Skip to main content

tv   FBN AM  FOX Business  June 25, 2019 5:00am-6:00am EDT

5:00 am
tonight. we thank you for being with us. here tomorrow night, brandon judd, damn bruce and -- tammy bruce and dan patrick among our lauren: it is 5:00 a.m., here are your top stories. president trump fires at iran's economy as the iranian government makes its own threats. is a deal even possible? cheryl: it is fed ex versus the u.s. government, why the shipping giant is telling the u.s. to do its own law enforcement. lauren: the democrats are getting ready to take the stage at th the he debate tomorrow, ae they focusing too much on joe biden. cheryl: and we'll tell you why coffee may be more than good for just a wakeup. it is tuesday, it is june 25t june 25th. "fbn: a.m." starts right now.
5:01 am
♪ please don't leave me, girl. ♪ don't you go. ♪ ain't too proud to plead, baby, baby. ♪ please don't leave me, girl. cheryl: welcome to "fbn: a.m.." good morning. i'm cheryl casone. lauren: good morning, everybody. i'm lauren simonetti. let's take a look right now at how your money is moving this morning. futures down in the u.s., dow is off 45, nasdaq down 24. cheryl: yield on the 10 year treasury right now as we see a collapse in the global bond market, down 6 basis points, 2.02%. lauren: consumer confidence plus new home sales due, plus jay powell will give his thoughts on the economy this afternoon. cheryl: tensions in iran continued overnight. let's look at oil. it is unchanged right now, $57.90. lauren: looking ahead to the g-20, stocks in asia lower across the board. the hedge sensinhang seng down,. cheryl: in europe, markets all
5:02 am
in the red. lauren: iran declaring the permanent closure of diplomacy with washington in response to president trump's new sanctions targeting the supreme leader. cheryl: ray bogen is in washington with more. >> reporter: president trump says he used great restraint when he decided not to strike iranian military targets last week, but he's not afraid to hit their economy. since the administration pulled out of the iran nuclear deal, they've levied over 1,000 sanctions. the president has added even more sanctions on iran, meant to cripple their economy. the main target, iran's supreme leader. >> the supreme leader of iran is ultimately responsible for the hostile conduct of the regime. >> reporter: the sanctions stop him or anyone who works for him from certain financial resources and blocks access to the financial system and assets in the u.s. it also punishes foreign financial institutions who try to help iran. >> for the people who say she's
5:03 am
are just symbolic, that's not the case at all. we've locked up tens and tens of billions of dollars. >> reporter: the head of the senate foreign relations committee supports the sanctions and is a proponent of negotiations. >> every nation wants to be a secure and they need to do what the north koreans did and analyze, is it in our better interest to pursue a nuclear weapon. >> reporter: democrats on capitol hill have pushed the president to release a plan for how he'll handle escalating tensions. >> it remains unclear what if any strategy this latest round of sanctions fits into and whether the latest round of sanctions will compel iran's leaders to alter their current course. >> reporter: members of congress are split on whether president trump needs authorization for military strikes against iran. the senate could officially consider that this week as they debate the national defense bill. in washington, ray bogen, fox news. lauren: u.s. and chinese
5:04 am
officials speaking on the phone ahead of this week's meeting between president trump and chinese president xi-jinping in japan and robert lighthizer spoke with china's top negotiator yesterday. friday's meeting will be the first face-to-face meeting since trump threatened to slap tariffs on basically everything beijing exports to the u.s. cheryl: fed ex says they shouldn't have to follow federal rules after they mishandled huawei. >> the increasing use of restrictions on exports and imports by the commerce department in various geopolitical and trade disputes korea it's just an impossible burden on fed ex and common carriers because under the department of commerce's regulations, we are expected to
5:05 am
