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tv   FBN AM  FOX Business  September 9, 2019 5:00am-6:00am EDT

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and we'll take up your book in an entire segment here in the week ahead. >> still winning. lou: i love it. till winning. what a lovely title. thanks, charlie. good night frororororo cheryl: it is 5:00 a.m. here are your top stories at this hour. the dow up 46 points in the premarket, does the u.s. have a leg up in the trade war? new reports indicate china taking a hit from the tariffs. the white house is warning investors to, quote, play the long game. those comments not hitting futures right now. dow up 45. lauren: is big tech too big? today, over 40 state attorneys generalses will launch an anti-trust probe into google with facebook waiting in the wings. cheryl: is the dmv selling your certainal information? a new report says the agencies uses loopholes to make millions over selling your data. lauren: who needs to pay rent?
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the stunning things millennial would rather spend money on? and what's driving them to brink of a quarter life crisis? it's monday, september 9th. "fbn: a.m." starts right now ♪ ♪ monday, monday. ♪ so good to me. ♪ monday morning, it was all i hoped it would be. ♪ oh, monday morning -- lauren: welcome to "fbn: a.m.." good morning, monday morning, i'm lauren simonetti. cheryl: good morning, i'm cheryl casone. lauren: welcome back. we have relatively muted start to the trading session in the u.s., dow up 44, s&p up 5, nasdaq gaining 14. cheryl: as investors await central bank decisions, the
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yield on the 10 year is higher by 4 basis points, you're seeing strength in the bond market. lauren: wti is trading to the upside. oil extending gains ahead of an opec meeting and saudi arabia ousting the energy minister. we have $57 for wti and gold at 1516 an ounce. cheryl: stocks in asia rising modestly after china announced the plan to he throw more cash into system. when the reserve limits are actually lifted. you can see the nikkei and shanghai and kospi higher. lauren: europe has better than expected economic data for the u.k. and germany. very muted reaction in europe. cheryl: we continue to watch all the things brexit today, another vote in parliament. we'll talk about that later on in the show. china's economy continues to take a hit from the trump administration's tariffs. beijing said imports from the
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u.s. plunged 22.5% in august, while exports to the u.s. fell 16% from just one year ago. this new round of data coming as the u.s. and china prepare for a 13th round of talks in washington next month. both sides are ramped up their tariff war. lauren: white house trade adviser, peter navarro, shared advice for anyone trying to predict whether the two sides will reach a deal on sunday morning futures. >> i would say play the long l game, look at the chess board. in the meantime, in the next 45 days, it's absolutely critical that we pass the u.s., mexico, canada agreement. in the scheme of things, in the short run, that's far more important. lauren: we'll take a look at the u.s.-china trade talks when maria bartiromo speaks with steven mnuchin at 8:00 a.m. eastern time. cheryl: microsoft's president, brad smith, is saying the trump administration is treating huawei unfairly. in an interview, smith said the
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u.s. government hasn't adequately made the case for the moves against huawei and add ad thathat huawei should be a allod to buy american technology. earlier, huawei was added to an export black list. lauren: in hong kong, hundreds of students formed student chains in support of anti-government protests today following a massive demonstration over the weekend. some of the protesters van vandalized subway stations, set fires and blocked traffic, even after carrie lamb withdrew the extradition big that started all this. thousands of demonstrators held a march to the u.s. lat consulae calling for the united states support. cheryl: pressure is mounting on boris johnson. this comes as johnson is pushing parliament to call a snap
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election for a second time today. he says europe needs to leave the european union by october 31st with or without a divorce deal. another minister we're learning resigned from johnson's cabinet. the u.k.'s work and pension secretary says she doesn't think johnson wants a deal before britain leaves the eu. more on that later on. lauren: indeed. peace talks with the taliban are officially off. that announcement coming from secretary of state mike pompeo after president trump canceled a he secret meeting with leaders from the terror group at camp david. cheryl: garrett tenney is live in washington with the details. >> reporter: the meeting was slated to take place and mike pompeo says the taliban is to blame for it not happening. on sunday, pompeo said the taliban tried to gain leverage in the negotiations by carrying out terror attacks in afghanistan including a suicide car bombing last week that killed 12 people. including an american soldier.
