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

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president trump to declassify the document on the spying of carter page. nike ignoring the massive backlash after cheryl: that editorial fingering president trump. is there a resistance movement. cheryl: social media stock taking after-- did the companies just throw in the towel and a greater regulation? lauren: media stocks may draw the plastic down 100 points. cheryl: looking at futures this morning we are looking at
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somewhat higher open on this thursday. the dow jones up 47, as a ps3, nasdaq up 10 and a half. lauren: in opened lower on worry of trade wars. cheryl: in asia bureau the trump administration administration imposing 20 billion in tariffs with hang seng dropping 1%. lauren: then there is this. >> when they bury me it will not be in my backyard. lauren: hbo releases a teaser for "house of cards" in the face of president frank underwood. "fbn:am" starts right now. cheryl: thursday, september 6. good morning. i'm cheryl casone. lauren: good morning. i'm lauren simonetti. cheryl: we have a lot of
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breaking news. at the white house is searching for an official who wrote@anonymous "new york times" op-ed that strongly criticized the commander-in-chief with the president tweeting last night: lauren: mike bergman at the white house with the details. reporter: unique op-ed posted by the "new york times", but the question is who exactly wrote it cracks the times posting an anonymous op-ed from someone who identifies himself as a senior administration official with the title: i am part of the resistance inside the trumpet ministration. that official writing at one point a president trump quote the dilemma which he doesn't fully grasp is many senior officials in his own
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administration are working from within to frustrate parts of his agenda and his worse inclination or did up anonymous senior claims quote given the instability many witness there were early whispers within the cabinet of invoking the 25th amendment which would start a process from removing the president, but no one wanted to precipitate because to show crisis is so we will do what we can to steer the administration in the right direction until one way or another it is over. president trump responded in part by rattling off to his administrations a call the schmitz while dismissing the "new york times" and the author. >> if that failing "new york times" has an anonymous editorial meaning gutless editorial, we are doing a great job. about poll numbers are through the roof and guess what, no one will come close to meeting me in 2020. reporter: in a statement sara sanders described the writer of
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the op-ed as a quote coward and said that they should resign. back to you in new york. lauren: or disgraced employee as opposed to loyal public servant. trade talks characterize as intense continue between the us and canada as part of an attempt to revamp the north american free trade agreement. >> we will see it works out. if it doesn't work i will will be fine for our country. it won't be fine for canada, but we love canada. look at the terrace they put on our dairy products. with tremendous trade barriers and we have not been treated fairly. lauren: canadian foreign affairs minister said the two sides making good progress. cheryl: the trumpet ministration could impose tariffs of up to 25% on an additional $200 billion in chinese goods once the public comment. that ends today. beijing will have to retaliate, but it is not
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affecting futures. lauren: not in the us. we will continue to watch the numbers and social media companies, yesterday twitter fell more than 6%. facebook fell sharply, all down. executives from twitter and facebook-- google of incorrect-- excuse me, twitter and the other company-- cheryl: alphabet, facebook and twitter. lauren: 's sheryl sandberg and jack dorsey were there testifying about foreign interference in the 2016 election and will that happen again and raising concerns these companies might face regulation. cheryl: investors reacting thinking they may agree to this. let's go to adam shapiro for more. reporter: takeaways from the hearing on social media include revelations the russian government continues to try to influence american elections and
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congress may impose regulation. facebook's sheryl sanders and twitter ceo jack dorsey told members of the senate intelligence committee their companies share information with others in silicon valley when a security risk is exposed , but they concede more needs to be done. >> we are proud of how that free and open exchange has been what a nice and used to distract and divide people and our nation and we found ourselves unprepared and ill-equipped for the immensity of the problems with acknowledged. reporter: sandberg says facebook has made progress eliminating fake accounts that spread false news and they have doubled their security and safety staff, but senator mark warner proposes potential regulation to thwart social media companies to identify the origin of a post as well as allowing people to sue social media companies for
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liable statement people after trust is a positive force for democracy and a so this has been a huge issue for us and that's why we are here today and that's why we will keep working. reporter: executives responded to alleged censorship of conservatives responding mistakes have been made and corrected. back to. cheryl: the justice department announced its investigating whether social media companies are intentionally stifling some voices on the platform. attorney general jeff sessions will meet with state attorney general on september 25, to look at potential anti- conservative bias. lauren: on capitol hill the number two of the site confirmation hearing for supreme court nominee judge brett kavanaugh putting him once again in the hot seat. topics yesterday included potential subpoena of president trump and special counsel robert robert moore rush investigation. >> can a sitting president be required to respond to a subpoena?