be -- cheryl: fed ex reports their earnings after the bell today. lauren: they ship 15 million packages a day. and mexico is deploying 15,000 troops in their efforts to stop the surge of migrants at the southern border. cheryl: in washington, the house could vote on a $4.6 billion emergency funding bill today. we've got griff jenkins with all the latest. griff, good morning. >> reporter: good morning, lauren and cheryl. well, it appears this house border supplemental is in real trouble at the moment as a source tells fox news they don't have the votes to pass it yet. some want to add provisions to the bill before they support it. the rules commit at this hasn't filed -- committee hasn't filed the vote to open the door to voting. >> i don't care what anybody says about the need for more funding. there is no excuse for children to be treated that way. i think there's a special place in hell for the people who have
5:06 am
allowed this policy to go forward. >> reporter: so it's unclear even doubtful that the house will even take the measure back up today. at this point i, ant the and ths ticking, the president gave them two weeks to get it done. the senate and the house have to each pass their bills respectively, then it ha has toe blended before it goes to the white house where we hear there's a veto threat. speaker pelosi weighed in on the president's threat to i.c.e begn i.c.e. deportatio deportation r. >> this is not america. we do not break up families because of status violation. >> reporter: this as mexico continues to do their part supporting the effort to slow down the surge of migrants at the border. mention he co-'mexico's secretae
5:07 am
said they have deployed a total of 15,000 troops. i can tell you, the border patrol, the u.s. border patrol tell me they're seeing a reduction in the number of apprehensions but it's too early to tell what exactly the impact is. we'll see what the day brings in the being behind me where lawmakers can get their act together. cheryl: president trump signed an executive order yesterday that calls for upfront disclosure by hospitals of actual prices for tests and procedures. it is all about transparency for patients. >> with this order, hospitals will be required to publish prices that reflect what people actually pay for services. in a way that's clear, straightforward, and accessible to all and you'll be able to price it among many different potential providers. you'll get great pricing. prices will come down by numbers that you won't even believe.
5:08 am
you won't even believe it. cheryl: this executive order will call for a rule making process by federal agencies, mostly secretary azar's agency, which usually could take months or even years to implement. cheryl: let's get to other -- lauren: a new government study shows oil and gas leaking into the gulf of mexico 1 a 5 15 yes after hurricane ivan in 2004. the federal bureau of safety and environmental enforcement estimates a leak somewhere between 378 and 4500 gallons of oil per day. stephen moore failed in his bid to join the federal reserve board but he will soon play a key role with cryptocurrency. he joined a group of entrepreneur creating an entity called decentral.
5:09 am
they will attempt to perform fed-like duties in terms of regulating the supply of crypto in the same way the fed controls the supply of money for the u.s. economy. an angry new york restaurant owner received a big refund from grubhub. the delivery app refunded $10,000 to the unidentified owner after he complained about five years worth of bogus fees for calls a that had nothing to do with food orders. it's the largest refund to come to light at a time when other restaurants say they too are battling grubhub over fees. mcdonald's decision to use fresh beef paying off. the burger chain says the switch from frozen patties helped them increase market share in five years. sales jumped 30%, so fresh is best. cheryl: let's take a look at u.s. futures. we've got red arrows again. june is still so far a very
5:10 am
strong month for all major u.s. averages. dow down 29, s&p down 5, nasdaq down 22 and a quarter still ahead, u.s. sanctions hitting iran's economy. why iran's leaders are now hitting back at the united states. we're going to explain that. and also why are major stock exchanges in this country accusing their own regulators of ethical conflicts? keep it here on "fbn: a.m." ♪ this love has taken its toll on me. ♪ she said good-bye too many times before. ♪ her heart is breaking in front of me ♪ goin' down the only road i've ever known ♪ ♪ like a-- ♪ drifter i was ♪born to walk alone! you're a drifter? i thought you were kevin's dad.
5:11 am
little bit of both. if you ride, you get it. geico motorcycle. 15 minutes could save you 15% or more. who used expedia to book the vacation rental which led to the discovery that sometimes a little down time can lift you right up. expedia. everything you need to go. your daily dashboard from fidelity. a visual snapshot of your investments.
5:12 am
key portfolio events. all in one place. because when it's decision time... you need decision tech. only from fidelity.
