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tv   FBN AM  FOX Business  May 25, 2018 5:00am-6:00am EDT

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results of 100 battles. that's it for us tonight. thanks for being with us, and good night from new york. of north korea, i have decided to terminate the plan summit on june 129, i believe that this is a tremendous setback for north korea and, indeed, a setback for the world. cheryl: breaking this morning, the summit is off but north korea says not so fast. we still want to talk. we are going to look at what is next and the fallout for the president here at home. gerri: sudden cancellation hits stocks. cheryl: stocks bounced back overnight from the selloff i didn't do. right now futures looking
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higher, s&p up 7, nasdaq up 26 and a half. gerri: good friday news and in europe stocks opened higher as investors gained the impact of tough new privacy regulation to take effect today, ftse up 26, cac 40 up 30 and the dax up 119. cheryl: look at that. take a look at asia, investors are eyeing talks as well as arrival commerce secretary of wilbur ross. japan's nikkei just a bit higher. gerri: how did this happen, alexa records a family's private conversation and then sends it out to someone on contact list, yikes. fbn:am starts right now. ♪
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cheryl: 5:01 a.m. in new york. it is friday. i'm cheryl casone. gerri: gerri willis. i think i have 10 alexa in the show. we have them in every room. if you record my conversations with my husband, honey, did you get the garbage out. it's so boring. cheryl: i don't have someone because of the story we will get to because of tapeddorring, anyway. gerri: details coming out on that one. we begin with canceled summit between the united states and north korea, both sides work to go keep the meeting alive. north korea says it's willing to sit down with the united states at any time urging president trump to reconsider decision and mike pompeo making late-night calls to north korea trying to figure out ways to get talks back an track. later the meeting could see still but at the same time, he
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spoke to have military action. >> if hay don't, we are more ready than we have ever been. gerri: could be a nuclear showdown. tit for tat. what happens next? let's bring in fox news foreign policy kyron skinner. it's been incredible 24-hour cycle. trump says no, north koreans say, yes, can the summit be salvage. >> perhaps not june 12th, the clock is ticking, however, this is not from my perspective surprising. this is what diplomacy looks
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like on the most difficult issue facing the globe right now and that's the nuclear problem on the korean peninsula, president trump has pushed the korean regime harder than any prior american president and he has exposed negotiating tactics in the world in a way that they kept hidden the past. for example, the north koreans really want, and i'm talking around kim, they want recognition that they are a nuclear power. they want to separate south korea from the u.s. they want to downgrade the u.s. military presence. all of those things as part of the negotiations and president trump is saying, hold up, this is about your nuclear program. gerri: let's talk about what happens next, that's a big question on the table, what does the u.s. focus on in the
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meantime and i want you to hear mike pompeo to what was an interesting reaction to yesterday's headlines. >> we always knew too that there was could be a summit that didn't work, it ultimately was unyou can -- unsuccessful. >> can you give us insights on what the administration is looking at next? >> in some situation normal, the pressure campaign continues. gerri: the guy sounds kind of depressed about this. what do we do in the meantime? we are still pushing to north korea talks, does the attention turn to china? >> it's complicated in that way because it does torn china, secretary pompeo had two meetings with kim, he's done a lot of back-room diplomacy trying to move the negotiations forward but the chinese are so central. on another front we are dealing with trade in china and the zte
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issue which is very upsetting for chinese giant where sanctions will be imposed. that will have a huge impact on that company and in some ways the chinese economy so trying to nit all the pieces together, the chinese, japanese who are skiddish about any negotiations with the north koreans, the south koreans would be merged as a real power broker in a way that they haven't before among all of the parties. gerri: right. >> that's what secretary pompeo is dealing with. there's a sense of battle fatigue. gerri: absolutely. south korea saying they will go ahead with this. they have all of the buying statements going was the fact that north korea department plan up for the planning meeting in singapore. big questions, kiron, we have to leave it there, great to see you. >> thank you.