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>> i can't give you an answer on that hypothetical question. lauren: republican senator orrin hatch further pressing the judge on where he feels his loyalty lies. >> what assurances can you provide that you will not allow the president's personal views on a case or personal interest to impact your decision? >> i'm an independent judge and have confirmed it to the supreme court and is a sitting judge i zero my loyalty to the conference's-- constitution. lauren: republican pulled a narrow 51 to 49 majority in the senate and the hope to confirm judge kavanagh before the supreme court next term starting october 1. cheryl: meanwhile we have this news. american express reportedly under investigation by the fbi. the "wall street journal" says the companies looking into foreign-exchange transactions and whether the international payment department misrepresented pricing to clients to get more business. newspaper said the
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inquiry is in early stages right now, but a big bombshell for american express. shares fell more than 1% yesterday. lauren: two big healthcare mergers to watch reportedly close to being approved. cheryl: tracee carrasco has that story and some of the headlines. tracee: the "wall street journal" reports the justice department is getting ready to formally improve-- approved to healthcare deals reporting cbs net at the will have to sell off assets related to medicare drug coverage to take care of competition concerns in the department's approval of the signet ad express scripts still could come without any of those. cheryl: let's talk about the latest on the probe into elon musk and tesla. tracee: new developments. our only child yes perino is learned from sources tesla ceo elon
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musk has retained legal heavyweights. elon musk has reportedly retained former fec commissioner and better litigator steve perino. sources say by hiring these two it highlights the seriousness of that inquiry. lauren: we are looking at a pretty car right there. [laughter] tracee: this is a teaser for "house of cards". we will soon know exactly what happened to kevin spacey's character for the shows six and final season. >> when they bury me, if won't be in my backyard and with a pay their respects they will have to wait in line. tracee: you can see claire underwood standing over the grave of her husband frank underwood.
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netflix cut ties with stacy after he was accused of sexual misconduct. cheryl: can we discuss the end of the last of season quirks-- she says my turn that's the moment "house of cards". tracee: have to wait until november when it comes out. lauren: i'm only behind one season. [laughter] cheryl: we have a lot more coming up. we have an exclusive with ceo of uber. she talked about his goal to get you to give up your car. lauren: if you own a car to get to work to pick up the kids in school, you own a car to get groceries etc. and we are building out services to solve each of those cases and ultimately making it unnecessary for you to own a car. cheryl: we will have more from the interview. a powerful earthquake
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has rocked northern japan, massive destruction. we will give you an update. look at futures despite the tariff five between the chinese and us which is escalating the dow is actually higher red 45, s&p up to and three quarters and nasdaq up eight. you are watching "fbn:am" too cold for camping? too hot to work? nah. this is the gator xuv835. with game-changing heat and air, it's never too anything for anything.