5:13 am
the supreme leader of iran is one who ultimately is responsible for the hostile conduct of the regime. he's respected within his country. his office oversees the regime's most brutal instruments including the islamic revolutionary guard corps. cheryl: president trump announced new sanctions on iran yesterday. this time he is targeting the country's supreme leadership. in response to the fresh u.s. punishment, tehran has declared the, quote, permanent closure of diplomacy with washington. let's bring in colonel daniel davis. good morning. >> good morning. cheryl: it's interesting, because these added sanctions against iran, they're really targeting the money that's flowing to the leadership.
5:14 am
do you think this brings the ayatollah to the table? >?>> clearly, it doesn't. this is obvious, this is not going to work. this highlights the whole point that the maximum pressure campaign is causing maximum chaos for our own interests. all it does is push iran further away from coming to any negotiations. you've seen bolton and pompeo have recently saying the right things, the door's open, you can talk. when you look at what we're asking them to talk about, permanently dismantle the nuclear weapons program, stop ballistic missiles and other things, the problem is, they don't have a nuclear program but we're strangling them with the economic situation. cheryl: let me push back. i think the fear is they're trying to get to development of that and i think the administration and otheral lies in europe don't want -- other
5:15 am
allies in europe don't want to see that happen. don't you want to head it off the pass now? >> they don't have it. we had an agreement in place. actually, it's still in place with the jcpoa to prevent that very outcome. and by getting out of it we gave away the leverage we have to keep that going into the future. but by all we do is using pressure, we don't provide any kind of diplomatic off-ramp. the clear result of that is going to be harden resolve and to increase the chance of war and that's why this is really a dangerous play, if we push too hard, we could cause the thing we're trying to prevent. cheryl: see your disagreement with the administration. mike pompeo met with the asaudis, he's trying to put more pressure. do you think the saudi coughs be a voice that iran would listen to, along with european
5:16 am
pressure? >> absolutely not. saudis are one of their biggest add veebiggestadversaries. cheryl: i want you to listen to what president trump had to say about the strategy. listen to the president. >> i look forward to the day when sanctions can be finally lifted and iran can become a peaceful, prosperous and productive nation. that can go very quickly. it can be tomorrow. it could also be in years from now. cheryl: isn't that an olive branch, his words? >> it's only an olive branch in so far as we're willing to give some things. if we're trying to add ballistic missiles to this discussion, then that means we have to be able to give something more than the jcpoa had. there's many people that don't want to give anything to iran. until you're willing to give as well as take, then there's no basis for negotiations.
5:17 am
cheryl: we have to run, but do you really think we're headed to war with iran? >> if we keep pushing too hard, there's the extreme possibility that that could happen, whether by design or whether by accident, miscalculation, and having no communications increases that risk. cheryl: colonel, thank you for being here. always great to have you on the show. >> thanks, cheryl. lauren: spacex launching the latest rocket from kennedy space center in houston this morning. the falcon heavy carrying 24 satellites for customers including the department of defense with elon musk calling it the most difficult launch ever, and off it goes. cheryl: let's check the action on wall street on this tuesday, a little bit of pressure but markets for the month of june got to he remind you here, we've got strong markets, all the major averages up more than 2% for the month. could have the best month for the dow since 1938. we'll see how today plays out. s&p is down 5 and a quarter, nasdaq down 25 and-a-half.
5:18 am
the dems are getting ready for their spotlight. this week's first debate of the season is about to get underway. are the other candidates going to turn all of this into a biden bash? we're going to talk about what to expects. and bad for business, the one candidate that the co-founder of home depot is calling the enemy of even every entrepreneur. you're watching "fbn: a.m." ♪ i want to take you you away. ♪ i just can't refuse it. ♪ keep on rocking to it. ♪ please tonigh don't stop the - the latest innovation from xfinity
5:19 am
5:20 am
isn't just a store. it's a save more with a new kind of wireless network store. it's a look what your wifi can do now store.