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pompeo said that attack prompted president trump to cancel the peace deal. >> we made real progress but in the end, the taliban over-reached. they forgot that america is always going to protect its interest. the american people should know we will continue to apply the appropriate pressure to make sure we are never struck with terror yo again from afghanista. >> reporter: the president is getting heat for even considering inviting taliban leaders to the u.s. less than a week before the 9/11 attack. jim ad addis said the president made the right call to cancel the meeting. >> i think you want to verify,
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then 2ru69. we demanded they break withal kai da since the bush administration. they've refused to do so. i think secretary pompeo saying go back to first principles is the right thing to do. >> reporter: for its part, the taliban is warning of additional attacks. a spokeman for the group said this will lead to more losses for the us. its credibility will be affected. its anti-peace stance will be exposed to the world. losses to lives and assets will increase. so at least for now negotiations to end america's longest war are over and there's a lot of uncertainty about where things will go from here. cheryl and lauren. cheryl: there certainly is, garrett, thank you very much. lauren: google is on high alert. a group of states are formally announcing an anti-trust investigation into the company. the probe expected to include more than 40 state attorneys general. we'll get full details of that investigation at a news conference outside the u.s. supreme court later today. the new york attorney general's
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office organizing a multistate probe into facebook for alleged anti-trust issues. cheryl: well, more trouble for wework's initial public offering. they may cut the valuation for the ipo below $20 billion. wall street journal is reporting the move could come as some investors want the company to postpone that planned offering. they have been raising questions about several issues including wework's business model and profitability. wework plans to start pitching the ipo to new investors today. lauren: the official death toll for hurricane dorian has risen to 44 in the bahamas. the health minister says they are not suppressing the number. officials warn that the death toll is likely to jump as they continue to search devastated areas. yesterday the faa issued a temporary flight restriction over the bahamas in order to reserve air space for search and rescue operations. cheryl: nuclear inspectors
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reportedly have found troubling material at a site in iran. lauren: tracee carrasco has the details for us. good morning, tracee. tracee: reuters is reporting that samples taken by the un nuclear watchdog from a site in iran showed traces from uranium, one of the elements needed to make a nuclear bomb. they are investigating the finding and have asked iran to explain it. meanwhile, secretary of state mike pompeo tells fox news sunday the door is still open for iran to reach a deal with the u.s. >> we want a successful iran. we want them to be part of the community of nations. you can't do that when you're building missiles that threaten europe, threaten israel and building out systems that could ultimately create a nuclear weapon. tracee: pompeo wouldn't comment on -- president trump meeting with iran's president later this month. a rescue effort underway for
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crew members after a flipped cargo ship. it overturned off the coast of georgia. the coast guard rescued 20 crew members by helicopter. the four missing crew members are trapped inside a room. the maker of oxycontin, purdue pharma, is expected to file for bankruptcy after settlement talks with a group of state attorneys general broke down. this puts the first federal trial on track to begin next month, likely without purdue. earlier this month they offered between $10 billion and $12 billion to settle thousands of lawsuits. a scary h sequel takes the weekd box office. >> if it isn't dead, if it ever comes back, we'll come back too. >> we didn't stop it. tracee: it chapter 2, pulling
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in $91 million in the u.s. and canada, the second highest opening for a horror film. the original it holds the record for a horror film debut grossing $123 million during its first weekend in 2017. and that is what's happening now. lauren: i guess we want to be scared. tracee, thank you very much. cheryl: let's take a look at futures this morning. we've got green arrows across the board dow up 46, nasdaq up 15. investors in a wait and see mode, not just with china trade but we'll get central bank moves this week answered next week. that will be pushing markets. still ahead, billions of dollars resting on just 280 characters. we'll tell you about the new way to measure how the president's tweets are affecting your money. and a new investigation exposing a privacy scare at the dmv. how your personal information is reportedly being sold for millions. keep it here, "fbn: a.m.."