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cheryl: also breaking this morning, talks to resolve the u.s.-china trade dispute now moving to beijing, chinese government says that commerce secretary wilbur ross will arrive there tomorrow, the trump administration saying it would not impose up to $150 billion in proposed tariffs after china agree today buy more american goods, zte could also come up, the u.s. has punished phone maker for violatings u.s. sanctions against iran in north korea but the administration officials are working to ease those penalties. >> i hope we can avoid getting into any kind of tariff situation, i particular worry about retaliation that impacts american agriculture, a place where we enjoy substantial trade surpluses with the rest of the world. gerri: china says it would
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target whiskey made in mcconnell's home state of kentucky if u.s. goes ahead with tariffs. cheryl: seem to have effect, don't they. gerri: that's right. cheryl: disgraced hollywood producer harvey weinstein is expected to turn himself in today, he plans to surrender to new york authorities following 7-month investigation into sexual assault investigations, the charges are related to a former actress lucia evans who claims weinstein assaulted her in 2004. weinstein had repeatedly denied allegations, bruno, good morning. >> good morning. cheryl: multiple sources this morning saying he will be charged with rape n one case first and third-degree rape and in the second case, first-degree sex act, what do you think has been going on in the last seven months and why did it take so long to arrest him if they have
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charges ready to go today? >> reportedly there's been tremendous amount of investigation both using grand jury and police tactics. it takes time to put thighs together especially with all of the victims, there are victims in all sorts of jurisdictions, many different jurisdictions investigating, you have los angeles, you the uk, even the feds are getting involved in things. so as hawaii, -- to why it didn't come sooner, i don't know. after happened with manhattan da dropping the ball on what many believe was a groping case, they had tremendous amount of pressure and tremendous amount of eyes to make sure they crossed, t's and dot the i's. cheryl: they had recordings of weinstein in a hotel room. in particular the statute of limit allegations, it is not expired in the two cases. the other actress is reportedly
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de la huerta, the other event that happened in manhattan. how do you think the charges will play out in court. weinstein still has enough money to have a team of lawyer, he has benjamin still on his side, where do you think it goes on the court? >> just on the point of statute of limitations is an important one. in new york state because there's allegation of force, there's no statute of limitations for the two charges. all right, as far as what's going to happen, he's going into court today, he will appear before a judge, it's been reported that there's already been an agreement about bail, a million dollars will be posted. he will also be on electronic monitoring, he's presumed innocent. he will plea until the and then there's a court case. >> court of public opinion where he's been prosecuted and you have actresses like ashley judd that have come out, he will come out and publicly said that they were attacked by weinstein.
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i want you to listen what the actress rose had to say about all of this. >> well, i've had a lot of years of trauma and seeing this man and i was present in the world i was in. it's shocking. it doesn't seem to be a shock when i see, and i know i'm not the only one. cheryl: well, she's not the only one, 80 women have public accused him of sexual misconduct. >> that's a common story. let's not forget that this is the story that really broke the me too movement. this is something that highlighted the problems in this industry among others and in the scheme many will look back at this case in a step in right direction. cheryl: heck of a perp walk in manhattan.
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our cameras will be there. david bruno, we appreciate it. >> have a great weekend. cheryl: coming up, new overnight a manhunt on for two men who blew up an ied in a restaurant in toronto. we will have the latest on that and aggressive new privacy rules taking effect in europe today, good for consumers but this could be huge fines for u.s.-tech companies like facebook, google and apple. better story for investors, dow down in premarket, nasdaq up 25 and three quarters, we will be right back. [music playing] (vo) from day one, we always came through for our customers. it's how we earned your trust. until... we lost it.