5:21 am
a get your questions answered by awesome experts store. it's a now there's one store that connects your life like never before store. the xfinity store is here. and it's simple, easy, awesome. lauren: the democrats are getting ready to take the stage in miami for the first of the democratic candidate debates. former vice president joe biden, look, he's still in the lead but
5:22 am
that's not stopping him from taking a shot at rival senators bernie sanders and elizabeth warren, who are both promising big student loan relief. >> look, we can do this, i'm not making the numbers up. mine are not let's make everything free for everybody all the time. we can send everybody to community college for free, cutting in half the cost of college, by just adding $6 billion to our budget. lauren: amber is at the white house correspondent and she joins us now. good morning. what is going on here? >> what's happening is biden is breaking his pledge not to attack the other candidates p but he has no choice. he is the frontrunner for now. things are change in a primary race very, very quickly. you see bernie sanders and elizabeth warren attacking one another as well, bernie suggesting warren is part of the establishment. this is where the dem candidates try to separate themselves out
5:23 am
from the crowded pack. lauren: two questions for you. what is biden's best strategy? and number two, you have bernie sanders going very much for the left, we're going to pay for everything, everything is free, biden more in the center. is elizabeth warren carving out that reasonable progressive path that might actually help her and is helping her in the polls? >> it certainly seems like warren is nipping on bernie's heels, coming up from closer to the bottom and is doing really well by having this middle of the road message between these two wings of the democratic party. biden obviously going for his return of normalcy campaign, also campaigning on obama who is very popular within the democratic party, so that's not a bad strategy to campaign on that record. but bernie still has a lot of momentum from 2016. he feels things were stolen from him then by the democratic establishment. and that might be a good case for him to make, that this is his chance to shine. lauren: you said joe biden is
5:24 am
campaigning, look at the success we had with barack obama. president trump said there's something fishy, there might be a big secret on why president obama has not endorsed his vice president, joe biden. what do you make of this? >> i think it's a fair point. if biden is going to campaign on that record, then it would stand to reason that he should ask for obama's endorsement. yet he claims that he told obama not to endorse him and i'm wondering in what world that strategy makes sense when you have a former president who is quite popular within your party, when you're running on his record, it really doesn't make sense to say by the way, though, barack, please don't endorse me even though i'm your best friend and even though i want to tell the people what we did during our eight years in office. lauren: in what world does it make sense that we can wipe away all of your student loan debts and pay for everything when you look at the state of our entitlement programs. when we retire, in 15 years, at the current levels there won't be anything for you when it comes to social security, for
5:25 am
instance. how does bernie suggest that we can really pay for this? >> i think this is going to be something that is really leaving a bad taste in the mouth of people who worked really hard, were financially responsible and paid off student loans. any other outstanding debt that they may have. and i think the question people are going to ask is at what point do we stop saying you need to pay off other people's debt. do people get their homes and autos paid off. why stop at student loan debt? this is going to be a pie in the sky proposal that bernie is going to have to explain, one, how he's paying for it and also how it's fair to people that were financially responsible. lauren: amber, thank you for joining us this morning. we appreciate it. cheryl: well, ahead of this week's democratic presidential debates, one of the co-founders of home depot criticized bernie sanders' plan to tax wall street to pay for $1.6 trillion in student loan debt. bernie marcus shared his thoughts on an exclusive
5:26 am
interview on cavuto coast to coast. >> don't bring up bernie sanders. that's a red flag in front of me. he's the enemy of event only ev entrepreneur that's been born in this country. >> if he became president what would you do? >> me, probably move to australia. cheryl: he said home depot is the poster child for capitalism. it was a great interview. lauren: it surely was. futures this morning. we have a little bit of a setback in an otherwise terrific month for the major averages. the dow is down 38 points, s&p down a 5, nasdaq down 25 this morning. jay powell speaks this afternoon. let's see what he says about the future of interest rates, if anything. coming up, all eyes on the big meeting between president trump and china's president at the g-20 later this week. the stakes for the world economy as the two leaders sit down. and we're going to tell you
5:27 am
about how co-ro corona is changs cans to help the environment. keep it here on "fbn: a.m." ♪
5:28 am
5:29 am
5:30 am
lauren: let's take a look at how your money is moving this morning. the dow is down just 32 points at the moment, within 100 points from a record high. nasdaq down 21. taking a look at the yield on the 10 year treasury note, 2.02%. investors looking ahead to consumer confidence and new home sales data, plus earnings from fed ex lennar. as tensions in iran continue, we check the price of oil, $57.96 a barrel. that is up si cents. looking -- up six cents.