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lauren: let's get caught up on what's happening now. the dow jones rise by 22 points and against-- again today. nasdaq trying to gain back some of yesterday's losses. a deadly earthquake has hit the island-- japanese island killing eight people and leaving at least 30 missing. that is a 6.7 magnitude earthquake causing major landslides and leaving almost 3 million homes without power. this is the second major disaster to strike japan this week. remember the powerful typhoon, that left 11 people dead. kim jong-un and the south korean president will meet again later this month to continue their need to get visitation talks. kim says he's completely committed to the denuclearization process
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despite recent tensions with the us. the korean leaders will meet september 18. the california department of motor vehicles admits accidentally sending 23000 invalid voter registrations. the mistake was caused by technical error in the states motor voter program. the agency says it's working with the secretary of state to fix the issue. that's what's happening now. cheryl: that was only twice. lauren: motor voter. [laughter] cheryl: uber is now in 400 cities throughout the world up and the transportation. our bonuses and we got the chance to sit down with her boss dara khosrowshahi to talk about plans to move the company forward improved to wall street uber can consistently turn a prophet. >> people want to know
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are you still sticking with the timeline of an ipo of 2019 because your new cfo-- >> nelson starts next week. >> says he's not on board for 2019 listing. >> i would expect nothing less of nelson. he's independent-minded, rigorous and so far on the outside so i think i want nelson to come in and i think that when he sees all of the work that teens are doing, i think, he will agree we are ready for 2019 ipl. there's a bunch of financial work going on. the company is big enough and important to the world and we have some incredibly talented technologists so i think we will be ready, but i want that stamp of approval from the cfo. >> the thinking on the street is if they ipo before you they basically take up the ipo capital in the
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market. are you concerned in that i'm not concerned. listing ourselves as part of the transportation revolution. it's about ultimately ending car ownership. it's a 6 trillion-dollar business. we may think uber is big, but we are 50 billion accounting for less than 1% of miles driven and really what ourselves and lift is trying to do is break apart all the cases of owning a car or q1 a car to get to work. you own a car to pick up the kids at school. you own a car to get groceries extra truck and we are building out services to solve those and ultimately making it unnecessary for you to own a car and we think there are plenty of companies who can be a part of that revolution and i think investors will line up. >> given the us president has talked about a antitrust situation with the tech companies like google, amazon and facebook do
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you think big-- tech companies like uber might be regulated in the future? >> we are regulated now. we work in every single city etc. and we look at the market as a 6 trillion-dollar transportation market, tiny part of the market accounting for less than 1% of miles driven on the road, so i think uber-- 2030 sounds bigger than it is today. >> no fear of being broken up at all? >> no fear of being broken up and ultimately regulators are our partners. we operate on the streets of new york city and while we may not agree on everything, ultimately we think we has a transportation service are incredibly valuable for ever sitting around and ultimately we have to be partners in building the solution together. it takes dialogue, sometimes you agree, sometimes you don't. we think the opportunity is enormous and there's a need for riders and drivers around around
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the world for our services a. cheryl: you catch more of the interview with the boss of uber, dara khosrowshahiat 7:30 a.m. eastern time today. lauren: coming up on the heels of court in there are about a new hurricane brewing right now and janice dean is tracking the next storm for us. market activity this morning, nasdaq futures trying to recover currently up 12 points, dow jones gaining 62. you are watching "fbn:am" i wish you weren't so worried about moving. i'm hoping these nature sounds will help me relax a bit. at least we don't have to worry about homeowners insurance. just call geico. geico helps with homeowners insurance?
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lauren: and fox senior meteorologist janice dean is here tracking the storm with the latest takes before we say goodbye to gordon and hello florence. watching a florence in the atlantic and we will have to keep an eye on florence over the next couple of days as it gets closer to bermuda and perhaps the east coast, but we don't want people to be freaking out just yet. we will certainly monitor the system as some of the computer models show perhaps an east coast brush, but this is seven to eight days away, so a lot of time to prepare and watch the forecast models work if you are going to bermuda you need to pay attention because the system could come close to you over the next three to five days. here's the last 12 hours with the cold front absorbing what's left of gordon bringing potential for heavy rainfall and this is the cold front that will bring eventual relief to the east coast over the next couple of days, so
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relief on the way. it will be hot and sticky today again in new york city and boston , but look at the temperatures for friday and saturday, much more fault like and refreshing. we will keep an eye on florence and keep you up-to-date. back to you. lauren: thank you and fall like it reminds me of pumpkin spice lattes. starbucks, dream come true for the company's chairman, the first ever starbucks will opens its doors in italy, but will they sell crappy chinos or pizza cracks what happens when two many pizza fans sign up with a -- for a pizza for life promotion. we will to you when we come back. they reveal in extremes and defy limitations. these pursuits may seem unnecessary. but the scariest thing i can imagine is a world where this,
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doesn't exist.