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cheryl: welcome back, let's get you caught up on what's happening now. here we go again. could be a wild markets, dow is up 67 in premarket, s&p 500, up 6 and a half,nation dabbing is up 27 and a quarter. well, explosive device set off in restaurant in toronto last night injuring 15 people, three of them had to be taken to the hospital in critical condition. the manhunt for police who set
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ied, ontario, you have to say it. gerri: my husband is from toronto. cheryl: apple scoring another victory over samsung in the patent case that lasted 7 years, samsung has been order today pay apple $539 million after samsung stole key elements of the iphone's design. mortgage rates, here we go. 7-year high. the average 30-year fix rate mortgage 4.66%. and higher end could see tend of era that saw cheap loans. gerri: all eyes are on the european union today as new data protection rules go into effect. cheryl: tracee carrasco with the
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headlines. trace tris if they handle european information, it takes over in effort to give europeans over control companies keep on them. companies will be required to report data breaches within a few days and get users' consent to process personal information, people will snrow the right to see what data companies hold on them and can request that some of it be deleted. companies will face fines if they don't comply. gerri: fascinating. we will have more on that. worse fears of concern, amazon alexa may be recording conversations, let me tell you, i have 10 of them in my house, amazon said go right ahead. my apologies. tracee: i have one and they would hear me talking to my dog, mostly. one of techo home speakers mistakenly recorded a private
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conversation and sent to woman's contact list, mistook the conversation as command and thought she was being instruct today send the message, alexa thought she was. amazon said, quote, as unlikely as this string of events is, evaluating options to make this case even less likely. cheryl: do i have to have an alexa? >> occasionally it hears alexa when you're not saying alexa. that's the command that gets it started interacting with you. cheryl: okay, i'm holding off. story going viral. sad truce. >> kids always tell the truth, louisiana second grade teacher facebook post has been shared more than 250,000 times, wake-up
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call for parents, writing assignment, i don't like to phone because my parents are on their phone every day, i hate my mom's phone and i wish she never had one. in fact, four students wrote the same similar answer there. parents have been commenting on the post with feelings of guilt while other teachers have echoed the same sentiments, parents, kids are watching, put the phone down. cheryl: story of the day. gerri: tracee, thank you for that. cheryl: we have a lot coming up. they are not getting a break in hawaii, the lava flow evacuating route. hawaii does have a plan, we will update you on that. aggressive privacy rules in europe today, could mean huge fines like u.s. tech companies like facebook, google and apple and you may own shares. dow 56 in the premarket, nasdaq up 26 and a half, we versal
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cheryl: hawaii's kilauea volcano growing nor ferocious by the day and seems no end in sight. third lava flow is pouring into the pacific ocean off of hawaii's big island while helicopters remain on standby to rescue residents whose escaped routes are blocked by the lava flow. dozens of buildings have been destroyed since the volcano erupted earlier this month. scientists say they don't know how long all of this is going to last. gerri: pictures are just amazing. a new day for online privacy in
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europe, a new tough law the general data protection regulation, e-regs go into effect today. good morning, dan, let's start with the impacts of the law, authorities spent millions and millions of dollars trying to comply with this and we think about tech being most impacted but literally if you do business with folks over in europe, you don't have to have a building there, office there, you're going to pay. what is the impact on american companies generally and consumers right here in the u.s. today? >> probably 50 emails they got last night from privacy perspective. that's the first thing. in terms of who it has impacted, it's the term companies, googles, apples, facebooks, you saw in brussels this week. t really about privacy, can they
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navigate this and make sure there's no impact to businesses, it's all about advertising renew and how the eu sort of reacts, we don't expect significant impact but this is a game-changing regulation. gerri: significant impact, they've sent hundreds of millions of dollars, that has impact on the bottom line for sure and the rules they're having to comply with, my goodness, if they ran a foul of them and apparently regulators are combing, looking for violaters, they face huge fines, 4% of revenues or $200 million whichever is more, 60 to 85% of those folks saying -- the companies says, we are not ready for this. i think it's a pretty big deal and hard to write off. what do you see coming ahead, could congress pass something even stronger or is this now the rule of the land. looks like europe is making rules for our companies?
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>> oh, yeah, look, that's the problem. the eu is much more extreme where we ever see the u.s. going, but it does speak to any -- europe has to comply with this. it's been significant in terms of investment as well as just game-changer to the regulatory environment from a data-privacy perspective. we don't do not expect this to go broader than europe but this is definitely a big issue that tech companies and silicon valley has been dealing with and i think what you're saying facebook front and center post cambridge, any missteps there, most center stage that the eu is focusing on, you know, licking their chopping trying to see if there's a speed bump that they hit. gerri: all right, i like the name, general data protection regulation. it's like out of fiction, the name of those regulations. thank you for coming on. appreciate it.
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cheryl: we have a lot coming, government investigation explaining while the uber self-driving car in arizona never stopped before hitting a pedestrian with a bike, that was a fatal accident. memorial day weekend, we honor veterans, we will tell you how a number of restaurants are honoring our heros around the country and taking a look at u.s. stock market futures this morning, dow up 62, the s&p is up 6. nasdaq up 26 in the premarket. we will see if we can keep the green numbers going on the friday. you're watching fbn:am. into retirement... and a little nervous. but not so much about what market volatility may do to their retirement savings. that's because they have a shield annuity from brighthouse financial, which allows them to take advantage of growth opportunities in up markets, while maintaining a level of protection in down markets.
