiatives that you care about. what will it take for you to unendorse donald trump? is there anything you he can do or say this point you won't
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continue to support him? >> that is bizarre. congressman you're criticizing donald trump for support a position you have. you support lifting embargo -- >> i'm crit-sizing -- >> we'll wrap up. the lawyers, might need them. back to you. melissa: adam thank you, yes. david: we have breaking news on a story we've been following closely. police have begun arresting demonstrators who were protesting against construction of an oil pipeline in north dakota. law enforcement officials encountered about 200 protesters who set up camp on private land in order to block the construction. we'll bring you latest on this story as it develops. melissa: the clinton foundation under fire. new details on latest wikileaks emails. show fresh allegations of pay for play at the clinton family it charity. when it comes to healthcare,
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melissa: new pay for play
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allegations of the clinton foundation facing more scrutiny after leaked emails from wikileaks reveal that some donors expected, quote, quid pro quo benefits in return. you think? this as another leaked memo details how a top clinton aide secured lucrative personal deals for bill clinton on back of raising money for the foundation. here is fred barnes of "the weekly standard." he is also a fox news contributor. i mean there is so much to pour through here. it is hard to get your arms around all of it but the thing i thought was moist compelling, chelsea clinton good actor, concerned what is going on in the foundation, goes to simpson thatcher, one of top audit firmsfirms, get lawyer, ranked the 2014 non-profit lawyer of year, one of the best lawyers, this woman came out retirement to come in and review the foundation. that person found, quote, tax-exempt public foundation with none of the independent oversight required by federal charity law.
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and said that donors expect in the interviews, they found donors expected quid pro quo in return for their contribution. this is the firm that they hired to audit their own foundation. how do you feel about that, fred barnes? your thoughts on that. >> i think that firm did a very good job. we know now, and this just adds to it what we've learned from the most recent wikileaks disclosures, that this was a rogue charity. it was not some, it was not the red cross or something like that. it was a rogue charity where people donated money, obviously because they expected some help in washington. melissa: right. >> or at least some influence there. then on top of it, melissa, was this thing, sort of like a surtax. melissa: right. >> your tax was your donation. the surtax was oh, and by the way, you may want to spend half a million dollars on a speech by bill clinton. melissa: like tip them. here you paid them. now here's the tip. >> yeah.
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melissa: in fact doug band laid it out for anyone else who wants to operate their own money machine, he laid out in 13 pages here is what you do. we would solicit donations. on the back of that you come in, say, listen wouldn't you also like to have bill clinton come in to give you a speech? this is money going directly to him and i secure for you, all this revenue, tens of millions of dollars in addition but connected to the foundation and in exchange for what, fred? what do you think these people who were handing over all that money think they're getting back now that she might go to the white house? >> well, first place, they want access, access at the top levels of government. secondly, they want help on on various policies that might make money for companies or for foreign governments or something. look, all there that we know, i'm sure there is more to come, argues in favor of one thing,
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and that is to shut the foundation down if hillary clinton is president. melissa: yeah. >> they should have shut it down when she was secretary of state and we saw, even though, signed an agreement there will be no more donations from foreign outfits and so on, of course those happened anyway. melissa: they did, they got the $12 million from the king of morocco. fred i'm afraid it is too late. they already paid money in. as their own auditors say a quid pro quo back when she goes into the white house. all those people that paid want their favor back when she gets there. it is very scary, fred. thanks for your time. >> of course, it is scary. david: if she gets there. we'll see. google parent alphabet beating third quarter expectations. shares of the company up more than 1% after-hours. let's go back to ashley webster for more details. ashley? >> what is interesting, david, the headline numbers is good but frustration comes with the vagueness behind it. we want to break out youtube.
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all we got on the conference call, youtube revenue continues to grow at a very significant rate. google cloud is showing substantial revenue growth. that is all wonderful but where are the numbers? how much money? saying self-driving cars being tested in four cities. those are some of the nuggets i gotten from the conference call. overall a good report and the stock continues to move 2% higher of a hours, guys. david: ashley, thank you very much. >> sure. melissa: amazon rebounding from earlier lows but still trading lower by more than 4% after missing analyst estimates from the third quarter by a lot. also weighing on the stock, a big up jump in worldwide shipping costs. $1.2 billion increase from last year. whoof. david: costs a lot to send stuff. new evidence that the white house new about hillary clinton's private email server. why president obama's blackberry could offer some real proof. ♪ did you know there's a way to save up to 95%
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♪ neil: new questions surrounding the white house's knowledge of hillary clinton's email server. remember this. >> mr. president, when you first learn hillary clinton used a email system outside of the u.s. government for official business while she was secretary of state? >> at the same time everybody else learned it, through news reports. david: a lot of people doubting that. but we may have a way to prove one way or the other. the way president obama's blackberry is set up could provide more evidence that the president knew about clinton's server before he claimed. catherine herridge is in d.c. with details. tell us, catherine. >> david, president obama's blackberry used a special process white listing only allowed to take calls and messages from preproved contacts. two former intelligence
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officials with knowledge to the setup point to the detail further evidence that the white house new hillary clinton's private account was being used for government business. these go former intelligence officials emphasized adding email contact to approved blackberry contact list is very deliberate act and only is done by the white house communications office after requests from the president's chief of staff or close aide. while there is a difference between a server and a private email address, it would have been clear to all involved that clinton was not on a state.gov account. at briefing white house press office went out its way to describe the president's public statements about when he knew the clintonemail.com account as old news. >> president's explanation in march of 2015 and my explanation what the president knew in march of 2015 hasn't changed. the truth is, this is critics of secretary clinton and president obama recycling conspiracy theory that already has been thoroughly debunked.
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>> in addition to 22 top secret emails too damaging to release for national security reasons, the state department withheld 18 email chains with 18 messages between the president and secretary clinton while she was secretary of state. when the address was white listed that is key data point to understand when they knew she was using communications network really highly irregular, david. david: if we can get ahold of that blackberry. catherine, thank you very much. melissa? melissa: big move after the bell. numbers you need to know about amazon and alphabet coming up v next. (music playing) ♪ push it real good... (announcer vo) or you can take a joyride. bye bye, errands, we sing out loud here. siriusxm. road happy.
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(announcer vo) you can commute.
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(man on radio) ...40! no flags on the play! (cheering) (announcer vo) or you can chest bump. yo commute, we got serious game. siriusxm. road happy. . >> here is another look at shares of amazon falling nearly 5% after missing earnings estimates. shares have been down more than 7%. the e-commerce giant gave disappointing forecasts for the upcoming holiday. that is a big one. >> that is the key. google parent alphabet up more
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than 1% after hours after the web giant reported better-than-expected third-quarter earnings and revenue. robust sales of advertising and all the mobile devices and youtube, which they own for the 20% rise in revenue. >> that does it for us. "risk & reward" starts right now. >> the more e-mails wikileaks releases, the more lies between the clinton foundation, the secretary of state's office and the clintons' personal finances, they all get blurred. clinton confidant doug brand bragging he funneled billions of dollars to the clintons, paid speeches and consulting contracts. mr. brand called the arrangement unorthodox. the rest of us call it outright corrupt. [cheers] >> the latest "fox news poll"

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