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(pilot) we're going to be on the tarmac for another 45 minutes or so. hour 36 in the stakeout. as soon as the homeowners arrive, we'll inform them that liberty mutual customizes home insurance, so they'll only pay for what they need. your turn to keep watch, limu. wake me up if you see anything. [ snoring ] [ loud squawking and siren blaring ] only pay for what you need. ♪ liberty. liberty. liberty. liberty. ♪ cheryl: one of the things that president trump is famous for, his tweets, and the power of the tweets forced jp morgan to create the cc index, it's a play on words from a president's
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infamous tweet. jp morgan says the president's tweets are having a significant impact on treasury yield and have started tracking the ones that move markets, including words like china, billion, products and the word great. lauren: i think he tweets on average 10 times a day. he used twitter many times to criticize jay powell for not cutting interest rates faster to juice the economy. trump's top trade adviser echoing that point on sunday morning futures. >> the federal reserve simply doesn't understand, their tight money policy is driving up the dollar, squeezing our exports, squeezing investment and the fed is costing us at least a point of growth. lauren: david nelson, street strategist with bell point asset management is here. good morning. is the fed to blame or is it the trade war. >> peter's a little over the top. last year was a policy mistake so the president was right on
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that. i likthe markets gave a clear message. that was a violent reaction you saw in the fourth quarter. the good news is, they got that message. this is a great year right now. we're up over 20% at this point and a lot of it is because of the complete reversal by the federal reserve. lauren: we get a quarter point cut in your opinion at the fed's next meeting. >> that's where consistent p cos right now. the rest of the world is at sub-zero. lauren: we don't live in a vacuum. as we have the trade war with the u.s. and china ongoing, peter navarro said in the interview we're in it for the long game. we just got trade numbers out china. they're struggling, maybe even more than they say they're struggling. >> this is going to go on for some time. what people are missing right now, it's the 70th anniversary of the chinese communist party. the last thing they want to do
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right now is deal with the issues in hong kong, so they're pushing on that. they don't want to deal with the trade war right now. i don't think we're going to get anything between now and 2020. the biggest thing is the change in sentiment here. 60% of americans here in the united states believe today that china's an economic and military threat. that's 180-degree reversal from where we were. lauren: the president has sentiment on his side. i want to he get to the jobs report. it's a modest downshift. >> it was a slight miss. it maybe hit th the sweet spot. it wasn't so low, it wasn't hot enough to take the fed off the table. lauren: the retail category lost 11,000 jobs. where is the consumer? >> i think the consumer's online. i think the retail falloff, i think that's a secular event. if they're not shopping at macy's, r they're probably buying it online. lauren: david nelson, thank you so much for coming on.
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cheryl: a second college administrator with alleged ties to jeffrey open time ha epsteint on leave. he's accused of hiding donations when he worked in 2014. mit's media lab director resigned one day after the new yorker reported his connection to epstein. mit is calling it a mistake in judgment. we've got a lot more coming up this morning. google facing down more than 40 attorneys generals in an anti-trust probe that starts today. is big tech facing a big wreck? and parents to prison, celebrity suspects in the high profile college admissions scandal getting a wake-up call from the court. could felicity huffman be headed to jail, despite pleas for leniency. keep it here on "fbn: a.m."