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>> if and when kim jong un chooses to engage in constructive dialogue and actions, i am waiting. cheryl: breaking news this morning hours after president
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trump canceled the june summit with kim jong un, north korea saying it's still willing to sit down with talks, quote, at any time, any format. cheryl: sudden cancellation hitting stocks yesterday, but ending down just 75 points. gerri: not today, stocks bouncing back, u.s. stock market futures, the dow up 57, s&p up 5 and nasdaq up 24. cheryl: in europe stocks are opening higher. all of those markets are in the green. gerri: over in asia, investors eyeing the breakdown of talks between u.s., stocks mostly lower although japan's nikkei edged higher. cheryl: how veterans and military families can enjoy some nice deals this memorial day
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weekend. fbn:am continues right now. ♪ ♪ gerri: it is 5:32 a.m. in new york, friday may 25th, good morning, i'm gerri wills. cheryl: good morning, i'm cheryl casone. here we go with lovely memorial weekend celebrating heros. gerri: a very good weekend, indeed. you and i are red and white. cheryl: loving our country. the summit between north korea and the united states may not be dead, north korea is now saying they're willing to talk with the u.s. any time at any format, now this happening hours after president trump pulled the plug on the singapore summit which had been scheduled for june 12th, secretary of state mike pompeo said the rogue nation failed for prep meeting
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what would have been historic meeting. >> over the past many days, we have endeavored to do what chairman and i had agreed, put preparation teams to begin to prepare for the summit and we had no received no response. cheryl: the president also pinning a direct letter to kim, for more, brad blakeman and democratic strategists hopkin. brad, your initial reactions of canceling summit by the president, what went on in the white house to come out to this conclusion? >> i know what went on, deputy chief of staff for operations went over and was stood up. there was no meeting, it was clear that they were stone-walling and not being
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cooperative and the president said, unacceptable. after promises were made to the secretary of state that there would be corporation, the summit would go forward in good faith, they operated in bad faith. the president did the right thing. cheryl: it's interesting, michael, you had president trump's supporters, they'll be nobel-peace prize in the future but critics like nancy pelosi jumped all over this news yesterday, listen to her. >> kim jong un is the big winner, he got global recognition and regard. he's the big winner and when he got this letter from the president saying, okay, never mind, he must be having a giggle fit right there now in north korea. cheryl: okay, michael, did the president get played? >> i mean, i think the president is seeing and feeling what every president before him for the last 20 to 30 years has felt when dealing with north korea and that's chaos and
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instability. i mean, i think a lot of us saw this coming and i think that the president canceling the summit was probably the right decision, i think the big losers are allies because they found out at the same time that the rest of the american and worldwide public and that was by twitter, by the news. i think that's problematic. cheryl: the south korean president who has only been an office a year is trying to salvage something, we shall see. at the same time, brad, back here at home, you even had new jersey senator menendez. we have the midterms coming up, do you think this failure becomes a political football against the republicans? >> no, i think the american people are shaking their head to democrats who are rooting for failure on the part of the united states and giving aid and comfort to kim, it was shameful that leader pelosi and democrats couldn't wait to rush to
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microphones to applaud the fact that these talks have broken down. it's down right un-american to root against the president who is trying to bring peace to a troubled region. cheryl: you know, michael, a lot of blame going against john bolton, of course, brand-new, former ambassador to the united nations, brand-new addition to white house staff that his tough rhetoric, overstepping verbally may be contributed to the north koreans starting to pull back and get more retaliatory against us. >> yeah, this is kind of typical john bolton, seems like his libya comments played a role into the summit not happening and now rumors coming out that he was the leading one to push for the president to cancel before the north koreans did. so i think john bolton will have a lot of problems inside the white house with people leaking and, you know, within an agenda. cheryl: a lot of blame being thrown at him this morning. we will see if the summit works
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out eventually. brad, michael, thanks for your time. >> happy memorial day, god bless our troops. gerri: new details of uber crash in arizona. cheryl: tracee carrasco with headlines. tracee: after uber had announced shutting operations in arizona, self-driving uber vehicle involved in fatal accident identified object 6 seconds before impact and didn't determine the need for emergency brake until 5 second later. the car has built-in automatically system was disabled and the driver didn't break until after the accident. is disabled it to reduce the potential of erratic vehicle behavior. gerri: wow, so many problems in headlines from technology today and then, of course, the a fatal one. netflix hit a huge mile stoan. tracee: yes, that's right,