5:31 am
stocks in asia all lower. in europe, a sea of red, just fractional declines, so very much a muted reaction to everything on tap. cheryl: investors are going to be closely watching president trump's meeting with china's president xi-jinping this week during the g-20 in japan. can the leaders move the ball forward and reach a trade deal. the ceo of fed ex weighed in on special report. >> we believe that the international situation will resolve itself, hopefully, maybe as early as this weekend with president trump. all 440 or 50,000 fed ex-ers are one way or another involved in international trade. so it's in everybody's best interest hopefully to resolve these issues and get back to open markets. cheryl: let's bring in scott ladner, chief investment officer at horizon investments and james roberts, guys, good morning. >> good morning.
5:32 am
cheryl: scott, to you. we mentioned at the top of the show that fed ex filed a lawsuit against the commerce department, saying we're not the enforcer when it comes to what can and cannot be shipped overseas and that in particular is over the huawei issue and u.s. suppliers not shipping components over to huawei. that was the broader interview topic. but what did you make of the comments about a possible trade deal and we need to get out of this with china and figure this out? >> well, we would definitely agree with mr. smith. it is in both parties' best interest to get something done at the meeting. we think it's setting up as a superman moment between trump and president xi himself. both parties have a lot to gain by getting something done. the u.s. can get materially better trades with an emerging super power and have better planning and cap ex expectations for companies and china can get certainty about what's going
5:33 am
forward with their economy and cut back on stimulus measures they've butthey've putin place. cheryl: the chinese economy can and will suffer more if something isn't figured out. i want to ask about the g-20. there will be early discussion was lighthizer and his counterparts in china and again this saturday meeting we're expecting, we hope at least at this point between china's president and president trump. do you think we can get the blueprint back on the table of a deal? where are we at diplomatically, in your opinion? >> i think the impasse on trade and other issues between the u.s. and china is likely to continue at the g-20, although there may be a face-saving agreement to continue negotiations before levying any additional tariffs. really it calls into question the value of the so-called g-2 meeting that was elevated after the financial crisis in 2008. of the four -- four g-20
5:34 am
countries, u.s., u.k., australia, are the only ones in the heritage index. americans don't need to be schooled on government issues by the likes of china, russia, saudi arabia and turkey. the international bureaucrats have turned the g-20 into an administrative state swamp. cheryl: you don't sound optimistic, then, is that what i'm hearing here? >> i think it's going to be a continuation -- these are very big issues, has bipartisan support in the united states for taking a tougher stance on china. the huawei thing is along law enforcement and national security concerns. fed ex caught in the middle, unhappy for them. i don't think the word wants internet traffic going via beijing in the future. cheryl: i think the a 5g build-out needs to be safe and
5:35 am
secure. i think we can all agree on that. from an investment standpoint, what if this plays out over the long term and no deal is reached and tariffs stay in place? investors -- we've had a muted reaction from markets so far. that's not going to last if we don't get some type of movement this weekend at g-20. >> no, we would definitely see a pullback in equity markets globally if we don't get something a little more concrete, a little more of a road map to an exit strategy for the conflict. i do think that would be somewhat limbed a limbed limite. we have had reemergence, global central bank policy becoming more coordinated, for the first time since trump was he'll elecd president. that should not be discounterred. cheryl: i don't want to discount the fact that we're having a a great month of june when it comes to the dow, the nasdaq and s&p, despite all of this, whether it's iran or china, markets are looking real strong right now and obviously, guys, we're looking for some
5:36 am