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lauren: actress felicity huffman asking a judge in boston for no jail time after pleading gil you this in the college admissions scandal. she is requesting probation, community service and a fine instead. she says she has, quote, a deep and abiding shame for her part in the scandal. she paid 1 $15,000 to a proctoro correct her daughter's answers. she will be sentenced friday. cheryl: more than 40 states are expected to launch an anti-trust investigation into google and facebook. the bipartisan probe will further pressure tech giants already under federal scrutiny
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over whether their online dominance stifles competition. what will this mean for the you future of tech? let's bring in zachary heck and our good friend misty maris. misty, we expect to see the texas ag out in front of the supreme court today. we'll get more details. it's expected to be mainly focused on google. what does a court of law, in particular the supreme court, if it ever goes that far, need to hear to convince them that google has too much power in the online advertising market. >> it's so interesting because tech was left unregulated for so long, to give it the opportunity to thrive. but now the law really needs to catch up. so that's what we're going to he see in a court of law with these lawsuits coming forward, bipartisan, all these states getting involved. it's going to help structure some parameters through the use of the legal system. what the court is going to want to hear is the results of investigation.
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with google, the primary focus is advertising. they control 31% of digital ad space. so the question is, are smaller advertisers even getting a shot? so that's going to be a main focus with respect to google. cheryl: what is the biggest concern, do you think for these technology companies? is it maybe having to take -- basically lose some of their share of the online advertising market, say if facebook had to sell off instagram or what's app. there's different probes they will go through. what's the biggest concerns do you think for these companies right now? >> i think both of those are major issues. what's more concerning is perhaps the breaking apart of the technology ecosystem and how technology works. these companies help the techie co-system grow. if you're trying to break p them up, is that the best way of getting further competition. we've seen technology companies
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grow and grow. that's not you througthat's notd regulation. cheryl: more and more americans, through the polling, they do believe that tech has gotten too big. privacy issues have a lot of people upset. there's four different probes, just to catch our viewers up. there's the doj, they're looking at a broad review of online platforms, ftc is looking at facebook, then the texas ag-led suit and the new york ag, they want to go after facebook. all of these -- if you have four separate investigations, does it mean all of that discovery helps the other investigations and that would be i'm thinking a bad thing for the tech companies. >> yeah, look, there's so much overlap here. it's going to be a little bit legally complicated, as you said, cheryl. there's so many concurrent investigations going on. but there's going to be a lot of
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sharing. we've already heard the federal government say they're working in conjunction with the states. the states wanted to speed up the process. they said federal government, you're moving too slow. so we're going to go into the courtroom. there's going to be overlap and sharing of information. that's going to lead ultimately i think to some results, some more regulation down the road and perhaps legislation. cheryl: zachary, you've got europe andup i europe is going after technology companies in different ways. do you think tech is going to have -- are they going to know how to operate if they've got two sets of rules from two separate continents. >> that's certainly concerning. the internet is a global phenomenon. if you regulate it differently in europe and the united states, that deals to issues. there's so many different jurisdictions trying to regulate the companies. the eu, the doj, the ftc, all these states, at at what point
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does there need to be better coordination to ensure the internet continues to grow and continues to offer services for people in a way they like and need. cheryl: as long as they can protect their privacy. i think that's one of the biggest issues on our minds right now. zach, misty, thank you so much for this. we're going to have you back. we'll be talking about this for a while. thanks, guys. lauren: take a look at this. a man appears to be fast asleep behind the wheel, putting other drivers at risk, after dozing off behind the wheel of his tesla. this is while he was on a highway in boston. new models come with auto pilot technology but drivers are supposed to be awake. tesla working to overcome regularegulatory hurdles before releasing a fully self-driving car. as the president gets ready to rally supporters in north carolina tonight, his campaign has new high tech plans to sweep
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the race in 2020. and it's the debate that has plagued mankind for decades, how heinz is answering the eternal struggle, the right way to pour ketchup. keep it right here on "fbn: a.m." ♪ i'm on top of the world, hey. ♪ i'm on top of the world, hey. ♪ waiting on this for a while now. ♪ great presentation, tim. could you email me the part about geico making it easy to switch and save hundreds? oh yeah, sure. um. you don't know my name, do you? (laughs nervously) of course i know your name. i just get you mixed up with the other guy. what's his name? what's your name? switch to geico®. you could save 15% or more on car insurance. could you just tell me? i want this to be over.