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although short-lived for a moment, netflix was number one in the media world. shares of netflix were up yesterday and market value soared above $153 billion briefly passing disney as the most valuable media company, however, by the close, disney had regained the top spot after netflix shares paired gains. cheryl: not surprised at all. disney is trying to catch up in streaming and digital and netflix has got it. tracee: netflix owns the streaming, i think. cheryl: memorial day weekend, we are celebrating troops, veterans, restaurants have good deals coming up. tracee: it is unofficial start to summer, a lot of businesses, companies wanting to honor those who have fought for our country, so this weekend there are a lot of deals for veterans and members of the military. dominoes offering a large two-topping pizza for 5-point t 9 when you order carry-out, golden coral giving free breakfast, hooters, free meal
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and small thank you because they do deserve much more. gerri: i love that, that's so awesome. tracee, thank you for that. tracee: thank you. cheryl: coming up, the force is with us as han solo story finally hits theaters. >> it-- i waited a long time foa shot like this. >> what do you think? well, what do you know? michael tamaro will be coming up and telling us if solo lives up to all the height. and taking a look at stock market futures on your friday going into the long weekend, dow up 54, nasdaq up 23 and a half, you're watching fbn:am liberty mutual stood with me
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and urinary tract infections, which may be serious. taking jardiance with a sulfonylurea or insulin may cause low blood sugar. tell your doctor about all the medicines you take and if you have any medical conditions. man: ask your doctor about jardiance and get to the heart of what matters. gerri: welcome back, let's get you caught up on what's happening right now. checking u.s. futures, all up. s&p up 5, nasdaq up 24, lawmakers and u.s. officials got first look on fbi informant's role. president trump alleged that the fbi used informant to conduct surveillance on presidential campaign doubling the
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controversy spygate, president trump awarding the medal of honor, navy seal team to afghan battle that left 7 americans dead. you're seeing them right there. he coordinated rescue of injured soldiers and ordered air strikes on al-qaeda fighters, denied speculation that he left one soldier behind. he claims that he checked on him and saw no sign of life. a gunman shot dead by good samaritan after opening fire on mother and daughter, police say the shooter opened fire inside a restaurant in oklahoma city before being killed by an armed man in the parking lot. >> some would say that to stop it more people will hurt or kill. >> mom and daughter are both expected to survive. two other people are hurt. it's unclear if they knew the shooter or what his motive might be and that is what's happening
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now. lots going on. cheryl: well, it is a tale of friendship and adventure, the latest installment of star wars series, solo hitting theaters today. joining us michael tamaro, up nice and early. >> bright and early. cheryl: did you like it, were you a fan? >> i sort of loved it. i love these movies, cheryl, good morning to you and gerri in new york. most iconic film characters of all time, han solo, who is han solo, how did he get the millennium falcon and chewbacca ever hook up. all the answers and much, much more are coming this way with the latest installment in the star wars franchise, let's take a look. >> i'm going to be a pilot in
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galaxy. >> you catch the essence of han solo, were you intimidated going into this? >> sure, you know what you're up against and part of the fun to have challenge of this taking on all that kind of stuff. >> what i love about stand-alone movie or origin stories you get to see different parts of the universe that you haven't seen before, so much fun. >> i loved that about coming into this because i didn't feel like i was making a sequel, i felt like our job was to actually push the boundaries. >> hey, kid, i'm putting together a crew. >> it's all about finding young han solo and letting him sort of grow into that iconic figure that we will recognize later. >> are you in? >> the underlying theme of human trafficking and equal rights and empowerment. >> it's cool to be in movie where they don't have to touch
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those stuff, they didn't have to do that. >> i love the marketing partnerships, red solo, it's an obvious partnership and a game of beer pong, which team would you rather be on, team lando or team han. >> i think so. [laughter] >> i thought we were in trouble there for it's fun. [laughter] >> never thought i would be talking beer pong with ron howard, but solo, star wars movie looks to be breaking all sorts of memorial day weekend records over the next couple of days and pulling about 130 to $150 million at the box office. gerri: michael, i have to tell you, i love this kind of stuff,
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it's gerri here, come on, this movie almost didn't make it, right? >> you know, they changed directors -- gerri: three times. >> ron howard had to come in and reshoot 70% of the movie and look, he pulled it off, baby. gerri: it looks good. cheryl: do you think we will have a big blockbuster summer, do you think hollywood is in for records? >> last year was the worst numbers in box office but there's no place to go but up. jurrasic world is coming up, we will have a very big summer at the box office. cheryl: really exciting, michael, thank you for getting up early, we appreciate it. gerri: houston rockets outlast warriors but the rockets may have lost a star player, we will have highlights and who was jack
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johnson and why did donald trump pardon him more than 70 years after he died. we have the story. you will love that one. u.s. stock market futures, take a look at this, dow up 63, s&p o, you'll only pay $4.95. fidelity. open an account today.