semblance of something this weekend. fox business is going to be all over it. scott, james, thanks so much for getting up early. >> great to be with you. >> thank you, cheryl. lauren: google in the cross hairs of a possible anti-trust probe by the u.s. government and now its biggest critics reportedly jumping on-board. the wall street journal is reporting from travel to online shopping, companies are preparing documents for the justice department investigation. companies including yelp and trip advisor are among google's critics. they claim google is favoring its own consisten content over . cheryl: chicago police have released files from the jussie smollett attack investigation including body cam footage of when he spoke to detectives that night and showed the news that he said the attackers allegedly put -- the noose attackers allegedly put around his neck. >>
5:37 am
[ indiscernible ] cheryl: you can see on the screen, they poured bleach on me, you could see the caption at the bottom there. police released video of the arrest of the two brothers implicated initially in the attack. the charges against smollett were later dismissed by prosecutors. a special prosecutor has been appointed to investigate the case from the start. smollett could be charged all over again. lauren: time for other headlines we're watching. new data reveals that repealing the cap on state and local tax deductions would largely benefit wealthier americans. they say repealing the cap would almost exclusively benefit those with incomes of at least $100,000 with a greater benefit going to those with incomes of at least $1 million. about $13 million people would see a decrease in tax liabilities. the new york stock exchange and nasdaq accusing a senior regulator of having ethical conflicts. they say the s.e.c.'s brett redburn has long challenged fees
5:38 am
charged by exchanges when he worked on wall street. he looks into whether fee increases imposed by exchanges for data they provide are justified. warner brothers is getting its first woman chief executive. ann sarnoff, currently the president of bbc studios americas. this, the maker of corona beer thinking green, moving away from plastic six pack rings and testing stackable cans that can lock together so they can sell beer cans without the plastic rings and sell a wider variety of cans. the new system strong enough to hold 10 cans in one stack. i think that's kind of cool, they can stack them up like that. cheryl: markets, slightly red arrows. i've got to mention this over and over. markets are doing really well for the month of june, dow is down 23, s&p down 3 and-a-half,
5:39 am
nasdaq down 20 and a quarter. we're watching your markets and we're watching this. fightinfightingaddiction, how on changed his life and bank account. team usa is gearing up to tackle france in the world cup. why the next match could be a make or break literally for the ladies. you're watching "fbn: a.m." ♪ i'm burning, i'm burning, i'm burning for you. ♪ i'm burning, i'm burning, i'm burning for you. ♪
5:40 am
5:41 am
5:42 am
lauren: being a successful entrepreneur certainly rewarding but also stressful. the need to achieve can be as add dicaddictive as drugs with s side effects. there's a way to stay healthy and focused. michael dash is the founder of fate. he joins us now. michael, i read your book and i wrote down something. you may not be indicted to gambling -- addicted to gambling, drugs or alcohol but if you're a high performing individual, you may have a piece of addiction. >> we all strive for those highs and even in entrepreneurship it might be a sale, it might be building another product, releasing a product, building another line, beating the
5:43 am
competition, whatever it might be. we want to fill that need and feel that high. and then when it's gone, we want to replicate it and due bring kat--duplicate it. that's the challenge of keeping it a healthy high and not straying off for a few hours of escape. lauren: you were a serial entrepreneur and then what happened. tell us your story, briefly. >> i owned a staffing business for 11 years, staffing recruiting business, and i was involved in several different addictions, but really the one that got me was adderall was very tough with me. it's rampant in the entrepreneur community. i'm a part of a lot of organizations and a lot of entrepreneur, i see struggling with it as well. for me, it fueled my kind of like drive but -- i thought it could get a ton don. at the samdone.at the same timey
5:44 am
