tv After the Bell FOX Business February 12, 2020 4:00pm-5:00pm EST
4:00 pm
any money or property taking satellites. the only way we get into the [closing bell rings] theranos blood tests and space now, the united states, cue the fireworks. another three-peat. services. she is facing charges of wild dow up 276. fraud. her trial is set to begin in launching people on soviet that nasdaq up 86. rockets in kazakhstan courtesy san jose this summer. the s&p up 21. connell: wow. of russia. to the next frontier of the it would be great for spacex to triple records. final frontier. the first astronauts flying a get their manned space capsule that will do it for into the air. "the claman countdown." we'll see you tomorrow. hurry up on the paperwork, guys. melissa: come on big money. commercial spaceflight could this has been going on for a major averages hitting all-time come as soon as 7th of may. while. they had a lot of successful highs as investors shrug off test of the rocket launches. the launching of spacex, other fears of the coronavirus and tested the abortion feature company, not tesla, operated by where they had the crew capsule focus on strong corporate elon musk. intentionally launched it wrong profits. the dow closing up 274 points, they will have a crew on it. nasa is saying mostly paperwork to ses the crew capsule. marking a new record close. everything worked out safe. left to go. the 7th of the year. they are almost there. it is very exciting. we're less than 500 points, look talk about this and other things unfortunately i'm not old enough at that, shy of 30,000. to lived through when we landed with our friend brett larson, on the moon and all the connell: wow. melissa: i'm melissa francis. fox news 24/7 on the radio. excitement building around that. this definitely will be a big welcome back. connell: good to be back in i pointed out from my long time day for spacex and elon musk. new york. from new hampshire. i'm connell mcshane. we'll see what comes next. you guys sounded great. the president talked about how back in new york. siriusxm 115. he wants more money for nasa so we'll talk all about it and have >> we bring it. more on the big market movers of connell: what do you make of the spacex deal? we can go to the moon and the day. >> i think it is fantastic. first here is what's new at this we were talking earlier our spy beyond. it will be a big move. connell: it is. want to talk about huawei as hour. on to the next. the democratic candidates well. u.s. officials say that company turning their attention to the has been able to use backdoors next round of contests after
4:01 pm
bernie sanders won a very close as many suspected to secretly race in new hampshire. access mobile phone networks for it is the latest, we will have more than a decade. the latest on the state of that the "wall street journal" reporting on it. deirdre bolton in the newsroom race and how nevada is working with details. reporter: connell, this is the to avoid an iowa-style fiasco. first time that the u.s. has given details how it thinks the it is a caucus state after all. chinese government is using huawei to spy on the u.s. revolutionizing the next generation of workers. specifically, american officials how some of the biggest names in say huawei has built equipment that allows it to tap into the technology world are taking matters into their own hands. telecoms without alerting the great story. we'll talk about that. carriers. sources say the u.s. kept this a price hike of one of the happy information highly classified until late last year. then it started sharing it with iest places on earth. trusted allies. what you need to know before you germany, uk, the idea being to plan your next disney vacation. get them freeze out huawei equipment from building their 5g melissa: susan li on the floor of the new york stock exchange networks. and edward lawrence at the but both the uk and germany, white house. let's start with susan. they're going forward with their contracts with huawei. reporter: a record close for all the uk actually even said last three benchmarks. month, it will allow it to build for the s&p 500, 11th record a limited amount what they call non-core 5g infrastructure. close. for the nasdaq the 13th record close. huawei for the record, strongly taking a look at the volume it denies the u.s. government's was pretty much four to one for winners compared to losers. this is a momentum market being allegations. here is part of company's statement.