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cheryl: congress is set to return to washington today after a month and-a-half recess and democrats have a full plate ahead. lawmakers were on recess during the recent mass shooting in el paso, texas and the one in dayton, ohio. house democrats are going to hold a forum on gun violence pre tension tomorrow. the house is gearing up investigation intuse the trump add medicine strags strayings administration with the house judiciary expected to discuss an impeachment inquiry and congress will have to work on trade as they consider ratifying the
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usmca deal. lauren: president trump is headed to north carolina to whertodaywhere he will rally sus isupportersfayetteville. this as he facing a you new challenger. >> i'm going to get in. >> you're going to run against president trump in the republican race. >> why. >> i think we need a conversation as to what it means to be a republican of. i think we need a conversation on humility and one's approach to politics. at the end of the day a tweet is interesting, maybe news worthy, but it's not leadership. lauren: mark sanford taking a direct shot at president trump while announcing his campaign on fox news sunday. competition is also heating up on the other side of the aisle. there's a new poll that shows that while former vice president joe biden is still the frontrunner, bernie sanders and elizabeth warren are nipping at his heels and kamala harris is
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in a distant fourth place. let's bring in attorney sheri kim along with former national political director for the dnc, raul after valar. mark sanford says he has a problem basically with moms and millennials. when you look at the numbers, this might be one of the reasons the president is in north carolina today for a special election, how does he get their support once again? how does he strengthen the support of moms and millennials. >> as we say in the south, bless his heart. mark sanford, i have no idea why he's running for president considering he was impeached from his giewb that tor gubernan south carolina for disappearing in argentina for the week. lauren: he's pointing to a problem with the trump administration and their ability to target all of these voters. does he have a point there? >> he doesn't have a point for two reasons. first and foremost, when it comes to moms, they're of mostly
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concerned about the economy. and the prosperity of not only their own household, but the ability of their children to have the great american dream. as we know, the stock market is up on average of 29% since donald trump has been elected, unemployment is the lowest since 1969. we have a maximum rate of a consistent unemployment rate around 2%. the united states economy is growing at 2% gdp. moms should be focused on that. two, when it comes to personal character and when it comes to humility, people don't run for president of united states because they're humble. they run for president of the united states because they have an idea or vision for the future. donald trump's vision when you match it up with any democratic contender is one that strengthens the u.s. economy and doesn't weaken it. lauren: let's talk about the contenders on the other side. i want to bring up the abc washington post poll again. biden is still clearly out in front here. but neck in neck are bernie sanders and elizabeth warren. so what happens at the next debate?