anger. i would not lead with empathy with my employees. frankly, i was kind of a jerk. lauren: how prevalent is adderall and other substances in the market? >> they're very prevalent. it can be very lonely being an entrepreneur. lauren: lever looked at it like that. >> you don't have a lot of people you can relate to. you can't talk to your employees. your spouse, your friends, they're probably not going to understand having to make a decision every minut 15 minutese day for 10 hours straight. it's important to surround yourself with like-minded individuals that you can lean on, maybe entrepreneur organizations, fill an t philan, athletic org. anythin organizatn on in times of challenge. lauren: entrepreneurs need to remember they're inspiring and
5:45 am
they're influencers. does that put on pressure? >> if you're not taking care of your step, you're not going to positively influence anybody else. and you might be an influencer, you're absolutely right, if you're leading a company of all these employees, you have clients and he competitors who are looking at you all the time, but if you're not whole as yourself, then you're not going to be great for any of them which is why it's very important to build strong habits around yourself and as you evolve as a human, replace old habits with new habits or positive habits of course, and that's why everybody talks about mindfulness now and talks about meditation, like back in the day i would have said meditation, what is this meditation. but try it before you judge it. that's my biggest message. lauren: what a story. what a comeback. thank you and good luck. >> thank you so much for having me. cheryl: let's take a look at how your money is moving this morning. we have got slight negative kickoff to your markets. we're coming back a little bit. dow down 18, s&p down 3 and a
5:46 am
quarter, nasdaq down 18 and a quarter. still ahead, a promise is a promise, even on twitter. how one oakland a's player got a fan to really prove his team spirit. and you may want to think twice before you he throw out toes leftovers in your fridge. you're watching "fbn: a.m." ♪ waiting for tonight. ♪ oh,. ♪ when you would be here in my arms. ♪ waiting for tonight. ♪ oh, oh. ♪ i've dreamed of this love for so long. ♪ waiting for tonight. e 24/7. it's not just easy. it's having-a-walrus-in-goal easy! roooaaaar! it's a walrus! ridiculous! yes! nice save, big guy! good job duncan! way to go! [chanting] it's not just easy. it's geico easy.
5:47 am
oh, duncan. stay up. no sleepies. who used expedia to book the vacation rental which led to the discovery that sometimes a little down time can lift you right up. expedia. everything you need to go.
5:48 am
5:49 am
cheryl: severe storms are threatening parts of the country with damaging winds, large hail and heavy rain. lauren: senior meteorologist janice dean live in the fox weather center with the details.
5:50 am
janice: we had reports of hail, damaging winds, tornado reports in virginia into texas. frowe will settle into a quiet r weather pattern, there's the good news here. future radar shows the potential for those storms today, across the areas that are mentioned, but then as we get into the next several days we'll be dealing with a lesser chance of severe weather and not too much rainfall, although we could see several inches across portions of the midwest and parts of texas, in towards louisiana and the northeast. here is your forecast today. the other big story is we're finally going to feel some summertime heat across the east coast including new york city where we will flirt with 90-degree temperatures over the next couple days. watching the p tropics across the pacific, south of mexico. this area of disturbed weather will not affect land but we will
5:51 am
certainly keep an eye on it. cheryl: hot one. janice, thank you very much. janice: of course. lauren: by the skin of their teeth, team usa moves on at the women's world cup. cheryl: ladies, this is it. they've got a few steps to go. jared: that was a close match yesterday. they weren't like the earlier ones in the tournament, the previous three where team usa outscored their opponents 18-0. it was 1-1 late second half when megan rapino broke the tie, 75th minute and the usa held on to win, 2-1 and will play in the quarter finals friday against france, expensive tickets. secondary market, one seller had tickets going for over $11,000. the get-in price was at around $400. want watch fo$400 watch for fre. friday, 3:00 p.m. eastern time. nba awards were presented last
5:52 am
night. most valuable player, averaged nearly 28 points, 12 and-a-half rebounds a game. he led the mill walk milwaukee a 60-22 record. >> want to thank the ownership for believing in me. [ cheering and applause ] jared: larr la dodgers are goo add protective netting to extend all the way down the foul lines. this news comes one day after a young woman was struck in the head by a foul ball. the dodgers take action. they say this will likely get done before the end of this season. the white sox said last week tear doing it. 27 straight gains the new york yankees hit home runs. last night, this one tied a may r juror league baseball -- major league baseball record in the yankees win. coming up, saturday on fox an