4:02 pm
i won't read you the whole thing propelled right now with what's but i will pick out key words i think you will see too. happening around the rest of the basically they talk about a world. asia markets are recovering from smokesscreen. they talk about not accepting the coronavirus and looks like the new cases are slowing down. any form of logic in the cybersecurity domain. maybe, maybe there is a handle finally they basically say that on this outbreak and that is the "wall street journal" chose helping sentiment at the new to repeat the lies that are york stock exchange. also you have politically talking to a few traders what being spread by u.s. officials. happened in new hampshire. the fact that you saw bernie nowedly enough this tension between the u.s. government and sanders win by less than what he won by new hampshire at least huawei somewhat vindicates apple back in 2016 against hillary and facebook's stance for years. the u.s. government has been clinton that was also a bit of a pressuring big tech to build relief here. these kinds of backdoors to the fact that elizabeth warren is fading, again encouraging allow law enforcement to circumvent security measures that she intends to tax every such as encryption for example. bond and stock trade on the the tech companies always argued corner of wall and broad and against it saying, malicious breaking out big tech. speaking of big tech, leading actors would be able to exploit gainers we saw a lot of money these backdoors but now we're at flow into these five big tech the place where you have data, names, amazons, apples, googles, privacy, national security, all at the heart of the matter. microsofts and the like. connell. connell: deirdre. today we saw google moving you know, bret, it is higher. we're fighting $2.6 billion fine interesting, the journal's reporting is a big deal for a in the european side. couple reasons. facebook gaining rotation as one of them i was in china. we went to huawei's headquarters well because what's app has
4:03 pm
and obviously asked the question crossed 2 billion in global about this but the answer from users. guys? melissa: susan thank you. connell: let's talk about all huawei said we build the this carol roth the creator of the future file planning legacy networks. once we do that we're out. we can't even access it system and. good to see you both. essentially. reporting sharing with our carol, take on the coronavirus allies reportedly gets first. susan was talking about this. the talk how everyone in the interested with the argument. market is getting past it. uk moved ahead with it. what assumptions are you making >> one of the ways they moved about growth around the world forward that huawei provides a and how maybe economies come great price point for their back from all of this once we're presumably past it? products and relatively stable how do you look at it? product. >> that is difficult to say. these are issues we have with china. i'm more focused on the fed and they steal corporate secrets. the coronavirus. for all we know huawei may sell we heard powell talk yesterday. i think that all of the us equipment that motorola developed a few years ago. liquidity they're injecting into they happened to get their hands the market is being perceived as on the blueprints. i'm making accusations. qe light. i think the fed has a lot more i don't have data to back it up. to do with this than anybody as a hypothetical. connell: as a hypothetical. happening around the world. >> the backdoors, when you leave >> fair enough. doug, you get your choice. a piece of network equipment you can take the fed. open for law enforcement to you can take the virus. access it, it is not necessarily i suppose as susan says you going to be necessarily law
4:04 pm
could try to handicap the enforcement. connell: by law you're record. political race but whatever you do the dow is up 275. different laws in different what do you say? >> february not normally known countries. you're supposed to get out and as a good month. not to have access. >> you're not supposed to leave although the last 10 years it the door open for anybody who has been the best month of the wants to. when you talk about a piece of year. it is shaping up that way so network equipment, think about far. i get concerned you're close to the router in your home, your cable modem for example. if the company that builds the the highest price-to-earnings cable modem, you know what? we want to see, what our cable ratio you have seen since 2002. modems doing out in the while, when they're with consumers? otherwise we're really getting these things are internet close where i get a little connected devices. you don't know the traffic going concerned. >> okay. through it. taking the economy's you know your web traffic is temperature. fed chair jerome powell facing going through it. as long as your connection is lawmakers on the senate banking not sewed down you will not be committee today. any wiser if somebody is looking edward lawrence at the white house with details. at packets that pass through reporter: federal reserve that. it is interesting germany was chairman jerome powell heard using huawei equipment building very tough questions from these senators. he did say under oath that the out the 5g network. economic expansion will continue they're not concerned at all. in his view. he also says he is watching the coronavirus very carefully and the backdoor is controlled by a es poo of equipment built by he says economic data will come germany. that may be a step we have to in soon to show the economic impact here in the u.s. but he take. networksked about huawei being spent a lot of time talking about what really keeps him up
4:05 pm