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does everyone go after elizabeth warren? how does kamala harris get back closer to the top of the pack? what's the strategy here? >> i think what they're going to do is they're going to -- when you're at the top of the ticket, you're going to be attacked. i think they're probably going to use some of the same strategy this used last time and go after the vice president. but what they should do and what they need to do is they need to articulate what they are going to do, what their plan is for americans and how are they going to better the economy and how are they going to better healthcare for americans as we move forward and how we are going to continue to have job growth. lauren: speaking of healthcare, as thoughtful as elizabeth warren is with all the plans she puts out, there are holes with the medicare for all plan. do you see kamala harris going after some of those holes for elizabeth warren and does -- i guess the best way to say it is, does joe biden need to fall for another moderate candidate,
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maybe like a cloc klobuchar, foo rise. >> three things about elizabeth warren's healthcare plan, it expands the trust fund at a times when it will have insolvency in sevens years. she fails to put in any rails or guard controls as relates to the continued expansion of government programs. she wants more regulation. she wants to make the centralized centers for medicare and medicaid control every healthcare decision which is ridiculous because they have a 15% error rate. three, whence it comes to elizabeth warren's healthcare plan, the real issue is not what happens to people above 65, the real issue is what happens to people below 25. it's voters in that millennial age group that p doesn't supporter. lauren: we have to leave it there. thank you for joining us. cheryl: president trump is bringing the re-election bid to your phone. the president's re-election campaign is reportedly developing a smartphone app that will not only bring together
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like-minded voters but it's designed to encourage supporters to get involved such as making donations, calling other voters, signing up for rallies and even registering to vote. the app also will feature prizes to encourage users to recruit more supporters. lauren: a democratic presidential candidate taking his campaign to new heights, literally. andrew yang does crowd surfing with supporters in california. >> andrew yang! andrew yang! andrew yang! andrew yang! [ cheering and applause ] lauren: the businessman turned 2020 candidate speaking at a forum organized by asian american activist groups when he was hoisted into the air. he tweeted out the video writing haven't crowd surfed in a while. cheryl: we have green arrows across the board on monday your monday, the s&p is up -- nasdaq is up 14.
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coming up today, the british parliament forcing boris johnson's hand over brexit. could he be facing an impeachment just months after taking office? an investigation exposing how the dmv is profiting off your personal information to the tune of millions of dollars. you're watching "fbn: a.m.." ♪ who is going to make it. ♪ we'll find out in the long run. ♪ in the long run. ♪ i know we can -- ♪get along, on down the road
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♪we've got a long long way to go♪ ♪scared to live, scared to die♪ ♪we ain't perfect but we try ♪get along while we can ♪always give love the upper hand♪ ♪paint a wall, learn to dance♪ ♪call your mom, buy a boat♪ ♪sing a song, make a friend♪ ♪can't we all get along?
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lauren: a new report says motor vehicle departments around the country are making millions of dollars off your personal information. a mother board investigation uncovered hundreds of documents obtained through public records that show a widespread pattern of selling driver data, including dates of birth, phone numbers, e-mail addresses through loopholes and old laws. many drivers are unaware that the dmv can sell their information to private parties. cheryl: across the pond, british lawmakers are weighing a move to impeach prime minister boris johnson if he ignores a no deal brexit law that is set to take effect today. is there going to be a break. dagenthrough in all a of this.ww lows right now. the u.k. gdp is up 4.3% in july. is that why you're seeing pressure and sterling is rising, or is it because of what's happening. we saw boris johnson and the
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irish prime minister holding a news conference last hour. what's going on? >> i think we're seeing a little bit of optimism from last week. looks like parliament is going to pass the law that is going to mandate an extension in the brexit deadline. the question is if boris johnson is going to comply with the law. we've got all kinds of interesting talk, such as impeachment, which to me seems unlikely. thomas jefferson was a prisoner of the united states last time someone was impeached in the united kingdom. we're more likely to see a legislative challenge, something the supreme court, maybe jail time for boris johnson. cheryl: he's got mass departures happening in the conservative party, including another one today. you've got some lawmakers that are leaving. you've also got -- now there's talk of a possible three month extension, that now they're pushing for they that, instead of making october 31st, give it a three month extension to try to work out something. does boris johnson really want to make a deal with the eu? it's starting to look like he
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doesn't? >> yeah, i mean, you can certainly make that argument, that what he's concerned about is optimizing his chances in the inevitable general election. we don't know if it's going to be this month, we don't know if it's going to be october or november. there's a general election coming. what we're seeing from boris johnson is he's positioning the conservative party to be the hard brexit party. he thinks that's what's going to win a general election. whether or not we'll see parliament enable him to call a general election in october as he wants is an open question. cheryl: we'll hopefully get headlines crossing in the next couple hours from the u.k. it could move the markets. thank you so much for being here. lauren: are you ready for sports? raphael nadal wins his fourth career u.s. open. cheryl: jared max is here with all the headlines. he hit it out of the park. jared: john mcenroe said he was so grateful, being a witness to this.