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>> failing "new york times" has an anonymous editorial. can you believe it quakes meaning cutlass editorial. cheryl: that editorial angering president trump. he ripped the explosive anonymous op-ed
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published in the "new york times" yesterday. is there a quiet resistance? lauren: is social media regulation coming next testimony from facebook cheryl sandberg's and jack dorsey. cheryl: nasdaq losing nearly 100 points yesterday. the dow jones gained 22-point. lauren: the dow jones continues to build today up another 57 looking at the premarket and nasdaq up eight. cheryl: europe stocks opening lower, but that has changed direction. lauren: we have a sea of red in asia on fears the trump administration will impose $200 million in tariffs on chinese products in china says it will retaliate. cheryl: and a domino's promotion for pizza for life goes horribly wrong for the company. "fbn:am" continues right now.
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we are coming up on 5:30 a.m. it is thursday, september 6, good morning. i'm cheryl casone. lauren: good morning. i'm lauren simonetti. cheryl: we have a big story. the explosive op-ed in the "new york times". president trump demanding to know the name of the author who wrote the scathing essay including inflammatory statements like this one. quote given me a stability many witness they were early whispers within the cabinet of invoking the 25th amendment, which would start a process for removing the present, but no one wanted to precipitate a constitutional crisis. that's one statement. in the joins us now. good morning. >> good morning. cheryl: where to start with this one. amy, let me start with the who.
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we know the white house was looking at about half a dozen names because they want to find out who wrote this scathing editorial. that doesn't necessarily mean the person is in the white house. i give you this quote and ask if you'd-- who you think it could be because they said that's why many trump appointees have vowed to do it we can to preserve our democratic institutions well sorting his impulses until he's out of office who do you think this could be? >> you now, unfortunately, it goes deeper than i think the public realizes. i have a good friend who works for the department of interior and visited him and he would walk down the hall and show me this office is being held by someone who's from the obama administration. this is the bush administration and this when cannot even whisper anything in front. there are 70 people that currently work under this administration i don't like the current
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president. i don't know why they choose to remain in those positions, but it's deeper than we thought and i think it will be more than a half dozen to a dozen people to investigate. cheryl: kellyanne conway was on the laura ingram show last night and i think this-- we will listen to what some of the administration defense will be. >> there are all up as like that in the "new york times" every day. it's just a different non- byline. i have to correct the record. it's not clear it's someone in the white house. it's a senior administration official. that could be many people there. hundreds of folks would qualify under that title alone. cheryl: is she kind of say nothing to see here? >> possibly yes. thousands of presidential appointees and kind of clarification we have is very vague. nonetheless, i think it's a serious undermining of the presidential authority.
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a president has every right especially at supposedly senior-level to be loyal to the administration, to the president, to the office of the president and i think in some ways even though the op ed talks about supposedly trying to prevent a constitutional crisis in some way it's like their actions are pushing in the direction of a mini constitutional crisis. cheryl: it could be, amy. let's forget the issue issue of the 25th amendment. woodrow wilson was ill at the end of his presidency and they talked about at their. ronald reagan say it-- at the reports of the end of his presidency, some said he was foggy. the 25th amendment ready serious charge brought up in the editorial. >> this has been going on since they never one of the presidency. you had a number of democrats crying for
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impeachment on a daily basis, so this is not a surprise and i think what we need to remember is let's look at the two years of all of the success that this administration has had. this president has campaigned on a number of promises that he's following through with and you may not like his style, but he's getting it done. cheryl: i don't have much time. last word, eric. the woodward book, bob corker has made similar statements. how big of a problem as it? >> i think people are used to books about the administration and unsourced material. there will be-- the fact is no one agrees with the president 100%. in that and looking at the results of the administration i think everyone has been on board for that and, i mean, no one agrees with anyone on everything.