at night. that is a cyberattack on the not being built by chinese banking system. he says that they can stop the bill de blasio, you cyberattack but he is worried about the erosion of confidence in the system itself. powell also talked about the have competition. andrew yang dropping out of the budget. presidential race. he says in addition to the debt it has some people wondering concern he says that what whether he will consider running for mayor of new york city? scratches his head or what makes would he be a better mayor than him scratch his head is health care. bill de blasio? what a depressing question. could he be worse? >> i would be a better mayor. listen. >> the biggest issue of our melissa: obviously you would. federal budget is health care >> anybody walking down the streets of manhattan would spending. we spend 6 to 7% of gdp more than other countries do. abettor mayor than that is about delivery. bill de blasio. that is a lot of money you're the point is, whoever has to clean up after bill de blasio spending every year and has to be a lot stronger, maybe effectively getting nothing. not as smart as this guy yang reporter: talking about a strong economy. ranking member, senator is. he seems to be a very clever sherrod brown laid into guy. he knows how to deal with president donald trump into the hearing. high-tech stuff. he called the president a liar he is naive. talking about his blue-collar for 1000-dollar salary for everybody for doing nothing. boom. >> he lies about a blue-collar but the perfect, strong, intelligence and sharp person to boom. i heard at the state of the clean up after de blasio would union that night. i was fairly incredulous my own be ivanka trump. she is a woman. she could be the first woman state of ohio job growth is mayor in the history of
4:06 pm
new york. i think she would be ideal. anemic or nonexistent. i can see you got manufacturing jobs are stalling compared to when he took office. "bulls & bears" tease coming up. reporter: powell testified that that means i have to move on. wages are rising for the lowest andy biggs will talk to us. he is from arizona. of income earners, beating out about the spat between the the highest of income earners. president and sanctuary cities. he also says that people on the fringes of the economy are now morgan ortagus from the state getting jobs which is something department. she will talk about the possible that hasn't happened in the beginning of the end of the past. back to you. afghanistan war. melissa: edward, thank you. that's significant. >> all right, david. look forward to that. picking up on that, is president see you at the top of the hour. trump's blue-collar boom a bust? i will vote for you as mayor. let's bring carol and doug back. connell: mayor asman. melissa: love it. connell: who let the dogs in, carol, you look at the the mall and for shoppers and unemployment rate for ohio. it was 5.2% in 2016. their puppies. melissa: i love it. how fun. connell: so does jeff flock. he is coming up next. it is down to 4.2%. ♪. i don't know if sherrod brown is wrong about that. it is above the national average which is 3.5. when you look, sherrod is ♪ representative from ohio. when you look at any of web pages or the like, he says he is working hard for ohio. ♪ so he thinks that beating down trump is talking about what a
4:07 pm
don't just plan to retire. failure his state is or, how he plan to live. an annuity helps cover your hasn't helped them? essential monthly expenses, i don't know. i'm trying to get my head around so you're free to live the life you want. this one. >> there is no way this, is the find out how an annuity financial gas lighting of can give you lifetime income america because the numbers don't play out. at protectedincome.org we've seen people who are at the bottom, bottom 50% have had the wealth increase since the end of 2016, 47%. where at the top it is only 13%. you have people getting back into the workforce. unemployment at lows for minorities and women. so this is just another one of those things that isn't true. you don't have to like the president. you don't even have to give him credit but you cannot deny the statistics. at the end of the day people are doing better f your state is not doing as well as some other states you need to look at policies in your particular state. melissa: yeah, doug. wages at bottom 25% are rising double the pace of the top 25%. >> true. i think they're cherry-picking some numbers here. the ohio unemployment rate bottomed at 4.0. so it ticked up after, to 4.2
4:08 pm
after couple months of some losses. but they're just cherry-picking. overall absolutely true. the vast majority of the percentage of net worth gains are going to the bottom 50%. is every person everywhere gaining? you know that is never going to work. you can always cherry-pick things. overall there is no doubt that the wind is at our back here and it's unacceptable that americans pay vastly more than can give you lifetime income certainly in ohio as well. >> carol, doug, thanks to both people in other countries, of you. for the exact same drugs. connell: encountering the very but they aren't listening. first test of her staying power they've just raised the prices of over five hundred drugs. might look like. amy klobuchar we talked about a lot in new hampshire may have president trump supports a bipartisan plan, pulled off the biggest surprise that would force drug companies to lower prices. in many ways. she is launching a seven-figure but the senate won't act. ad buy in the next battleground tell senate leaders to stop drug company price gouging state. can she make momentum last? and lower drug prices now. we'll break down the state of the race next. melissa: plus on the heels of his speaking gig with jpmorgan, prince harry is looking to land another deal with a major bank in his search for financial independence. all the details coming -- i'm sure he can give regular people great financial advice.