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this is the first weekend of the nfl season, sunday night football, i sent my dad a text, saying i know you're watching football bu put tennis on right now. nadal, he showed his age. late in the match -- with all of his strength, he was hitting into the net. i said this may not work. nadal wins the first two sets. here we go. in the end, he loses 2-3 championship points potentially and he eventually comes back. he was up 5-2 in the final set and then championship point, that l dale finally gets it. -- nadal finally gets it. the exaltation he shows not only when he wins the final point, but after the match. he was in tears. he's a 19 time grand slam singles champion. cheryl: let's move to football
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news. jared: look at that. unbelievable. cheryl: antonio brown, what is wrong with him and i hate to say it, but his language. jared: frost bitten feet, the helmet issue, and he cursed at his general manager and the raiders released him on saturday. a video is posted on antonio brown celebrating his release. there's something wrong. the new england patriots work out a deal. here he is, celebrating that he's released. the patriots work out a deal. they figure bill bell belichek a football whisperer. antonio brown may be the most talented in football. cheryl: but something is off. jared: if a antonio brown has n appetite for destruction, odell beckham junior has an appetite
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for attention. alauren: what was on his wrist? jared: i don't think he's been football focused for a few years, that's why the giants got rid of him. he's wearing a $350,000 watch at his nfl game yesterday. really? cheryl: thought that was so strange. lauren: usually they don't wear jewelry and a $350,000 watch. jared: odell beckham junior, look at me. look at me. look at me. we're done looking. play football and we'll start watching in big ways again. lauren: says jared max. you can catch jared's sports reports on fox news headlines 24/7 on sirius xm channel 115. cheryl: the dow is up 47 points in the premarket, s&p up 6 and-a-half, nasdaq up 14 and three quarters. it's all about the central banks the next couple weeks. coming up, hurricane dorian devastated the bahamas and its effects were felt all the way up the coast. wait until you see the video of the destruction it caused as far
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north as canada. the return of a classic, a detas on volkswagen's resurrection of the famous beetle. ♪ i'm in love with a girl with a four wheel drive. ♪
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lauren: the effects of dorian being felt all the way to canada, after leaving a path of destruction in the bahamas and sweeping up the carolina coast, hurricane dorian hit the canadian mayor times over the weekend, -- maritimes over the weekend. dorian's 100-mile-an-hour winds struck, causing a crane to crack in half. more than 300,000 people were left without power after the
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storm hit canada. cheryl: the u.s. southeast is facing a heat wave. lauren: meteorologist adam klotz is live in the fox weather center with the forecast. good monday morning. >> it's september but it's feeling like summer. especially the next couple days. currently in new york city, sitting around p 65 degrees. so plenty of spots where it's comfortable but a lot of heat will be building in. these are forecasted highs for monday, you see it pooling up in the middle of the country, 91 degrees for kansas city today, close to 100 degrees for atlanta. all of this funnels in and even moves further to the north. by the time we get to tuesday and wednesday, suddenly you'll be knocking at 90 degrees in the chicago area. this lingers into wednesday, it lingers into thursday, ultimately also, with a lot of places getting really warm. all of this heat, it's still fueling hurricane season across the atlantic basin. we are getting today into the
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area where it's peak hurricane season. as we know, no big storms out there right now but i want to point out a couple areas we're paying attention to. little disturbance in the atlantic, two of them, have a 40% chance of turning into something over the course of the next week. we'll be watching because hurricane season marches on. lauren: 40% chance is a pretty big chance. thank you. an unprecedented walkout at british air wasways grounding ny all of the flights. tracee: british airways canceled more than 1500 flights and tells passengers not to show up as pilots begin a massive 48-hour strike. the move comes in response to a long-running pay dispute. pilots rejecting a proposal that would have given them an 11.5% raise over three years. they argue the airline is doing better financially so they should see a greater share of the profits. another strike is planned later this month. the volkswagen beetle is not
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dead yet. they're resurrecting the original type one beetle as an electric car. vw will provide the t batteries and powertrain. no word on how much it will cost. volkswagen said a they're working on a similar remake for the vintage micro bus.. heinz is solving one of the greatest mysteries, how to get the ketchup out of a bottle. they show the perfect pouring angle that won't drench your fries. just tilt the bottle so the label is straight, simple as that. heinz ketchup was launched nearly 1508 year 150 years ago. cheryl: i don't buy that. because if the ketchup is struck in there, you've got to shake that thing. upside down.