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cheryl: welcome back, the houston rockets holding a moment of silence for the victims to have santa fe high school shooting last night. the school's choir singing national anthem. first respond toaster --
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responders were invited. chris paul had a solid night, posting 24 points and rockets held up the warriors 98-94. they lead the seerdz -- series 3-2. chris paul went down with injury, ouch. he was seen liching off the court. the team says he will be reevaluated to see if he's good to go for game 6. gerri: that would be a legend, johnson pardoned by president trump, the pardon came after president trump spoke with sylvester stallone who has been outspoken advocate for reversal. johnson first black heavy weight champion received racially motivated conviction in 1913 for what the law, couldn't transport a white woman across state laws because he was black. the president called johnson a greater fighter.
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cheryl: a lot of people happy to see the conviction overturn. coming up, we are taking a look at stock market futures on friday going into the 3-day weekend, higher open at this point, looks like it. we will come back and give you a preview of next week's big economic report. we will be right back. this is your new name. this is your new house. and a perfectly inconspicuous suv. you must become invisible. [hero] i'll take my chances.
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gerri: we have one more day of trading before long-holiday weekend. promises to be busy week next week when wall street gets back to business. good morning. we-- what are we going to be watching for next week, what's in your crystal ball? >> a lot of economic data, jobs is a big one, looking at the unemployment levels that are expected to come out still on trend to be staying at the 17-year lows, heading towards 3.6 next year and indicater is what we think will happen with interest rates when the fed meets in june. unemployment data is going to be big component to that. cheryl: the interest rate story is big as well. we have mortgage rates this week that hit 7-year high, the economy is now seeing the effects of those rising bond yields but isn't there going to be fallout on consumers or home
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sales. >> that's a big question. it's extraordinary, it's fastest rate of mortgage rate growth in 46 years. home prices have been going strong this year, up about 6% and the question, i think, is going to be is this the inflection point where you hit mortgage rates hit consumers and you get demand coming off supply constrain, home development markets, will be a big one. gerri: 46 years, that's unbelievable. lots of inflationary pressures on consumers out there. gas prices could go back up to $3 a gallon. let's talk about the impact there, what happens to economy, what happens to consumers' wallets? >> not growing as expected. gdp has been strong but consumer spending has been a little bit slow, gas prices are you positive as you say. one of the things that economists are looking at for next week whether we are going to start seeing those tax cuts
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starting to impact consumers positively and whether this is the time particularly towards now and second half of the year seeing benefit come through. cheryl: geopolitical concerns, volatile week for the markets in general because of what's happening with washington, north korea, china, are investors still closely watching that, do you think they will look to something else next week? >> very much so. june is coming up. eu and nafta. gerri: thank you, excellent job, appreciate your time today. cheryl: thank you for watching fbn:am, happy memorial. gerri: happy memorial day. cheryl: we send it to dagen mcdowell, we will see you soon, missy. dagen: both of you ladies, i will see soon. i'm dagen mcdowell in for maria bartiromo, friday may 25th, 6:00 a.m. eastern. 62-point gain on dow future
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after 74-point loss yesterday. the major market gauges did finish the day to the downside but they were off session lows. nasdaq composite down ever so slightly yesterday. this was all after the stock -- after president trump canceling meeting with north korean's leader kim jong un. checking global action, biggest gainer is cac quarante in france. in asia overnight, mixed action to report. the nikkei managing to eke out a small gain but broadly speaking, asian markets were up. president trump firm in his position when explaining why he made that call. >> north korea has the opportunity to end decades of poverty and oppression. i hope that kim jong un will
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ultimately do what is right not only for himself but perhaps most importantly what's right for his team. dagen: this coming as we have new video from north korean showing aftermath of explofcións at nuclear site. latest developments ahead. intense manhunt underway after explosive device goes off in restaurant, at least 15 people injured. harvey weinstein said to turn himself in next hour. details in charges that he's finally facing coming up. the popular game raking in massive $300 million in april helping drive gains for the whole industry, this weekend, will you be playing video games and floating in a

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