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cheryl: that's why democracy. great to have you both here. inc. you so much. lauren: looking at shares of twitter and facebook and google para doubtful that falling sharply yesterday after executives from two of the companies work grilled on capitol hill. we will talk about it with research chief analyst lou. good morning. >> good morning. lauren: we were showing that the stocks took a big hit, but it seems like tech selling yesterday was indiscriminate. why do we see a major tech fall yesterday? >> these tech stocks have been moving in unison. we talked about the theme all year long that tech dominates the entire market. the index-- ec sympathy -- sympathy selling in the short term. i think you have to look at the fundamentals for each sector. there's a lot of differences in between.
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i don't think you can paint with a broad brush and say all tech stock is doomed. lauren: lets québec to to the hearing yesterday. i was looking at the appearance of facebook sheryl sandberg very poised embellished and then you have twittered jack dorsey who look like he just woke up and came in from coachella or something. listen to how he tries to explain if there's anti- conservative bias of the platform. >> what did the algorithm take into account that led to prominent conservatives including members of the us house of representatives not being included in autos search suggestions? >> we were using a signal of the behavior of the people following accounts and we didn't believe upon further consideration and also seen the impact which was about 600,000 accounts. lauren: help me out.
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first of all, he seemed to board. you understand what he's saying and is convincing you that twitter is doing enough? >> he said he's very shy and does not like to speak in public. i give him credit that he is their. mark zuckerberg wasn't there. this is a man who's been very critical of and i have to give them credit he's earning my respect. i do think twitter is serious about making changes where facebook is still making excuses and forget the pudding, the proof is in the prepared remarks. jack dorsey said we take full responsibility to fix it whereas facebook said we have a responsibility to fix it and there's a key difference their. twitter understands the future of their business rests on a solution and i don't think facebook at that speed. lauren: wall street is forgiving facebook of it this morning. there is a nonchalance among some of these executives even for the no show which was empty chair that was supposed to be by a google representative. that didn't happen. >> i think there will be a harsher penalty for not participating then
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it would've been for the hassle of participating. lauren: thank you very much. cheryl: well, walmart testing a new delivery program. lauren: tracee carrasco joins us lauren: walmart testing its own network of independent delivery drivers to deliver groceries. the new delivery system online drivers using their own car to make these deliveries took walmart will use a third-party company to recruit, that and pay the drivers. testing is underway in nashville and new orleans. walmart hopes to offer home grocery delivery to 100 metro areas by the end of the year. lauren: they are competing with amazon. what is starbucks doing overseas? tracee: starbucks will open an upscale café in milan, the first in its country and 35 years after the chairman visited is
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silly-- italy and was inspired to set up his own coffee chain. it will be high-end and so will prices. prices nearly double what italians pay at their local coffee shop. starbucks says the café is a premium experience hence the cost. cheryl: that has been his dream. domino's pizza, free pizza for life promotion went completely haywire. what happened? tracee: domino's pizza in russia told customers to tattoo a domino's logo on their body. they underestimated how many people would actually be willing to take their pizza that far. the promotion was scheduled to go two months, but was shut down after five days with domino's announcing the first 350 people with tattoos awarded a lifetime deal. lauren: i'm not surprised because tattoos are no big deal
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anymore. tracee: covered up maybe was something else. lauren: coming up we are looking at senator bernie sanders and how he's upped his attack on amazon with a new tax bill and what happens when employees at an oregon restaurant chain gets political quirks major backlash. futures looking pretty good this morning. so, the whole world is talking about ai. big, bold promises like... it'll find life on mars! but here's the thing. you don't live on mars. (beep) you build wind turbines. supply car parts to thousands of cities. answer millions of customer calls a year. like this one: no, i didn't order this. it's terrifying. and that's why you work with watson. hello. it knows your industry, protects your insights, and works with tools you already use. that's why it's the best ai for the job.