4:09 pm
connell: so can this guy. the retail ice age is prompting some shopping malls to attract an unlikely companion. jeff flock. no, excuse me, dogs. we'll talk about the coolest pet of them all. friendly pets in malls with jeff flock still to come. how can anyone change the cannel if. melissa: i don't know. look at those dogs. so cute. ♪. liberty mutual customizes your car insurance so you only pay for what you need. only pay for what you need. ♪ liberty. liberty. liberty. liberty. ♪ quitting smoking is freaking hard.st, like quitting every monday hard. quitting feels so big. so, try making it smaller. and you'll be surprised at how easily starting small... ...can lead to something big. start stopping with nicorette you've been hearing a lot about 5g. but there's 5g... and then there's verizon 5g. we're building the most powerful 5g experience for america.
4:10 pm
it's more than 10x faster than some other 5g networks. and it's rolling out in cities across the country so people can experience speeds that ultra wideband can deliver. 1.7 gigs here in houston. 1.8 gigs here in frigid omaha. almost 2 gigs here in los angeles. that's outrageous! it's like an eight-lane highway compared to a two-lane dirt road. ♪ ♪ do you recall, not long ago ♪ we would walk on the sidewalk ♪ ♪ all around the wind blows ♪ we would only hold on to let go ♪ ♪ blow a kiss into the sun ♪ we need someone to lean on ♪ blow a kiss into the sun ♪ all we needed somebody to lean on ♪ the new xc90 plug-in hybrid electric. xc90. recharged. so w>>i'm searching for info on options trading, and look, melissa: retail ice age forces it feels like i'm just wasting time.
4:11 pm
wasted time is wasted opportunity. companies to get creative, jeff >>exactly. that's why td ameritrade designed a first-of-its-kind, personalized education center. flock in a chicago mall. called coolest mall in country. see, you just >>oh, this is easy. yeah, and that's reporter: that is what the bring >>oh, just what i need. fido web site says. courses on options trading, webcasts, tutorials. yeah. their award-winning content this is an increasingly is tailored to fit competitive bricks and mortar your investing goals and interests. retail environment, if malls can and it learns with you, so as you become smarter, do things to bring more people so do its recommendations. >>so it's like my streaming service. in, go for it. well exactly. well except now, you're binge learning. >>oh, i like that. thank you, the demise of bricks and mortar i just came up with that. >>you're funny. i believe is overdone. learn fast with the td ameritrade education center. you look at numbers, third call 866-285-1934 quarter 2019. the percentage of retail that is or visit tdameritrade.com/learn. on-line, it really still is get started today, and for a limited time, pretty small, most of the buying get up to $800 when you open and fund an account. gets done out here, malls are trying -- this is? or tdameritrade.com/learn. who is this muggsy? ♪ and takashi . they have a yapy hour they do, that is teddy back there.
4:12 pm
a lot of them bridg -- bringing, beyond the routine checkups. all of the time, and on occasion beyond the not-so-routine cases. they buy stuff at mall, that comcast business is helping doctors provide care in whole new ways. cool. the numbers on story closures all working with a new generation of technologies have been -- story closure have powered by our gig-speed network. been mounts but stuff like this does help. you bring your dog -- do you because beyond technology... there is human ingenuity. sometimes buy stuff here. >> for him, no. every day, comcast business is helping businesses reporter: how about yourself. go beyond the expected. >> oh, yes. to do the extraordinary. take your business beyond. reporter: great dogs here. this one, one more time, thank you for coming, we asked some some people say that's ridiculous. pet owners to come bighted. i dress how i feel. yesterday i felt bold with boundless energy. >> we come 3 times a week. this morning i woke up calm and unbreakable. reporter: they will have a dog lounge. melissa: that was my next tomorrow? who knows. question, a dog snack bar. age is just an illusion. connell: that dog wants to be on how you show up for the world, that's what's real. tv. melissa: we have a lot of -- what's your idea? like that. i put it out there with a godaddy website.