5:53 am
historic major league baseball series, the first ever in london, yankees, red sox. yesterday, the field got painted. that's going to be a fun one. cheryl: so good about that netting. a woman died last year, head trauma, a mother at a game. it was out west. finally. jared: finally. and one day i think we'll probably look back and say wait, they didn't always have this protective netting. how could that be? that's what hockey arenas became. cheryl: when you see me at the yankees game i'm going to be like this. that's my move. jared: don't be staring at your. cheryl: thank you very much. catch jared's sports reports on fox news headlines, 24/7, sirius xm channel 115. lauren: coming up, if you're drinking coffee right now, go ahead, pour another cup. we'll explain why that might be good four and why scientists say take home the doggie bag. the question is, should you take home a doggie bag on a first
5:54 am
date? why not. ♪ my experience with usaa has been excellent. they really appreciate the military family and it really shows. with all that usaa offers why go with anybody else? we know their rates are good, we know that they're always going to take care of us. it was an instant savings and i should have changed a long time ago. it was funny because when we would call another insurance company, hey would say "oh we can't beat usaa" we're the webber family. we're the tenney's we're the hayles, and we're usaa members for life. ♪ get your usaa auto insurance quote today. ...or trips to mars. $4.95. delivery drones or the latest phones. $4.95. no matter what you trade, at fidelity
5:55 am
it's just $4.95 per online u.s. equity trade.
5:56 am
5:57 am
by keeping leftovers to get a more delicious meal. >> okay, some coffee news for you. if you love it it's time to celebrate, a new studies say coffee can help you burn fat. researchers from the university say that coffee can stimulate assessment known as brown fat which is used to produce heat in the body, using energy which then burns calories and the researchers want to see if coffee can do it alone. cheryl: why am i not center,
5:58 am
captain was with friends, get this, able to swim with the shark, he says the shark was friendly and even allowed him to petit because who doesn't want to pet a shark? nobody ever. lauren: talk about team spirit, oakland a's fan made promise to get tattoo is ramon, grand slam, outfielder complied and so did the fans and tattooed an elephant in right arm. cheryl: twitter thing going on. hey, i'm doing it, a promise is a promise. even if you make it on twitter. lauren: all right. cheryl: let's take a look at how your money is moving on tuesday, futures slightly lower, s&p down 4 and 3 quarters, we are getting comments from jay powell.
5:59 am
>> 100 points from record high, the market is certainly moving to upside, the yield on the 10-year treasury moving slightly to downside, down a few basis points at 2.02%. cheryl: yeah, the bond market kind of collapsing actually. we will talk about later on fox business. also you will have data on consumer confidence coming out and new home sales, plus you'll be getting earnings and more important fedex, obviously curious about the lawsuit they filed against commerce department. lauren: exactly, speaking of china micon reports today. how tensions with china affects them and also tensions with iran that is and has been moving the price of oil, cheaper gasoline at the pump but could be changing oil 57.82. cheryl: closed higher yesterday considering that the new sanctions are against iran,
6:00 am
investors seem hopeful that that would work. that's it for fbn:am, mornings with maria starts now. maria: hey, there ladies, good morning to you, happy tuesday, i'm maria bartiromo, good to see you, it is tuesday june 25th, top stories right now just before 6:00 a.m. on the east coast, we have breaking news once again this morning, iran is slamming the u.s. sanctions, tehran calling them outrageous, they end any chance of diplomacy border battle back on capitol hill, 4 and a half billion dollar bill to provide funding for migrant funding at the border. nancy pelosi taking backlash, méxico sends 15,000 troops to u.s.-méxico border overnight. fedex suing the government over huawei restrictions, suing the commerce department, find out coming up. the first launch sending 24 satellites into orbit, what

167 Views

info Stream Only

Uploaded by TV Archive on