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cheryl: welcome back. lets get caught up on what's happened. despite trade tensions ramping up between us and china futures for the dow up 49 nasdaq up by 62 cvs is holding talks over which cavity should gain control of the broadcast network. this comes less than a month before the dispute goes to trial after cbs sued national amusement-- amusements. redstone currently controls 79% of cbs. bernie sanders waging a war against amazon proposing a new bill called stop bezos act that would tax the company to paper their employee federal benefits. sanders has targeted bezos with his immense wealth.
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oregon fast food restaurant receiving backlash from customers after a group of employees were politically charged buttons with phrases like: abolish ice and no one is illegal. the company said the employees refused to take the buttons off. the restaurant has since about the employees to wear the badges on the premises. they gave in. that's what's happening. lauren: the economy, we could get more evidence of that tomorrow when the government releases august unemployment report, but showing economic growth could cause problems for the emerging market if the federal reserve has to raise interest rates to prevent the economy from overheating work gary, good morning. >> good morning. lauren: the economy overheating? are you worried about that? >> not at all. finally, we have some growth in this economy.
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for the past eight years during the obama administration the word malaise seemed to be about almost every single day. we finally have good solid growth, low unemployment. people are working and have the opportunity to work more hours. and we are worried about overheating, that's 375 on my list of things to worry about. lauren: i will give you another number, 191,000 jobs expected in the month of august when we get that numbers tomorrow and unemployment to go down. these are good numbers that's making many worry the feds might hike interest rates too fast, but listen to what the st. louis federal reserve president said. >> i think we are about where we need to be today. we have been preemptive. we have inflation at target. doesn't look like there's a lot of
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inflation pressure based on tips based and expectations so i think we are in good shape for today and we should just play it going forward by taking in incoming data and reacting to incoming data. lauren: he went on to say he doesn't think the fed should continue hiking. when you say? >> look, i think everyone places too much faith in the fed period to be predicted. they are just regular people like you and i would access to a little more data, but they are forecasting that has been horrible. about as good as anyone else. their crystal ball is hazy, also. may be another two hikes, but it's so small a quarter basis point each time. i don't think it's anything to worry about. lauren: doesn't that strengthen the us dollar and doesn't that have harmful effects in other places like emerging markets,
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turkey, south africa? >> you bring up a good point although historically the link between the us dollar and emerging markets is tenuous at best. if anything it to strengthens our economy, i think, and really the dollar is more in opinion of how strong it country's economy is. i would rather see a strong dollar because it's usually an indicator the us economy is growing. lauren: i wish we could-- send them my way. in the seo. cheryl: coming up we will talk about nike. they are frankly going all in with this colin kaepenick add. you will not believe when they plan to air the commercial. the semi final matches is set at the u.s. open. could we end up with an all-american women's final? gerrit is coming in now. looking at futures, dow up 48, s&p up two and three quarters and nasdaq up six.
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you are watching "fbn:am" too cold for camping? too hot to work? nah. this is the gator xuv835. with game-changing heat and air, it's never too anything for anything.