4:13 pm
mic hog right there. make the world you want. that is it for us. connell: that is the way to end the show, "bulls and bears" right now. david: we have a jam-packed hour, more winning on wall connell: "fox business alert." cisco reporting its earnings. street with markets soaring to susan back with us from the new york stock exchange. they're just out. new highs, all major averages how did they do, susan? set records today, new hope, susan: not terrible, not great. for the quarter 77 cents a longest war in u.s. history may little better than what analysts be coming to an end, new details expected of 76 cents for the is-- from the state department quarter. revenue slightly better about a pace plan with taliban. 12.01 billion. analysts looked for president trump this afternoon sounds off on sentences of roger 11.98 billion. forecasts were not great. they are expecting revenue in response trial praising justice department for intervening, the next quarter to 1 1/2 to 3 1/2% for the next year. could this be the beginning of the stock is up marginally, another democratic push for buybacks. they authorized $11.8 billion buy backs of the stock to reduce impeachment. all that and newer coming up. the supply in the market to -- all that and more coming boost up the price. they're boosting dividend 3 cents. for cisco, this are tough with spending crimped for companies
4:14 pm
especially telecom. connell: susan li, thank you. melissa: moving on from new hampshire the democratic candidates turning attention to the next set of races after bernie sanders claimed a close victory over pete buttigieg with amy klobuchar pulling off a third place showing. jonathan hunt is in las vegas with all of the latest odds and betting. jonathan. reporter: melissa, nevada was the big winner in a sense last night after the results came in from new hampshire because the field is really split now between the progressive wing of the democratic party and the moderate wing. that means nevada is getting a lot of attention, a lot of ad dollars coming in. most significantly from senator amy klobuchar. she is splitting the moderate vote right now with mayor pete buttigieg. clearly if she puts a lot of money rand time in nevada shoo he can get ahead of pete buttigieg. both of them for the moment trailing senator bernie sanders
4:15 pm
who won as you know in new hampshire and believes that he can do very well here in nevada. trailing all of them by a very long way of course former vice president joe biden. his campaign essentially on life-support but he believes he can do well here because nevada is a far more diverse state than either new hampshire or iowa. listen here. >> i think it does look like america, right? not only matters winning in nevada because it is the third state and important to carry that momentum forward but it is important for campaigns to be able to show we are appealing to america. this is what america looks like. reporter: think will be the first caucus since the disaster in iowa. the nevada democratic party was going to use the same app used in iowa. they have scrapped those plans. they're sending out very complex bide lines for early voting which begins on saturday.
4:16 pm
buckle up here and listen to these. one, they're given a card with a pin number. they enter that number into a google docks form. they select three to five preferences on a paper ballot. they put the ballots and cards into a ballot box. a volunteer will apparently monitor each ballot box. observers and campaign staff are also allowed to monitor the entire process. the ballot boxes will then be transported to processing centers. they will get scanned and stored there. they will be kept secret until actual caucus day on february 22nd. what happens then, anybody's guess. back to you. melissa: what could possibly go wrong with those instructions that is the instructions you get with the toy you're supposed to put together on midnight before christmas for the kids next morning. you need the kids to put it together. nobody will be able to do that. that is insane. jonathan, thank you. connell: what could possibly go
4:17 pm
wrong. melissa: what could possibly go wrong. connell: we have a come blumist, former bush speechwriter. nevada what could possibly go wrong in iowa told us that. discount what might go bronc or may not go wrong but as we move on to nevada and south carolina we often look at the stock market and not that it is going to react in you a way or shape or form but my reaction investors are not giving much credence at all, by the numbers, second most likely person to be president in january of 2021 is democratic socialist bernie sanders after incumbent president trump. doesn't seem like anyone wants to quite believe that yet. how do you see the state of the race. >> it is still early days. we have nevada coming up, south carolina. we haven't hit super tuesday yet often you see a candidate pick up a lot of steam. could be investors paying attention are remembering in the next two races nevada and south carolina clinton won in
4:18 pm
2016. still a lot of time for the moderate, for someone like pete buttigieg or klobuchar to really close that gap and overcome bernie sanders. i wouldn't see the nervousness in the market. connell: we have storylines we sometimes overdo and the current hundred we overdo in the media, sanders versus the moderates. will it be that simple? that reminds people of the never trump movement that never materialized. there was never a one-on-one matchup for candidate trump in 2016. maybe there won't be one either, whether a quote, moderate whether buttigieg or klobuchar. how do you see it playing out? >> i think biden will continue to fade although he won't want to hear that. you're right, we have a number of alternatives to bernie sanders. he looks like the most extreme. really the fact elizabeth warren hasn't been doing very well at t narrative because she was also seen as the more progressive wing.