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it's a sport. lauren: call heinz right now. tracee: you guys are right. cheryl: we have a lot more coming up. a big problem for some big cities. why workers are starting to flee in droves. forget retirement and who needs to pay that rent after all. you won't believe what millennials say they would rather spend their money on. hopefully it's helping with their -- seriously -- quarter life crisis. we'll be back. ♪ i want to dance with subpoena. ♪ i want to feel the heat with somebody. ♪ yeah, i want to dance with somebody. r instance, r instance, we know how your customers shop. and what they've already purchased. like this lamp. and we use those insights to show you what they might consider buying next. mid-century modern, nice. that way, you can keep sending them offers for the perfect products.
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just another reminder of the value you'll find at fidelity. open an account today. ♪ if that's what it's all about. ♪ mama, if that's moving up, then i'm moving. ♪ cheryl: new data shows why workers are reportedly moving out of big cities. lauren: mike gunzleman joins us with that story. >> the amount of people leaving large cities is increasing. new york city, about 300 people leave the tri-state area every day. why is this? cheryl: it's expensive. >> besides de blasio. beyond that, it's the fact that technology, you're able to work remotely from home. also, what i found interesting is that almost 40% of the american workforce right now are freelancers. they can call their own shots or
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decide their own lifestyle choices. if i'm going to be in the industry, i don't have to be in the major city for it. i can do it on my own. i thought that was interesting. technology is the biggest factor. lauren: and the priorities among millennials, they are changing big-time. >> this is not good. college students went to college last week, a lot of them. parents, i apologize for this. one in five millennials and gen-zers, say they expect to be financially dependent on the parents through their 30s. so that's neverred good. priorities have changed for about 15 to 21-year-olds. the pry t order is to have a car -- priority is to have a car, to own a car rather than pay rent. cheryl: what is this quarter life crisis thing we mentioned earlier? >> 15% of gen-zes say they have a quarter life crisis. everyone's entitled. stop being entitled, just chill.
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lauren: mike, thank you. cheryl: that's it for us and our quarter life crisis. it's over to "mornings with maria" right now. maria: we'll see you in a few minutes, cheryl. happy monday, i'm maria bartiromo, it is monday, september 9th. your top stories right now, just before 6:00 a.m. on the east coast. markets kicking off the week if the green. futures indicate a gain at the start of trading of better than 60 points on the dow industrials. we're watching china and the trade tensions there as a new meeting is on the calendar now for early october. beijing shows more signs of slowing growth, however interest, fromthe ongoing battl. dorian's devastation, the federal aviation adfederal avian administration issuing temporary flight restrictions over the bahamas. we are at 44 people dead in the bahamas. officials warning the number is likely to jump. we'll take you there, live. calling off peace talks. president trump canceled the secret meeting at camp david
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with taliban leaders and president of afghanistan. back in session today, members of congress return to washington. we break it down, coming up. more worries for we wework, the company looking into further valuation cuts for the ipo. it may postpone it all together. we've got the latest. "mornings with maria" begins right now. ♪ ♪ monday, monday. ♪ monday, monday. ♪ sometimes it just turns out that way. ♪ maria: we've got a big show this morning. joining the conversation, dagen mcdowell, pollster an poll, lee

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