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cheryl: it might be the best day of the year because football is back tonight, but there's more controversy. lauren: there is. jared is here to kick things off for us poor mike 214 days since the philadelphia eagles when their first super bowl. nfl 2018 season opener against the falcons entering the game we will see a new nike commercial narrated by and starring activist. [inaudible conversations]
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>> don't ask if your dreams are crazy. reporter: two-minute commercial. it has colin kaepenick speaking about athletes that overcame odds to achieve athletic greatness. remember nate boyer? the green beret that served multiple tours. he convinced colin kaepenick to kneel instead of sitting and nate says it's dangerous territory that suggests something for me when i hear sacrifice everything. the last thing i think about is money. if it's a matter of sacrificing money or your brand, that's far different than sacrificing your life. mostly subscription free streaming kicks off tonight and basically if the cave is on tv in your local market it can be streamed for free in
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most situations. you can spend $5 a month to get the red zone and channel, but only on your phone. network-- the nfl figures two to 3% of its audience strains nfl games. tennis, anyone? novak djokovic beat john millman. american medicine keys also one which means we are on possible course for an all-american women's final between medicine keys and serena williams. trevor story for the first place colorado rockies in the nfl-- the nl west. he hit three home runs last night. cheryl: amazing. lauren: i was just looking to see the ball and how far it really went. jared, thank you. you can catch his sports reports on fox news headlines play
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for/seven. cheryl: we stand camera because we have another segment coming up after a quick commercial break. european stocks pretty mesh shaking out for is about emerging markets and trade. we have something you need to hear when we return. here? we've been helping you prepare and invest for retirement since day one. why would we leave now? because i'm retired now. so? we're voya. we stay with you to and through retirement... with solutions to help provide income throughout. so you'll still be here to help me make smart choices? well, with your finances that is. we had nothing to do with that, uh, tie. or the suit. or the shirt. voya. helping you to and through retirement.
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but, he can't look at him! it's just not done! please sir. i want some more more? more? more? more? please sir he has asked for... thank you what? well he did say please sir yes he did and, thank you yeah. and thank you he's a wonderful boy (laugh) a delightful boy (all boys): thank you, thank you, thank you. >> european stock has
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reversed earlier losses with concerns about emerging markets and trade tensions. scott joins us from chicago. welcome home, scott. >> good morning. >> chicago? >> we are going to ask about emerging markets and european markets. >> you are doing my tour duty, how does that sound? >> with you make of it? >> it's starting to go from a ba selloff to some sort of mild contagion. that's a big word and we have to be careful, but we think about it in days for the stock market is a group of 222 day selloff. the bond market has been selling off for 240 days, the long as we have seen since the financial crisis so they start to sell the rally guys and that's when you get the problem in its due to the fact that we have interest rates going up or it looks like they are getting
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better and at the same time because these trade tensions, so everything is lining up to make it difficult for those emerging markets. >> you call it a mild contagion, but do you look at it as a one-off or something more serious? >> because of the length of it it will be marred serious because you start to tie up capital. you have options, not make the money these guys were expecting seven traders turned negative that is the problem we are facing because it's gone on so long. >> got it. 's nice to see you on this side of the pond, sir. >> time for some good pizza. [laughter] >> thank you. that's really good pizza >> maria know something or two about pizza. >> she's a new york pizza lady. maria: we have a lot on that coming up. good morning. happy thursday and thank you for joining us.
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i'm maria bartiromo. and it's thursday, september 6. top stories on east coast, attack from within, "new york times" op ed allegedly written by an anonymous strap administration insider getting some harsh words this way from the presidents. >> about failing "new york times" has on anonymous editorial. anonymous meaning gutless, gutless editorial. we are doing a great job about poll numbers are through the roof. our poll numbers are great and no one will come close to beating me in 2020 because of what we have done. maria: president trump's late-night tweets coming out this morning was trade tensions again accelerating the us expected to put additional tariffs on $200 billion with a chinese goods as early as today. china overnight said it will counter that we will get into it. future showing the market will open higher. doubt set to open about 40 points, s&p 500 and
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nasdaq also in positive territory. next day yesterday on wall street. dow jones up 22 and s&p 500 and nasdaq losing ground. nasdaq down better than 1% in the face of those testimony from tech executives. in europe fractional gains as you can see best performer in paris. fear of weakness and emerging markets has aged-- asian indices fighting overnight. a deadly earthquake hitting japan triggering landslides. we have the latest on the race to find survivors in japan coming-out. grilled on the hill, facebook and twitter testifying on capitol hill yesterday. google conspicuously absent the file coming up. plus, sleep at the wheel how volvo is planning to turn a nap in the drivers seat into no big deal. we had those stories coming up in joining me to break it down our own dagan mcdowell.

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