4:19 pm
while it is an attractive storyline, it could be an indication a majority of voters are just not ready to put a different type of extremity in terms of ideology into the white house or to challenge donald trump. connell: the fading of warren was overshadowed by the biden story. she finished fifth. that is a big story from new hampshire. she is right next door in massachusetts. came as another woman in the race as senator klobuchar was moving up. so how do you see her candidacy? the knock against her right now she doesn't have the organization. you heard jonathan she will buy a lot of ads in nevada. the question can she keep going from there? does she have the money, does she have the organization? >> a lot of hope in these circumstances the candidate will start to catch on with donors but some donors supporting andrew yang who suspended his campaign after new hampshire or even michael bennet will start to give klobuchar another look, that is much more likely they
4:20 pm
will suddenly say, oh, i'm feeling like a sanders now. connell: you feel like a lot will happen, at least i do next couple weeks before we get to super tuesday. thanks for coming on. >> thank you. melissa: fox news ceo jim murin will be stepping down of the he will serve in current leadership roles until a successor is appointed. he has been ceo since 2008 and worked at mgm since 1998. connell: i look at ceo, if i step down, stock goes up, how would i feel in that situation? melissa: way to point that out. connell: tomorrow's workforce remodeled. when we continue how big tech going into the classroom to train the next generation of workers. we'll have that. a win for elizabeth holmes. why some of the charges against the former theranos ceo are being dropped. melissa: amazing.
4:25 pm
♪. melissa: hungry for new highs? some of silicon valley biggest names are sending their employees to teach in new york city classrooms instead of waiting for the right employees to come to them. it is part of the city's tech in residence initiative which matches employers with current students to make sure they have the skills needed for the fast-changing industry. joining me now is one of the administrators behind the program, mario. baruch college school chair. thanks for joining us. how did this get started? >> we were, this program was started by new york city. we were contacted by them to participate two years ago. it is a large program that covers multiple campuses in cuny we were very happy to be a part of it. melissa: were the teachers threatened at all? that people coming in to teach that weren't professors?
4:26 pm
we can teach coding, we don't need the outside people to come and do it? >> problem we have is we do not have enough people to teach our courses. there is no threat to the, to the professors who are in the department. in fact we're very happy to have these professionals teach for us as adjunct instructors. we rely a lot on adjunct instructors to teach our students. one of the things that we want as full-time faculty members is that our students get the best education and the best preparation for their careers. and, combination of teaching by us and industry professionals is really what prepares them best for that. melissa: i have a child getting ready for high school. i interview kids going off to college and they're all very focused on getting the specific skills they need to find a job. so i can imagine that being very attractive to kids, you know, thinking about coming to your college. when i talk to ceo's of
4:27 pm
companies though, they say they're willing to do the the local government and the local school system to get into the classroom. so it is surprising to me that, the local government was the one that came to you. tell me a little bit more about that. >> this is, the city of new york is, has actually multiple programs this way. we are, as i said, we're one of the campuses that participated in this. in fact they, there are other programs through which we bring industry professionals into the classroom. we are a public institution. we are, we are the city university of new york, so the state and the city have a real investment into the success of our students. >> you would think that but the other ceo's i talk to say they want to get into like high school and they can't get through sort of the teachers union and the local infrastructure. maybe it is easier at a university level. >> probably. melissa: when you're not talking
4:28 pm
about minors. do you think that, do you feel like it would be more appropriate to target or maybe in addition to what you're doing to target younger kids? because it seems like kids are kind of deciding what they want to do in middle and lower high school. they could be learning that coding then. what do you think about that? >> it really depends what you're teaching, right? if we're talking about just basic coding skills, sure. in fact that is happening quite a lot right now at the high school level but at the college level, what we're providing is beyond that, not just basic coding skills but, skills that are more advanced and are more applied, the students can actually use immediately upon getting an internship, or once the graduate is getting a full-time position. melissa: thank you for coming on. i hope you come back to tell us more. this is the solution to the student debt problem, getting kids training to go out and get a good job to pay the tuition back.
4:29 pm
>> absolutely and that is something we do and actually provide very well. we are the number one college in the country in social mobility. melissa: nice. good for you. congratulations, thanks for coming on. connell: very important stuff. a pricey world after all. disneyland announcing a series of ticket price hikes. melissa: are you kidding my? connell: we didn't want to tell you before the show. they pushed the cost of one-day passes over $200 for the first time ever. melissa: wow? connell: that is a lot and comes less than a year after the opening of "star wars." melissa: one ticket for one day? connell: they're getting set to launch the march them-themed avengers campus. above 200. melissa: we were there. amazes me you can't move inside the park. it is so expensive. i can say how can all these people afford this. it is so expensive but always packed. connell: it is always packed.
4:30 pm
>> i don't understand. wall street's 2020 warning. why one former finance executive is cautioning democrats over a front-runner says will quote, ruin the economy. connell: plus laying the ground work to become financially independent. melissa: sort of. connell: prince harry reportedly in talks with a banking giant post-"megxit," all details whether you want them or not. melissa: first time in three decades a standard poodle won the top prize at the westminster dog show. she outlasted nearly 3,000 other dogs around the world, for three days, to win best in show in madison square garden. our family has a dog ollie in florida. he could beat that dog. connell: no offense. melissa: this guy's hair is fantastic. connell: very, yeah. well-blow dried or something. melissa: might be a hat. connell: that is enough about that.
4:34 pm
4:35 pm
independence for the royal couple will come courtesy of the banking giants in the united states. reports that the duke of sussex had contact with goldman sachs when the couple were on vacation in canada. that was before the shocking announcement they were leaving the royal family in january. harry could follow in footsteps of high-profile people, gwyneth paltrow and david beckham. they spoke at their so-called talk events. if harry signs on, he would not be paid for the speechers. pr experts say it will ultimately lead to a very lucrative future relationship. what kind of money are we talking about? estimates are for the net worth of the royal couple right around 35 to 40 million. if you get these big relationships with financial companies going it could rise above one billion dollars. now harry and meghan's team at kensington palace back in the uk trying to downplay all of this
4:36 pm
saying that the contact with goldman sachs in november was purely on behalf of charities that harry supports but it certainly has taken people by surprise. i'm sure that includes those inside buckingham palace. we should also note that harry gave a speech at a private event hosted by jpmorgan down in miami. it was in front of a crowd of billionaires and famous people, reportedly including magic johnson. harry apparently talked about the death of his mother, his time in counsel and touching on why he decided to leave the royal family. there is a report that harry received more than a million dollars just for that speech with jpmorgan. but neither the bank or spokespeople for the royal couple will confirm that but bottom line what we're getting out of this, that life after the royal family and financial ipsco be very lucrative indeed. guys, back to you. connell: ashley webster. melissa: one step closer to the demise of our economy? former goldman sachs ceo lloyd
4:37 pm
blankfein slamming bernie sanders after his win in the new hampshire primary saying that the democratic candidate would quote, ruin the economy. here to react is bill mcgurn "wall street journal" columnist and fox news contributor. i mean this isn't a surprise. lloyd blankfein largely thought to be a democrat of course but i wouldn't be surprised if he supports michael bloomberg. so maybe he is getting out there to let, plus it is true, that it would ruin our economy so that helps too. what are your thoughts? >> no, exactly. look, recently bernie sanders was on television, i think cbs, and he was asked about how much his programs would cost and i think the estimate that was given to him was 60 trillion or something. he said he didn't know. he said nobody knows. he proposing all this spending. so in many ways joe biden made the case mr. blankfein made during the case. saying the spending is way
4:38 pm
beyond what's practical. the taxing that it would take to sustain it would be off the charts. melissa: yeah. do you think people would listen to lloyd blankfein who would vote for bernie sanders? it seems like in other words, woe be preaching to the choir? >> well he might but i think the question now is in the democratic party. you have a bernie wing that likes these things, free college, "medicare for all" and so forth. you have others called the more moderate wing because they're not going as far. so maybe mr. blankfein's strength is the latter part. remember in the new hampshire primary, though senator sanders won, if you added up the people that have a more moderate agenda, pete buttigieg, joe biden and amy klobuchar it, was a larger percentage. i think it was more than half. melissa: still super liberal. >> absolutely. melissa: i would imagine that lloyd blankfein would support mike bloomberg and it is the no
4:39 pm
the mike bloomberg who is here in new york who is pro-business. this guy is talking about jacking up taxes on anybody. >> right. melissa: i don't know if the old one is the real mike bloomberg or the real one is the real mike bloomberg. who knows what you would get. i don't know, it will be higher taxes for all of us. meanwhile aoc facing untraditional competition for new york's 14th district. long time business news anchor, michelle caruso-cabrera will run for the seat as a democrat. she is among several candidates challenging alexandria ocasio-cortez in the 2020 primary. so what is particularly great about this is her parents, michelle's parents, i know her well from cnbc, her parents are immigrants from cuba and they left because socialism does not work. that's why they had to come here. so every time aoc stands up there and spouts off about socialism michelle can correct her no, here is what actually
4:40 pm
happens. what are your thoughts? >> no. it is incredible. this woman has an impressive resume'. calls herself mcc. melissa: she always has. >> versus aoc. she is much more free market than the run of democratic candidates. i think her bigger advantage, though i agree with her on all that, the only vulnerability i think aoc would have, her roll sabotaging the am done deal. -- amazon deal. that would have had jobs come to her district. she is popular nationally. if she would be vulnerable it would be in a primary. it is a safe blue seat. she won the primary last time, only 16,000 votes. melissa: not only that, she is burned every bridge she ever crossed. she has made enemies of so many of the democrats. then like you said, she chased a lot of jobs out of new york. so i don't know, she may have a high q rating, a lot of people
4:41 pm
know her nationally. she is good at supporting bernie sanders, her actual constituency who knows how they feel. >> especially a primary, not everyone turns out. that is the trick. in a general election i don't think you have a chance to do it. >> very interesting, bill mcgurn. connell: nobody thought she would beat joe crowley. people thought he would be speaker. melissa: if he didn't bother to come home and run. connell: you never know. the inventor as the defendant. elizabeth holmes with a small victory in court for her summer trial we're talking about coming up. to infiniti and beyond, nasa and spacex are getting ready for take off.
4:42 pm
beyond the routine checkups. beyond the not-so-routine cases. comcast business is helping doctors provide care in whole new ways. all working with a new generation of technologies powered by our gig-speed network. because beyond technology... there is human ingenuity. every day, comcast business is helping businesses go beyond the expected. to do the extraordinary. take your business beyond.
4:43 pm
and with the sxfinity stream app, screen is your big screen. which is free with your service, you can take a spin through on demand shows, or stream live tv. download your dvr'd shows and movies on the fly. even record from right where you are. whether you're travelling around the country or around the house, keep what you watch with you. download the xfinity stream app and watch all the shows you love. the end might not be as happy as ayou think.end.
4:44 pm
after all, 4 out of 5 people who have a stroke, their first symptom is a stroke! but the good news is you can rewrite your ending and get screened for stroke and cardiovascular disease. life line screening is the easy and affordable way to make you aware of undetected health problems before they hurt you. we use ultrasound technology to literally look inside your arteries for plaque that builds up as you age- and increases your risk for stroke and heart disease. so if you're over 40, call to schedule an appointment for five painless screenings that go beyond annual checkups. and if you call us today, you'll only pay $149-an over 50% savings. read it again, papa? sure. i've got plenty of time. life line screening. the power of prevention. call now to learn more.
4:45 pm
connell: "fox business alert." tesla with recalls. recalling 15,000 model s, suvs in u.s. and canada. issue with power steering cutting off while the driver is behind the wheel. national highway traffic safety administration say there have been no known crashes or injuries related to the issue. a recall from tesla just announced. melissa: a legal victory for elizabeth holmes, a federal
102 Views
IN COLLECTIONS
FOX Business Television Archive Television Archive News Search ServiceUploaded by TV Archive on